I was born in 1987. Through a systematic trading philosophy, I have grown my initial 300,000 capital to 42 million. This is not luck, but built on daily review and reflection. Today, I want to share this complete method—including how to do the review, how much effort it requires, and the logic behind selecting coins.
As a professional trader, I dedicate two hours every day without fail to this practice. First, spend half an hour grounding myself in the data, then give myself time to calm down—let go of subjective thoughts and anchoring during trading. Only then do I proceed with the actual review, correcting my biases from the day and re-examining the market with a more objective perspective.
This step sounds simple, but it is very crucial. You need to learn to forget subjective opinions, forget your holdings, and forget the account’s gains or losses. In the evening, look at the market with a fresh perspective. Often, I find that some of my intraday judgments were completely wrong.
**Multi-Dimensional Review System (Layered by Time Frequency)**
**Real-Time Monitoring During Trading (Hourly)** The market constantly sends signals. I monitor the 1-hour ATR changes of mainstream coins, especially during abnormal periods when volatility exceeds 5%. Pay attention to price differences between exchanges; for example, if the premium of the main contract on leading exchanges suddenly exceeds 0.3%, it’s a warning sign. The liquidation heatmap is more direct—over $5 million in liquidations concentrated at certain price levels often indicate a critical market point. Also, check the safety of your leverage positions, calculate how much volatility is needed for a price decline to trigger liquidation, and observe whether the funding rates of perpetual contracts and arbitrage opportunities in spot markets are changing.
**End-of-Day Deep Review (1-2 hours daily)** The evening review is more detailed. Audit each key decision you made during the day—when you opened or closed positions, whether your planned technical levels matched actual execution, and what the slippage costs were. Record all these details clearly; over time, this helps identify your patterns and vulnerabilities.
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I was born in 1987. Through a systematic trading philosophy, I have grown my initial 300,000 capital to 42 million. This is not luck, but built on daily review and reflection. Today, I want to share this complete method—including how to do the review, how much effort it requires, and the logic behind selecting coins.
As a professional trader, I dedicate two hours every day without fail to this practice. First, spend half an hour grounding myself in the data, then give myself time to calm down—let go of subjective thoughts and anchoring during trading. Only then do I proceed with the actual review, correcting my biases from the day and re-examining the market with a more objective perspective.
This step sounds simple, but it is very crucial. You need to learn to forget subjective opinions, forget your holdings, and forget the account’s gains or losses. In the evening, look at the market with a fresh perspective. Often, I find that some of my intraday judgments were completely wrong.
**Multi-Dimensional Review System (Layered by Time Frequency)**
**Real-Time Monitoring During Trading (Hourly)**
The market constantly sends signals. I monitor the 1-hour ATR changes of mainstream coins, especially during abnormal periods when volatility exceeds 5%. Pay attention to price differences between exchanges; for example, if the premium of the main contract on leading exchanges suddenly exceeds 0.3%, it’s a warning sign. The liquidation heatmap is more direct—over $5 million in liquidations concentrated at certain price levels often indicate a critical market point. Also, check the safety of your leverage positions, calculate how much volatility is needed for a price decline to trigger liquidation, and observe whether the funding rates of perpetual contracts and arbitrage opportunities in spot markets are changing.
**End-of-Day Deep Review (1-2 hours daily)**
The evening review is more detailed. Audit each key decision you made during the day—when you opened or closed positions, whether your planned technical levels matched actual execution, and what the slippage costs were. Record all these details clearly; over time, this helps identify your patterns and vulnerabilities.