Many people enter the market and buy blindly, only to be wiped out in the end. Instead of blindly following the trend, it's better to master the basic trading logic. These 10 tips are market-verified experiences; it is recommended to save and review them repeatedly.



**About Entry Points**: When a strong coin undergoes continuous correction for more than 9 days from a high level, you can try to buy in batches; for popular coins, wait until the pullback is sufficient and the trend is stable before taking action. The phenomenon of "three must have five, five must have seven" often appears on the top gainers list. Coins that have risen for two consecutive days can be watched for dips.

**About Exit Points**: After a coin has risen for two days, don't be greedy. It is advisable to reduce positions appropriately to lock in profits; coins with a daily increase of over 7% often have momentum the next day, but this also signals risk. The top performers on the gain list usually realize profits around the fifth day, so foresight is necessary.

**About Risk Control**: If the price doesn't recover to the cost the next day after purchase, be brave enough to cut losses—this is an iron law. If a coin fluctuates weakly for three consecutive days and shows no signs of improvement after another three days, it's time to adjust your holdings; don't hold on stubbornly.

**About Technical Analysis**: The most core aspect is the volume-price relationship—breakouts with increased volume at low levels are worth noting, while increased volume at high levels without new highs should prompt you to exit. Looking at moving averages, a 3-day moving average turning upward indicates short-term strength; a 30-day moving average strengthening signals a medium-term trend; if the 80-day and 120-day moving averages both turn upward simultaneously, it often marks the start of a main upward wave and long-term rally. For mainstream coins like BTC, catching these signals can significantly reduce detours.

**One last point**: The amount of capital isn't really the key; those who can truly make money are always disciplined, methodical, and have a stable mindset. The market is there, but the key is whether you can respond clearly. Continuous learning, accumulating experience, and constantly improving your understanding are fundamental to seizing opportunities amid volatility.
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ShamedApeSellervip
· 22h ago
That's right, but you need discipline. If your mindset isn't stable, it's really over.
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FrontRunFightervip
· 22h ago
nah this reads like every other "i got lucky once" post lmaooo... where's the part about sandwich attacks tho? that's what actually matters in this dark forest
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CoinBasedThinkingvip
· 01-11 09:36
Not bad, but how many people can really implement this set of theories? The key is still mindset. --- Stop-loss is the hardest; most people get caught here. --- I’ve tested the volume breakout at low levels, and it indeed has a probability advantage. --- The "Three must have five" set I think I’ve heard somewhere before, it feels a bit mystical haha. --- Having less capital is actually better; less psychological pressure, and it’s easier to stay disciplined. --- If you want to reduce your position in two days, it’s better to do short-term trading to avoid hassle. --- I’ve waited a long time to see the 80 and 120 moving upward together as a signal. --- That last sentence really hit me; cognition is truly the most expensive thing. --- If there’s no improvement after three consecutive days, should I adjust my position? I need to watch for another week before I dare to act. --- A 7% increase as a risk signal—this perspective is interesting, a contrarian indicator?
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UnluckyLemurvip
· 01-10 14:52
That's right, but I'm just worried that some people will still go all-in after reading it.
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LiquidationWatchervip
· 01-10 14:51
It's the same theory again. It sounds good, but 99% of people can't follow through. Mindset is the hardest part.
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LiquidatedTwicevip
· 01-10 14:41
It sounds good, but how many people can actually follow through?
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quietly_stakingvip
· 01-10 14:36
There's nothing wrong with what you said, but execution is too difficult. To put it plainly, greed harms people. I've tried this moving average strategy, but the hardest part is the stop-loss. It sounds simple, but when actually trading, everything gets chaotic. Staying calm and steady—who doesn't want that? But it's just not achievable. Rather than studying all these, it's better to just set a fixed investment plan. I've never been able to see the pattern in the top gainers list. The key is the selling point, but I always want to wait a bit longer.
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notSatoshi1971vip
· 01-10 14:35
That's right, discipline is a hundred times more important than the amount, but unfortunately most people simply can't do it. --- Stop-loss is really the lowest threshold for making money, yet most people skip it. --- I've definitely encountered the saying "where there are three, there must be five," but more often than not, it's just face-slapping; the market isn't that predictable. --- The signal of both 80 and 120 turning points at the same time is pretty good; when I have free time, I'll try to see if I can catch it. --- Having less capital is actually better, as it enhances risk resistance, keeps the mindset stable, but the only concern is a mental breakdown. --- Talking about reducing positions in two days is easy, but when it really comes to parting with the assets, it's a different story. --- I think the most difficult part about the volume-price relationship is how to judge the volume breakout at low levels. --- Staying calm is easy to say, but in practice, it's truly a matter of life and death.
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ChainSauceMastervip
· 01-10 14:25
It's the same theory again. I've heard it ten times, but some people still lose money. --- It's easy to say, but hard to do. When it comes to cutting losses, everyone is greedy. --- The stop-loss hurdle, 99% of people can't get past it. --- Moving averages look simple, but when using them in real trading, I get confused. --- Having little funds can't make big money, that's true. --- The logic behind the rise ranking list is always five or seven, why do I always get caught in the five being buried. --- Stay calm? Ha, who can stay calm when the market plunges. --- Volume increases at low levels? Good grief, I'm always the last to catch the falling knife. --- Listening to discipline sounds simple, but when the account drops, discipline seems to disappear. --- BTC's signals are indeed clear, but the problem is that the reaction speed can't keep up, brother.
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