Last time someone asked a pretty harsh question about Jinma: Did you make money in the crypto world because you’re especially bold?



I almost couldn’t hold back my laughter at the time.

The truth is, when Jinma first entered the market, I was incredibly timid—putting in 800U and losing it all down to just 300U.

Later, I managed to slowly grow that leftover amount into hundreds of thousands of U, honestly, it’s not that I “dared,” but that I became increasingly afraid to make reckless moves.
$G
Later, I developed a set of simple methods, so simple they’re a bit boring, but I rely on them to survive:

Step 1: Only trade with “living” assets
Recently, I keep the ones with volume and wave structure; for those with continuous decline and no buyers, I delete them from my watchlist. Essentially, I avoid those dead coins that the market is abandoning.

Step 2: Only watch the big trend, don’t chase short-term hype
Before the weekly chart shows a clear move, I treat all upward spikes as noise and resolutely don’t go against the trend.
$BEAT
Step 3: Wait for the market to give me the answer
When the price returns near a key moving average (like the 60-day line), I don’t rush. I wait until volume increases, the decline stops, and the structure re-forms before gradually entering.

Step 4: Stick to a strict rule—cut losses when broken
As soon as a key moving average is effectively broken, I don’t explain or add to my position; I walk away. If I’m up about 20%, I take half profits to lock in gains, and the rest is for potential upside.
This method isn’t mystical at all, and it’s even a bit simple—just constantly filtering out trades with low certainty.

Looking back later, I realized: I didn’t make money by catching huge surges, but by avoiding many trades that should have wiped me out.

The most counterintuitive thing in the crypto world is: #0成本拿2股SK海力士
It’s not those who make money who survive, but those who “don’t chase quick profits,” and in the end, they’re the ones still at the table.
G6.95%
BEAT8.98%
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