Kan Huikai is right:


When it comes to trading, you really don’t need to learn too much trading skills.
Many people study a lot of indicators, memorize a whole rack of trading tactics, but when the chart moves, they’re still completely at a loss—they don’t know whether to go long or short.
Actually, in this line of work, having one thing you’ve mastered is better than knowing a lot.
People with talent are naturally few; ordinary people don’t rely on talent—they rely on focus, repetition, and execution.
Any set of mature trading techniques can be learned to 80–90% in half a month, but most people lose because: they understand it but can’t do it, or they can do it but can’t stick with it and hold their discipline.
Techniques are easy to learn; discipline is hard to maintain. Methods are easy to get; controlling the human mind is hard.
Instead of chasing new tactics and learning new indicators every day, it’s better to take a simple and effective logic and train it to the extreme.
Take all your previously profitable trades, review them, and look for common formations and common signals—then lock them into your only trading model.
One moving average, one pattern, one set of entry and exit rules—that’s enough for a lifetime.
The simpler the trading, the easier it is to make money; the more complicated the ideas, the easier it is to lose.
Keep sticking to only the markets you understand, only execute your fixed signals, repeat and wait patiently—after a long time, the market will naturally reward you.#Gate广场五月交易分享
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