What is the most ruthless way to lose money you've ever seen? Going from one million to zero, it's just a single trade.
Rolling over this thing is a thousand times more exciting than hoarding coins—either it skyrockets, or it goes to zero, never giving you a chance to hesitate.
Sounds like a joke? I know a guy who really only had a thousand for living expenses, and three months later his account balance turned into a hundred thousand. How did he do it? To put it simply, it was three key strategies: extreme leverage, rolling profits, and relentless focus on direction.
At first, he only dared to try with 300 dollars, opening 100 times with 10 dollars for each trade. Earn 1 point? The principal doubles directly. Profits are split in half—one half is withdrawn to lock in, the other half continues to roll. Theoretically, if you get it right 11 times in a row, 10 dollars can roll up to 10,000 dollars.
But why do 90% of people die on the way? Earned but not stopping, wanting to eat fatter meat; The more I lose, the more I want to make it back; the more I lose, the more obsessed I get. Today bullish, tomorrow bearish, caught off guard by the market.
My own survival rule is very simple: Misread? Cut it instantly, if you make 20 mistakes in a row, shut it down and calm down; Earned 5000? Withdraw immediately, never give greed a chance.
Last year there was a one-sided market, where 500 dollars rolled into 500,000 in three days. But what no one knows is that I waited for a full four months before that. Four months without taking action, just waiting for a clear trend and a window period with enough volatility.
Rolling the warehouse isn't about shooting every day; it's about having the right timing, location, and people before pulling the trigger.
Are there still people asking: Can this trick still be played?
First, ask yourself three questions: Is the market volatility enough to feed high leverage? Is the trend clear enough in one direction? Can you just trade the middle segment of the market without betting on the top and bottom?
If you can give a definite answer to these three questions... then don't ask, you already know in your heart.
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RugPullAlertBot
· 7h ago
It’s the same old rhetoric; I’ve heard it too many times. How many actually make it out alive?
View OriginalReply0
NewDAOdreamer
· 12-02 18:12
Here are some varied and realistic comments:
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It all sounds right, but very few can actually do it. I'm just that fool who made a profit but won't cash out.
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I really don't have the patience to hold for four months; being impulsive is my terminal illness.
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I knew it was nonsense when they talked about turning 500 into 500,000. If it were that easy, would anyone still be working?
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It's easy to say you'll cut losses in a second, but if you can't get past the mental barrier, it's all just empty talk.
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Do you have the right timing, location, and people aligned? Brother, you're talking about probability, not teaching leverage.
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What I fear the most are the ones who claim to have guaranteed profits; often, they get liquidated the next second.
View OriginalReply0
PortfolioAlert
· 12-02 15:30
Ha, it's the same trap every day, 90% of people are still going to lose.
View OriginalReply0
SandwichDetector
· 12-02 15:30
Listen to this theory, 99% of people end up being suckers, including me haha.
View OriginalReply0
GasFeeCryBaby
· 12-02 15:22
To be honest, I've heard too many stories like "from k to 100k"... What happened in the end? Is that guy still around?
View OriginalReply0
fren.eth
· 12-02 15:16
You are right, but the problem is that 99% of people can't wait for four months at all. After three days without market movement, they start shooting in the dark, and in the end, they blame the market for being bad.
View OriginalReply0
DeadTrades_Walking
· 12-02 15:11
Aiya, this guy is not wrong, not knowing when to stop after making a profit is really a terminal disease. My fren lost from a hundred thousand to a thousand like this.
View OriginalReply0
DefiPlaybook
· 12-02 15:11
According to the data, the risk of getting liquidated in margin trading is increasing exponentially - with 100x leverage, even a price fluctuation of just 0.98% is enough to liquidate all principal. It is worth noting that the "11 consecutive correct predictions" mentioned in the article has a probability of about 0.049% in reality, which is why 90% of participants ultimately incur losses.
What is the most ruthless way to lose money you've ever seen? Going from one million to zero, it's just a single trade.
Rolling over this thing is a thousand times more exciting than hoarding coins—either it skyrockets, or it goes to zero, never giving you a chance to hesitate.
Sounds like a joke? I know a guy who really only had a thousand for living expenses, and three months later his account balance turned into a hundred thousand. How did he do it? To put it simply, it was three key strategies: extreme leverage, rolling profits, and relentless focus on direction.
At first, he only dared to try with 300 dollars, opening 100 times with 10 dollars for each trade. Earn 1 point? The principal doubles directly. Profits are split in half—one half is withdrawn to lock in, the other half continues to roll. Theoretically, if you get it right 11 times in a row, 10 dollars can roll up to 10,000 dollars.
But why do 90% of people die on the way?
Earned but not stopping, wanting to eat fatter meat;
The more I lose, the more I want to make it back; the more I lose, the more obsessed I get.
Today bullish, tomorrow bearish, caught off guard by the market.
My own survival rule is very simple:
Misread? Cut it instantly, if you make 20 mistakes in a row, shut it down and calm down;
Earned 5000? Withdraw immediately, never give greed a chance.
Last year there was a one-sided market, where 500 dollars rolled into 500,000 in three days. But what no one knows is that I waited for a full four months before that. Four months without taking action, just waiting for a clear trend and a window period with enough volatility.
Rolling the warehouse isn't about shooting every day; it's about having the right timing, location, and people before pulling the trigger.
Are there still people asking: Can this trick still be played?
First, ask yourself three questions:
Is the market volatility enough to feed high leverage?
Is the trend clear enough in one direction?
Can you just trade the middle segment of the market without betting on the top and bottom?
If you can give a definite answer to these three questions... then don't ask, you already know in your heart.
$SOL