I have been testing on gold contracts for a period of time, and I now have a relatively stable trading direction. For interested friends, you might consider copying the trades to try.
The core idea is simple—focus on gold contracts, maintain low-frequency operations, roughly one trade per week. Since April, the actual results have been quite good, and the profit after deducting fees is shown in the chart below.
To be honest, I need to point out a few things: these data are the results from early testing, and future performance might be even better, but fluctuations are also possible—no one can guarantee to replicate the same results every month. If you want to try, my suggestion is to start with a small position and observe for two months to see if the strategy fits your risk preference and capital scale, then make a decision.
The trading market always tests patience and risk awareness; I do not recommend blindly following the trend.
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GamefiHarvester
· 6h ago
Hey, isn't gold supposed to be stable... The early data looked good, but it's all the same.
Following trades depends on consistency. Once a week isn't high frequency at all.
I'm a bit cautious about this wave; it feels like leaving a backup plan for myself.
Honestly, the future market fluctuations are the real test. Now I keep hearing this kind of opening line every day.
A two-month observation period is reasonable, but how many people can really stick with it in practice?
Small-scale trial and error sound easy, but it's hard to actually do. It's about mindset...
Gold has been so volatile in these few months—how can it still be stable? Haha.
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 6h ago
Low-frequency trading once a week, I approve of this pace. But to be honest, the current market trend since April has been a tailwind for gold; the real test is still ahead.
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quietly_staking
· 6h ago
Low-frequency gold contracts, stability is all that matters
Once a week trading without itchiness, I agree with this
Small-scale testing for two months before entering the market, this is the correct approach
Backtesting looks good, but it doesn't guarantee future performance; the risk is always there
However, truly being able to consistently generate data is indeed better than most people
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Wait, where's the chart? I didn't see the profit screenshot
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Gold contracts sound simple, but the actual volatility can drive people crazy; patience is really the bottom line
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This low-frequency operation idea is pretty good, much better than those who frequently cut losses intraday
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I like honest analysis; it’s not hyped as a guaranteed money-maker
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Trading once a week? This strategy must be combined with stop-loss to be meaningful
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StealthDeployer
· 6h ago
Gold contract stable trading, I like this logic
Once a week, definitely more sensible than those who chase highs and sell lows every day. This low-frequency strategy really allows for longer survival
The data looks good, but your honest words deserve a score. No bragging, top
Wait, is this floating profit real transaction or just paper profit?
Before copying trades, you really should test with a small amount for two months, otherwise you'll become a target for being harvested like a leek. Your advice is spot on
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DegenRecoveryGroup
· 6h ago
Gold trading is once a week, sounds pretty stable
Honestly, can it be replicated later? That's the question
Trying with small amounts is also fine, anyway, the risk has to be borne by yourself
I have been testing on gold contracts for a period of time, and I now have a relatively stable trading direction. For interested friends, you might consider copying the trades to try.
The core idea is simple—focus on gold contracts, maintain low-frequency operations, roughly one trade per week. Since April, the actual results have been quite good, and the profit after deducting fees is shown in the chart below.
To be honest, I need to point out a few things: these data are the results from early testing, and future performance might be even better, but fluctuations are also possible—no one can guarantee to replicate the same results every month. If you want to try, my suggestion is to start with a small position and observe for two months to see if the strategy fits your risk preference and capital scale, then make a decision.
The trading market always tests patience and risk awareness; I do not recommend blindly following the trend.