Three Trading Rules: How to Grow from $3,000 to $40,000



Last year, I met a trader whose account had only $3,000 left. He didn't pursue complex technical analysis; instead, he adhered to three basic trading principles. Over two months, his account grew more than tenfold, with zero liquidation throughout. These three rules may seem simple, but very few people can truly stick to them.

**First: Divide the principal into three independent accounts**

Split the $3,000 evenly into three parts, each with different goals and risk levels. The first is for short-term oscillations, with a maximum of two trades per day; exit immediately if the fluctuation exceeds 5%. The second waits for strong weekly trends, remaining flat if the trend isn't confirmed. The third is purely defensive funds, avoiding any extreme market conditions, aiming to keep oneself always in the game. Full position trading essentially leaves the account's fate to random market fluctuations, a risk that cannot be quantified.

**Second: Only participate in clear upward trends, ignore all noise**

Most of the crypto market's time is spent in irregular fluctuations, which are not suitable for retail traders. The true entry signals are quite clear: when the daily moving averages form a bullish alignment and effectively break through previous resistance levels with increased volume. Once the profit from this trade reaches 30% of the initial capital, take half profits immediately to lock in gains, and move the stop-loss to the breakeven point for the remaining position to let profits run. Don't try to catch every wave; only trade what you understand. This is the fundamental logic for stable profits.

**Third: Use rules to replace subjective judgment**

Before placing each order, write down the rules in advance. Set a fixed stop-loss at 3%; once triggered, close the position automatically without hesitation. When profits exceed 10%, move the stop-loss to the entry price to let profits naturally extend. After 11 p.m., prohibit watching the market, and avoid staying up late to monitor positions. True trading should be as monotonous as an assembly line, not a rush of adrenaline-driven gambling.

Growing from $3,000 to hundreds of thousands has never been about having divine market judgment, but about whether you can repeatedly execute the simplest trading discipline like a machine. Opportunities are always present in the market, but the initial principal is just this one portion.
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RugPullProphetvip
· 2h ago
In simple terms, not being greedy allows you to live longer, but out of ten people who can truly do it, nine will eventually break their discipline.
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FlatTaxvip
· 3h ago
It's easy to say but hard to do. How many people can truly endure the 11 o'clock market viewing ban?
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LuckyBlindCatvip
· 3h ago
Knowing this trick to split into three accounts has been around for a while, but the key question is how many people can really execute it? I'm the kind of person who knows but can't do it—full position, never regret. That's true, but does this guy really multiply his holdings tenfold in two months? I feel like that's a bit too good to be true... Prohibiting trading at 11 PM? Dude, you're just talking in your sleep. The crypto market always explodes in the middle of the night. Taking half profits at 30% sounds stable, but who will make up for the missed multiple gains? I do understand, but the psychological barrier is tough, especially when watching your account turn green. Honestly, the difficulty lies in discipline; otherwise, so many people wouldn't be losing. Writing down the rules and actually following them are worlds apart. This logic is sound, but the problem is that people always want to take a gamble.
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AmateurDAOWatchervip
· 3h ago
That's right, the key is whether the discipline can be maintained.
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MoneyBurnervip
· 3h ago
It's easy to say but hard to do. I got stuck right at the first step, always thinking about going all-in for a big gamble. I've tried the split-account approach, but I couldn't stick with it; it's still easy to be driven by FOMO. A 3% stop-loss sounds simple, but when the price really drops, I get soft. Every time I think about waiting a bit longer. This guy doubled his investment ten times in two months, which shows that discipline is truly the biggest killer of returns. Right now, I just need a robot that can slap me in the face.
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StakeTillRetirevip
· 3h ago
To be honest, I've tried the sub-account system before, but I tend to slack off easily. The key is really to turn off the phone after 11 o'clock.
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not_your_keysvip
· 3h ago
That's right, you just need to control your hand, or you'll lose even 3000 USD. I've seen too many people go all-in and end up with nothing.
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