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Six years ago, I entered the market with 3,000 USD, and now my account has 50 million. I’ve experienced margin calls, taken losses, watched my account go from full to empty, and then from empty back to full. Today, I’ll openly share the insights I’ve gained over these six years of investing real money.

Honestly, if you can truly follow just one of these points below, I guarantee it will save you 200,000. If you can follow three, you will no longer be a retail investor being casually harvested, but someone who truly understands this market.

**First Pitfall: A sudden surge doesn’t mean the end; a slow decline is the real killer**

The most terrifying thing in the market isn’t big rises and falls, but the gradual, grinding decline.

I saw once a coin that shot up 20% in five minutes straight, then traded sideways and declined over the next two hours. It looked like a whale was dumping, right? But the next day, it surged another 50%. I later realized that the slow correction after a quick rise isn’t a sign of a downtrend, but rather a shakeout—whales shaking out the timid investors.

What’s truly dangerous? It’s the flash crash immediately after a sharp rise—that’s a trap set by the big players. The problem is most people get shaken out during the shakeout, missing the subsequent main rally.

**Second Pitfall: A rebound after a sharp decline is even more dangerous than the decline itself**

After a short-term plunge, the market always offers a seemingly good rebound opportunity. People think, “It’s fallen so much, it must bounce back,” and rush in, only to get caught.

Rebounds in a downtrend are the most lethal. Big players use this psychology to dump their last chips. Remember, never catch falling knives—let them hit the ground first. When it stabilizes, then consider buying.

**Third Pitfall: Volume hides the truth, but few can read it**

High volume at a top doesn’t mean the market has peaked. Sometimes, high volume at a high price is the final push by the whales. You need to look at the nature of the volume—at what price is the volume happening? Is it pushing up or smashing down?

What you should really be wary of is decreasing volume at a high level. When volume keeps shrinking but the price keeps making new highs, that’s dangerous. What does it indicate? It shows that the big players have already finished unloading, and the remaining are just bagholders.
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MagicBeanvip
· 4h ago
30,000 U to 50 million? How many times does this guy have to get liquidated before he figures it out, haha
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token_therapistvip
· 5h ago
3000u to 50 million? That number is a bit scary; I need to see the bill with my own eyes to believe it.
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PerpetualLongervip
· 5h ago
Here comes Versailles again, from 3,000U to 50 million? I don’t believe you, show your withdrawal records first before bragging, or you’re just another mouthful of nonsense. --- That’s quite right, but the problem is that knowing and doing are two completely different things. I’m just the kind of fool who gets shaken out during a wash. --- Reducing volume at a high level is indeed dangerous, but I’m currently fully invested at the high point, and breaking even is still a distant goal. This article is useless to me. --- "Catching the falling knife," sounds easy, but in actual operation, who doesn’t want to buy the dip? It’s just that the mindset is hard to control. --- Damn, starting to talk about the psychology of the market makers again. I feel like I understand everything, but then I look at the K-line and still can’t make sense of it. --- This is a classic survivor bias. The few who make money are very lucky, and 90% of people following this theory still end up losing money. --- The last sentence hit me hard; it’s true, everyone is a bagholder, including myself. --- Really? Six years to multiply by 10,000 times? Let me do the math on compound interest... I can’t figure it out, and I don’t believe it anyway.
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OldLeekNewSicklevip
· 5h ago
30,000 U to 50 million? Man, you really have the guts to tell that story. But honestly, I'm tired of the typical washout tricks. The key is whether you have chips and the right to speak in your hands. Without that, even if you understand the market well, it's all useless.
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DeFiVeteranvip
· 5h ago
3000U to 50 million, this guy is not wrong. I have deep experience with the shakeout phase; I've been left behind too many times.
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GasFeeCriervip
· 5h ago
From 3,000U to 50 million, this story sounds quite familiar... I believe in the washout phase, but the rebound and catching the falling knife really depends on luck.
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NFTArchaeologistvip
· 5h ago
3000U to 50 million, is this some kind of story or did you really open a blind box?
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