#特朗普数字资产政策新方向 In the crypto market, everyone wants to get rich overnight.


But the more eager you are to get rich quick, the faster your account goes to zero.

I’m not some big shot—I started with just a few thousand USDT. The only reason I managed to grow from a retail investor to over 50 million is by sticking to one principle:
“Don’t ask how much you can make; first ask whether you should even do it.”

Take $LTC as an example—before you start calculating profits, it’s better to first ask yourself: do you really understand this trend? If your logic is right, the rest will fall into place naturally.

The lessons I’ve learned over the years can be summed up in three stages:

**Stage One: Practice with Small Positions**
Split 1,000 USDT into five parts, only use 200 USDT per trade.
Always set stop-loss and take-profit; avoid markets you don’t understand and never go against the trend.

**Stage Two: Add Positions With the Trend**
Once the account grows to 10,000 USDT, keep each position to about 25% of your total capital.
If I’m on the right track, I’ll add to my position in batches, focusing on that sweet spot in the middle of the trend.

**Stage Three: Lock in Profits Regularly**
After the account breaks 200,000, I start withdrawing a portion of profits every week.
It’s not about being afraid to lose, but about not getting cocky. Only by staying grounded do you truly lock in your gains.

Most people get liquidated for three reasons:
· Opening positions blindly, no strategy
· Not setting stop-losses, holding on till the end
· Having the right direction, but giving up halfway

A friend who followed my strategy grew from 800 USDT to 12,000 USDT and just withdrew yesterday—he was so excited he didn’t sleep all night.

When you’re headed in the right direction, slow is fast.
LTC2.26%
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ChainDoctorvip
· 2h ago
Absolutely right. I almost got liquidated because of greed too. Now I stick firmly to the principle of "ask whether you should do it first." Understanding the trend is really more important than making quick money. Otherwise, no matter how much capital you have, it's useless. Stop-loss is crucial—so many people can't turn things around just because they get stuck here. These three stages are explained perfectly, especially the part about regular withdrawals in the later stage. Otherwise, paper profits are no different from not making any money at all. Rolling fifty million from a retail investor truly takes that kind of self-control. Most people simply can't sit still.
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StableGeniusvip
· 10h ago
ngl, the "i turned 5k into 50M" narrative hits different when you realize survivorship bias is doing all the heavy lifting here. empirically speaking, most people following this playbook are already liquidated—we just don't hear from them. the risk-adjusted math on this doesn't quite add up, but yeah, position sizing beats leverage every time, that part's actually solid.
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LiquiditySurfervip
· 10h ago
To be honest, I agree with the logic of "asking whether you should do it first"... but the key issue is that most people simply can't stop themselves; as soon as they see the candlestick chart, they get itchy hands. Cutting losses is even harder than LTC going up 10 times.
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StrawberryIcevip
· 10h ago
Seriously, I’m convinced by this logic. Most people lose because of greed—they want to go all-in, and end up losing everything. Slow and steady compounding is the real way to win.
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MidnightSellervip
· 10h ago
To put it simply, people are just afraid of seeing stories about someone flipping a few thousand USDT into a million, then a bunch of people rush in and go all in, only to have their accounts wiped out two weeks later. I've been watching this LTC trend for a while and I'm still a bit confused; in fact, I'm a bit glad I didn't rush to chase it.
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RektButSmilingvip
· 11h ago
That's absolutely right, but most people just can't do it. I've seen too many people who think they'll get rich "tomorrow," but end up forgetting their account password by the next week. That friend who went from 800 to 12,000 is really inspiring, but the key is that he actually resisted the urge to chase the pumps. I have to admit, that's even harder than the technical part.
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TideRecedervip
· 11h ago
Honestly, after all these years, that old saying still hits the hardest—the ones who have no discipline in their positions will end up giving it all back sooner or later. Stop-loss sounds easy in theory, but it's torture in practice. Still, those who don't set stop-losses end up blowing their accounts even faster. Fifty million sounds intimidating, but going through those three stages is really just a process of quitting greed, and that's more important than anything else. Anyone who's messed with countertrend trades knows how much of a trap they are. Now I'd rather miss out than get involved. The logic behind scaling in batches is definitely more resilient than going all-in at once, but only those who already have profits can really hold on. Withdrawing a little every week sounds conservative, but it's actually about wrestling with your own human nature. The hard part isn't how to earn, but how to keep. That friend turning 800 into 12,000 is impressive, but whether they can hold onto it and actually cash out is another story. If you don't understand it, don't touch it—this sentence is worth more than ten trading systems. Unfortunately, most people just let it go in one ear and out the other.
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