People often ask, how do you determine support and resistance levels, and when is the right time to enter the market? Honestly, it's not that mysterious.



My approach has always been simple but effective. When choosing coins, I don't randomly browse; I look at the top gainers. Coins that have experienced a rally in the past half month are directly added to my watchlist. If they can rise, it indicates there is capital backing and popularity gathering behind them, providing a foundation for continued upward movement. Otherwise, there's no point for traders to connect the dots.

I also keep technical indicators straightforward—mainly focusing on the monthly MACD. I avoid trading when the trend hasn't clearly emerged. Those oversold rebounds? Winning once is partly luck. Relying on that for long-term turnaround will eventually lead to a crash.

When I actually enter a position, I mainly look at the medium-term moving averages. I wait until the price pulls back near a key moving average and is supported by trading volume. Only then do I consider entering. Don't try to guess the bottom; learn to wait for signals. When the conditions are right, act; if not, be patient and wait—no forcing.

Once in, things become simple—if the moving average holds, keep holding; if it breaks, exit immediately. Every hesitation could turn profits into losses. I've stepped into too many of these traps.

When the gain is good, don't be greedy. Take profits gradually by reducing your position in stages. Don't always try to eat the whole fish; the tail is often the most troublesome part.

The most crucial rule: if the price breaks below a key level, just exit without hesitation. This discipline has saved me countless times. Many people are reluctant to cut losses, but ending up with small losses can eventually turn into big holes.

The method, in essence, isn't complicated. The hard part is whether you can stick to it consistently. Market opportunities are always there, but the prerequisite is that you survive long enough to seize them.
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DeFiDoctorvip
· 16h ago
The consultation record shows that this patient's clinical presentation is quite typical—strong technical execution but lacking an early warning mechanism for liquidity risk. The monthly MACD combined with moving averages, in simple terms, is a passive replenishment after being unable to chase the rally, betting on subsequent capital relay. This can easily turn into a "price correction to the moving average = stop-loss machine" in a bear market. The idea of reducing positions in batches is somewhat interesting, as it at least indicates not to be greedy, but the problem is: he didn't consider the risks on the protocol side. Focusing only on K-line charts can avoid price crashes but cannot prevent contract explosions or liquidity exhaustion. It is recommended to periodically review the adaptability of this strategy across different market cycles.
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SnapshotLaborervip
· 12-25 13:56
Exactly right, but the hardest part is execution. I've also tried sticking to the moving averages, but one hesitation and it's all gone, really.
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BrokeBeansvip
· 12-25 13:56
Bankrupt Dou Dou, what a name! It's all heartfelt words. I really need to remember that sticking to the monthly MACD is more reliable than those flashy indicators.
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ForkItAllDayvip
· 12-25 13:56
That's right, discipline is the key to survival. Most people die because of greed.
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GateUser-4745f9cevip
· 12-25 13:55
That's right, discipline and patience are key. I used to pile on various indicators, which only led to worse losses. Now, I'm similar to you—once the moving average breaks, I withdraw, there's no need to hesitate.
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FloorPriceWatchervip
· 12-25 13:53
That's right, it's all about discipline. What I fear most are those moments when you make excuses for yourself—thinking of a rebound after a moving average break, only to end up sinking deeper and deeper.
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NftBankruptcyClubvip
· 12-25 13:35
When the moving average breaks, run. I have deep experience with this. Last time I didn't heed the advice and almost became an ATM.
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