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The strategy of contract rolling has seen too many people grow their positions to 1 million, only to be wiped out in the last trade. This thing is a thousand times more exciting than simply holding coins—making overnight riches when you win, and being completely out when you lose.
There’s a guy who started with only 1,000 bucks in active funds, and through rolling positions for 3 months, he managed to grow it to 100,000. Similar stories are endless; at the core, it all boils down to these three tricks: 100x leverage + profit reinvestment + stubbornly sticking to a single direction.
His approach is like this: first, try with $300, opening only $10 contracts at 100x leverage each time. Earn 1%, then double the position; take out half of the profit, and roll the other half forward. In theory, 11 consecutive wins could turn $10 into $10,000.
But in reality, 90% of people crash at these points: they’re reluctant to take profits, wanting to make more; they can’t accept losses, and end up increasing their positions as they lose; when the market changes, they switch strategies, only to get slapped in the face.
So he set a strict rule: cut losses immediately when wrong, stop after 20 consecutive wrong trades; once earning $5,000, withdraw it—never get greedy. Last year, during a big market move, he rolled $500 into $500,000 in three days—but he waited four months before making a move. Rolling positions isn’t something you do every day; it’s only when opportunities arise that you go all in.
Now the question is, can you still roll? First, ask yourself these questions: Is the market volatile enough? Is the trend clear and one-sided? Can you just eat the fish meat, not greedily chase the tail? If all answers are “yes,” then go for it. If you hesitate, it means the market hasn’t taught you enough yet.
Honestly, rolling is a gamble with your life. Without the right mindset and discipline, it’s better to hold coins patiently and wait for the bull market.