Holding less than 10,000? Put aside those complicated derivatives operations for now. Today’s share is the simplest and most sustainable approach—avoiding liquidation and steadily growing your principal.
Many people have turned five figures into seven figures using this method. In essence, it involves just four actions. The simpler it is, the easier it is to stick with.
**What to look for to enter**
A daily MACD golden cross, especially one above the zero line. This indicates the market has already turned bullish, more reliable than any rumors. Don’t let the "soon to skyrocket" messages in groups distract you; technical signals are the retail investor’s safeguard.
**How to hold**
Follow only one line—the daily moving average. When the price stays above it, hold steady; once it breaks below, exit. The "wait and see" mindset is the most dangerous; poor execution will get you swept out early.
**When to act**
Volume and price resonance is the real opportunity. When the price breaks above the moving average, trading volume should also increase. Sell in stages: take half profit after a 40% rise, close the rest at 80%, and exit completely if it falls below the moving average.
**Stop-loss without debate**
If the closing price falls below the moving average, exit at the next open. A lucky break can wipe out a month’s profit; missing the chance to cut losses is always better than getting liquidated.
**Why this old method still works**
Rules lock in greed and fear, ensuring profits come from discipline. Only trade in clear trend conditions, automatically avoiding 80% of ineffective oscillations. Multiple small wins allow compound growth, and only then can the principal truly keep rolling.
The market never lacks opportunities. But if you can’t even stick to basic discipline, any opportunity is just a trap.
For small funds to turn around, first let go of the idea of getting rich overnight. Practice this method until it becomes instinct, and you’ll realize—slow is actually the fastest.
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GateUser-c799715c
· 11h ago
Exactly right, but the bottleneck is that many people are stuck on execution.
View OriginalReply0
RektButStillHere
· 11h ago
That's quite straightforward, but when it comes to execution... most people just can't do it. I have the most experience with stop-losses; last time, I just kept "waiting and seeing" and ended up going back to the pre-liberation era.
View OriginalReply0
UncleLiquidation
· 11h ago
The money from discipline is the most reliable... I just want to ask, how many people can truly avoid greed?
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GateUser-40edb63b
· 11h ago
That's right, discipline's money is the most stable.
View OriginalReply0
SnapshotBot
· 11h ago
To be honest, discipline is really the bottleneck; most people simply can't do it.
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ExpectationFarmer
· 11h ago
To be honest, discipline is the most painful part. Watching people in the group shout about a surge makes me itchy, and one greediness directly brings me back to zero. I've been using the MACD setup for over three years, and it is indeed stable, but it's a psychological torment.
Holding less than 10,000? Put aside those complicated derivatives operations for now. Today’s share is the simplest and most sustainable approach—avoiding liquidation and steadily growing your principal.
Many people have turned five figures into seven figures using this method. In essence, it involves just four actions. The simpler it is, the easier it is to stick with.
**What to look for to enter**
A daily MACD golden cross, especially one above the zero line. This indicates the market has already turned bullish, more reliable than any rumors. Don’t let the "soon to skyrocket" messages in groups distract you; technical signals are the retail investor’s safeguard.
**How to hold**
Follow only one line—the daily moving average. When the price stays above it, hold steady; once it breaks below, exit. The "wait and see" mindset is the most dangerous; poor execution will get you swept out early.
**When to act**
Volume and price resonance is the real opportunity. When the price breaks above the moving average, trading volume should also increase. Sell in stages: take half profit after a 40% rise, close the rest at 80%, and exit completely if it falls below the moving average.
**Stop-loss without debate**
If the closing price falls below the moving average, exit at the next open. A lucky break can wipe out a month’s profit; missing the chance to cut losses is always better than getting liquidated.
**Why this old method still works**
Rules lock in greed and fear, ensuring profits come from discipline. Only trade in clear trend conditions, automatically avoiding 80% of ineffective oscillations. Multiple small wins allow compound growth, and only then can the principal truly keep rolling.
The market never lacks opportunities. But if you can’t even stick to basic discipline, any opportunity is just a trap.
For small funds to turn around, first let go of the idea of getting rich overnight. Practice this method until it becomes instinct, and you’ll realize—slow is actually the fastest.