People often ask me: "In the same market conditions, why do some get wiped out overnight while you can keep withdrawing steadily?" Honestly, there’s no secret. I treat trading as a game of probabilities, not a casino. I’ve been using this approach for over five years, and it’s best suited for those who don’t want to stare at K-line charts all day but want to survive long-term.



**Tip 1: Lock in profits first, tie your principal with a safety belt**

Starting from small retail accounts, I adhere to one principle — take profits immediately and never go all-in.

How exactly do I do this? Every time my position’s profit reaches 10% of the principal (for example, starting with 10,000 USDT and earning 1,000 USDT), I immediately move half of the profit to a cold wallet, and the remaining half continues to participate in the market. The benefit of this is that when the market surges, I can compound gains through snowballing, but if it drops, only the profits are lost, and the principal remains untouched.

Over five years, I’ve made more than 30 withdrawals like this. The craziest week, I withdrew 150,000 USDT, and the exchange’s customer service even called to verify the source of funds. Basically, this trick is like winning at mahjong — stash a few red tickets in your sock first, then continue playing with peace of mind. Feeling secure, your hands won’t shake.

**Tip 2: Don’t stubbornly fight the trend; eat market fluctuations**

I never get caught up in whether the coin price will go up or down. Instead, I use multi-timeframe hedging to profit from market volatility.

The operation logic is as follows: first, determine the main trend on the daily chart (for example, an upward trend recently), then find a clear oscillation range on the 4-hour chart, and finally, precisely enter on the 15-minute chart. I often open two positions on the same coin — one following the breakout of the main trend (with a stop loss set at the previous low on the daily chart), and another in the 4-hour overbought zone with a reverse short position. Both stop losses are strictly controlled within 1.5% of the principal, but the take profit targets are set at over 5 times.

Last year, a coin’s price surged over 90% in one day. My trend-following position was stopped out directly, but the reverse short position gained nearly 40 points. It looks like one win and one loss, but overall, my account still made a profit, and I didn’t have to bet on whether it would rise or fall.

The core of this method is: instead of trying to predict the market, design a good risk framework so that every market swing can become your profit opportunity.
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SybilAttackVictimvip
· 6h ago
It's really just a sock theory that wins big, this method works, gotta learn it.
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TaxEvadervip
· 6h ago
Storing money in your socks is a perfect metaphor, haha, it's incredibly realistic.
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BetterLuckyThanSmartvip
· 7h ago
The core is discipline in withdrawals. I respect that. But to be honest, I still tend to be soft-hearted... --- Multi-cycle hedging sounds good, but when it comes to actually executing and stopping loss, I still hesitate—who doesn't? --- That example of inserting a 90% stop-loss was incredible. Two opposite trades indeed work wonders, but it requires extremely strong mental resilience. --- Taking profits early is a common tactic; the problem is that few people can really stick to it more than 30 times... --- Probability games are not casinos. It's easy to say that, but truly maintaining such strong willpower is rare. --- Withdrawing more than 30 times in 5 years—only with this data can there be some persuasion. Anyone can tell a story. --- The most critical part is risk management. A 1.5% stop-loss sounds simple, but executing it is another matter. --- I understand the hedging logic; it's just afraid of greed causing profits to be lost back...
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YieldChaservip
· 7h ago
Withdrawing to secure the bag, I totally support this move, but it really tests self-discipline.
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potentially_notablevip
· 7h ago
This set of things looks good, but how many people can truly execute it properly? --- Well... that is to say, if you can't get past the psychological barrier, even the best strategies are useless --- The part about hiding red tickets in socks was hilarious, very vivid imagery --- Multi-cycle hedging sounds simple, but the pressure of monitoring the market is still high --- Mentioned 150,000 USD and was directly called by the exchange; the treatment is indeed different --- The key is whether you can really resist going ALL IN; this tests human nature --- With over 30 withdrawals in 5 years, what does this data indicate? Either extremely lucky or there is indeed something behind it --- "Instead of predicting the market, it's better to design a risk framework"—this sentence is worth reading repeatedly --- The case of eating 40 points on a reverse order—is it a bit like survivor bias? --- Can anyone really set a stop loss at 1.5% and take profit 5 times that? Is the risk-reward ratio this outrageous? --- But the idea of setting profit targets is indeed a psychological boost, at least it allows for a peaceful sleep --- It sounds good, but when the market crashes, true colors are revealed. Who doesn't want stable withdrawals?
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