#数字资产市场动态 I want to share a trading method — it sounds simple, but in practice, it’s surprisingly effective. Honestly, this approach helped me ride a multi-million dollar market move on $UNI.



To give some background: eight years ago, I started from zero, buried in debt, in a much worse situation than most current losers. After entering the crypto space, I abandoned the luck-based, hot-spot chasing, rumor-following methods and focused on one thing: finding a sustainable and stable trading logic.

The result is this "emotionless" system.

How does it work? It’s divided into four steps:

**Step 1: Coin Selection Criteria**
Only look at daily charts, stay away from minute-level oscillations. Filter for coins where the MACD shows a golden cross, with special focus on positions above the zero line — that’s where the main funds are truly exerting influence.

**Step 2: Entry Signal**
All complex indicators are distractions. I only focus on one daily moving average: if the price is above it, hold; if it falls below, exit. No gray areas, no illusions like "maybe it will rebound tomorrow."

**Step 3: Adding to Positions**
When the price breaks above the yearly moving average with a significant increase in volume, go all-in. It’s a straightforward logic.

**Step 4: Partial and Stop-Loss**
Sell one-third of your position when it gains 40%, another third at 80%, and clear all when it breaks below the moving average — leave no position behind. This tests your discipline the most. If the next day it unexpectedly drops below the moving average, no matter how valid the reason, you must close immediately. No regrets for missing out; wait until it recovers and re-enter.

99% of people fail at this step because they always find reasons to delay exiting. I don’t do that.

With this logic alone, I went from debt to an eight-figure asset. It’s not luck, nor do I need to watch the charts obsessively — just internalize the discipline. $BTC Market movements have also proven this method’s effectiveness.

Is it simple? Yes, very simple. Is it hard? The difficulty lies in not wavering from the very first trade.
UNI-1.53%
BTC-0.06%
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DeFiVeteranvip
· 19h ago
Sounds good, but how many people can truly stick with it from the very first trade? Selling too early and not regretting re-entering—that mindset is the hardest part. Daily MACD combined with moving averages sounds quite systematic, but I'm just worried about overcoming human nature. A million-yuan-level profit is indeed ambitious, but I want to hear more about how many pitfalls you've stepped into. Having execution power ingrained in your bones is a tough statement, which shows you've really experienced life and death.
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OfflineValidatorvip
· 19h ago
Discipline is indeed the hardest part; saying "I won't regret selling early" sounds easy, but actually doing it is really tough.
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SandwichTradervip
· 19h ago
Discipline is indeed a weakness. Most people speak nicely about it, but the moment the price breaks the moving average, they start making up stories. This method sounds boring, but I think the key is—dare to admit you're wrong, then immediately get out, leaving no room for bargaining. From debt to eight figures, it's either luck or crushing execution. Breaking the moving average means closing the position; it doesn't sound very glamorous, but this is the watershed between those who survive and those who get wiped out. I agree that there is no gray area, but honestly, 99% of people can't stick to such a trading system.
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NFTBlackHolevip
· 19h ago
Honestly, this logic sounds like "easy to understand but hard to implement," but the key is whether you can really withstand the fear of that moment. If the price breaks the moving average, then close all positions. Does anyone really do that? I think most people start to regret after selling at a loss, then brainwash themselves into saying "hold for the long term." But going from debt to eight figures is truly impressive. How strong must one's mental resilience be?
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AirdropChaservip
· 19h ago
Break the moving average and run, I respect that. Much more rational than those who panic after bottom-fishing.
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