A trader has been maintaining a live trading account on a major exchange for nearly 600 days, with an account margin of approximately $1.59 million. His track record is quite impressive—cumulative returns fluctuate between 174% and 222%, with a single-trade win rate exceeding 74%, indicating his trading judgment is not bad.
What’s most attractive is that his 30-day profit and loss curve shows a steady upward trend. Although there are fluctuations, he always recovers after each pullback, which precisely demonstrates that his position management and risk control are not just theoretical. Being active for such a long time while maintaining these results suggests his strategy is sustainable.
However, it’s also important to recognize the risks. The maximum drawdown reaches about 56%, which is a test for ordinary traders. It means you need to be psychologically prepared for periods when your account could shrink significantly. Plus, there are obvious volatility and retracement phases during trading, so in the short term, you might face considerable unrealized losses.
Therefore, the performance of this trader is indeed worth referencing, especially for traders with a higher risk tolerance who plan to participate in the market long-term. But the prerequisite is a full understanding of market volatility—you shouldn’t follow blindly. Investment decisions still need to be cautious.
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GasFeeTherapist
· 19h ago
600 days with 174% returns sound great, but do you dare to copy a 56% drawdown? I definitely don't dare.
Honestly, if your mindset isn't strong enough, you'd better not try. You'll realize it when you start cutting into your profits so much that you begin to doubt life.
A 74% win rate looks good, but one major drawdown can wipe out all your previous gains... This is the curse of trading.
Steady? I think more often it's just good luck to catch the right market conditions. Otherwise, who can go 600 days without a blow-up?
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DAOdreamer
· 19h ago
600 days of persistence is indeed tough, but a 56% drawdown... I have to ask myself if I can withstand it, worried that a single correction might blow my mindset.
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OldLeekConfession
· 19h ago
600 days, 174% returns sound pretty good, but a 56% drawdown... I still held on. This mental toughness is truly unmatched.
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DeFiGrayling
· 19h ago
600 days 174% return sounds appealing, but that 56% drawdown really can make people depressed. I must be someone with a particularly strong heart to dare to copy it.
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SybilAttackVictim
· 19h ago
Making this amount in 600 days and staying steady shows real skill; just make sure you’ve thought through whether you can accept the 56% drawdown.
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LiquidityWizard
· 19h ago
Holding for 600 days without loss is already impressive, but I can't handle that 56% drawdown.
This guy is steady, but I just don't have the mental resilience to match.
174% returns sound great, but if I had to go through a 50% cut, I would vomit blood.
A trader has been maintaining a live trading account on a major exchange for nearly 600 days, with an account margin of approximately $1.59 million. His track record is quite impressive—cumulative returns fluctuate between 174% and 222%, with a single-trade win rate exceeding 74%, indicating his trading judgment is not bad.
What’s most attractive is that his 30-day profit and loss curve shows a steady upward trend. Although there are fluctuations, he always recovers after each pullback, which precisely demonstrates that his position management and risk control are not just theoretical. Being active for such a long time while maintaining these results suggests his strategy is sustainable.
However, it’s also important to recognize the risks. The maximum drawdown reaches about 56%, which is a test for ordinary traders. It means you need to be psychologically prepared for periods when your account could shrink significantly. Plus, there are obvious volatility and retracement phases during trading, so in the short term, you might face considerable unrealized losses.
Therefore, the performance of this trader is indeed worth referencing, especially for traders with a higher risk tolerance who plan to participate in the market long-term. But the prerequisite is a full understanding of market volatility—you shouldn’t follow blindly. Investment decisions still need to be cautious.