Many traders ask about the logic behind selecting coins and operational strategies. In fact, after years of market practice, the biggest insight is: the most effective methods are often the simplest, and complex operations tend to lead to pitfalls.



Many people can't resist when the market fluctuates, and frequent trading usually results in losses. This is a common problem among beginners. What really matters is—only look at the top gainers list when choosing coins. Only coins with active liquidity offer continuous trading opportunities. Coins that remain stagnant for a long time are a waste of time and funds to buy.

In technical analysis, don't overemphasize short-term daily fluctuations. More important is the MACD indicator on the monthly chart: when a golden cross forms, consider entering; if no golden cross signal appears, stay in cash and wait. True trend opportunities appear over longer cycles. Frequently engaging in low-probability trades like oversold rebounds often erases previous profits in one go.

The 70-day moving average is the key observation point. When the price dips back to near the 70-day MA and is accompanied by a significant increase in volume, that’s a signal to add to your position; if such confirmation signals are absent, don’t act even if you’re optimistic, because the market never lacks opportunities. Patience is half the victory.

The rules for exiting after entering are equally crucial: hold when the market is bullish, but exit immediately if the price breaks below the 70-day MA. Many traders’ losses stem from "reluctance to cut losses," always hoping a rebound will save the position, but end up turning unrealized gains into huge losses. Take profits in stages: sell half at 30% profit, another half at 50%, and hold the remaining part for larger gains. Missing this wave is no regret; the next opportunity will come.

The most fundamental discipline is: if the price breaks below the 70-day MA, exit immediately. No matter how long you've held or how much you've invested, once the line is broken, walk away. Don’t fight the trend, don’t gamble with yourself.

In trading, those with simple execution tend to survive the best. Don’t always think about turning the tide in one shot. Consistently profitable traders are those who stick to discipline and control their emotions. The market is fair—those who follow the rules comfortably survive, while those relying on gut feelings will eventually be taught a lesson.
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OnchainDetectivevip
· 14h ago
Breaking the 70-day moving average, run away. It's easy to say, but really hard to do.
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GreenCandleCollectorvip
· 14h ago
Breaking the 70-day moving average line means run, it's easy to say but hard to do...
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GasFeeCryvip
· 14h ago
The 70-day moving average theory has been heard too many times; the key is still to stick to discipline.
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GateUser-cff9c776vip
· 14h ago
Bro, you're right about everything, but the key question is—how many people can really do it? It's like Buffett's investment philosophy—sounds simple, but executing it is like hell. Breaking the 70-day moving average and then selling is as easy as drinking water, but can you really hold back when your position doubles? That's the art of trading. However, I admit that from the supply and demand curve perspective, your logic perfectly exemplifies the philosophy of a bear market—discipline is aesthetics.
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