Honestly, traders with only a few thousand dollars in their accounts should really avoid wasting energy on complicated operations.



I’ve put together a basic but highly effective trading framework. It’s easy to execute, and most importantly, it can help you survive the market and gradually grow your principal. Some followers have adopted this approach, going from five figures to seven figures. It all boils down to four simple steps—so simple it’s almost unbelievable.

**Step 1: Choose a coin based on a single signal—Daily MACD Golden Cross**

Don’t listen to rumors; even the best talkers are less reliable than data. Especially the golden cross formed above the zero line, which is the most stable. Focus solely on this condition and set everything else aside.

**Step 2: Operate around the daily moving average**

Hold when the price is above the moving average; exit when it falls below. Don’t waver in between. This isn’t just advice—it’s a strict discipline you must follow.

How to enter? The price must break above the moving average with increased volume. Only then is a heavy position follow-up reliable. What if you’re in profit? Take some profits when gains reach 40%, then sell another portion when it hits 80%. If the price closes below the moving average, clear all remaining positions—no luck involved.

**Step 3: Only one stop-loss rule**

If the closing price falls below the moving average, exit unconditionally at the next open. A single lucky break could wipe out all your previous gains—such a cost is too high.

**Step 4: Mentality management is more valuable than technical skills**

This method may seem simple—using straightforward indicators and strict discipline—but that’s exactly what retail traders need. During a market like PIPPIN’s, following signals, managing position sizes, and calculating risk-reward ratios allowed traders to fully capture the gains.

Market opportunities are continuous; what’s truly lacking is execution. Without discipline, even more opportunities are useless. Missing out is okay—wait until the price reclaims the moving average to buy again, and you’ll catch up. Traders who survive and make money are often those who act earliest.

Are you that kind of person?
PIPPIN4,18%
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HappyToBeDumpedvip
· 11h ago
Honestly, this set of tools is just a template for scamming rookies, just told by a different person. --- When the moving average shows a death cross, just run. It sounds easy, but it's hard to actually do. A single retest can crush your mentality. --- Bro, going from five figures to seven figures is all survivor bias. The ninety-nine who died are nobody's concern. --- I just want to know, why is this so stable method still being taught here. --- There's only one rule for stop-loss, but human nature can't get past this. That's the real difficulty. --- What's so great about the MACD golden cross? Fake crosses are everywhere. Try it if you don't believe me. --- Discipline is indeed valuable, but the problem is most people lose all their capital before discipline takes effect. --- The traders who survive are indeed the ones who got in early, but they might also be the luckiest ones. --- No problem, I just think this theory oversimplifies reality a bit.
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Token_Sherpavip
· 11h ago
ngl the whole "macd golden cross" thing is just... mechanical pattern matching masquerading as strategy. sure, discipline beats greed, but this reads like survivorship bias wrapped in oversimplified rules.
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GovernancePretendervip
· 11h ago
You're right, discipline is more important than anything else. I've personally suffered from not executing stop-losses. It sounds simple, but actually doing it is really hard. Most people fail due to their mindset. Going from five figures to seven figures is too exaggerated. Who would believe that? I've tried the golden cross of moving averages, and it actually works pretty well. Coming out alive is more important than anything else. Making money is secondary. MACD is old news, but there are still people using it to make money. Don't be afraid of missing out; you need to learn this mindset. Heavy position follow-up? I’d rather be a bit cautious. Smaller positions last longer. There's no solid scientific basis for taking half off at 40%. Execution is definitely a weakness; knowing and doing are worlds apart.
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AlwaysAnonvip
· 11h ago
You're right, I'm just worried about the execution being inadequate. Discipline is really more valuable than technology.
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SignatureAnxietyvip
· 11h ago
You're right, discipline is truly more valuable than anything else. I was too greedy before and ended up losing everything. --- Spending a few thousand on complex operations is indeed suicidal. The MACD golden cross strategy is really effective and yields the same results as mine. --- It seems that being simple is actually the most profitable. That's how I do it now, and I feel like I’ve finally survived. --- The most ruthless is the moving average stop-loss. Lucky psychology is the fatal flaw for most people, no room for negotiation. --- Relying on this to go from five figures to seven figures? Execution is indeed key. There are plenty of opportunities, but the question is whether you can hold onto the profits. --- Don’t listen to the news, data is the real thing. I’ve been using the MACD golden cross signal above the zero line for a long time. --- The saying that mental management is more valuable than technical skills hit me. I lost all my gains before simply because I lacked discipline. --- Following large positions and breaking out with volume can easily be driven by emotions; you need to be ruthless.
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ForkTonguevip
· 11h ago
That's right, discipline is more important than anything. I used to be too greedy. The MACD golden cross method is indeed reliable; simple and straightforward is the most effective. By the way, going from five figures to seven figures—how long does that take? Once the moving average breaks below, just run. It sounds easy, but actually doing it is really hard. Mentality is really the key; most people fail because of overconfidence.
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