#美国贸易赤字状况 Pre-market preparation determines whether you make a profit or a loss. My habit is to always check the trending list—focusing on those with increasing volume and price. Projects without volume are not worth watching; only coins with real money pouring in are worth betting on.
Regarding trend judgment, the monthly chart is my faith. The fluctuations on the daily chart are just noise; the true trend is on the monthly chart. Once the MACD forms a golden cross, I decisively follow the trend. This is not gambling; this is riding the upward momentum.
As for entry points, I firmly rely on the 60-day moving average. As long as the price pulls back to the 60-day MA and trading volume significantly increases, that’s my signal to heavily buy in. Clear support levels, comfortable cost zones, and a strong psychological defense naturally hold.
But here’s the key—making money is never about buying, but about selling. Once the price breaks below the 60-day MA, I immediately liquidate all positions—no excuses. Being soft-hearted is self-destructive; it will wipe out all the profits made earlier.
How to lock in profits without retracement? Two-step rule: sell half when floating gains reach 30%, then sell half again when gains reach 50%. The remaining portion is pure profit, and your mindset becomes much lighter.
Does this sound a bit mechanical? But I’ve learned the hard way: trading without a system yields no stable returns. Those relying solely on intuition will eventually give their profits back to the market. Every rule I follow is a lesson learned from falling on the trading floor. Markets change, but trend, position, and discipline are always the anchors.
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MissedTheBoat
· 8h ago
I've tried this 60-day line defense tactic before, but a black swan event broke through the support directly, resulting in a huge loss.
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ImpermanentPhilosopher
· 8h ago
I've also tried the 60-day line hold strategy, but later I realized that a monthly golden cross isn't 100% reliable either.
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BlockchainRetirementHome
· 8h ago
The 60-day moving average is a bit of a harsh spell to cast, but all the pits I've fallen into are truly real.
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Sell > Buy, this phrase must be engraved in your mind. How many people have died from greed.
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Systematic trading has really saved lives, more reliable than any technical analysis.
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People who believe in the monthly chart sound impressive, but you also need to look at the daily chart. Waiting a month for a signal is a big risk.
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A 30% halving, then a 50% halving again, sounds simple but can be exhausting to do, especially when the market keeps rising.
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I agree with the idea that only when volume and price expand do you start losing money, but you also need to beware of the main players' dumping tactics.
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Mechanical execution is truly more valuable than any smart trading, but the difficulty lies in those two words: soft-hearted.
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Can BNB's current dip test the 60-day moving average? It feels like the support is still above.
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The rule of clearing positions sounds good, but many people can't bear to cut losses when the price actually falls below.
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Discipline, at first, everyone thinks they can do it. But when they actually lose money, they forget everything.
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StakeTillRetire
· 8h ago
60-day moving average believers, I've given up on that long ago. Now it's all about watching how the big funds move. If they dump, I follow; if I can't keep up, I go all cash and sleep soundly.
#美国贸易赤字状况 Pre-market preparation determines whether you make a profit or a loss. My habit is to always check the trending list—focusing on those with increasing volume and price. Projects without volume are not worth watching; only coins with real money pouring in are worth betting on.
Regarding trend judgment, the monthly chart is my faith. The fluctuations on the daily chart are just noise; the true trend is on the monthly chart. Once the MACD forms a golden cross, I decisively follow the trend. This is not gambling; this is riding the upward momentum.
As for entry points, I firmly rely on the 60-day moving average. As long as the price pulls back to the 60-day MA and trading volume significantly increases, that’s my signal to heavily buy in. Clear support levels, comfortable cost zones, and a strong psychological defense naturally hold.
But here’s the key—making money is never about buying, but about selling. Once the price breaks below the 60-day MA, I immediately liquidate all positions—no excuses. Being soft-hearted is self-destructive; it will wipe out all the profits made earlier.
How to lock in profits without retracement? Two-step rule: sell half when floating gains reach 30%, then sell half again when gains reach 50%. The remaining portion is pure profit, and your mindset becomes much lighter.
Does this sound a bit mechanical? But I’ve learned the hard way: trading without a system yields no stable returns. Those relying solely on intuition will eventually give their profits back to the market. Every rule I follow is a lesson learned from falling on the trading floor. Markets change, but trend, position, and discipline are always the anchors.
$BNB $SOL