People often ask about the secrets to wealth growth, especially how to go from tens of thousands to a million-level amount. Honestly, don’t start with the goal of ten million; it’s more reliable to focus on earning your first 1 million steadily. Once you have that money, even if you only do spot trading with a 20% annual return, it can match a regular worker’s annual salary.



The most stable way to grow from 50,000 to 1 million is through a rolling position strategy. The key isn’t accumulating small profits daily, but breaking down the power of compound interest into several precise operations.

So, how exactly to do it? In daily trading, use small positions to get a feel for the market, and when big signals appear, go all-in. I only take long positions and never touch shorting. Beginners should avoid trying dual-direction trading.

What constitutes a reliable big market signal? I summarize three points. First, after a sharp price drop, the market should consolidate sideways for at least two weeks, then suddenly break out with high volume—that confirms a reversal. Second, the daily chart should stay firmly above key moving averages, with volume and price moving in sync. Market complaints decrease, and more people are watching rather than trading. Lastly, such opportunities often occur during market quiet periods, with no trending topics on hot searches, and retail investors generally losing money. In reality, the big players have already been building positions in the background.

Let’s break down the practical details. First, this 50,000 must be idle funds, not affecting your daily life. Set a stop-loss to protect your principal before considering rolling positions. Second, use a position-by-position mode, keeping total exposure within 10%, with leverage no more than 10x—effectively the same as 1x leverage. Set the stop-loss at 2%. When breaking out, be cautious with adding positions: for every 10% increase, use the new profits to open a 10% position, without changing the stop-loss. The most important thing is to never gamble everything, never add to losing positions, and never hold through a stop-loss. When a stop-loss triggers, stop trading and patiently wait for the next opportunity.

Risk control always comes first. During volatile, declining, or news-driven coins, avoid trading altogether. Under the position-by-position mode, if one position gets liquidated, only the margin is lost. When rolling positions, take out 30% of the profit each time to secure gains.

In simple terms, rolling positions isn’t about luck or gambling; it’s a craft of finding, recognizing, and seizing opportunities.
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AirdropHunterXiaovip
· 3h ago
It sounds very reasonable, but the key is that most people can't cut losses. Once they lose, they want to make it back, and end up getting deeper and deeper into the trap.
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MetaverseMortgagevip
· 5h ago
It sounds good, but I think this set of logic is still a bit idealistic. In actual trading, where are all those perfect signals waiting for you to copy?
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GasBankruptervip
· 01-11 08:55
It sounds good, but it all comes down to execution. I have just one question: how many people can truly withstand a 2% stop-loss without feeling distressed? Most are just armchair strategists.
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NFTRegretDiaryvip
· 01-10 14:57
Sounds good, but I trust my instincts more. Those signal judgments are basically hindsight, and when the real market moves come, who can perfectly time the entry...
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defi_detectivevip
· 01-10 14:57
That's right, I strongly agree with the logic of rolling positions. The key is to have patience and wait for signals, don't always think about daily trading.
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AllInAlicevip
· 01-10 14:57
It's the same theory again, I've heard it countless times... The key is discipline, but most people can't do it.
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SellLowExpertvip
· 01-10 14:46
It's another round of rolling positions, compounding, and main force building positions... Bro, I've heard your theories so many times, but the key question is, how many people can really avoid going all-in and topping up? To put it simply, when the market crashes, I just get confused.
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