After implementing the capital allocation method I taught for three months, the account directly surged to 38,000U. The key to turning things around is not so-called skills, but dividing the money into three portions.
The first position of 200U is for short-term trading, with a maximum of two trades per day. Set the stop-loss line strictly, exit immediately upon hitting the line, and refuse to overtrade.
Short-term trading is inherently a high-risk gamble, where it's not about making huge profits in a single trade, but about steadily accumulating small gains. Many people fail due to greed in chasing trades, while he follows the rules and slowly accumulates through small profits.
The second position of 200U is kept for trend trading, focusing only on weekly signals and only trading in a clear upward trend.
Trends are like tides; forcing against the trend will only lead to being overturned. He never follows the news blindly; he waits for the trend to establish before entering the market, steadily capturing the most core profit segments.
The last 200U is a safety cushion, primarily for risk hedging. Liquidation in the crypto circle is like thunder; this part of the funds is 'lifesaving money.' If there is a risk of liquidation, immediately replenish the position.
Helped him resolve crises multiple times. I always emphasize: 'Small losses can be endured, but if the principal is gone, it's a complete exit.'
The key operating principle is even more crucial: Never enter the market if the daily moving average is not in a bullish arrangement. Only intervene after a volume breakout of previous highs and a closing with a positive candle; profit.
Lida 30% first extract half into the bag, set the remaining part to a 10% trailing stop loss. There is also a dead rule: cut losses at 5%, raise the stop loss to the breakeven point at 10% profit.
From 600U to 38,000U, it has never been a miracle. Winners in the crypto circle are not those who charge the hardest, but those who hold the most steady—preserving the principal to wait for the wind.
Most people are trapped in a vicious cycle; it's not a lack of effort, but a lack of a guiding light. The market is often there, but opportunities do not wait—only by following the right people can one walk out of the darkness.
