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#美国贸易赤字扩大 Recently, someone asked me why I always emphasize the importance of rolling positions. It may seem like a "slow life," but it can turn small funds into large ones.
I smiled because those who have been through the market a few times know very well—making money is never difficult; the hard part is the mindset.
The most outrageous thing I've seen isn't turning 5,000 into 1 million; that's quite common as long as the market is strong, anyone has a chance. When violent trends like $BERA and $INIT come, account figures can grow rapidly.
What’s truly outrageous is earning hundreds of thousands in a week, only to be wiped out by a single bearish candle.
That kind of mental breakdown is even more painful than a complete liquidation.
Honestly, I’ve been down that road too. Making some money makes you feel elated, and the more you earn, the more you want to add to your position. Once a decline appears, you hold on stubbornly, always thinking "I'm afraid of being stopped out and then rebounding." After being severely taught by the market a few times, I finally understood what "the market is teaching you how to behave" really means.
Regarding rolling positions, there's no need to overcomplicate it.
In essence, it’s just one word: patience.
Wait for a stable profit opportunity, wait for a wave pattern that clearly shows the main players’ layout, wait for confirmation before taking action.
Newcomers all have a common problem—restless fingers. "Let me try" is always on their lips, but every attempt ends in a loss.
Another common trap: wanting to add to your position immediately after making a profit.
Please, everyone, this is not a racing game.
After making your first profit, the smartest move is to withdraw the principal first, and let the remaining profit do whatever. You’ll be surprised to find that your mindset will change entirely.
My current approach is very straightforward—once I gain 50%, I move the stop-loss to the breakeven point. If the market continues to perform well, I keep riding the wave; once I double my position, I lock in profits. No matter if the market still has room to grow or not, I won’t be greedy anymore.
At the core, it’s about prioritizing "staying alive" over "how much I make."
Most people fail not because the market is hard to predict, but because of what's inside their heads: fear, impatience, gambler’s mentality, stubborn holding.
The destructive power of these emotions is even more intense than the fluctuations of candlestick charts.
Stop dreaming of overnight riches.
Making ten times your money in a day is meaningless; the key is whether you can protect what you’ve earned.
Market opportunities are everywhere, but once your principal is gone, it’s gone forever.
If you’re still in the stage of "feeling great when prices rise, panicking when they fall," then you really need someone to help you stabilize your rhythm, tell you when to enter and when to exit.
Otherwise, you’ll just fall into a vicious cycle of chasing gains, panic selling, reckless gambling, and regret afterward.