Futures trading is something not everyone can master.
After grinding through the crypto industry for nine years, I've only just reached the threshold of stable profitability. All of this comes from experience accumulated through countless nights of sacrifice while others rested and played, built with real capital and retrospective analysis.
The core of trading is always: trend first, entry point second. Befriending the trend is far more reliable than stubbornly obsessing over entry points.
Take those who love short-term heavy positions—at their core, they're engaged in "scalp" arbitrage. But this work requires massive accumulated trading feel from countless transactions, comprehensive judgment across multiple indicators and patterns. Never attempt heavy position scalping lightly without these skills.
If newcomers want to practice short-term trading, start with light positions first. Trading follows one principle: practice makes perfect—trade enough times, and market sense becomes instinctive.
I still remember those three years around 2021. I relentlessly focused on Ethereum short-term trading, opening up to 100 trades per day. During high-frequency trading days, my mind got foggy, but this very extreme repetition honed my muscle memory and conditioned reflexes.
Which price point to go long, which to go short—no prolonged thinking required. The moment the market moves, orders execute automatically.
You see, small-level fluctuations are always microcosms of major trends. Only through sufficient trading volume can you develop instant responsiveness to market movements. Once your mind dulls, short-term trading becomes slow suicide.
Additionally, always stick to your circle of competence. If you excel at trend trading, deepen your expertise there; if you master scalping, perfect that skill. But regardless of your approach, trend always comes first—all entry point selections exist to serve the trend, regardless of timeframe.
Finally, I want to say: futures trading is a hard path, but not impossible. Brother, persist, and I wish you success soon! @btc_davie
Futures trading has never been an easy path.
Futures trading is something not everyone can master.
After grinding through the crypto industry for nine years, I've only just reached the threshold of stable profitability. All of this comes from experience accumulated through countless nights of sacrifice while others rested and played, built with real capital and retrospective analysis.
The core of trading is always: trend first, entry point second. Befriending the trend is far more reliable than stubbornly obsessing over entry points.
Take those who love short-term heavy positions—at their core, they're engaged in "scalp" arbitrage. But this work requires massive accumulated trading feel from countless transactions, comprehensive judgment across multiple indicators and patterns. Never attempt heavy position scalping lightly without these skills.
If newcomers want to practice short-term trading, start with light positions first. Trading follows one principle: practice makes perfect—trade enough times, and market sense becomes instinctive.
I still remember those three years around 2021. I relentlessly focused on Ethereum short-term trading, opening up to 100 trades per day. During high-frequency trading days, my mind got foggy, but this very extreme repetition honed my muscle memory and conditioned reflexes.
Which price point to go long, which to go short—no prolonged thinking required. The moment the market moves, orders execute automatically.
You see, small-level fluctuations are always microcosms of major trends. Only through sufficient trading volume can you develop instant responsiveness to market movements. Once your mind dulls, short-term trading becomes slow suicide.
Additionally, always stick to your circle of competence. If you excel at trend trading, deepen your expertise there; if you master scalping, perfect that skill. But regardless of your approach, trend always comes first—all entry point selections exist to serve the trend, regardless of timeframe.
Finally, I want to say: futures trading is a hard path, but not impossible. Brother, persist, and I wish you success soon! @btc_davie