A trader once shared a simple-looking method that helped him turn around from debt, and now his assets have reached eight figures. This trading approach was refined over eight years, with its core logic summarized in four steps.
First is the coin selection phase. Focus only on the daily chart, specifically on coins with MACD golden crosses, especially those with a crossover above the zero line. These signals have the highest success rate. Many mainstream coins meet this criterion, but the key is to be patient and wait for such opportunities to appear.
Second is the holding rule. Set a safety line— the daily moving average. Hold the position as long as the price stays above it; sell immediately if it breaks below, with no exceptions. It sounds simple, but maintaining strict discipline is actually difficult. Many people hesitate due to psychological expectations, which often marks the beginning of losses.
Third is the entry and exit rhythm. Buy only when three signals occur simultaneously: the price breaks above the daily moving average, trading volume increases, and the chart pattern confirms the trend. Then, increase your position decisively. For selling, take a step-by-step approach: sell one-third when the gain reaches 40%, another third at 80%, and if the price falls below the daily moving average, clear all remaining positions. This laddered exit strategy effectively locks in profits.
The final and most crucial rule: if the price unexpectedly breaks below the line the next day, regardless of the reason, close all positions immediately. Don’t expect a rebound; wait until it recovers above the daily moving average before re-entering. The profits you’ve earned won’t be lost.
The advantage of this method is that it doesn’t require watching the market all day, nor does it rely on rumors. Two words sum it up: "discipline." It doesn’t seek explosive profits but aims for stable compound growth. To replicate this success, you must work together in execution, making rules a genuine part of your trading habit.
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MevWhisperer
· 01-09 05:56
In simple terms, it's discipline trading with compound interest. It sounds easy, but 99% of people will fail to execute.
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ser_ngmi
· 01-09 05:56
To be honest, the words discipline sound simple, but very few people actually practice it.
Wait, it took 8 years to refine? Then I guess I need to prepare myself mentally...
Breaking the line and clearing the position is actually another way of saying stop-loss, but the key is to actually execute it, not just talk about it.
Selling one-third at 40%? That seems a bit conservative, but stable compound interest definitely sounds more reliable than getting rich overnight.
Here's the question: is the MACD golden cross signal also effective in a bear market? Or do we have to wait for the market to turn around?
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FastLeaver
· 01-09 05:55
In plain terms, discipline is king; most people fail due to their mindset.
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LightningWallet
· 01-09 05:53
Basically, it's discipline. After 8 years of honing the sword, it sounds easy, but actually sticking to it requires a tough mindset.
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BuyHighSellLow
· 01-09 05:51
Discipline is easy to talk about, but when your mindset is truly shattered, who can stay disciplined?
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AirdropAutomaton
· 01-09 05:51
Discipline is easy to talk about but really hard to practice. The things I’ve refined over 8 years are truly different.
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GasGuru
· 01-09 05:30
It sounds like just a daily MACD old trick. After 8 years of practice, it's still the same? Stop bragging. The real challenge is the psychological barrier; most people simply can't stick with it.
A trader once shared a simple-looking method that helped him turn around from debt, and now his assets have reached eight figures. This trading approach was refined over eight years, with its core logic summarized in four steps.
First is the coin selection phase. Focus only on the daily chart, specifically on coins with MACD golden crosses, especially those with a crossover above the zero line. These signals have the highest success rate. Many mainstream coins meet this criterion, but the key is to be patient and wait for such opportunities to appear.
Second is the holding rule. Set a safety line— the daily moving average. Hold the position as long as the price stays above it; sell immediately if it breaks below, with no exceptions. It sounds simple, but maintaining strict discipline is actually difficult. Many people hesitate due to psychological expectations, which often marks the beginning of losses.
Third is the entry and exit rhythm. Buy only when three signals occur simultaneously: the price breaks above the daily moving average, trading volume increases, and the chart pattern confirms the trend. Then, increase your position decisively. For selling, take a step-by-step approach: sell one-third when the gain reaches 40%, another third at 80%, and if the price falls below the daily moving average, clear all remaining positions. This laddered exit strategy effectively locks in profits.
The final and most crucial rule: if the price unexpectedly breaks below the line the next day, regardless of the reason, close all positions immediately. Don’t expect a rebound; wait until it recovers above the daily moving average before re-entering. The profits you’ve earned won’t be lost.
The advantage of this method is that it doesn’t require watching the market all day, nor does it rely on rumors. Two words sum it up: "discipline." It doesn’t seek explosive profits but aims for stable compound growth. To replicate this success, you must work together in execution, making rules a genuine part of your trading habit.