To be honest, in this circle, having steady hands is more important than having a quick mind.
When I first entered the game, I was in debt, with only 4,000 yuan left to get by. Now? My account balance has reached eight figures. Sounds like a joke, but those who've been through it understand—there's no special talent here, just relentless commitment to a "brute-force compounding strategy" and a ruthless determination forged through hardship.
Today, I'm laying out the hard-earned lessons from years of grinding—purely my personal record of real-world experience. Take it for what it's worth.
**Getting Started: Survival Rules for Small Capital**
A lot of people come in thinking they can flip a few thousand bucks into millions, only to blow up their account in less than three days. I did the opposite.
Started with as little money as possible, and stuck to two iron rules: - Profits reach 80%? Immediately withdraw the principal. - Losses hit 30%? Cut the position without hesitation.
After three consecutive wins, I forced myself to stop. This is how I rolled my funds: 100→180→324→583U... Your hands can go with the flow, but your mind must stay sharp. After each cycle, I'd force myself to stay away from the market for an entire day. This kind of counter-intuitive self-discipline is what kept me from getting wiped out in the newbie zone.
The deadliest things at this stage are greed and FOMO. Seeing posts about others getting rich, you can't sit still, jump in, and become instant cannon fodder. My lesson: if you want your small capital to survive, treat "preserving principal" as your only commandment.
**Intermediate Stage: The Three-Position Strategy After Breaking 1,000 U**
Once my funds surpassed 1,000U, I ditched the retail gambler's habit of going all-in and started splitting my capital into three independent positions, each with a different purpose.
**Lightning Position**—Focused exclusively on the entry windows of European and American institutions
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RuntimeError
· 23h ago
Steady hands are really top-notch, that's true. But eight figures still sound a bit far-fetched, haha.
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Quitting after winning three times in a row sounds easy, but it's insanely hard to actually do.
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I just want to ask, is this "three position strategy" really that magical, or is it just that when the market is good, everything makes money?
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Take out the principal after 80% profit, cut losses at 30%... Sounds good on paper, but can you really keep your cool during actual trading?
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Taking a whole day off from the market when you have a small account—this kind of self-discipline goes against human nature, I just can't do it, haha.
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Still the same saying: survival first, making money second. Most people haven't even figured out the first rule.
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To put it bluntly, staying alive is more important than getting rich quick, but everyone who comes in wants to get rich overnight. It's a contradiction.
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I'm looking forward to more on the institutional entry timing window—it feels like this is where the key point comes.
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SchrodingersPaper
· 23h ago
Eight figures? Bro, isn’t that just telling stories, or did you really figure it out? But honestly, what I’m most afraid of is this kind of "staying away from the market for a whole day"—I just can’t do it, my hands are too itchy.
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MetaverseHomeless
· 23h ago
A steady hand is indeed more valuable than quick thinking, I agree with that. But when it comes to the eight-figure strategy, the explanation is a bit too vague; it feels like some details are being deliberately glossed over.
To be honest, in this circle, having steady hands is more important than having a quick mind.
When I first entered the game, I was in debt, with only 4,000 yuan left to get by. Now? My account balance has reached eight figures. Sounds like a joke, but those who've been through it understand—there's no special talent here, just relentless commitment to a "brute-force compounding strategy" and a ruthless determination forged through hardship.
Today, I'm laying out the hard-earned lessons from years of grinding—purely my personal record of real-world experience. Take it for what it's worth.
**Getting Started: Survival Rules for Small Capital**
A lot of people come in thinking they can flip a few thousand bucks into millions, only to blow up their account in less than three days. I did the opposite.
Started with as little money as possible, and stuck to two iron rules:
- Profits reach 80%? Immediately withdraw the principal.
- Losses hit 30%? Cut the position without hesitation.
After three consecutive wins, I forced myself to stop. This is how I rolled my funds: 100→180→324→583U... Your hands can go with the flow, but your mind must stay sharp. After each cycle, I'd force myself to stay away from the market for an entire day. This kind of counter-intuitive self-discipline is what kept me from getting wiped out in the newbie zone.
The deadliest things at this stage are greed and FOMO. Seeing posts about others getting rich, you can't sit still, jump in, and become instant cannon fodder. My lesson: if you want your small capital to survive, treat "preserving principal" as your only commandment.
**Intermediate Stage: The Three-Position Strategy After Breaking 1,000 U**
Once my funds surpassed 1,000U, I ditched the retail gambler's habit of going all-in and started splitting my capital into three independent positions, each with a different purpose.
**Lightning Position**—Focused exclusively on the entry windows of European and American institutions