You only have a few thousand $U in hand? Don’t mess around. The dumb way is the real way—where you’re actually making money! $CHZ


I’ve seen too many people: all their small money gets dumped into random moves, and in the end they end up losing everything. That feeling—really not a good one.
The strategy below is a lesson I paid for myself in losses, and it’s also something I only truly believed after a few friends around me rolled from a few thousand $U into seven figures.
Not exciting, even a bit stupid, but steady. The core is just four steps—do it and that’s it.
1. Pick coins
Only focus on the daily-line MACD golden cross—prefer ones above the zero line.
Don’t trust gossip. I used to believe it too. If you chase in, you get trapped. Later I realized the indicators are more reliable than most big names. Missing out on news traps—once you’ve taken that hit, that’s enough.
2. Trading
Stubbornly stick to the 20-day moving average.
Hold firmly when the price is on the line; as soon as it breaks, exit immediately. Don’t fantasize about “wait a bit longer and it’ll come back.” I took that loss—what came wasn’t a rebound, it was a 50% drop. If it breaks the moving average, you leave—this is discipline, not a suggestion.
3. Entry and exit
Wait for two signals to trigger entry and exit at the same time:
Price stands above the moving average
Trading volume clearly increases
If both conditions are met, then go all-in. Don’t rush—rushing makes you more likely to make mistakes.
Step-by-step take profit:
Up 40%: cut a portion, lock in gains
Up 80%: cut another portion
If it breaks below the moving average, clear out and exit—don’t stay attached
4. Stop-loss
Look at the closing price.
If the close breaks below the moving average, you must exit the next day. Even if it feels unbearable, you still have to leave. One act of luck can wipe out a month’s profit. I’ve tried it—it really hurts.
Missing the trade isn’t scary. Buy back after it reclaims the moving average. There are plenty of opportunities—once your principal is gone, it’s really gone.
This method isn’t exciting and is kind of boring. But the people who survive in crypto are never the smartest—they’re the most disciplined.
Back then, that $PIPPIN move: people around me followed the signals, managed their positions well, and steadily ate up big chunks of profit. It wasn’t luck—it was rules.
Stop always slapping your thigh and saying “if only I’d known earlier.” The market isn’t short of opportunities—it’s short of people who can execute simple rules all the way through.
If you want to turn a small amount around, stability matters more than speed. I’ve walked this path—going slower is fine. Just don’t fall. #PreIPOs第二期OpenAI认购
#盘前合约上线长鑫存储
#台积电Q2净利暴增77.4%
CHZ-1.97%
PIPPIN0.87%
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • 3
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
LeekLighthouse
· 38m ago
This method looks boring, but it’s indeed reliable. My friend relied on moving-average discipline—going from a few thousand to several hundred thousand. Don’t always think about getting rich overnight.
View OriginalReply0
CoffeeGas
· 2h ago
This is too real. I followed the news before and it was cut in half; later I honestly watched for a MACD golden cross, and then combined it with the 20-day moving average. Although it’s slow, the account finally has started to grow positively. Keep your principal—only then do you have a chance. This post has to be saved and read again and again.
View OriginalReply0
VolumeHunter
· 2h ago
Discipline is the king; after losing a few times, I finally understood that indicators are more reliable than news.
View OriginalReply0
  • Pinned