Ten years of navigating the crypto world, witnessing too many people rush in only to retreat in disappointment. Instead of discussing vague concepts, it's better to lay out the executable details that can change your fate.
**Rule 1: Divide**
Start with 20,000 in capital, split into ten parts immediately. Use 2,000 of them to enter the market first. The goal is not to make money but to get used to losing this amount without losing composure. Complete three full "buy - take profit" cycles in a row before moving on to the next part. This is not psychological training; it's screening whether you have the trading gene.
**Rule 2: Practice**
Simulated trading is like basic training. You must complete 20 consecutive trades, each with pre-set stop-loss or take-profit points, allowing the system to trigger automatically. If you can't do this, strictly prohibit real money trading. Frankly, this tests your execution ability.
**Rule 3: Wait**
The 12 to 18 hours after a major positive event is the decisive window. If during this period the price surges then falls back and breaks below the 7-period moving average on the 15-minute chart, it signals the end of the bullish momentum—liquidate and walk away, no dragging.
**Rule 4: Cut**
Before every long holiday, on the second last trading day, forcibly reduce your position to below half. This includes National Day, Spring Festival, and others. It's a statistical method to counteract the "holiday curse" with rules.
**Rule 5: Roll**
Mid-term funds are permanently divided into three parts: 50% in core holdings, lying dormant; 30% in flexible trading positions; 20% in cash, ready at any time. Every 20% increase in price sells 10% from the flexible position; every 15% drop uses cash to buy back 10%. Numeric rules ensure you buy low and sell high.
**Rule 6: Do**
For short-term trading, only focus on "dual regulation coins"—those with 24-hour trading volume in the top 50 and a bid-ask spread below 0.5%. Large volume and tight spreads indicate big funds are involved, providing liquidity for your entry and exit.
**Rule 7: Snatch**
For rebounds, focus on "downward acceleration." When the 4-hour candlestick shows three consecutive bearish candles, each longer than the previous, the bears are losing strength, and a technical rebound is imminent. Other situations are traps.
**Rule 8: Cut**
Within 60 seconds of buying, place a stop-loss order. The stop-loss should be set at the price that invalidates your original reason for buying. For example, if you bought on a breakout, the previous high support is your stop-loss line. Hit the line and sell—no second thoughts.
**Rule 9: Watch**
For short-term monitoring, focus on the 15-minute candlestick chart combined with the KDJ indicator's J value. When J crosses upward through 5, consider testing a buy; when J crosses downward through 95, consider testing a sell. Block out all other information.
**Rule 10: Abstain**
Avoid groups, master signals, and fragmented analysis. Your data bank only needs two things: a classic technical analysis book and detailed records of every failed trade you make. Learning from your mistakes is more solid than listening to others.
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CharityAllianceConsensusMember
· 01-22 15:34
New Year Wealth Explosion 🤑
View OriginalReply0
SatsStacking
· 01-22 15:25
It's a tough talk, but this set of rules really can't escape that vicious cycle.
View OriginalReply0
WalletsWatcher
· 01-22 15:25
Basically, execution determines life or death. There's nothing new about it, but indeed some people just can't take it in.
View OriginalReply0
HalfBuddhaMoney
· 01-22 15:12
Ten years of hard work and experience, discussing things in such detail, is much more reliable than those big V influencers who boast every day. I really respect those who just directly throw out numbers.
Ten years of navigating the crypto world, witnessing too many people rush in only to retreat in disappointment. Instead of discussing vague concepts, it's better to lay out the executable details that can change your fate.
**Rule 1: Divide**
Start with 20,000 in capital, split into ten parts immediately. Use 2,000 of them to enter the market first. The goal is not to make money but to get used to losing this amount without losing composure. Complete three full "buy - take profit" cycles in a row before moving on to the next part. This is not psychological training; it's screening whether you have the trading gene.
**Rule 2: Practice**
Simulated trading is like basic training. You must complete 20 consecutive trades, each with pre-set stop-loss or take-profit points, allowing the system to trigger automatically. If you can't do this, strictly prohibit real money trading. Frankly, this tests your execution ability.
**Rule 3: Wait**
The 12 to 18 hours after a major positive event is the decisive window. If during this period the price surges then falls back and breaks below the 7-period moving average on the 15-minute chart, it signals the end of the bullish momentum—liquidate and walk away, no dragging.
**Rule 4: Cut**
Before every long holiday, on the second last trading day, forcibly reduce your position to below half. This includes National Day, Spring Festival, and others. It's a statistical method to counteract the "holiday curse" with rules.
**Rule 5: Roll**
Mid-term funds are permanently divided into three parts: 50% in core holdings, lying dormant; 30% in flexible trading positions; 20% in cash, ready at any time. Every 20% increase in price sells 10% from the flexible position; every 15% drop uses cash to buy back 10%. Numeric rules ensure you buy low and sell high.
**Rule 6: Do**
For short-term trading, only focus on "dual regulation coins"—those with 24-hour trading volume in the top 50 and a bid-ask spread below 0.5%. Large volume and tight spreads indicate big funds are involved, providing liquidity for your entry and exit.
**Rule 7: Snatch**
For rebounds, focus on "downward acceleration." When the 4-hour candlestick shows three consecutive bearish candles, each longer than the previous, the bears are losing strength, and a technical rebound is imminent. Other situations are traps.
**Rule 8: Cut**
Within 60 seconds of buying, place a stop-loss order. The stop-loss should be set at the price that invalidates your original reason for buying. For example, if you bought on a breakout, the previous high support is your stop-loss line. Hit the line and sell—no second thoughts.
**Rule 9: Watch**
For short-term monitoring, focus on the 15-minute candlestick chart combined with the KDJ indicator's J value. When J crosses upward through 5, consider testing a buy; when J crosses downward through 95, consider testing a sell. Block out all other information.
**Rule 10: Abstain**
Avoid groups, master signals, and fragmented analysis. Your data bank only needs two things: a classic technical analysis book and detailed records of every failed trade you make. Learning from your mistakes is more solid than listening to others.