Having been in the crypto world for 8 years, from an initial 800 yuan to now achieving financial freedom, I want to honestly say—this is not about extraordinary talent or insider information. Frankly, it boils down to two words: stability. And a strategy that many have mocked—a 50% position strategy.



How do I allocate funds? I use the five-part fund division method. Divide your account into five equal parts, and only trade with one part at a time. The obvious benefit of this approach: set a 10% stop loss, and a single mistake can only lose up to 2%; even if you make five consecutive mistakes, the total loss is just over 10%. Conversely, if you are correct, aim for at least 10% profit-taking. It may seem slow? Actually, this is the power of compound interest.

The trading logic is also simple—go with the trend, don’t fight against the major trend. I especially rely on the MACD indicator: when DIF and DEA form a golden cross below the zero line and break above zero, I decisively open a position; once a death cross appears above zero, I immediately start reducing my position. One principle I never break: never add to a losing position; only consider increasing when in profit. Volume and price action are also crucial—breakouts with volume at low levels are followed, but if volume surges at high levels without new highs, it’s time to exit.

The criteria for choosing coins are also simple: only trade coins in an uptrend. Use the 3-day, 30-day, 84-day, and 120-day moving averages to judge the true trend, and don’t be fooled by short-term fluctuations.

Perhaps the most important point—review every trade. Turn those seemingly lucky moments into real skills. That’s the true secret from going from 800 to 48 million. Daily habit accumulation—stay steady, get the rhythm right, and execute strictly according to plan. Ordinary people can also break through.

The threshold for this methodology isn’t high: three rules to survive, five to achieve stable profits, and if you can master all eight, financial freedom is just one market cycle away. Embed the word "stability" into your bones, and you too can become the expert others talk about.
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GweiTooHighvip
· 7h ago
Honestly, I’ve been using the five-position method for a long time, but it really tests discipline. Most people simply can’t stick with it. Reviewing past trades is indeed a weakness for most people; it’s the last thing they want to look at when they’re losing money. The MACD combined with moving averages is indeed stable, but I have to admit, it’s really tough when the market isn’t doing well. This guy persisted for 8 years before reaching financial independence, which shows that having a method alone isn’t enough—mindset is the real ceiling. Saying that losing 10% over five mistakes sounds good, but the real question is whether you can stick with it during those five consecutive losses.
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YieldHuntervip
· 8h ago
nah look, the 5-position sizing thing actually holds up if you look at the data—risk-adjusted returns are legit there. but tbh the real tell is he's treating macd crossovers like gospel when most degens blow up doing exactly this during sideways markets. sustainable returns ≠ one strategy working in a bull run, know what i mean? 复利确实狠,前提是你不在shitcoins上赌命
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PoolJumpervip
· 8h ago
Distributing risk across five positions is indeed a solid strategy, but execution requires strict discipline. Most people fail mainly because of their decisions to add or replenish positions.
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ser_we_are_ngmivip
· 8h ago
That makes a lot of sense, but executing it is really difficult. When it comes to review, I tend to be the laziest; I often just count the profits and delete the records when I lose, haha. The five-part method sounds really stable, but how many people can truly stick to it without adding leverage? I also use MACD, but sometimes it's easy to get fooled by the signals, especially during consolidation periods. Ultimately, it's all about mindset. Even the best methods are useless if your mindset is poor.
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