#美国就业数据不及预期 Five thousand yuan startup, turning into one hundred thousand in three weeks—this sounds like an exaggeration, but someone actually did it.



A friend entered the market in February, not relying on insider information, not touching trash coins, and not going all-in recklessly. He simply used a "Slow and Steady Method" to multiply his investment twentyfold. Honestly, when I watched him operate his account, I finally understood what true trading discipline looks like.

**First Trick: Gradual Position Building and Rolling Accumulation**

When entering, he only invests 20% of his initial capital (about 4,000), using 3x leverage to test the waters. After making some profit, what does he do? He’s not greedy. Suppose he earns 1,500; he only adds one-third of that to his position and reduces leverage to 2x. This way, profits grow, but there's always an exit route. Many people go all-in on the first day, and when the market reverses, they get wiped out immediately—game over.

**Second Trick: Patience and Focus on Key Levels**

Last month, BTC oscillated between 95,000 and 96,000. Most people were opening and closing positions daily, burning through fees each time. He? Over two weeks, he didn’t make a single trade, like a turtle hibernating. He waited until the price truly broke through a key resistance level before quietly entering. Real big profits are never built from daily trading; they’re usually hidden in just two or three critical opportunities.

**Third Trick: The Liquidation Line is the Line of Life and Death**

When BTC was at 84,000, he set his liquidation point below 76,000, leaving a 10% buffer. Even if the market suddenly crashes, he won’t get wiped out. Conversely, how many people have their liquidation lines so tight that a single lower shadow candle finishes them off?

**Fourth Trick: Take Profits and Cash Out**

On the day his account doubled, he withdrew half of the funds to his wallet. When it hit 100,000, he took out 80,000 and kept only 20,000 on the exchange for continued trading. The key point: the numbers in the account are virtual; only the money in the bank card is real.

**Four Iron Rules Summarized:**

- Only invest up to 20% of the total principal on the first trade
- Only take high-probability setups; watch the market when idle
- Keep a buffer above the liquidation line
- Regularly withdraw profits; don’t let account figures blind you

The bull market is still on the way. Instead of daily hype, learn this methodology and accumulate steadily step by step. The next person to double their funds might be you.
BTC0,44%
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • 9
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
0/400
tx_or_didn't_happenvip
· 01-18 08:34
It sounds good, but there are very few who can actually do it. I've seen one account soar from 5k to 100k and then drop back to 20k, losing all the fees in the process.
View OriginalReply0
CafeMinorvip
· 01-18 01:47
Honestly, this methodology sounds quite reliable, but 99% of people can't execute it; their mindset gets in the way.
View OriginalReply0
ChainMelonWatchervip
· 01-16 15:20
This statement sounds good, but how many people can really stick to not fully investing?
View OriginalReply0
CompoundPersonalityvip
· 01-15 10:10
Really, I've seen too many all-in blow-ups, and this approach is indeed solid. The key point is that the account numbers are all virtual; only when they go into the bank card do they count.
View OriginalReply0
WhaleWatchervip
· 01-15 10:10
This methodology sounds reliable, but honestly... how many people can truly stick with it?
View OriginalReply0
AirdropChaservip
· 01-15 10:09
Damn, this guy really has discipline. Unlike me, who constantly chases highs and sells lows, losing money.
View OriginalReply0
tokenomics_truthervip
· 01-15 10:07
This methodology does sound somewhat promising, but to be honest, I trust those who can withdraw stably more. No matter how impressive the account numbers are, they don't mean much.
View OriginalReply0
DegenWhisperervip
· 01-15 09:51
I’ve heard this set of arguments too many times... but indeed, some people have survived by operating this way. The key point is the "profit taken," and the fact that the account balances are all fake really hit home for me.
View OriginalReply0
Rugpull幸存者vip
· 01-15 09:48
Honestly, looking at this strategy, the key is to have patience; most people truly can't do it.
View OriginalReply0
View More
  • Pin