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This set of short-term trading ideas has actually made me hesitant to reveal everything outright.
I'm not worried that you won't learn, but rather afraid that once you do, you'll be more arrogant than me when you go back to your hometown at the end of the year and meet people.
First, let's clarify the basic logic: small funds aiming for rapid doubling in a short period have never been about who can predict the market accurately. It's really about catching the rhythm and understanding the market structure. These two factors are the key determinants.
I'm not teaching you to go all-in aggressively nor to mechanically copy a specific entry point. Instead, I want to help you see the market from a different perspective.
Personally, I especially like to focus on the quietest periods in the market—when there are few participants, low information noise, and market sentiment is relatively calm. These are the best times to see the true nature of the market clearly. Many truly important capital movements happen quietly in such environments. Silent but observable clues can be found with careful observation.
For example, if the order book depth suddenly thins out, the bid-ask spread widens, or there are mismatched fluctuations in related markets in a short period—these signals are not "signs of an imminent surge," but rather large funds quietly adjusting their positions. Understanding this helps you grasp what the market is actually doing; if you can't, you'll just think the market is very boring.
Regarding actual trading, I never fully load my position all at once. The first order is just a test—used to verify whether this move is genuine capital action or just a false alarm.
When the market sentiment is clearly skewed and prices start behaving abnormally, that's the real good time to add positions. Profits always come from volatility, not from stubbornly believing in a particular project.
The most important thing is to always keep some ammunition in hand. The most violent market swings often occur when "it looks like the market is about to end." Traders without bullets can only watch opportunities slip away.
As for risk management, honestly, experienced traders are not mainly worried about losing money itself, but about being shaken out by market shakeouts. Setting stop-loss levels isn't about blindly copying tutorials but about identifying key price levels that the market collectively pays attention to and can be easily targeted.
Finally, let me be honest with you: the essence of this trading approach is to understand capital flows, wait for the right timing window, and test patience and mental resilience. It’s not about mastering complex techniques but about controlling the impulse to operate impulsively.
Once you understand this logic, it can become a tool to amplify your gains; if you can't, it's best to just ignore these words.
The market is never short of opportunities and trends; what’s lacking are traders who can survive until the next opportunity arrives. Sometimes it’s like bumping around in the dark—right now, you hold a lamp. The lamp will keep shining, but the key is whether you decide to follow along.