Joe Campbell, the trader who asked for help with a $106,000 debt due to a short bet that went wrong, has stopped requesting money on his GoFundMe page.

Campbell has ended his campaign on the fund-raising website after getting $5,310 in donations.

“I’m taking the GoFundMe posting off, over $5,000 is unbelievable and will go a long way towards this debt,” the trader writes on the website. “It is far more than I ever thought I would get by doing this page.”

The GoFundMe page currently shows the campaign had a goal of $5,000 and exceeded it by $310.

Campbell had said he went to bed Wednesday evening with some $37,000 in his trading account at E-Trade, holding shares in KaloBios Pharmaceuticals US:KBIO short overnight. His bet that the stock would fall turned into a trader’s worst nightmare. The shares soared after Martin Shkreli, the Turing Pharma CEO who’s been accused of price gouging, took a majority stake. That left Campbell in debt to E-Trade — $106,445.56 in the hole. Shrkeli has now been named chairman and the company said it has secured at least $3 million.

Campbell’s plea for money drew lots of flak, with comments such as “this type of digital begging is ... pathetic.”

“While it is hard to read the bashing messages, its great to see all the awesome people out there willing to help out and sent encouraging messages,” Campbell writes in his new post (grammatical errors his).

“I am hopeful that everyone learns from my expensive lesson and that you all take care so that it does not happen to you ever!”

And everyone can probably agree that it’s good to hear this now infamously unsuccessful trader reveal a shift in approach: “Also for the record — I will not be shorting low float stocks ever again!”

Here’s the full new post by Campbell on his GoFundMe page that declares an end to his fund-raising effort:

Read more:Help! My short position got crushed, and now I owe E-Trade $106,445.56

And see:Why you should never short-sell stocks