Having been in the crypto market for so long, your account still hasn't reached a million? Then you really need to take a good look at this article.



It's not some mysticism, just ten solid survival rules. Follow them, and while I can't promise you'll get rich, at least it can help you pay less tuition and live longer.

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**Rule 1: Small funds must understand the "wait for the hare by the stump"**

Catching the main upward trend once or twice a year is enough. Don't chase the market every day with a full position, keep 20%-30% cash on hand; it can save you in critical moments. Many people miss opportunities just because they run out of bullets.

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**Article 2: Cognitive Level = Earning Limit**

If you don't understand the trend or choose the wrong coin, no matter how good your luck is, you won't be able to hold onto your profits. A demo account can help you practice your speed, but a real account tests your judgment and mental control—these two are not on the same level.

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**Article 3: When good news is fully released, it is a signal of the peak**

Did the major news not come out on the day it was announced? If it opens high the next day, you must decisively exit. At this time, everyone is looking for opportunities to retreat, and if you hesitate, you will become the one left holding the bag.

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**Article 4: Reducing positions before long holidays is an old-school habit**

During the holiday period, trading volume shrinks and there is a lack of news, making the market prone to strange fluctuations. Reducing positions a week in advance can help avoid many inexplicable losses.

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**Article 5: When trading in waves, you must keep "spare grain"**

Sell in batches when it rises, buy in batches when it falls. It sounds simple, but it tests patience the most when put into practice. It relies on discipline, not on the luck of a big bet.

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**Article 6: Only engage with targets that have good liquidity for short-term trading**

A cryptocurrency with poor liquidity is easy to enter but difficult to exit; that's not trading, it's self-imprisonment. Short-term trading is about being flexible in entering and exiting; you need to be able to enter and also able to exit.

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**Article 7: The Rhythm of Decline Determines the Strength of Rebound**

The market has its own rhythm. Those that slowly decline usually recover slowly as well; those that suddenly crash often rebound vigorously. By observing the way it falls, one can predict the nature of the rebound.

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**Article 8: Stop-loss is a lifesaving skill**

If you made a mistake, admit it, and cut your losses. Never fantasize about "waiting for it to rebound" — preserving your capital is the only chance for a comeback next time. This is a hard rule, with no room for negotiation.

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**Article 9: Short-term focus on 15-minute cycle + core indicators**

Use the 15-minute candlestick chart in conjunction with KDJ to observe overbought and oversold conditions, and then confirm with MACD and RSI as assistance. It's not about having many indicators, but whether you can consistently apply the same set of standards.

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**Article 10: Understanding a few indicators is better than learning a bunch**

Choose three to five indicators that you truly understand and research them in depth. Understand why they are effective and under what circumstances they fail. This is a hundred times more valuable than memorizing a bunch of terms.

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These ten points don't involve any profound theories; they are all experiences gained through blood and tears. There aren't many who can truly achieve this, but as long as you persist, the market will eventually reward you.
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alpha_leakervip
· 11-27 13:18
To be honest, the eighth point hits me the hardest. I've seen too many people stubbornly refusing to stop loss, resulting in a loss that goes from 20% to a painful 50%. This kind of stupidity tax is really something I can't afford.
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ShadowStakervip
· 11-26 15:11
ngl point nine feels oversimplified... 15min + kdj combo works until it doesn't, and that's where most people blow up. the indicator dogma thing is real though
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ChainSauceMastervip
· 11-26 09:37
You are all right, but the execution part is hell mode.
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DegenDreamervip
· 11-25 12:56
You're right, it's the stop loss that is the hardest to achieve; it’s hard to stay firm when watching the fall.
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GasFeeNightmarevip
· 11-25 12:56
You're right, too many people can't follow the eighth rule, greed kills.
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MoneyBurnervip
· 11-25 12:55
You're right, it's just particularly difficult to execute... I'm currently stuck on the fifth point. Selling in batches and buying in batches sounds simple, but once I start, I just want to go all in, and before I realize it, I've run out of bullets.
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OldLeekConfessionvip
· 11-25 12:52
That's a valid point, but the key is still to have discipline. I've missed several waves before because I didn't leave any bullets.
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GateUser-9f682d4cvip
· 11-25 12:43
To be honest, the eighth point struck me the most. The moment of Cut Loss was the hardest, but it has saved me countless times...
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ContractCollectorvip
· 11-25 12:35
The first point hits me the hardest; without any bullets in hand, I can only watch the market run.
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