Early on, I knew a friend who turned 100,000 into 42 million. He once said something quite insightful: The essence of a great trader boils down to two abilities— the determination to hold back and place orders during a sharp decline, and the rationality to resist the urge to add to positions during a surge.
Later, I also experienced many setbacks in the crypto world and summarized some survival rules, now sharing them:
**Trade only after 9 PM** My current rule is to avoid trading before 9 PM. By then, most news has settled, candlestick charts are clearer, and trend judgments are more accurate. Last year, there was a day when BTC dropped 3% during the day, and everyone in the group was shouting about a bear market. I didn’t move. After 9 PM, I saw trading volume halved and the 4-hour MACD hadn’t broken down, so I entered a small position. The next day, it rebounded, earning a net profit of 5,000 USD. During the day, the market is mainly manipulated by big players; the real trend only shows at night. Beginners are most likely to become cannon fodder during daytime.
**Take profits immediately** I set a strict rule: if I make a profit on the same day, no matter how small, I withdraw 30% to my bank card first. Last year, using this method, I accumulated 150,000 just from withdrawals. Even if subsequent trades lose money, the cash in my pocket remains real. There’s a saying in crypto—numbers on the screen are just digital; only the money in your pocket truly belongs to you.
**Let indicators do the talking, not intuition** I use TradingView and check MACD, RSI, Bollinger Bands before every trade. I only act when at least two signals align. After adopting this approach, my win rate jumped from 30% to 60%.
**Use flexible stop-loss, don’t hold on stubbornly** When I can monitor the market, I move my stop-loss up as profits increase. When I can’t monitor, I set a hard stop-loss at 3%. Many think stop-loss means admitting defeat, but that’s wrong—stop-loss is about protecting your capital and leaving room for a comeback.
These are all experiences gained through real trading. For friends who want to avoid pitfalls and grow steadily in the crypto space, applying this logic will naturally improve your returns.
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CryptoHistoryClass
· 12h ago
nah, the 9pm rule is just survivorship bias dressed up as strategy. statistically speaking, we're seeing the exact same "timing the market" fallacy that preceded every major capitulation phase in crypto history.
Reply0
MerkleTreeHugger
· 12h ago
Honestly, I've heard many times about turning 100,000 into 42 million, but few actually hold onto the money until the end. I agree with the 9 PM post; daytime fluctuations are really just emotions, only at night is the truth.
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LiquidatedThrice
· 12h ago
100,000 to 42 million? That's nonsense. How many 4x gains would that require?
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I only check the market after 9 PM. I've tried, but I missed the morning rebound and still lost money.
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Taking out 30% when you make a profit sounds reliable, but what about the fees? Is it worth doing this every day?
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To put it nicely, MACD and RSI are both lagging indicators. Who are you fooling?
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A 3% stop loss sounds simple, but can you really do it in practice? At the moment of cutting losses, everyone will hesitate.
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This set of logic does make sense. It's much more reliable than those calling signals.
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GateUser-6bc33122
· 12h ago
The phrase "9 PM" is a bit mysterious; I actually find that the true calm and steady flow happen from 2 AM to 5 AM.
Early on, I knew a friend who turned 100,000 into 42 million. He once said something quite insightful: The essence of a great trader boils down to two abilities— the determination to hold back and place orders during a sharp decline, and the rationality to resist the urge to add to positions during a surge.
Later, I also experienced many setbacks in the crypto world and summarized some survival rules, now sharing them:
**Trade only after 9 PM**
My current rule is to avoid trading before 9 PM. By then, most news has settled, candlestick charts are clearer, and trend judgments are more accurate. Last year, there was a day when BTC dropped 3% during the day, and everyone in the group was shouting about a bear market. I didn’t move. After 9 PM, I saw trading volume halved and the 4-hour MACD hadn’t broken down, so I entered a small position. The next day, it rebounded, earning a net profit of 5,000 USD. During the day, the market is mainly manipulated by big players; the real trend only shows at night. Beginners are most likely to become cannon fodder during daytime.
**Take profits immediately**
I set a strict rule: if I make a profit on the same day, no matter how small, I withdraw 30% to my bank card first. Last year, using this method, I accumulated 150,000 just from withdrawals. Even if subsequent trades lose money, the cash in my pocket remains real. There’s a saying in crypto—numbers on the screen are just digital; only the money in your pocket truly belongs to you.
**Let indicators do the talking, not intuition**
I use TradingView and check MACD, RSI, Bollinger Bands before every trade. I only act when at least two signals align. After adopting this approach, my win rate jumped from 30% to 60%.
**Use flexible stop-loss, don’t hold on stubbornly**
When I can monitor the market, I move my stop-loss up as profits increase. When I can’t monitor, I set a hard stop-loss at 3%. Many think stop-loss means admitting defeat, but that’s wrong—stop-loss is about protecting your capital and leaving room for a comeback.
These are all experiences gained through real trading. For friends who want to avoid pitfalls and grow steadily in the crypto space, applying this logic will naturally improve your returns.