In 2021, when I entered the market with 2000U, the contract traders around me lost everything due to a single misjudgment. Some liquidated and had to mortgage their houses, others disappeared without a trace. But over these five years, my account curve has always maintained a 45° upward trajectory, with the maximum drawdown never exceeding 8% of the principal.



I'm not smarter than others, nor do I have any insider information, and I don't rely on free airdrops. Frankly speaking, I treat the market as a machine rather than a casino. Today, I want to break down and share the logic I've summarized from my personal practice.

**First Trick: The "Bulletproof" Lock-in and Compound Strategy**

At the very first second of opening a position, I always place two orders simultaneously—take-profit and stop-loss. This may seem cumbersome, but in reality, it’s like insuring each trade.

Once profits reach 10% of the principal, I immediately transfer 50% of the gains to a cold wallet. This is not greed, but a way to ensure that in the worst case, you’ve protected your winnings. The remaining half continues to compound—using "free profits," not the principal.

The benefit of this approach: if the market continues to rise, you enjoy the power of compounding; if it suddenly reverses, at worst, you give back half of the profits, leaving the principal intact. Over five years, I’ve taken profits 37 times, with the largest single-week withdrawal reaching 180,000U. The exchange’s customer service even called me via video, thinking there was an account anomaly.

**Second Trick: Multi-Cycle Sniping with "Displaced Positioning"**

Different timeframes reveal different market states. My approach is to monitor three dimensions simultaneously: daily for the main trend, 4-hour for range trading, and 15-minute for precise sniping.

For the same coin, I usually open two orders:

A order is for breakout chasing longs, with a stop-loss placed at the previous low on the daily chart. The goal of this order is to catch directional moves.

B order is a limit short, set in the overbought zone on the 4-hour chart. Its purpose is to profit from reversals within oscillating markets.

Both stop-losses are controlled within 1.5% of the principal, but take-profit is set at over 5 times. About 80% of the market time is spent oscillating and double-sided pinning, and while others get liquidated in this process, I can profit from both directions.

**Third Trick: Treat Stop-Loss as a "Ticket"**

This is the easiest point for beginners to overlook. Many think stop-loss is a waste of money, but in my view, a small 1.5% loss is like a ticket to a "casino opportunity."

A one-second delay in setting the stop-loss might cut your profits in half later. When the market is favorable, I move the take-profit to give the profits room to run. When the market suddenly turns, a timely stop-loss protects the principal and leaves room for bigger opportunities next time.

Turning 2000U into a seven-figure sum sounds like a dream. But when you truly control each trade’s risk to 1.5%, and consistently make 37 successful withdrawals over five years, the power of compound interest becomes evident.

Without relying on K-line mysticism, insider info, or superstition, it’s all about probability, discipline, and patience—transforming the exchange into a stable cash machine.
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BTCRetirementFundvip
· 13h ago
Sounds like a story, but it actually makes sense. --- Honestly, I've never been good at stop-loss. --- 37 withdrawals, this is compound interest, brother. --- 2000U to seven figures, if it really worked like that, I would have been financially free long ago. --- Feels like a discipline issue; most people can't stick to it. --- That one-week withdrawal of 180,000U left the exchanges stunned haha. --- The key is that most people are greedy and simply can't stick to this logic. --- Multi-cycle sniping sounds professional, but actual operation is really difficult. --- Learning to withdraw 50% from cold wallets, I need to learn this trick. --- Others get liquidated but still profit, is the difference really that big? --- 1.5% stop-loss sounds simple, but executing it is agonizing. --- 37 successful times over 5 years, such a high probability, I find it hard to believe. --- The bulletproof vest strategy is interesting; I'll try it next time.
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GmGmNoGnvip
· 01-12 15:30
Honestly, 37 withdrawals sound a bit intense, but the logic is indeed rigorous. Stop-loss is like buying insurance; that analogy is perfect. Friends who are still chasing highs and lows, I really have no way to help. Both directions can make money, this system is truly top-notch. Compound interest is just something built over time; there's no other secret.
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BearMarketBarbervip
· 01-12 15:11
This guy makes a good point, but I don't quite understand the part about withdrawing 180,000 U. Wait, it's all a 1.5% stop loss, so why is your account curve so stable? Honestly, this compound interest strategy really works, but there are too many people who can't stick with it. Opening two orders at the same time, I need to think about this approach. Cold wallet withdrawals, at least not afraid of exchange bankruptcy, I've learned this. I feel the key is still mentality; a single stop loss causes more loss than losing money itself. Talking about risk control all the time, why are there still so many margin calls around me?
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GhostAddressHuntervip
· 01-11 11:10
This logic has some substance; using the ticket as a metaphor for stop-loss is brilliant.
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ForumLurkervip
· 01-10 13:56
This logic sounds solid, the key is execution.
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MevShadowrangervip
· 01-10 13:56
It sounds good, but I'm just afraid it can't be executed.
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PumpDetectorvip
· 01-10 13:54
ngl the 45° curve thing is just survivorship bias dressed up fancy... but yeah the risk management part actually checks out, that's literally how i've seen the real whales move
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ShibaSunglassesvip
· 01-10 13:53
This logic sounds reasonable, but the execution difficulty is truly exceptional.
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TokenSleuthvip
· 01-10 13:39
This logic is actually a variant of the Kelly formula. Why are some people still going all-in?
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StablecoinEnjoyervip
· 01-10 13:37
It all sounds like a story, so why has no one lost everything?
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