I've seen too many people crash in contracts, and finally I realize a cruel truth: traders who don't cut losses are just automatic ATM machines for the market makers.
Why do most contract traders end up losing everything? Honestly, market fluctuations are just surface reasons. The real killer is always that one phrase—"Wait a little longer."
I've seen accounts grow from 100,000 to 1 million, only to be wiped out in one stubborn hold. I've experienced the same despair myself: shorting against the trend during a BTC rally, planning to exit at a pullback, but getting pushed through all the way; chasing a breakout in SOL, thinking of taking profits and leaving, only to go to zero after a single spike.
The reason for every liquidation is the same—ignoring the importance of stop-loss.
After years of trading, I’ve only learned two painful lessons:
**First: Holding on once might keep you alive, but holding on forever will definitely kill you.**
**Second: The real way to protect your life isn’t how much you win, but how much you can afford to lose.**
My current trading strategy is based on three principles.
When opening a position, always set a stop-loss. The larger the leverage, the stricter the stop-loss. Use 20x leverage with a 5% stop-loss. If you can afford to lose it, accept it—don’t expect a single turnaround to reverse the situation.
Floating profits are not for fantasizing—they are for protection. Take profits and raise your stop-loss to leave a safety net, so that a retracement doesn’t wipe out all your gains.
Most importantly, control your emotions. After losing a few trades in a row, close the software and take a break. When emotions run high, your judgment becomes completely chaotic.
Using this approach in contracts always follows a low-risk, high-reward rhythm: profit when the market moves with you, and withdraw immediately when it moves against you.
In the end, stop-loss is not about admitting defeat—it's about retreating. The traders who survive are not those who never lose, but those who dare to lose, dare to retreat, and can wait for the next opportunity. The market is always there; once your capital is gone, the opportunity is truly gone.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
5 Likes
Reward
5
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
Whale_Whisperer
· 10h ago
Stop loss is really the hardest lesson. I've seen too many people die on "just wait a little longer," and I am one of them...
Only after paying the price in blood did I realize that staying alive is way more important than winning money.
That's right, most people are actually working for the market makers, the ATM belongs to them.
I've made quite a bit but never held onto it, now I understand that "how much you can lose" is a hundred times more important than "how much you can earn."
This greedy habit is really deadly. I also execute a 5% stop loss with 20x leverage, although it looks like I'm losing quickly, it's definitely better than a margin call...
Moving the stop loss to lock in unrealized gains is really ruthless, but it has saved me several times. Otherwise, my mindset would have collapsed during drawdowns.
The key is emotional control. After losing three trades in a row, you should shut up. Not all market conditions are suitable for you to trade.
Stop loss is about retreating. I thought about this for a long time before truly understanding it. Staying alive is the only way to have the next opportunity.
View OriginalReply0
SocialAnxietyStaker
· 12h ago
It's really true. I myself crawled out of that endless loop of "wait a little longer." Every time I try to turn things around, I end up sinking deeper... Now there are only two words—stop loss. Surviving is the key.
View OriginalReply0
BridgeTrustFund
· 12h ago
Really, I've seen people hold on stubbornly when 100,000 turns into 1,000,000, but eventually it all disappeared. Setting stop-loss orders sounds easy to say, but when it comes to actually doing it, everyone wants to wait a bit longer, and then there's nothing left.
View OriginalReply0
RebaseVictim
· 12h ago
You're so right. From 100,000 to 1 million and then to zero, I have more than one buddy like that around me.
I've never been soft, really.
View OriginalReply0
LiquidatorFlash
· 12h ago
20x leverage with 5% stop loss... I double-checked this number three times, and it really is a viable option.
View OriginalReply0
NftRegretMachine
· 12h ago
It's the same old story. It's true what you say, but the key is whether it can really be done... Most people forget after reading and just keep holding on stubbornly.
People who have truly survived a turnaround can't stop. Mental resilience is much harder than technical skills.
I just want to ask, who can really calmly raise the stop-loss when in floating profit? It sounds easy to say.
I've seen too many people crash in contracts, and finally I realize a cruel truth: traders who don't cut losses are just automatic ATM machines for the market makers.
Why do most contract traders end up losing everything? Honestly, market fluctuations are just surface reasons. The real killer is always that one phrase—"Wait a little longer."
I've seen accounts grow from 100,000 to 1 million, only to be wiped out in one stubborn hold. I've experienced the same despair myself: shorting against the trend during a BTC rally, planning to exit at a pullback, but getting pushed through all the way; chasing a breakout in SOL, thinking of taking profits and leaving, only to go to zero after a single spike.
The reason for every liquidation is the same—ignoring the importance of stop-loss.
After years of trading, I’ve only learned two painful lessons:
**First: Holding on once might keep you alive, but holding on forever will definitely kill you.**
**Second: The real way to protect your life isn’t how much you win, but how much you can afford to lose.**
My current trading strategy is based on three principles.
When opening a position, always set a stop-loss. The larger the leverage, the stricter the stop-loss. Use 20x leverage with a 5% stop-loss. If you can afford to lose it, accept it—don’t expect a single turnaround to reverse the situation.
Floating profits are not for fantasizing—they are for protection. Take profits and raise your stop-loss to leave a safety net, so that a retracement doesn’t wipe out all your gains.
Most importantly, control your emotions. After losing a few trades in a row, close the software and take a break. When emotions run high, your judgment becomes completely chaotic.
Using this approach in contracts always follows a low-risk, high-reward rhythm: profit when the market moves with you, and withdraw immediately when it moves against you.
In the end, stop-loss is not about admitting defeat—it's about retreating. The traders who survive are not those who never lose, but those who dare to lose, dare to retreat, and can wait for the next opportunity. The market is always there; once your capital is gone, the opportunity is truly gone.