Seeing a senior trader in the circle make recent decisions, I really feel a bit sorry for him. His principal isn't much, just over 4,000 USD, but if he follows the copy trading route, his account size could be leveraged to around 1 million USD. Based on his stability, extracting 100 USD profit from the market daily is not at all difficult. In this way, a copy trader could earn 25,000 USD a day, and his 10% profit share would be 2,500 USD, which is nearly 20,000 in fiat currency. Just one step away from success, but due to emotional fluctuations, he ruined this guaranteed-win situation.
Thinking calmly, what this reveals is not just an isolated case. Too many of us, including this trader, are actually trapped in a thinking trap: being overly obsessed with the "technique of daily profit from market fluctuations." It sounds impressive, but the ceiling is really right there. This approach relies on state and luck; if one day doesn't go well, all previous efforts could be wiped out, and the next time, problems may arise due to emotions or network issues. Putting all your assets on the edge of "winning every day" is not only exhausting but also incredibly fragile.
Is there a smarter way to live? One that allows assets to generate stable cash flow automatically without constantly monitoring the market or worrying about perfect entry points? Absolutely. That's also why more and more people are starting to reevaluate their trading strategies.
View Original
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.
15 Likes
Reward
15
7
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
BoredWatcher
· 14h ago
It's the same story again, claiming stable monthly income every day, but when it really matters, it's all gone in an emotional breakdown.
View OriginalReply0
IronHeadMiner
· 14h ago
It's the same old story again. Blame the market if you haven't managed your emotions well. LOL
View OriginalReply0
Hash_Bandit
· 14h ago
yo, classic case of mining the same block over and over expecting different rewards... dude had the hashrate lined up perfectly but couldn't handle the difficulty spike. emotional volatility kills more rigs than hardware failure ever will, ngl.
Reply0
ContractTester
· 14h ago
Honestly, emotions are really the biggest killer in trading. One wrong thought and it's all gone.
View OriginalReply0
SelfRugger
· 14h ago
It's the same story again, following the trend and having your dreams shattered.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropFatigue
· 14h ago
Wow, this guy was so close to making it, emotions are just killers.
Seeing a senior trader in the circle make recent decisions, I really feel a bit sorry for him. His principal isn't much, just over 4,000 USD, but if he follows the copy trading route, his account size could be leveraged to around 1 million USD. Based on his stability, extracting 100 USD profit from the market daily is not at all difficult. In this way, a copy trader could earn 25,000 USD a day, and his 10% profit share would be 2,500 USD, which is nearly 20,000 in fiat currency. Just one step away from success, but due to emotional fluctuations, he ruined this guaranteed-win situation.
Thinking calmly, what this reveals is not just an isolated case. Too many of us, including this trader, are actually trapped in a thinking trap: being overly obsessed with the "technique of daily profit from market fluctuations." It sounds impressive, but the ceiling is really right there. This approach relies on state and luck; if one day doesn't go well, all previous efforts could be wiped out, and the next time, problems may arise due to emotions or network issues. Putting all your assets on the edge of "winning every day" is not only exhausting but also incredibly fragile.
Is there a smarter way to live? One that allows assets to generate stable cash flow automatically without constantly monitoring the market or worrying about perfect entry points? Absolutely. That's also why more and more people are starting to reevaluate their trading strategies.