With an 8-year trading career and a cumulative profit of 36 million, it may look glamorous, but it’s actually based on the simplest rules.
Many people are curious about how sophisticated my trading system is, but it’s actually quite the opposite—so simple that it’s almost boring. But it’s this boring discipline that pulled me back from the edge of a margin call.
Have you ever had a moment like this: when the market moves, your mind heats up, you make frantic trades, and in the end, your account still shows the same number? I’ve stepped into this trap many times when I was young, so now I dare to share these rules.
**A few key disciplines:**
Where the funds are, the opportunities are. Watch the top gainers and track the movements of the leading capital. Don’t touch coins that haven’t been recognized by funds, no matter how tempting they look.
On the technical side, the MACD signal on the monthly chart is the most trustworthy. Only consider entering when a bullish crossover occurs; otherwise, wait. Rebounds are best left to the experts—retail traders shouldn’t participate.
The 60-day moving average is a critical threshold. As long as it holds support and accompanied by significant volume increase, that’s the best time to add positions. If conditions aren’t met, stay in cash.
If the price breaks below support, you must exit immediately—no hesitation. Most people who go from profit to loss are stuck on one thing: “I can’t bear to sell.” I never fight against the market.
Gradually taking profits is crucial. If you make 30%, take half off; if it reaches 50%, take off another half. Greed to eat the whole fish often results in getting pricked by a fishbone.
And the last lifeline: once the price falls below the 60-day moving average, exit immediately. Don’t try to guess the bottom, don’t stubbornly hold the position—this is my bottom line for survival.
The truth in crypto is that the more complex the strategy, the harder it is to execute. The real way to make money is never about precise predictions, but about those ingrained trading disciplines. Simple, repetitive, and consistently applied—that’s enough.
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4am_degen
· 7h ago
Honestly, discipline sounds simple, but actually enforcing it can really drive you crazy...
Just looking at the top gainers and funds is useless; the key is whether you can really hold your finger back in the face of temptation.
I've used the moving average support theory before, and it’s indeed stable. I'm just worried that sometimes the market doesn’t give you a chance to react.
Once it breaks below, run—that's something I deeply understand. I used to be reluctant, and as a result, I went from making money to losing money, a bloody lesson.
The art of gradually taking profits lies in knowing when enough is enough. Greed is truly a poison in trading.
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This methodology may sound boring, but it’s truly the simplest way to survive, isn’t it?
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8 years to 36 million sounds like not that much? Or maybe I have a flawed aesthetic.
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The key is that most people simply can’t stick to such boring rules; after a month or two, they start looking for reasons to break them.
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Are all the people who really make money like this, or is this brother truly a minority?
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BridgeJumper
· 7h ago
That's right, discipline is the hardest thing to enforce, a hundred times more difficult than finding a good opportunity.
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36 million sounds great, but I'm more curious about how many times he's blown his position in these 8 years to develop such ruthlessness.
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I've been using the 60-day moving average strategy for a long time; it's really that simple, straightforward, and effective.
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The word "reluctant" hits home. Many people fall for these two words, myself included.
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Dividing profits in batches is a must; greed for full gains will only lead to counterattacks.
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I'm a bit curious—entering only when the monthly MACD crosses gold—how much patience does that require? Most people simply can't wait.
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The phrase "don't oppose the market" must be engraved in your mind; too many people die waiting on "just a little longer."
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It feels like removing all complex ideas and only keeping the most aggressive rules actually makes money.
With an 8-year trading career and a cumulative profit of 36 million, it may look glamorous, but it’s actually based on the simplest rules.
Many people are curious about how sophisticated my trading system is, but it’s actually quite the opposite—so simple that it’s almost boring. But it’s this boring discipline that pulled me back from the edge of a margin call.
Have you ever had a moment like this: when the market moves, your mind heats up, you make frantic trades, and in the end, your account still shows the same number? I’ve stepped into this trap many times when I was young, so now I dare to share these rules.
**A few key disciplines:**
Where the funds are, the opportunities are. Watch the top gainers and track the movements of the leading capital. Don’t touch coins that haven’t been recognized by funds, no matter how tempting they look.
On the technical side, the MACD signal on the monthly chart is the most trustworthy. Only consider entering when a bullish crossover occurs; otherwise, wait. Rebounds are best left to the experts—retail traders shouldn’t participate.
The 60-day moving average is a critical threshold. As long as it holds support and accompanied by significant volume increase, that’s the best time to add positions. If conditions aren’t met, stay in cash.
If the price breaks below support, you must exit immediately—no hesitation. Most people who go from profit to loss are stuck on one thing: “I can’t bear to sell.” I never fight against the market.
Gradually taking profits is crucial. If you make 30%, take half off; if it reaches 50%, take off another half. Greed to eat the whole fish often results in getting pricked by a fishbone.
And the last lifeline: once the price falls below the 60-day moving average, exit immediately. Don’t try to guess the bottom, don’t stubbornly hold the position—this is my bottom line for survival.
The truth in crypto is that the more complex the strategy, the harder it is to execute. The real way to make money is never about precise predictions, but about those ingrained trading disciplines. Simple, repetitive, and consistently applied—that’s enough.