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I've seen many people make huge profits and suffer big losses in the contract market. The difference often comes down to a single thought.
Take $ICNT as an example. I previously positioned myself around 0.4, planning to take profits around 0.65. The historical low of this coin is 0.0929. If it multiplies tenfold, the target would be 0.929. It sounds simple, but very few people can actually realize this profit. The key lies in how to survive.
**Mindset Determines Everything**
First, recognize one thing: contracts are not gambling; they are tools. Treat them with a business mindset—be meticulous and cautious, and don't expect to get rich overnight. Also, be mentally prepared for errors; small losses are normal, and a few big wins are needed to cover those small losses. Finally, use discipline to completely lock down greed and fear, maintaining rationality during both gains and losses.
**Strategy Is the Map**
Position management is the line between life and death. My advice is to risk no more than 2% of your total funds on a single trade. Over-leveraging is the most common way to get wiped out in contract trading.
Before opening each position, set your stop-loss and take-profit levels in advance, and execute them unconditionally. When taking profits, consider scaling out to lock in some gains while letting part of the profit run—this way, you lock in risk and don’t miss out on big moves.
Technical analysis should be precise, not extensive. Trade only in clear trends; don’t try to bottom-fish or top-sell—those are deadly strategies. Find key support and resistance zones as trading opportunities; your win rate will be much higher. As for candlestick patterns, mastering a few key ones is enough. The focus should be on understanding the underlying battle between bulls and bears.
**Avoid Deadly Traps**
Frequent trading is a big taboo. Instead of making random moves, wait for high-confidence opportunities. Remember: doing nothing is often better than making mistakes.
Another absolute no-go is averaging down against the trend to lower your cost. In contracts, this is like slow poison, often leading to liquidation. When the market moves against you, either cut losses promptly or hold firmly—don’t think about buying more as prices fall.
**Final Words**
The core of contract trading isn’t about prediction; it’s about using discipline and systems to handle uncontrollable volatility. Many people lose money not because they can’t see the market correctly, but because their execution falls apart—chaotic mindset, reckless adding, haphazard stop-losses. So the first step is always to survive, only then can you talk about making profits.