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Remember the fierce spirit when I first entered the market five years ago—staying up late to monitor prices, chasing highs and cutting lows, accounts like a roller coaster. Now, full-time trading has entered its fifth year, growing from a $5,000 initial capital to a seven-figure scale, with maximum drawdown controlled within 8%. Along this journey, my biggest realization is actually quite simple: making money depends not on "taking a gamble," but on "protecting the position."
Today, I want to talk not about stories of overnight wealth, but about how to operate trading as a stable cash flow system.
**Tip 1: Take profit and stop loss early**
I've seen too many people become greedy when floating profits, only to be reversed and lose their principal. I set a strict rule for myself—within 5 minutes of opening a position, the take profit and stop loss orders must be in place. No suspense left.
Once profits reach 10% of the principal, I immediately withdraw 50%. For example, if I earn $10,000, I directly withdraw $5,000 to a cold wallet to buy US bonds or gold, while the remaining $5,000 continues to roll over for trading. What's the benefit of doing this? Using market money to play the market keeps my mindset especially stable.
Over five years, I have withdrawn a total of 37 times. The highest weekly withdrawal was $180,000. Even in extreme market dips, I only give back some profits, and the principal never moves. Compared to those routines of "floating profits and doubling down to lose everything," this approach is much more solid.
**Tip 2: Multi-timeframe misaligned position building**
The most common mistake beginners make is fixating on the 1-minute K-line to go all-in, only to be tricked badly. My habit is to analyze the trend on the daily chart, find ranges on the 4-hour chart, and execute sniper entries on the 15-minute chart. This layered approach not only captures the big direction but also helps find entry and exit points within local oscillations.
There's also a counterintuitive but very effective trick: I open both long and short orders on the same coin simultaneously. For example, if Bitcoin is at a support level on the daily chart, I chase a breakout with a long order, placing the stop loss at the previous low; at the same time, I place a limit order for a short in the overbought zone on the 4-hour chart. This isn't gambling, but letting the market tell me the next rhythm. Last year, a certain coin spiked within 24 hours—my long position was stopped out, but my short caught the rebound. In the end, my net profit for the week was still positive.
The most powerful aspect of multi-timeframe analysis is that it turns a ranging market into a cash machine. No need to wait for perfect trending conditions; volatility itself becomes an opportunity to make money.