Recently, I've noticed something: a lot of people want to try trading contracts, but very few actually dare to take action.
To put it plainly, without guidance, people are just fumbling around—panicking when the market fluctuates, opening positions at random, not setting stop-losses, and ultimately getting liquidated and leaving.
In reality, when it comes to contracts, the core principles are pretty simple: Understand the trend and don't go against it, use small positions to test rather than going all-in, set your stop-loss and don't rely on luck, and steady profits are more reliable than trying to get rich overnight.
If you truly grasp things like trend analysis, risk control settings, and position management, you'll do much better than blindly trading for half a year.
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GasFeeBarbecue
· 12-08 08:26
So true. The people around me are always talking about trading contracts, but the moment they open a position, they immediately give up. It's all about psychological resilience.
Stop-loss is really crucial—set it and you survive, don't set it and you'll get wiped out.
Right now, I'm just sticking to small positions. Maintaining a stable mindset is more valuable than anything.
I don't know why so many people insist on going all-in. Greed is just too hard to fix.
If you manage your risk, contracts really aren't that scary. It's just that most people can't stick to it.
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FadCatcher
· 12-06 04:39
That's right, stop-loss really is a watershed moment. Most people fall because of wishful thinking.
Those who went all-in are already out; you still need to play it safe.
These few points sound simple, but very few people can truly achieve them.
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AirdropHunterXiao
· 12-05 19:08
It's better to make money yourself than to just sell ideas. Everything you said is right, but nobody listens.
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DecentralizedElder
· 12-05 19:05
That's right, stop-loss is really a stumbling block for a lot of people.
It's actually just those three basic moves, but when it comes to execution, it's a real killer.
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just_vibin_onchain
· 12-05 18:57
That's right, but there are very few people who can truly and wholeheartedly stick to these principles. I've seen too many people talk about risk control while going all-in with their trades.
Let's drop this topic and look at it from another angle—what do you think is the hardest part, the psychological aspect or the technical analysis?
Honestly, setting stop-losses is really tough. If you set one, you're afraid of getting stopped out; if you don't, you're afraid of getting liquidated. No one can escape this vicious cycle.
There's a big gap between knowing all this and actually doing it—a gap measured by a losing account.
Even if you get the direction right, it doesn't matter if your position management is a mess.
That's how contracts are. It's easy to enter, but hard to get out alive. It seems simple, but when it's your turn to trade, everything falls apart.
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ZKProofEnthusiast
· 12-05 18:57
Absolutely right. I’ve seen too many people shouting about wanting to play with contracts, but as soon as there’s a drop, they immediately surrender.
Risk control really isn’t just empty talk—it’s the only way to survive longer.
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NeverPresent
· 12-05 18:56
Alright, what you said is absolutely right. Most people really fail because of their mindset.
Recently, I've noticed something: a lot of people want to try trading contracts, but very few actually dare to take action.
To put it plainly, without guidance, people are just fumbling around—panicking when the market fluctuates, opening positions at random, not setting stop-losses, and ultimately getting liquidated and leaving.
In reality, when it comes to contracts, the core principles are pretty simple:
Understand the trend and don't go against it, use small positions to test rather than going all-in, set your stop-loss and don't rely on luck, and steady profits are more reliable than trying to get rich overnight.
If you truly grasp things like trend analysis, risk control settings, and position management, you'll do much better than blindly trading for half a year.