Many people engage in Cryptocurrency Trading by buying and selling blindly, resulting in a significant reduction in their account. In fact, trading isn't as complicated as it seems; at its core, it involves grasping a few key signals, and the rest is about disciplined execution.



**The core logic is straightforward: use the MACD golden cross to find buying points, use the daily moving average to determine the holding direction, and use the percentage of increase to decide the reduction rhythm.**

Looking at the daily chart, when the MACD forms a golden cross above the zero line, it is a relatively clear entry signal. Not all golden crosses are reliable, but the success rate of golden crosses above the zero line is significantly higher - this has been tested over time. The logic of selecting coins is that simple.

What to do after entering the market? Just keep an eye on the daily moving average. If the coin price is above the daily moving average, hold on; once it drops below the daily moving average, clear your position immediately. It sounds easy, but executing it tests one's mindset the most. Many people always think "just wait a bit longer", "it might rebound", and end up getting trapped.

Regarding position allocation, when both the coin price and trading volume break through the daily moving average, you can consider increasing your position. Selling is more critical — when the increase reaches 40%, reduce one-third of your position to secure profits; if it rises to 80% or more, reduce another one-third; if it falls below the daily moving average, liquidate the remaining position. The benefit of this logic is to reduce positions gradually while walking, which avoids early liquidation and also prevents greed from leading to a complete loss of profits.

There is no room for negotiation when it comes to stop losses. The daily moving average is the lifeline; if it is broken, you must cut your losses. Some people always want to gamble on a rebound, which usually results in even greater losses. Instead of waiting for a rebound, it's better to step back and observe. Wait for the coin price to stabilize above the daily moving average before gradually re-entering. This approach is actually more stable.

In practical cases, during a certain contract market, strictly following this logic to enter long positions, with a profit-loss ratio set to 10:1. A certain coin surged quickly from 0.26 to 0.39, with an increase of nearly 50% in less than a few hours. This is not luck; it is because of entering at the right position and then letting the profits run.

The biggest fear in trading is not losing money, but rather not following the rules. No matter how perfect the method is, it becomes useless once emotions take over. Sticking to these four steps—choosing coins based on golden crosses, holding positions based on moving averages, reducing positions based on price increases, and having no exceptions for stop losses—is the way to survive in the long run.
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TokenCreatorOPvip
· 9h ago
You're right, it's a matter of execution. After all this talk, most people still fail due to greed and panic. The seemingly simple rules are actually the hardest to stick to.
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SchrodingerAirdropvip
· 9h ago
You're right, it's the discipline that is the hardest part. --- The daily moving average is really a good thing, it's been verified long ago. --- The stop loss part is explained thoroughly, those who trade based on emotions have all perished. --- I need to remember the rhythm of reducing by one third at 40%. --- The golden cross pattern above the zero axis is indeed more reliable; I've tried it a few times. --- The key is still to resist the urge to act, which tests a person the most. --- An 10:1 profit-loss ratio is quite rare in this market. --- If it falls below the daily moving average, just play people for suckers; there's nothing to struggle with.
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RunWhenCutvip
· 9h ago
You're not wrong, but the execution is tough, brother. --- When it really falls below the moving average, my hands are shaking, and I can't remember what stop loss is. --- This logic sounds simple, but how many can really stick to it? --- I just want to ask, is the case from 0.26 to 0.39 real, or is it hindsight? --- The mindset is the most expensive tuition, worth more than any technical indicator. --- The four words 'discipline execution' sound light, but doing it is life-threatening. --- The key is not to be greedy; finding the right balance of taking profits is the hardest. --- When the moving average is broken, should I play people for suckers? Why do I always end up playing people for suckers at the bottom? --- What you said is correct, but how can I not be swayed by emotions? --- The rhythm of reducing positions is indeed exquisite, but the premise is to catch the right entry point.
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MevWhisperervip
· 9h ago
In simple terms, it requires discipline; otherwise, no matter how good the method is, it will be useless. The mindset is the biggest enemy, truly. When the moving average breaks, run away; don't wait for any rebound, I deeply understand this. It sounds simple, but among ten people who try, nine die from emotions. MACD golden cross pattern combined with daily moving average, the logic is very clear; the key is execution, everyone. It's another story of a profit-loss ratio of 10:1, but it's hard to refute; entering at the right position really changes everything. The pace of reducing positions is written quite detailed: reduce one third at 40%, reduce again at 80%, don't be greedy or pull out early, it's quite interesting. Cut Loss is the hardest; just this point can filter out more than half of the people.
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MetaMiseryvip
· 9h ago
At the end of the day, it’s still a mindset issue. You can learn the technology, but the hardest part is not being able to cut losses. Those who are still betting on a rebound after the daily moving average has fallen are basically suckers.
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