An OpenClaw post popped up, so I figured I'd check on the Binance trading bots again.
Logged in and found about $300 I'd forgotten about. XRP, ETH, ALCH, and LUNA were still sitting there.
OpenClaw and other LLM API approaches looked like they'd cost a fair amount, so I shelved those and tried Binance Grid bot first.
Results After 3 Runs
- OPNUSDT: 1 run
- WLFIUSDT: 1 run
- ETHUSDT: 1 run
All three closed at roughly 3–4% profit per run. Nothing spectacular, but no losses either.
WLFIUSDT/ETHUSDT bot dashboard.
In the screenshot, the ETHUSDT side shows current price rose above the range's upper limit. That means the current price exceeded the top of the configured range, which causes matching to stop.
Numbers from the Screenshot
-
WLFIUSDT (Perp, Short 10x)
- Working
- Price Range:
0.10 - 0.13 - Number of Grids:
50 - Invested Margin:
50.00 USDT - Total Profit:
0.45 USDT (0.90%)
-
ETHUSDT (Perp, Long 10x)
- Working
- Price Range:
1,105.00 - 2,005.00 - Number of Grids:
33 - Invested Margin:
132.00 USDT - Total Profit:
4.49 USDT (3.40%)
Only 3 runs so far — too small a sample. I'll keep running it and next time include entry/exit prices and fees in the breakdown.
If you're not sure what a Grid bot is, start with this.
This is a personal experiment log, not financial advice. Cryptocurrency is extremely volatile — always establish your own criteria and risk management principles before getting involved.
References:
- https://academy.binance.com/articles/your-guide-to-binance-trading-bots
- https://academy.binance.com/articles/what-are-funding-rates-in-crypto-markets
- https://www.binance.com/en/fee/trading
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