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I recently came across a very interesting trading case. A trader only dares to short when the price experiences a significant pullback, and he often shorts at relatively high points. This gave me some thoughts.
Many people see others' floating profit screenshots and want to follow suit, but the problem is that by the time you see it, they have already made several times their profit. If you chase and enter a short position now, the risk and reward are completely mismatched. That’s why it’s essential to have your own judgment when trading contracts—blindly following the crowd usually leads to losing money 99% of the time.
Although this trader controls his position size very small, each trade is well thought out and not randomly opened. Sharing this can provide reference for those with market sensitivity, which is valuable in itself. Looking at specific data, he experienced a maximum floating loss of 700% on TAKE tokens, over 100% floating loss on ETH, and up to 800% on ZEC. If you had shorted at his deepest floating loss point, you could have benefited from this rebound.
The key is that small position size + correct entry timing = high-efficiency gains. This is much more meaningful than those daily bragging about how great they are.