#数字资产动态追踪 Complex technology is not an excuse; trading methods in the crypto world are not that mysterious. Today, I’ll share one of the most used strategies in practice—moving average follow-up strategy, suitable for those who want steady swing trading and don’t want to be swayed by emotions.
What this method can achieve: not buying at the lowest point, but using rules to constrain yourself, and controlling trial-and-error costs through position management.
**How to choose coins and how to get on board**
First, pick the right coins. Only focus on those with a clear upward trend—price staying above key moving averages (like the 30-day MA), and the MA lines diverging upward. That’s a good sign. Avoid coins that are in a downtrend.
Divide your funds into three parts for staged entry. Why divide? Because the market often plays false breakouts, and those who go all-in at once usually suffer the most.
When the price volume breaks above the 5-day MA, enter with the first part. Then see if it can hold above the 15-day MA; if yes, add the second part. Finally, if it can break through the 30-day MA, add the third part as the final push. This process allows the market to prove the strength of the trend itself.
**The secret to holding, and the timing to sell**
After entering, price pullbacks are normal. As long as it doesn’t fall below the MA you rely on, hold on. Once it breaks below, you need to exit that position. For example, if it breaks the 15-day MA, sell the second part, but if the first part still stays above the 5-day MA, keep holding it.
Shorting works the same way in reverse. When a high-level stagnation starts to break the MA: sell the first part if it breaks the 5-day MA, sell the second if it breaks the 15-day MA, and if the 30-day MA is gone? Exit completely—don’t bet on a rebound.
**It’s that simple**
The trend speaks for itself; you just need to use rules and position management to control risk. This method won’t make you a billionaire, but it helps develop a habit of stop-loss and achieve steady profits in swing trading. Coins like $SOL and $RVV can all be traded under this logic, as long as you stick to disciplined execution.
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SillyWhale
· 8h ago
This moving average entry strategy is essentially following the trend. The real test for a person is the psychological barrier—whether they dare to truly cut losses when the stop-loss line is broken.
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LiquidationKing
· 13h ago
It sounds good, I have long used the theory of entering in batches and using moving averages for stop-loss. The key is still mindset; the real difficulty is maintaining discipline and not breaking the rules.
People who go all-in at once are indeed the most miserable. I have seen too many, dividing into three parts is indeed more stable.
They say they won't gamble on rebounds, but in reality, everyone gets caught once before they understand.
In that $SOL wave, I just didn't sell when it broke the line, and later I lost even more. Now I just follow the rules.
This method, to put it simply, is "slow is fast." Surviving and leaving alive already means winning.
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JustHereForAirdrops
· 01-08 09:33
Speaking of this moving average strategy, I've played it before, but very few people actually execute it properly. Most are still uncertain and panic when the price drops.
Also, entering the market in batches sounds simple, but in practice, people always want to go all-in at once. That's a human weakness.
The key part is the stop-loss; it's easy to write but really hard to implement.
As soon as the price drops, you want to buy the dip, and you simply can't stick to the rules.
But it's definitely more reliable than those chaotic speculations, at least there's a framework in place.
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ColdWalletGuardian
· 01-07 06:01
Entering in batches is a solid approach, but the real bottleneck is discipline in execution, brother.
Basically, you have to be ruthless—cut losses quickly, break the line and walk away, no need to hesitate.
Moving average strategies sound simple, but in practice, who isn’t repeatedly tortured by emotions? In the end, most just stop-loss at the bottom.
This method can indeed avoid being caught in an all-in trap; dividing into three parts is definitely more stable.
I just want to ask if anyone can really sell immediately when the price drops below? Or are they all betting on a rebound?
It sounds nice, but the market doesn’t play tricks easily; false breakouts are hard to defend against.
---
The key is really not to be greedy, stick firmly to the rules, and don’t think about bottom-fishing.
Moving averages won’t make you big money, but you won’t lose too much blood. For beginners, that’s enough.
I’ve tested this logic; the SOL move really worked out, but I’m just worried it won’t listen next time.
---
I’ve attended many such strategy courses, but in the end, I still lost due to my mindset.
