Many traders stumble and fail ultimately because of one thing—poor risk management. The maximum risk exposure per trade should never exceed 2%-5% of the total funds; this is not a suggestion, but an iron rule. In simple terms, you need to survive long enough.



Then there's the issue of adding positions. When the trend is correct, don't go all-in at once. Use pyramid or inverted pyramid strategies to enter in batches—adding to your position at key breakout points or pullback levels. This can effectively reduce the average cost. The key is that the positions added later should be smaller than the earlier ones, so you can truly control risk.

Once you start making profits, moving your stop-loss to protect gains becomes especially important. Don't be greedy; cut your losses when needed. This is the most direct way to protect the money you've already earned.
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BlockchainNewbievip
· 01-20 10:25
Living longer means earning more; that's the truth. Don't think about going all-in to turn things around overnight.
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notSatoshi1971vip
· 01-19 08:28
The all-in players have already cleared out; staying alive is the real key.
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SchrodingerGasvip
· 01-17 19:33
A risk exposure of 2%-5% is indeed an inevitable result of market efficiency; the "long-term gains" logic is sound. People who go all-in are essentially gambling, not risk management. Pyramid scaling is, in essence, a practical application of rational expectations. Setting stop-losses is easy to say but really hard to do, but that's probably the dividing line between retail investors and stable profit-makers. What you mentioned should have long been a basic skill for on-chain traders, but ironically, those chosen ones who kill with high gas fees love to operate in the opposite direction.
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FomoAnxietyvip
· 01-17 19:26
Going all-in feels great for a moment, but it leads to liquidation and burning in the crematorium, buddy.
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SignatureCollectorvip
· 01-17 10:56
Living a long life is the key, and this is invincible. --- Going all-in on that strategy is truly a gambler's mentality; I've seen too many get wiped out after a small dip. --- Setting stop-losses properly actually allows you to sleep peacefully without watching the market until dawn. --- The 2%-5% threshold is a hard barrier; otherwise, every black swan event can knock you out. --- Scaling into positions gradually is indeed a brilliant tactic, but it tests your patience. --- The key is that most people know these principles but simply can't do them; greed destroys everything. --- Protective stop-loss sounds simple, but implementing it involves psychological challenges, which are really torturous. --- Even if the trend is correct, going all-in is just asking for death. --- Pyramid scaling must be disciplined; acting on impulse is just gambling. --- Why do so many people lose money? It's because they want to double quickly and have an absurdly weak risk awareness.
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bridge_anxietyvip
· 01-17 10:52
I'm very familiar with risk management; I've learned many painful lessons firsthand. The all-in mentality definitely needs to be abandoned. I'm currently using the method of adding positions in batches, and I feel much more comfortable. Stop-loss is the hardest to execute; it's easy to argue with yourself.
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MerkleDreamervip
· 01-17 10:41
Living longer is the only way to make big money. It's not that you can't remember this phrase; it's just genuinely hard to do. --- A 2% stop-loss sounds easy, but when it comes to critical moments, who doesn't want to hold on a little longer? --- Adding positions in a pyramid style sounds perfect, but in reality, it's a test of psychological resilience. --- The theory that stop-loss protects profits isn't wrong, but unfortunately, most people only realize it after they've lost money. --- To put it simply, greed is hard to overcome; otherwise, there wouldn't be so many margin calls. --- Scaling into positions gradually to lower costs is fine, but if the trend is wrong, you'll still get wiped out.
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ShitcoinArbitrageurvip
· 01-17 10:41
Honestly, the 2-5% one is really a blood, sweat, and tears story. Those who went all-in have lost everything; surviving is the real winner. --- I've used the method of entering in batches before, and it’s indeed satisfying, but the key still depends on the rhythm. Many people add to their positions and end up having nightmares. --- The hardest part about stop-loss is actually pressing the button; the psychological barrier is too tough. --- Adding positions in a pyramid scheme sounds simple, but in practice, it often backfires. The more it drops, the more you add, and that’s a disaster. --- Risk management sounds easy to talk about, but actually doing it is really difficult. Otherwise, so many people wouldn’t get liquidated. --- It seems everyone understands, but the reality is that only one in ten thousand can survive until next year. --- Protective stop-loss really hit the mark; 99% of people die because they can’t bear to cut losses. --- The 2-5% is no joke. I’ve seen so many people think they’re capable, only to be wiped out in one wave and lose everything.
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GovernancePretendervip
· 01-17 10:29
You're absolutely right, the 2-5% threshold is indeed a life-and-death line. I've seen too many people go all-in and then get eliminated immediately.
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