Recently, a fren private messaged me asking: "The crypto market is moving sideways now, with no leverage opportunities and no hot topics, how can one make money?"
My answer is simple – in 60 days, I turned 2800U into 68,000U. I didn’t stay up all night watching the market, nor did I touch those high-risk altcoins. What helped me avoid 80% of the pitfalls in the market were three seemingly clumsy but actually effective methods.
**Let's first talk about position management.**
I won't invest all the principal at once. Instead, I will split it into three independent accounts: one part for short-term trading, operating a maximum of twice a day, aiming to make 2%-3% before taking profits, primarily to cover transaction costs; another part specifically for trend chasing, entering the market only when the price breaks through a previous high, taking profits when reaching 30%; finally, I will keep a reserve to deal with sudden pullbacks or the need to average down.
In a volatile market, this kind of splitting operation can keep the account feeling alive, preventing a complete collapse due to a single misjudgment.
**Let’s talk about the principles of timing.**
I only trade when the trend is clear, and I close the trading software during sideways periods. The specific criteria are: the daily MA30 must be above the MA60, and the price must genuinely break through the previous high. Only when both conditions are met do I take action. At other times, even if MERL rises or IRYS has movements, I won't touch it.
Most of the time this year, the market has been quite frustrating, and many people have lost heavily due to frequent trading. I chose to take a break, which allowed me to avoid those seemingly opportunistic but actually trap-like bait.
**Finally, there is the line of discipline.**
I set three strict rules for myself: immediately stop-loss if any single trade loses more than 3%, no delusions; when floating profit reaches 10%, pull the stop-loss line to the cost price to ensure the safety of the principal; uninstall the trading software at 11 PM every night to prevent impulsive operations late at night.
These rules sound a bit mechanical, but they effectively isolate emotional interference in decision-making. After all, the crypto market is not a casino; during volatile periods, it's not luck that counts, but the execution of the rules.
In summary: dismantle positions to diversify risk, wait for trends without acting blindly, and maintain discipline to control emotions. Opportunities for coins like TAC may arise at any time, but only the money that survives can wait for the next wave of the market. Stick to this method, and next time the market rebounds, you will be able to steadily profit.
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AirdropHunter9000
· 11-29 22:32
60 days from 2800 to 68,000, to be honest, it's a bit exaggerated, but the logic of the trap for breaking down positions can indeed help one survive longer.
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BrokenDAO
· 11-27 11:30
To put it plainly, this is a problem of incentive mechanism design. The author spreads the risk across three accounts, which essentially hedges against their own decision-making errors — this is quite honest. But can this method be replicated?
The key flaw lies here: no matter how strict the rules are, they cannot withstand human nature. That "23 o'clock to uninstall the software" strict rule? I've seen too many people break it just three days after making it. This is not a system issue; it's that the trust cost of execution is too high.
That being said, compared to those who boast about swing trading and high leverage, this guy at least admits that he can also misjudge and needs a stop loss line as a defense. This logic of "only the money that survives can wait for the next wave" is, in a way, a satire of DAO governance — many protocols also fail before they fully understand how to survive.
Digital numbers look good, from 2800 to 68,000 is indeed tempting, but is this an individual case or a systemic viable solution? I remain skeptical about the latter. The market doesn't care much about "democracy" — a set of rules may work now, but the next time window could become a trap.
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pumpamentalist
· 11-27 03:55
2800U soared to 68,000, it's easy to say but this discipline is indeed harsh...
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No exaggeration or criticism, a stop loss of 3% is truly lifesaving, I’ve seen too many people hold a losing position until they burst
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Uninstalling the trading software at 11 PM is brilliant, the mind just isn’t clear late at night
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I need to ponder the idea of splitting into three accounts, but the execution ability is probably the ceiling for most people
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Can relying on MA30 and MA60 help avoid 80% of the pitfalls? I feel like this is just psychological comfort...
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Waiting for the trend is easy to say but hard to do, can one really hold on without operating?
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Taking half profits is a good idea, greed is the biggest killer in the crypto market.
View OriginalReply0
StablecoinAnxiety
· 11-27 03:46
This trap method sounds quite reliable, but the execution difficulty is a ceiling.
Recently, a fren private messaged me asking: "The crypto market is moving sideways now, with no leverage opportunities and no hot topics, how can one make money?"
My answer is simple – in 60 days, I turned 2800U into 68,000U. I didn’t stay up all night watching the market, nor did I touch those high-risk altcoins. What helped me avoid 80% of the pitfalls in the market were three seemingly clumsy but actually effective methods.
**Let's first talk about position management.**
I won't invest all the principal at once. Instead, I will split it into three independent accounts: one part for short-term trading, operating a maximum of twice a day, aiming to make 2%-3% before taking profits, primarily to cover transaction costs; another part specifically for trend chasing, entering the market only when the price breaks through a previous high, taking profits when reaching 30%; finally, I will keep a reserve to deal with sudden pullbacks or the need to average down.
In a volatile market, this kind of splitting operation can keep the account feeling alive, preventing a complete collapse due to a single misjudgment.
**Let’s talk about the principles of timing.**
I only trade when the trend is clear, and I close the trading software during sideways periods. The specific criteria are: the daily MA30 must be above the MA60, and the price must genuinely break through the previous high. Only when both conditions are met do I take action. At other times, even if MERL rises or IRYS has movements, I won't touch it.
Most of the time this year, the market has been quite frustrating, and many people have lost heavily due to frequent trading. I chose to take a break, which allowed me to avoid those seemingly opportunistic but actually trap-like bait.
**Finally, there is the line of discipline.**
I set three strict rules for myself: immediately stop-loss if any single trade loses more than 3%, no delusions; when floating profit reaches 10%, pull the stop-loss line to the cost price to ensure the safety of the principal; uninstall the trading software at 11 PM every night to prevent impulsive operations late at night.
These rules sound a bit mechanical, but they effectively isolate emotional interference in decision-making. After all, the crypto market is not a casino; during volatile periods, it's not luck that counts, but the execution of the rules.
In summary: dismantle positions to diversify risk, wait for trends without acting blindly, and maintain discipline to control emotions. Opportunities for coins like TAC may arise at any time, but only the money that survives can wait for the next wave of the market. Stick to this method, and next time the market rebounds, you will be able to steadily profit.