Having seen many cases of trading accounts growing from small to large, the most impressive one is a friend who started with $1,500 and turned it into $28,000 in three months. Now the account has grown to $56,000, and he has never experienced a margin call. Don’t rush to say it’s luck; his steady success relies on this set of solid logic.



I myself went from a $7,000 principal to financial freedom, and it was through experiencing losses that I realized these three core principles:

**First Trick: Capital Triangle Allocation Method, Firmly Reject Full Position Trading**
Divide the $1,500 into three parts. $500 for intraday trading, taking profits when the trade goes well and not being greedy; $500 for medium-term swing trading, making a move every ten to fifteen days to aim for a big gain; the remaining $500 is always a backup, never to be touched. What’s the benefit of this approach? Staying alive is the only way to have a chance to make money. The fate of full position trading is one word—death.

**Second Trick: Prioritize Thick Profits, Frequent Trading Equals Giving Away Money**
80% of the time in crypto markets is sideways consolidation. The more frequently you trade, the more you pay in liquidity fees and slippage. The smart approach is to wait until the trend is clear before entering, so you can easily profit. When profits exceed 20% of the principal, lock in 30% and walk away; let the rest continue to run. The hallmark of expert traders is fewer trades, but each one yields big gains.

**Third Trick: Machine-like Rule Execution, Never Be Driven by Emotions**
Pre-set strict rules, then let them operate automatically. Cut losses immediately if they exceed 2%, take profits and reduce positions at 4%, and absolutely forbid adding to losing positions or doubling down. Write down the rules and follow them strictly—don’t overthink or change them. Only then can your capital truly flow automatically, rather than being wrecked by your emotions and greed.

The size of the principal is not the issue; the problem lies in your mindset. Too many people ruin opportunities they could have earned because they’re eager for quick gains. For those who truly want to learn how to allocate positions, catch trends, and precisely control their holdings, these three principles are enough.
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SnapshotDayLaborervip
· 8h ago
Triangular position splitting sounds good, but in reality, it still depends on the person to execute. That 2% stop-loss line is a bit tight for me, and being frequently caught in a trap is a bit uncomfortable.
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LiquidatedTwicevip
· 10h ago
There's nothing wrong with that, but the execution is extremely difficult. I've tried triangular allocation, but I always get beaten by emotions. When I see the price rise, I want to go all in, but in the end, I still got wrecked.
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TokenVelocityTraumavip
· 14h ago
That's right, going all-in is really a death trap. I've seen too many people lose everything because of greed in one shot.
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JustAnotherWalletvip
· 14h ago
I truly feel the impact of position sizing. Going all-in can really wipe someone out in one shot. But to be honest, there's a universe between knowing and doing, and most people still get destroyed by their emotions.
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GasFeeCriervip
· 14h ago
That's right, going all-in is just asking for death. That's how I lost money before. The key is to protect the principal, and leave the rest to time. This allocation strategy is indeed practical, but the main concern is losing composure during execution. It sounds simple, but controlling emotions during real operation is the difficult part. Frequent trading really eats up fees, so I'm now just patiently waiting for the trend to appear. Automated execution is excellent; you just need to set rules and not change them randomly.
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CrashHotlinevip
· 14h ago
You're not wrong. Going all-in is suicide. I've seen too many old-timers go all-in and then disappear, never making it to the day they profit.
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SurvivorshipBiasvip
· 14h ago
It sounds good, but very few people can truly stick to this discipline. I've seen too many who understand these principles but can't put them into practice...
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