Many people think that trading cryptocurrencies is very complicated, but in fact the most effective methods are often the simplest. A trader once shared a set of ideas—growing from 1,000U to 1,000,000U—using what appears to be the most ordinary combination of technical indicators.
The core logic is actually not difficult; the key lies in execution and discipline.
**Step 1: Screen for Potential Coins**
Pull in coins that have had the highest gains over the past 11 days, then eliminate those that have fallen for more than 3 days. Continuous decline usually indicates capital fleeing and no participation value. The remaining ones are truly favored by funds.
**Step 2: Monthly Chart Confirmation Signal**
Open the monthly K-line chart and focus only on coins with MACD golden crosses. Avoid death crosses at all costs. It's best to wait until the first pullback after the golden cross without breaking support; only then, when the signal is clearer, take action. No need to rush.
**Step 3: Daily Chart 60 Moving Average Layout**
Switch to the daily chart. If the price retraces to near the 60 moving average and there is a volume-increasing bullish candle or a long lower shadow, it indicates that the main funds are absorbing the position—this is the moment to enter heavily. But the prerequisite is volume confirmation; if not confirmed, better to miss out.
**Step 4: Use the 60 Moving Average for Risk Control**
After entering, the 60 moving average becomes the only red line for risk control. If the price rises 30%, sell one-third to lock in profits; if it rises to 50%, sell another third to continue gaining. Once it falls below the 60 moving average, do not hesitate—liquidate all positions.
The beauty of this framework is its simplicity: monthly screening + daily 60 moving average execution. Although the probability of breaking support is very small, risk awareness must come first. Many traders lose money not because of method issues, but because they are reluctant to cut losses.
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DiamondHands
· 01-07 09:52
Sounds good, but how many can actually follow through? I'm the kind of person who knows to cut losses, but my hands tremble so much I can't press the sell button...
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LiquidationWizard
· 01-07 09:49
That's right, stop-loss is the most difficult lesson. I've seen too many people stubbornly hold on.
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SoliditySurvivor
· 01-07 09:48
Basically, it's a discipline issue. Anyone can have a method, but being unable to cut losses is the fatal flaw.
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NestedFox
· 01-07 09:47
Sounds good, but I'm worried it might just be another armchair strategy.
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SchrodingersPaper
· 01-07 09:44
It's the same old 60 moving average routine again. I tried it last year, and what happened? I hesitated at the moment of stop-loss, and now I'm still lying on the floor.
Many people think that trading cryptocurrencies is very complicated, but in fact the most effective methods are often the simplest. A trader once shared a set of ideas—growing from 1,000U to 1,000,000U—using what appears to be the most ordinary combination of technical indicators.
The core logic is actually not difficult; the key lies in execution and discipline.
**Step 1: Screen for Potential Coins**
Pull in coins that have had the highest gains over the past 11 days, then eliminate those that have fallen for more than 3 days. Continuous decline usually indicates capital fleeing and no participation value. The remaining ones are truly favored by funds.
**Step 2: Monthly Chart Confirmation Signal**
Open the monthly K-line chart and focus only on coins with MACD golden crosses. Avoid death crosses at all costs. It's best to wait until the first pullback after the golden cross without breaking support; only then, when the signal is clearer, take action. No need to rush.
**Step 3: Daily Chart 60 Moving Average Layout**
Switch to the daily chart. If the price retraces to near the 60 moving average and there is a volume-increasing bullish candle or a long lower shadow, it indicates that the main funds are absorbing the position—this is the moment to enter heavily. But the prerequisite is volume confirmation; if not confirmed, better to miss out.
**Step 4: Use the 60 Moving Average for Risk Control**
After entering, the 60 moving average becomes the only red line for risk control. If the price rises 30%, sell one-third to lock in profits; if it rises to 50%, sell another third to continue gaining. Once it falls below the 60 moving average, do not hesitate—liquidate all positions.
The beauty of this framework is its simplicity: monthly screening + daily 60 moving average execution. Although the probability of breaking support is very small, risk awareness must come first. Many traders lose money not because of method issues, but because they are reluctant to cut losses.