#数字资产市场动态 At first glance when opening the market, my habit is to pull up the two-week gain and loss rankings. Not just to browse casually, but to lock onto those cryptocurrencies with sudden abnormal changes in trading volume and price—targets without major institutional participation. No matter how good the fundamentals are, I won't touch them.



Trend analysis, never guess based on intuition. My approach is to keep a close eye on the monthly chart. The daily K-line fluctuations are full of noise; the true direction is hidden in the monthly chart. Once the MACD shows a monthly golden cross, it's like igniting an engine— the big trend is about to start. At this point, if you follow in, you're not gambling; you're riding the wave at the right moment.

The 60-day moving average—this line is my life and death line. After confirming the trend, how do I get in? I wait for the price to retrace to the 60-day moving average, while trading volume significantly increases—that's my signal to heavily enter the market. The cost advantage is obvious, the support below is solid, and I can sleep peacefully at night.

But the hardest part is never entering, but exiting.

My rules for myself are cold-blooded and simple: once the price breaks below the 60-day moving average, I liquidate immediately. No excuses, no hesitation—even if I’ve made a good profit earlier, I must exit unconditionally. Being soft once could cost me ten times the profit.

How to hold after profit? When floating gains reach 30%, I first sell half of my position to lock in profits; when it rises to 50%, I sell the remaining half. The remaining holdings are entirely made with market money—my mindset changes completely.

Some say this method is too rigid. But after all these years, I’ve seen a truth: in the crypto market, those who make money have systems, while those relying on intuition are just paying off debts. Behind every rule, there are failures I paid tuition for. Trend judgment, entry points, stop-loss discipline—only profit from markets I understand clearly, so the market won’t treat you like a rookie.

The market is evolving, but the underlying logic never changes. Using effective methods to capture opportunities, holding onto chips, staying alert—this is the way to survive longer in this market.
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MevShadowrangervip
· 2h ago
Run as soon as the 60-day moving average crosses, I agree with that. But when it actually comes to execution, how many people can do it unconditionally and exit?
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ContractExplorervip
· 6h ago
Breaking the 60-day moving average and then running away, it's easy to say but really heartbreaking to do. --- The moment of the golden cross on the monthly chart is indeed exciting, but I'm afraid of getting caught in a pullback. --- This system sounds perfect, but in real trading, the most I do is be soft-hearted. --- Reduce half of the position at 30%? Why do I always think of taking profits only after a 50% loss? --- Where are the big players? Why can't I see any unusual volume movements? --- If it breaks through the 60-day moving average, should I really exit immediately? My friend said that's the easiest position to be washed out. --- The phrase "pay off debt with intuition" hits hard; I lost money last year doing exactly that. --- Daily K noise, monthly K truth— I agree with this logic, but how long does it take to repeatedly confirm the bottom? --- It feels like your system is for large-scale trend trading. Can it be used for small-cap coins? --- Clarity and greed are really incompatible in the crypto world. Pick one.
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DeepRabbitHolevip
· 7h ago
Breaking the 60-day moving average and running immediately, I agree with this point. Compared to those shouting "hold long-term" and finally getting caught at the bottom, it's much clearer. Being too soft-hearted is indeed a poison; losses can happen very quickly. Trading without a system is just gambling, this statement hits the mark. You're right, even rigid rules are better than losing money. This logical approach has indeed stood the test of time, but the key question is: can it really be implemented consistently? Most people can't do it. Sell everything at 50%, and use the remaining floating profit to make money—brilliant, the psychological burden is gone. I also avoid coins that the main players are not involved in; no matter how good the story, it's useless. The monthly MACD golden cross signal is quite reliable; it's much more stable than the daily fluctuations.
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CryptoWageSlavevip
· 7h ago
Once the 60-day moving average crosses, I run. I have deep experience with this; softening my heart just once and I know the pain. It sounds like you're sharing your own story. System trading can indeed help you survive longer. But to be honest, how many people can really execute it properly? Most are still getting wiped out in the struggle. A golden cross on the monthly chart sounds good, but what I care more about are those moments when the main players are frantically sweeping up positions. This theory has no flaws; I'm just worried about getting called out when executing. How do you manage to never soften your stance?
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gas_fee_therapistvip
· 7h ago
Entering discipline is really a hundred times harder than exiting, you're so right. --- I also use the monthly golden cross signal, but I still often get trapped, maybe I don't execute aggressively enough. --- If the 60-day moving average breaks, I run. It sounds simple, but actually cutting losses is really hard. --- Take half off when floating profit reaches 30%, this mindset is indeed stable, unlike me going all-in waiting for a big rally. --- All intuition-driven traders are paying off debts, this really hits home. --- Systematic trading is boring, but most retail traders get wiped out by emotions. --- I won't touch coins that the main players aren't involved in, doing this well can save a lot of tuition fees. --- Every time I say I will stick to discipline, but when the market dips, I still tend to go soft. --- This method isn't rigid; it just requires being ruthless. Most people can't be ruthless enough. --- The last sentence is brilliant: being clear-headed is more valuable than anything else.
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