#数字货币市场洞察 $RDNT For positions under 100,000, use the simplest approach to steadily lock in profits



$XNY To be honest, there are tons of people losing money in the crypto space. The problem often isn’t technical skill; at its core, it’s that urge to “perfectly buy the bottom and sell the top.”

The market itself didn’t kick you out—it was your own “cleverness” that did.

$PIPPIN After years of ups and downs, I’ve found the most reliable strategies for surviving with small funds boil down to just four moves—they’re so simple it’s almost silly. Just follow them to the letter, and your odds of blowing up will drop significantly.

**First Move: Coin Selection Must Be Solid**

Don’t mess with things that are erratic and unpredictable.

Pull up the daily chart and focus on one thing: the MACD golden cross.

Especially the crosses that appear above the zero axis—those are the real signals of a trend starting.

Those weird, jumpy candlestick patterns? Ignore them. With just this one filter, your success rate will already surpass most people.

**Second Move: Only Follow the Daily Moving Average for Buy/Sell Timing**

This method sounds rough but is extremely effective:

If the price is still above the moving average, keep holding or even add more.

As soon as it falls below the moving average, get out immediately—don’t hesitate.

Why? Because the golden rule of trend trading is simple—never fight the overall trend.

**Third Move: Learn to Add and Reduce Positions in Steps**

When price breaks above the moving average and volume is confirming the move, that’s when you can increase your position.

Cutting back is even simpler—do it without emotion:

When the price rises 40%, sell one-third.

When it rises 80%, sell another one-third.

If it drops below the moving average, sell everything left.

The beauty of this is: you’re taking profits on the way up, and you won’t get trapped on the way down.

**Fourth Move: The Daily Moving Average Is Your Lifeline**

When you see the price break below the moving average, don’t overthink reasons, fundamentals, or news—just don’t bother.

Exit immediately.

Don’t get upset after selling; just wait for it to climb back above the moving average before re-entering.

Trading isn’t about how fast you react—it’s about whether you can consistently stick to your rules.

**Final Words**

This strategy may look rigid, but it’s this very “rigidity” that turns many from blind gamblers into consistent winners.

If you always feel like you’re trading in a fog with no sense of direction, try lighting this “dull lamp.”

It won’t make you rich overnight, but it can lead you onto a steadier, more sustainable path to profits.
RDNT2.31%
XNY-2.14%
PIPPIN-7.94%
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BTCWaveRidervip
· 8h ago
That's right, that's the point—most people die because they keep thinking about perfectly catching the bottom. Even after the moving average breaks down, they still keep talking nonsense. Serves them right.
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EyeOfTheTokenStormvip
· 13h ago
Basically, it's discipline. The hard part is sticking to it. It's MACD again, and moving averages... I just want to ask everyone, why didn't this stuff work during the market rally at the end of 2023? Playing with 100,000 yuan in T? That seems a bit risky. It's better to focus on surviving first. The worst thing is those who think they've understood after just watching tutorials, but then a market wave comes and they're wiped out. When the moving averages break, just run. It sounds simple, but actually doing it can be deadly. Slipping up a lot can lead to losses.
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SerumSquirtervip
· 12-10 00:59
To be honest, I’ve been using this approach since the beginning of the year, and it’s much more comfortable than those people who keep researching breakout patterns every day. It might sound silly, but it really works—you just have to resist the urge to mess around. If the moving average breaks, get out; if it goes up, sell in batches. It sounds simple, but the hardest part is maintaining that sense of discipline. Those dreams of getting rich overnight should have ended long ago. It’s better to just follow the daily chart honestly.
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DegenDreamervip
· 12-08 15:21
Simply put, it's a mindset issue. So many people stumble because they're fixated on making perfect trades.
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PumpDoctrinevip
· 12-08 15:20
Sounds like you just lack discipline and only feel satisfied by chasing highs and selling lows, right?
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MevTearsvip
· 12-08 15:16
Simply put, it's stop-loss discipline. It sounds easy but is incredibly hard to do.
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SatoshiHeirvip
· 12-08 15:14
It should be pointed out that this methodology is essentially a classical regression of technical analysis. Let’s return to the origins of the white paper—Satoshi Nakamoto never mentioned MACD, but on-chain data does tell us that patterns are often this simple. Those who claim to accurately time the bottom fundamentally misunderstand the essence of moving averages: they are not for predicting the future, but for recording the consensus of the past. Undoubtedly, discipline in execution is more valuable than cleverness, and this has been repeatedly proven in every cycle.
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MainnetDelayedAgainvip
· 12-08 15:13
According to the database, how many days have passed since someone last successfully implemented this methodology? Feel free to add more data.
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BlockchainDecodervip
· 12-08 15:03
From a technical perspective, there is an interesting paradox in this moving average discipline system—the simpler the rule, the harder it is to follow. The root cause lies in cognitive biases inherent in human nature. According to behavioral finance research, the real losing point for retail investors is not actually their timing ability, but rather their excessive desire for "certainty." It is worth noting that the article mentions a dual verification mechanism of MACD golden cross plus daily moving average. This approach actually aligns with the core logic of trend-following strategies. But here's the problem: how tolerant is this mechanical execution under extreme volatility? I remain skeptical. Overall, the conclusion that "rigidity means survival" essentially emphasizes that discipline is more important than prediction. But what I want to ask is—how many people can truly ignore news and only look at moving averages? That is the real key.
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