Why do so many people stumble in the futures market?



I'll be straightforward—99% of people have no idea what they are doing.

They get liquidated every day and can't stop. Knowing the danger, yet feeling like something is pulling them, they repeat the cycle over and over. It's not bad luck; there's only one problem.

**1. The leverage you think you have and the actual leverage are two different things**

Platforms show 5x, 10x leverage, and you believe it. With $10,000 in your account, your risk tolerance is $500, but you open a position of $30,000.

Thinking you're cautious, but in reality, a 1% market move could be close to liquidation.

Of course, platforms won't emphasize the real risk; they'll make you feel safe. Then what happens? When the market moves, you become the easiest target for liquidation.

**2. How do truly profitable traders operate?**

You think top traders are making trades every day.

Wrong.

They spend 70% of their time waiting. Only when certainty appears do they act precisely. Once they place an order, the direction is clear, the position is reasonable, and stop-loss is defined, they secure the profit cleanly.

Look at most traders— the more they lose, the more they want to trade; the more panicked they are, the more they try to add positions, which makes them lose even faster. You're not trading; you're creating liquidity for the exchange.

**3. The core of surviving in futures trading—self-control**

Stay calm when others panic, stay alert when others are greedy.

Losses must be strictly limited; 5% of your account is the ceiling. Once you identify the correct direction, let the profits run freely—don't rush to close positions.

Liquidation is not fundamentally a market problem; it's your inability to control yourself.

**4. Futures trading is not gambling—unless you approach it with a gambling mindset**

Blindly over-leveraging, following feelings, chasing bullish trends... that’s true gambling.

Those who truly make money in futures rely not on luck or news, but on discipline, probability awareness, and execution.

**5. Going solo forever leads nowhere**

Those who truly turn their situation around are not necessarily the most talented, but those who have guidance.

Someone who points out your problems, teaches you how to control positions, and manage rhythm—that's the key to change. Opportunities are always there; but if you keep blindly rushing in, your confidence to turn things around will be eroded.

Take advantage of the active market, and act early with knowledgeable people—you'll have the real capital to survive.
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GateUser-7b078580vip
· 5h ago
Data shows that waiting 70% of the time is correct, but the problem is that 99% of people simply can't wait, and in reality, the true pattern is often eroded by this impatience. --- Wait a little longer, the all-time low hasn't been reached yet. Jumping in now with an irrational mechanism will eventually eat you up. --- Having observed the pattern, accounts that get liquidated by the hour are mostly those with excessive control desires trying to add to their positions. Miners are consuming too much, retail investors are left with little. --- It sounds good, but I have to question the last part "finding knowledgeable people," because those who truly survive are often those who have fallen a few times and learned from it. --- Although I agree with the 5% loss ceiling, most people can only hold on until the second week, which is already good. --- The feeling that contracts will eventually collapse is growing stronger. Entering the market now is like gambling at a historical high. Recognizing this early can save many people from dying unnecessarily.
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MEVHuntervip
· 5h ago
nah this mempool psychology shit hits different... most people don't even understand their own liquidation price, that's the real poison
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AirdropNinjavip
· 5h ago
Honestly, this article made me a bit uncomfortable... because it really hit home. I'm the kind of fool who keeps trading more the more I lose, and I’m rushing towards liquidation faster and faster. Waiting 70% of the time? No way, I get anxious whenever my account is idle, afraid of missing the market, and as a result, I miss the opportunities that end up costing me. A 5% stop-loss? Haha, to me, that's just a joke.
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