🔥 Gate Square Event: #GateNewbieVillageEpisode10
👤 Featured Creator: @CHAITHU
💬 Trading Quote: The market doesn’t reward emotions, only patience and discipline.
Charts move — but discipline holds.
Share a moment where patience paid off, or emotions cost you a lesson.
A real story > a perfect result.
⏰ Event Duration: Dec 4 04:00 – Dec 11 16:00 UTC
How to Join
1️⃣ Follow Gate_Square
2️⃣ Post with the hashtag #GateNewbieVillageEpisode10
3️⃣ Share your reflections — strategy, mindset, discipline
Authenticity boosts visibility and your chance to win.
🎁 Rewards
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I’ve been grinding in this space for seven years. I started with just 30,000, and now my account has surpassed 50 million. What’s kept me alive until today is the “Half Position Rule”—it sounds conservative, but I average 70% returns per month. I once taught a student who doubled their capital in three months using this approach. Today, I want to share the strategies I’ve summarized over the years—those who get it, get it.
First, let’s talk about position management. Split your capital into five parts, and only use one-fifth for any single trade. Set a 10% stop-loss for each position. That way, even if you get five trades in a row wrong, you’ll only lose 10%. But if you catch the right trend just once, taking profit above 10% is easy, so you don’t have to worry about getting stuck in a bad trade.
Following the trend is always more reliable than trying to pick the bottom. A rebound in a downtrend? Most of the time, that’s just a bull trap. A pullback in an uptrend? That’s the real opportunity to get in. If you want to make quick money, it’s simple: follow the trend—don’t always bet on a reversal.
Stay far away from coins that have surged in the short term. Whether it’s a major coin or a small cap, sustained consecutive rallies are actually rare. After a price skyrockets in the short term, it gets much harder for it to keep climbing. If you see heavy volume at highs but the price isn’t moving, that’s basically a sign it can’t go any higher—most likely a pullback is coming. Everyone knows this, but there’s always someone who can’t resist taking a gamble.
MACD is my most commonly used entry and exit indicator. When DIF and DEA form a golden cross below the zero axis and then break above it, that’s a relatively reliable entry point. If MACD forms a death cross above the zero axis and turns downward, it’s time to reduce your position—don’t hesitate.
Never average down on losing positions! This move has trapped countless retail investors: you lose, then add more, then keep losing, and end up in deeper trouble. The correct approach is to only add to winning positions—never try to rescue a losing one.
You must keep an eye on trading volume. If there’s a breakout with heavy volume after a low-level consolidation, it’s worth watching. If there’s heavy volume at highs but the price is stagnant, get out quickly. The relationship between volume and price is the real key.
Only trade assets in an uptrend. If the 3-day moving average turns up, it means there’s short-term potential. If the 30-day is trending up, that means the medium-term is getting strong. If the 84-day is moving up, it’s entering a major rally phase. If the 120-day moving average is up, that’s a long-term bull market. Time is money—choosing the right trend can save you a lot of effort.
You have to review your trades every day. Check whether your previous logic still holds, whether the weekly trend matches your judgment, and whether there are any reversal signals. Adjust your strategy at any time based on the market.
Only by using systematic thinking and repeatable trading methods can you cut through market emotions and noise and go further, more steadily.