#ETH走势分析 To be honest, the tuition fees I’ve paid on my trading journey could have bought me a car.
Chasing pumps and dumps, watching my account go from green to red to liquidation on those sleepless nights—just thinking about it still makes my heart race. Later, I realized that the people who survive and steadily profit actually use the simplest methods.
Here are four iron rules I still stick to:
**First: Only touch coins with a story** If a token hasn’t appeared on the top gainers list, I don’t even look at it. Money votes with its feet; obscure coins are most likely traps. Hype is the lifeline.
**Second: Only trust two technical signals** A monthly MACD golden cross is my entry trigger. As for those flashy daily chart patterns? I quit relying on them long ago. The other one is the 60-day moving average—only act if the price pulls back, stabilizes above it, and volume picks up. Otherwise, just watch.
**Third: Take profits in batches** When my unrealized profit hits 30%, I sell half; if it reaches 50%, I halve again. Don’t ask why I don’t hold for a double—I’ve seen too many people go from 80% profit to a loss. Greed kills.
**Fourth: Cut losses immediately if the lifeline breaks** The moment the 60-day moving average is lost, clear out without asking why. The market won’t turn back just because you hold on. Leave when you have to—don’t get emotional with price action.
Those who truly survive in this market don’t do it by lucking out on one big win, but through countless acts of restraint and discipline that compound over time. Bet less, earn slowly, stay in the game longer—that’s the only moat retail traders have.
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ApyWhisperer
· 4h ago
That’s way too realistic. Thinking back to those times when I went all in with my entire position still makes me nervous.
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CuttingOffBothHandsW
· 12-05 04:07
How is the 120-day moving average strategy?
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WagmiAnon
· 12-05 01:05
Damn, I've been using this 60-day moving average for a long time, it's just that my execution is too poor...
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fomo_fighter
· 12-04 07:10
That's absolutely right. I'm also using the 60-day moving average strategy, but sometimes I just can't resist and don't want to cut my losses.
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BearMarketBard
· 12-04 07:10
If the 60-day moving average is broken, just get out—I truly agree with that. But when you said "only touch coins with a story," why does it still feel like you're just betting on hype?
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MEVHunterX
· 12-04 07:05
The tuition I paid for buying a car... Mine was even more expensive, I even put in my house down payment once.
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AlgoAlchemist
· 12-04 06:57
That was a bit harsh, but the 60-day moving average has really saved me several times—it's much better than randomly looking at candlestick charts.
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PebbleHander
· 12-04 06:53
The 60-day moving average really is the line between life and death. I suffered losses before because I refused to admit it.
#ETH走势分析 To be honest, the tuition fees I’ve paid on my trading journey could have bought me a car.
Chasing pumps and dumps, watching my account go from green to red to liquidation on those sleepless nights—just thinking about it still makes my heart race. Later, I realized that the people who survive and steadily profit actually use the simplest methods.
Here are four iron rules I still stick to:
**First: Only touch coins with a story**
If a token hasn’t appeared on the top gainers list, I don’t even look at it. Money votes with its feet; obscure coins are most likely traps. Hype is the lifeline.
**Second: Only trust two technical signals**
A monthly MACD golden cross is my entry trigger. As for those flashy daily chart patterns? I quit relying on them long ago. The other one is the 60-day moving average—only act if the price pulls back, stabilizes above it, and volume picks up. Otherwise, just watch.
**Third: Take profits in batches**
When my unrealized profit hits 30%, I sell half; if it reaches 50%, I halve again. Don’t ask why I don’t hold for a double—I’ve seen too many people go from 80% profit to a loss. Greed kills.
**Fourth: Cut losses immediately if the lifeline breaks**
The moment the 60-day moving average is lost, clear out without asking why. The market won’t turn back just because you hold on. Leave when you have to—don’t get emotional with price action.
Those who truly survive in this market don’t do it by lucking out on one big win, but through countless acts of restraint and discipline that compound over time. Bet less, earn slowly, stay in the game longer—that’s the only moat retail traders have.