#美联储降息 Deciding to make a living from this industry? Don't rush to get on board. First, master these 10 rules. Each one is forged through trading experience.$FET



1. Strong coins have been falling for 9 consecutive days from high levels; this is the time to have the courage to follow up.
2. Any coin that rises for 2 days in a row should be reduced in position; don't be greedy.
3. Coins with a daily increase of over 7% often have room to surge the next day; keep an eye on them.
4. Don't chase the peaks of major bull coins; wait for their correction before entering the market for the most comfort.
5. If the market remains calm for three days, continue observing for another three days; if there's still no movement, switch coins.
6. If today's profit can't even cover yesterday's loss, exit quickly.
7. There is a pattern: if there are three coins on the gainers list, there will be five; if there are five, there will be seven. After two days of continuous rise, buy on dips; the fifth day is a good time to sell.$US
8. The relationship between volume and price is the key to trading—pay attention to volume breakthroughs at low levels, and if volume surges at high levels without price increase, run immediately.
9. Focus only on coins with an upward trend: a 3-day moving average trending up indicates short-term opportunity; a 30-day moving average trending up shows medium-term support; the 80-day is the main upward wave; the 120-day determines the long-term direction.
10. Small accounts rely not on luck but on the right methods, stable mindset, strict discipline in execution, patience, and seizing opportunities.

My strategy is straightforward: don't trade until a pattern forms; only act when you're sure. Once I develop my own logic, I can reach eight figures in a year, and maintain a win rate above 90% over the next five years—thanks to these seemingly simple but effective methods.

In the current market environment (Federal Reserve rate cut cycle), this methodology is especially worth revisiting.
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Web3ExplorerLinvip
· 14h ago
Hypothesis: volume-price divergence at resistance levels functions like Byzantine generals problem—everyone thinks they're reading the same signal but half the traders are already heading for the exits. the real oracle here? discipline, not luck.
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WinterWarmthCatvip
· 15h ago
Article 9 is the most critical. How many times have I stepped on the 80-day moving average hurdle? After two consecutive days of rise, I cut my positions. I really agree with this now; my previous greed almost got me trapped. When volume and price don't match, I run immediately. It sounds simple, but it's really hard to do, brother. This logic is against human nature. I can't learn to switch coins if I wait three days without any movement. The 120-day moving average determines the direction. I feel like I've never really looked at it before. You need enough courage to make money, but it seems like my courage is never enough. Recently, the volume spike at low levels tricked me again. A steady mindset and strict discipline—it's easy to say, but executing it is deadly. No pattern, no trading. But I always can't control my hands. This methodology sounds like gambling on luck, doesn't it?
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MemeKingNFTvip
· 15h ago
Huh, item 6 hits home. The recent wave yesterday really wasn't enough to fill the gap. Nine consecutive days of decline and now entering? That takes some serious mental strength. I'm afraid I can't do it. It really feels like "Zhou Yi Gui Mei" from the Book of Songs—the market's ups and downs all depend on whether those few lines can align. Item 10 is the most critical. It's not about luck turning things around. This sentence is worth reading three times. Only when the 80-day moving average is upward do I dare to increase my position. The 120-day moving average is probably the last faith support. I've lost enough times by panicking when volume and price don't match, so I believe in this. This set of logic may seem cumbersome, but it's actually using time cost to improve win rate. It really works in the bear market mode. But the part I least understand is item 5—patience to watch three more days with no big waves... I truly don't have that patience.
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TommyTeacher1vip
· 15h ago
Still dare to buy after falling for 9 days? Man, your mentality is not ordinary. --- The second point is the most painful: after two days of rise, you want to reduce your position. Easy to say, hard to do. --- Relying on this set to make 8 figures? The cost of bragging is really low. --- Got the key to volume and price? When volume increases at high levels and it doesn’t rise, immediately withdraw. A bloody lesson. --- 90% win rate? Just listen, no one can be that steady. --- Waiting for the correction to re-enter is indeed comfortable, but many also miss out on the gains during this wait. --- Small accounts want to turn around; having methods alone isn’t enough, you also need a bit of luck. --- If the pattern hasn’t formed, don’t open a position. I need to change this bad habit.
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CoffeeNFTsvip
· 15h ago
Article 8 is spot on. The relationship between volume and price is truly the key. If there's high volume at high levels and the price doesn't rise, I would have already sold. A lesson learned the hard way.
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