#战略性加仓BTC Contract liquidation has never been about bad luck; the fundamental reason is that you haven't mastered the art of rolling positions.
I've seen too many people play contracts like this: - Run away after a 10% increase; the subsequent tenfold market can only be watched - Market crashes suddenly, and they panic buy to cover; in the end, the last spike causes total liquidation - Correct market direction judgment, but a 5% pullback wipes them out This way of operating is more random than a lottery
How do skilled traders do it? Conversely: Rolling positions is not "float profits then add to positions → go all-in → get rich overnight." Those who follow that path all end up losing
The core points are: - Capital must be strictly protected; add positions only at critical points; only use profits for rolling trades
Here's an example of actual pyramid rolling operation: Suppose the account has 10,000 USDT, and you predict a major market drop
Stage 1 — Test the waters, invest only 500 USDT, with 100x leverage equivalent to a 50,000 USDT exposure, stop-loss set at entry price +2%, do not move until confirmation signals appear
Stage 2 — After earning 50% of the principal, use half of this profit to add to the position for the first time; if the price continues to break lower, roll in 70% of the remaining profit
Stage 3 — When a major market move starts, lock in floating profits immediately with a hedge; during the rapid decline phase, place a reverse order to eat the last wave
Using a total of 20,000 USDT principal, this strategy can withstand a 30% market decline; upon settlement, the account balance is 96,000 USDT It's not about luck; it's purely about executing according to rules
The market punishes all reckless decisions, but as long as the methodology holds, profits will steadily flow into the account
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.
10 Likes
Reward
10
3
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
LiquidationSurvivor
· 8h ago
That's right, it's a discipline issue. Most people fail due to greed, seeing unrealized gains and wanting to go all-in, only to be washed out by a 5% stop-loss. Rolling positions requires cold-blooded execution, but few can truly do it.
View OriginalReply0
RugPullProphet
· 8h ago
It's the same old story, sounds good in theory but in practice, it still depends on luck.
View OriginalReply0
MoneyBurner
· 8h ago
Sounds like you're about to scam me into going all-in again... But the pyramid scheme definitely lasts longer than my previous all-in approach.
#战略性加仓BTC Contract liquidation has never been about bad luck; the fundamental reason is that you haven't mastered the art of rolling positions.
I've seen too many people play contracts like this:
- Run away after a 10% increase; the subsequent tenfold market can only be watched
- Market crashes suddenly, and they panic buy to cover; in the end, the last spike causes total liquidation
- Correct market direction judgment, but a 5% pullback wipes them out
This way of operating is more random than a lottery
How do skilled traders do it? Conversely:
Rolling positions is not "float profits then add to positions → go all-in → get rich overnight." Those who follow that path all end up losing
The core points are:
- Capital must be strictly protected; add positions only at critical points; only use profits for rolling trades
Here's an example of actual pyramid rolling operation:
Suppose the account has 10,000 USDT, and you predict a major market drop
Stage 1 — Test the waters, invest only 500 USDT, with 100x leverage equivalent to a 50,000 USDT exposure, stop-loss set at entry price +2%, do not move until confirmation signals appear
Stage 2 — After earning 50% of the principal, use half of this profit to add to the position for the first time; if the price continues to break lower, roll in 70% of the remaining profit
Stage 3 — When a major market move starts, lock in floating profits immediately with a hedge; during the rapid decline phase, place a reverse order to eat the last wave
Using a total of 20,000 USDT principal, this strategy can withstand a 30% market decline; upon settlement, the account balance is 96,000 USDT
It's not about luck; it's purely about executing according to rules
The market punishes all reckless decisions, but as long as the methodology holds, profits will steadily flow into the account