Pre-market not looking at the涨跌榜? Then it's like rushing in blindly; the flow of funds has already revealed the next move.
My habit is to scan once before the market opens each day, looking for targets with volume and price movement in sync. I don't go where there's no activity—only active funds mean potential.
As for the direction, the monthly chart is enough. The daily fluctuations are just noise signals; the real trend is on the monthly chart. Once MACD forms a golden cross, following in is a trend-following move, not gambling.
Only look at the 60-day moving average when entering.
When the price hits the 60-day MA and volume increases at the same time, that's when I dare to add positions. The clearer the support level, the more confident I feel, and the more decisive I am in acting.
But there's a key point—making money isn't just about buying, it's about how you sell.
If the 60-day MA breaks, no need to talk nonsense, just exit immediately.
Too many people can't let go, and in the end, all the profits from earlier are completely lost.
How to lock in profits?
When floating gains reach 30%, cut half of the position; at 50%, cut another half. The remaining part is all unrealized profit running, and your mindset changes instantly.
This set of rules may sound rigid, but the truth is: disciplined trading is the only way to keep making money, following your instincts will eventually give back the gains.
Every principle behind these rules is learned from past losses.
The market is changing, but trends, positions, and execution are constant.
The next wave of行情 is brewing—are you ready with your system?
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SignatureLiquidator
· 01-08 06:45
You're absolutely right. The most painful time to cut losses is often the most correct time to do it.
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LootboxPhobia
· 01-07 10:57
Exactly right, but most people simply can't execute the 60-day moving average. They see the MACD golden cross and rush in, and when it breaks the line, they keep fooling themselves. In the end, they get wiped out during the last wave of pullback. Those who truly make money are the ones with ironclad discipline and a rock-solid mindset.
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PhantomHunter
· 01-06 03:40
That's so right, the monthly chart is the real king, and those fluctuations on the daily chart are just to trigger stop-losses.
Honestly, refusing to sell is the hardest part; watching unrealized gains decline is mentally torturous.
Once the 60-day moving average breaks, I run—sounds simple, but it's deadly to implement.
Discipline is truly something you learn the hard way through losses.
Making money relies on this system: sticking to the rules, but sometimes it feels like this thing can't be trusted.
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BearEatsAll
· 01-05 09:33
That's right, greed is truly the biggest poison in trading. I used to be reluctant to sell even after the 60-day moving average broke, and as a result, a single pullback wiped out my gains. Now I follow the rules—cut in half at 30%—and it feels much easier.
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ClassicDumpster
· 01-05 09:31
The 60-day moving average is indeed useful, but my problem is that I always can't resist adding full position at the 30% level...
That's right, selling is much harder than buying, and the worst losses happen when I can't bear to take profits.
Those who can make money in 2026 are still the disciplined ones; others are still just leeks.
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Anon4461
· 01-05 09:25
Sounds good, but those who directly follow the monthly golden cross end up losing everything in the end haha
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BlockchainBouncer
· 01-05 09:16
That's right, taking profits is even harder than cutting losses. I also often get greedy.
When the 60-day moving average breaks, you have to run. I've learned this lesson the hard way.
I'm optimistic about your rhythm, just worried you'll be soft when it comes to execution.
Selling is an art; anyone can buy.
I'm also watching the monthly MACD golden cross. Can 2026 turn the tide?
Volume and price coordination is really the ultimate trick for screening targets; everything else is nonsense.
Reduce by 30%, then halve again by 50%. This mindset is really steady; I need to follow that.
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MEVSandwich
· 01-05 09:14
That's right, taking profits is more difficult than cutting losses. I often get stuck on the words "just wait a little longer."
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SleepyValidator
· 01-05 09:13
To be honest, I've heard the 60-day moving average strategy too many times, but the key is that very few people can actually stick with it.
It's not that I don't know how to sell; it's just that when my mentality collapses, I become greedy, and in the end, I lose money.
Systems sound impressive, but in practice, you still have to contend with yourself.
Pre-market not looking at the涨跌榜? Then it's like rushing in blindly; the flow of funds has already revealed the next move.
My habit is to scan once before the market opens each day, looking for targets with volume and price movement in sync. I don't go where there's no activity—only active funds mean potential.
As for the direction, the monthly chart is enough. The daily fluctuations are just noise signals; the real trend is on the monthly chart. Once MACD forms a golden cross, following in is a trend-following move, not gambling.
Only look at the 60-day moving average when entering.
When the price hits the 60-day MA and volume increases at the same time, that's when I dare to add positions. The clearer the support level, the more confident I feel, and the more decisive I am in acting.
But there's a key point—making money isn't just about buying, it's about how you sell.
If the 60-day MA breaks, no need to talk nonsense, just exit immediately.
Too many people can't let go, and in the end, all the profits from earlier are completely lost.
How to lock in profits?
When floating gains reach 30%, cut half of the position; at 50%, cut another half. The remaining part is all unrealized profit running, and your mindset changes instantly.
This set of rules may sound rigid, but the truth is: disciplined trading is the only way to keep making money, following your instincts will eventually give back the gains.
Every principle behind these rules is learned from past losses.
The market is changing, but trends, positions, and execution are constant.
The next wave of行情 is brewing—are you ready with your system?