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#数字资产市场洞察 Contracts can really make money, but it all depends on the individual.
People around me who trade have rolled from 1000U to tens of thousands, and I’ve also seen someone start with 5000U and end up with over a hundred thousand, only to have a single market wave wipe it all out. Why can’t they stop after making money? To put it simply, it’s just two words—desire. After making a profit, they want to make more; after losing, they are anxious to recoup their losses. People are repeatedly pulled between this greed and fear.
What really wears down the account is not some strange market conditions, but these three classic problems.
**Insufficient cognitive level.** Unable to understand the project, unable to distinguish market structure, and rushing in based solely on feelings or hearsay. This makes it easy to be led by others and increases the probability of falling into pitfalls.
**The mindset in this area is easy to collapse.** Without patience, one wants to act as soon as the market fluctuates, leading to increasingly chaotic positions. When it's time to cut losses, one is reluctant, and when it's time to take profits, one fantasizes about holding on for longer. So what happens? The account is gradually eroded through repeated trial and error.
**The technical execution is lacking.** Trend judgments are frequently incorrect, and once losses occur, one starts to hesitate more and more, making it increasingly difficult to recover. This vicious cycle ultimately leaves one with only the education provided by the market.
Strategy is important, but mindset is fundamental. Whether you can calmly review after a loss, and whether you can stay clear-headed during a profit—these two points test a person more than any skills.
Contracts are like a magnifying glass: they amplify your self-discipline and your weaknesses. How far you go ultimately depends on yourself. Market opportunities are indeed always present, but there are even more traps; only a few can consistently make money. If you want to survive here a bit longer, you still need to think more and learn more.