I exchanged 200,000 yuan for the most expensive class—about how not to ruin yourself in the crypto market.
Honestly, I was initially a gambler who went all-in on every trade. So what happened? I didn’t dodge a single one of the three fatal flaws:
My mindset collapsed immediately; going all-in means tying your emotions to the market. Every rise and fall can take half your life away. Without cash on hand, you have no bullets on the battlefield—you can only watch opportunities slip away. The scariest part is, the market doesn’t care about feelings, it’s here to cure that overconfidence of "I’m definitely right."
Later, I developed a three-layer position management method, and that’s how I survived.
**Foundation Layer 40%-50%**: mainly dollar-cost averaging of Bitcoin and Ethereum, with a target of holding for over 3 years. This layer is the ballast, no matter how big the storm, the ship won’t capsize. **Flexible Layer 30%-40%**: can include Bitcoin, Ethereum, plus 1-2 other mainstream coins, for swing trading, but individual losses should not exceed 10% of this layer. **Cash Layer 20%-30%**: all in stablecoins or fiat currency. This layer is emergency funds and ammunition for hunters, always keeping the option open.
When executing this set of rules, there are three core formulas:
Single trade stop-loss cannot exceed 2% of total funds, forcing yourself to place small bets each time. Buy in batches, at least three times, with ratios roughly 3:4:3, avoiding missing out or buying at the top. After profits, raise the stop-loss to protect the principal first, then let the gains continue to run.
Use different paces for different market conditions. In a bull market, holding on is winning; follow the trend and gradually take profits. In a bear market, you must endure; at this time, increase the foundation layer’s dollar-cost averaging to wait for panic selling. In a sideways market, the simplest approach is to do nothing reckless—watch more, act less.
If you want to start this plan now, follow these steps:
First, immediately redistribute your funds in a 5:3:2 ratio. Second, write down the rules and post them somewhere you see every day. Third, treat yourself as a machine without emotions and strictly follow the plan for three months.
Many people ask me, is position management really that important? My answer is—this is not an elective course, it’s a survival course. Learning to use position sizing to create a sense of security for yourself is the only way to truly break free from the gambler’s mindset and become a rational investor. The market will always be there, opportunities won’t stop, the key is to find your own rhythm so you won’t get lost in the market.
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.
15 Likes
Reward
15
7
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
ZkProofPudding
· 11m ago
200,000 yuan tuition fee. This guy really learned the hard way, but to be honest, position management is indeed the foundation of survival.
View OriginalReply0
SilentAlpha
· 9h ago
200,000 tuition fees are indeed heartbreaking, but compared to going all-in and losing everything, it's still better to be safe.
View OriginalReply0
TokenStorm
· 10h ago
200,000 yuan tuition fee... I backtested this position model, and the technical aspects look solid, but the key is how many can stick with it for three months. To be honest,
Going all-in is really fun, but being forcibly liquidated is even more satisfying. Verified.
View OriginalReply0
hodl_therapist
· 10h ago
200,000 yuan tuition to change your mindset, got it. I used to be a full-position gambler too, now I just watch others get liquidated and sleep peacefully.
---
This position management method is basically: don't let yourself collapse too easily. My biggest fear has never been a drop, but running out of bullets.
---
That's right, having no cash in hand is like being a walking corpse; you can only rely on market movements to eat.
---
I agree with adding to positions and dollar-cost averaging in a bear market, but you need psychological preparation; otherwise, you'll panic and try to bottom fish.
---
Compared to methodology, I think the hardest part is executing those three months. Most people give up in less than a week.
---
A 2% stop-loss per trade sounds easy, but when you're actually caught, you still think "wait a bit more," fooling yourself.
---
Hold through a bull market, endure a bear market, don't move recklessly in a volatile market—easy to say, but only winners do it.
---
Is the lesson from 200,000 yuan worth it? Depends on whether you've learned. Most people forget after reading and will repeat the same mistakes.
View OriginalReply0
BakedCatFanboy
· 10h ago
200,000 tuition fees, this guy has truly seen blood with real weapons. Going all-in with a full position is indeed not something I can afford to play; I've lost quite a few such people around me.
View OriginalReply0
PositionPhobia
· 10h ago
Damn, how much do I have to lose out of 200,000 to realize this set of strategies... I can't even hold my full position now, and I feel even more anxious after reading this.
View OriginalReply0
RealYieldWizard
· 10h ago
200,000 tuition fees... it's considered cheap. A buddy I know used his house down payment and invested it directly, and he's still regretting it now.
I exchanged 200,000 yuan for the most expensive class—about how not to ruin yourself in the crypto market.
Honestly, I was initially a gambler who went all-in on every trade. So what happened? I didn’t dodge a single one of the three fatal flaws:
My mindset collapsed immediately; going all-in means tying your emotions to the market. Every rise and fall can take half your life away. Without cash on hand, you have no bullets on the battlefield—you can only watch opportunities slip away. The scariest part is, the market doesn’t care about feelings, it’s here to cure that overconfidence of "I’m definitely right."
Later, I developed a three-layer position management method, and that’s how I survived.
**Foundation Layer 40%-50%**: mainly dollar-cost averaging of Bitcoin and Ethereum, with a target of holding for over 3 years. This layer is the ballast, no matter how big the storm, the ship won’t capsize. **Flexible Layer 30%-40%**: can include Bitcoin, Ethereum, plus 1-2 other mainstream coins, for swing trading, but individual losses should not exceed 10% of this layer. **Cash Layer 20%-30%**: all in stablecoins or fiat currency. This layer is emergency funds and ammunition for hunters, always keeping the option open.
When executing this set of rules, there are three core formulas:
Single trade stop-loss cannot exceed 2% of total funds, forcing yourself to place small bets each time. Buy in batches, at least three times, with ratios roughly 3:4:3, avoiding missing out or buying at the top. After profits, raise the stop-loss to protect the principal first, then let the gains continue to run.
Use different paces for different market conditions. In a bull market, holding on is winning; follow the trend and gradually take profits. In a bear market, you must endure; at this time, increase the foundation layer’s dollar-cost averaging to wait for panic selling. In a sideways market, the simplest approach is to do nothing reckless—watch more, act less.
If you want to start this plan now, follow these steps:
First, immediately redistribute your funds in a 5:3:2 ratio. Second, write down the rules and post them somewhere you see every day. Third, treat yourself as a machine without emotions and strictly follow the plan for three months.
Many people ask me, is position management really that important? My answer is—this is not an elective course, it’s a survival course. Learning to use position sizing to create a sense of security for yourself is the only way to truly break free from the gambler’s mindset and become a rational investor. The market will always be there, opportunities won’t stop, the key is to find your own rhythm so you won’t get lost in the market.