I understand stop-loss and all, but I just can’t bear to cut the meat.
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LayerZeroJunkie
· 01-07 05:59
That's a good point. Batch building positions can indeed be life-saving. I was once caught in an all-in position and changed after that. Now, I trust discipline much more than luck.
Moving averages, to put it simply, are meant to let the market verify the trend itself, so there's no need to guess the bottom with those false signals.
This strategy is quite straightforward, but the hardest part in execution is resisting the urge to YOLO. Discipline is truly the most valuable asset.
The selling point is indeed crucial. Many people make money and then give it back because they fail to stick to these rules. When the price breaks below the moving average, it's time to run, right?
The question is, can you really stay so rational during live trading? The mindset can collapse at any moment.
Developing a habit of stop-loss is easy to say but requires going through several cut-loss experiences to truly build. Without that process, it's hard to genuinely trust it.
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AltcoinMarathoner
· 01-07 05:59
just like mile 20 of an ultra, this is where discipline beats emotion. been DCA-ing moving averages for three cycles now — the accumulation phase rewards the patient, not the hopeful. macro perspective? trend layers self-validate when you let them breathe through the drawdowns.
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DefiEngineerJack
· 01-07 05:44
ngl, moving average stacking sounds nice in theory but where's the empirical data on win rate across different market regimes? most people just get liquidated following lines anyway lmao
Reply0
DustCollector
· 01-07 05:44
Honestly, I've been using the strategy of entering in batches for a long time. It's just that sticking to discipline is really difficult. Seeing the coin hit the daily limit and still having the urge to go all in...
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TheShibaWhisperer
· 01-07 05:41
To be honest, I've been using the phased entry method for a long time, but sometimes greed ruins it... like waiting for a rebound after breaking below the moving average.
If you don't want to bother too much, just watch the 30-day moving average. If it holds, stay; if it breaks, run immediately. Such a simple thing shouldn't be made complicated.
$SOL has been operated this way a few times, much more comfortable than all-in. Stop-loss has really saved me several times.
Do moving averages deceive us? Have you seen fake breakouts and similar tricks?
It looks stable, but it really requires disciplined execution. Most people talk nicely about it, but...
That's why trading is easy to say, but the hard part is not letting emotions hijack you.
#数字资产动态追踪 Complex technology is not an excuse; trading methods in the crypto world are not that mysterious. Today, I’ll share one of the most used strategies in practice—moving average follow-up strategy, suitable for those who want steady swing trading and don’t want to be swayed by emotions.
What this method can achieve: not buying at the lowest point, but using rules to constrain yourself, and controlling trial-and-error costs through position management.
**How to choose coins and how to get on board**
First, pick the right coins. Only focus on those with a clear upward trend—price staying above key moving averages (like the 30-day MA), and the MA lines diverging upward. That’s a good sign. Avoid coins that are in a downtrend.
Divide your funds into three parts for staged entry. Why divide? Because the market often plays false breakouts, and those who go all-in at once usually suffer the most.
When the price volume breaks above the 5-day MA, enter with the first part. Then see if it can hold above the 15-day MA; if yes, add the second part. Finally, if it can break through the 30-day MA, add the third part as the final push. This process allows the market to prove the strength of the trend itself.
**The secret to holding, and the timing to sell**
After entering, price pullbacks are normal. As long as it doesn’t fall below the MA you rely on, hold on. Once it breaks below, you need to exit that position. For example, if it breaks the 15-day MA, sell the second part, but if the first part still stays above the 5-day MA, keep holding it.
Shorting works the same way in reverse. When a high-level stagnation starts to break the MA: sell the first part if it breaks the 5-day MA, sell the second if it breaks the 15-day MA, and if the 30-day MA is gone? Exit completely—don’t bet on a rebound.
**It’s that simple**
The trend speaks for itself; you just need to use rules and position management to control risk. This method won’t make you a billionaire, but it helps develop a habit of stop-loss and achieve steady profits in swing trading. Coins like $SOL and $RVV can all be traded under this logic, as long as you stick to disciplined execution.