#数字货币市场洞察 Friends trading contracts, take note: not setting a stop loss = running naked


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When it comes to contracts, survival is more important than anything else.

This market is never short of stories about people getting trapped. Many come in full of confidence, thinking opening 2x leverage during a sideways market isn’t a big deal—they might even make it back if they’re lucky. But here’s the issue: what if Bitcoin suddenly surges from 110,000 to 126,000 in one go? That’s when you realize you simply can’t hold out by sheer willpower. In the end, you’re not thinking about how much you can make, but “how many more days can I last?”

Those who truly understand the game ask themselves before opening a position: “What’s the maximum loss I’m willing to accept on this trade?”

1% of your capital? Or 2%? Set this number in stone first, then work backward to determine where your stop loss should be. That’s what real trade preparation is. Don’t think about profits first—think through the worst-case scenario. That’s the rule for survival in trading.

A stop loss is never admitting defeat. Picked the wrong direction? Cut the loss and move on. Wrong entry point? Switch positions and try again. That’s far more rational than stubbornly holding on to a losing order. Taking a loss stings, but holding until liquidation is deadly.

The worst are those who turn their losing orders into “belief.” Half a month passes, half a year passes, and those stuck positions are still sitting in their account. They call it persistence, but in reality, they’re trapped by a bad decision. It’s not just your money that’s tied up—it’s your attention too. When new opportunities come, you can only watch, unable to act.

This is the most costly thing in trading: sacrificing all future possibilities to keep paying for past mistakes.
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TokenRationEatervip
· 12-06 12:07
Holding onto a losing position can really drive people crazy. I’ve seen people stubbornly hold on until liquidation—it’s really unnecessary. Cutting losses with a stop-loss is nowhere near as painful as stubbornly holding on. Taking a loss actually feels like a relief. This is what I hate the most—when you know you’re on the wrong side but still insist on waiting for a turnaround, only to end up with your account wiped out. Setting a stop-loss actually lets you sleep well at night. If you don’t set one, you’ll end up glued to the screen every day, worrying yourself sick. At the end of the day, it’s about managing risk, not admitting defeat. Too many people just don’t get this.
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RunWhenCutvip
· 12-05 21:52
Honestly, not setting stop-losses is just gambling with your life. I’ve seen too many people hold onto losing positions until they get liquidated and end up with nothing. --- Talking about stop-losses is easy, but when it really matters, there are very few people who can actually cut their losses. --- The craziest are those who hold onto a losing position for half a year and still say they’re waiting for a rebound. I’m speechless. --- 2x leverage doesn’t seem like much, but when things go one-sided, it’s gone in an instant. This stuff is really dangerous. --- Calculating your stop-loss precisely is what makes a professional. Everything else is just gambling. --- It’s not just your money that gets trapped, your whole mindset does too. When new opportunities come, you can’t move at all. It’s a terrible feeling. --- That’s how contracts work—staying alive is more important than anything else. No profit is better than just breaking even. --- I’ve made mistakes too, but now I stick to one principle—if it’s wrong, just cut it quickly. That’s always better than holding until liquidation. --- I really don’t understand those people who call their losing positions “faith.” Isn’t that just lying to yourself?
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SeasonedInvestorvip
· 12-05 21:50
Honestly, what you said this time really hit home. I have a buddy who got liquidated because he didn't set a stop-loss, and now he's still sighing all the time, always hoping to recover his losses, but it's just not possible.
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DeFiGraylingvip
· 12-03 16:37
Damn, that really hits home. I'm the idiot who stubbornly held onto a bad position until it became a conviction...
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DoomCanistervip
· 12-03 16:24
Ultimately, surviving and making it out is the most important thing. I’ve seen too many people treat stop-losses as a disgrace.
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GateUser-7b078580vip
· 12-03 16:22
Data shows that although this theory sounds right, when it comes to actual execution... well, human nature always wins.
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NftBankruptcyClubvip
· 12-03 16:12
I've seen plenty of people hold onto losing positions until they're liquidated. Setting stop-losses isn't about admitting defeat—it's a survival skill you have to master.
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