First, self-expose your own situation:

I am an 'old leek' who has struggled in the crypto world for 7 years—no, now I should be considered a free person singing 'The serfs have risen up!'

I entered the market back then at 80 bucks, got overly excited and went all in on a copycat coin, and at the peak lost over 500 bucks.

When I was doubting life during a drop, I even considered selling tea eggs, but the tea egg vendor told me: 'You should keep trading coins, don’t take away my livelihood.'

Later, after enduring bull and bear markets, and going through waterfalls, I finally summarized a set of iron rules for trading coins that won’t get you cut and can occasionally allow you to harvest.

1. Divide your funds into five parts, even if you make a mistake, you won't panic.

Never go all in!

Divide your principal into 5 parts, and use only 1 part at a time.

What does it mean? Making a mistake once means losing at most 2% of total funds, making a mistake 5 times means losing 10%.

This is like going to a casino with just a little change; if you lose, you can just leave and treat yourself to a cup of milk tea.

2. The market is like a relationship, don’t go against the flow.

When the market drops, there are always people shouting 'It's time to buy the dip!'... Don't listen, that's called a trap.

When it rises and then retraces, people start shouting 'It’s over, it's going to crash'... In fact, that's a golden pit.

The market has a rhythm, go with it, don’t sing the opposite tune.

3. See a surge and get excited? You probably want to get cut beautifully.

Don’t touch coins that triple in value in a short period.

At high levels with stagnation, it is very likely to plummet afterwards; if you rush in, you are just helping others get out of their positions.

4. MACD is an old friend; all entry and exit rely on it.

Not understanding candlesticks is fine; just learning MACD is enough:

Entering the market: When the DIF and DEA cross above the 0 axis below, and then break through the 0 axis—like a dog suddenly jumping out of a mud pit, it might turn into a dark horse.

Reducing positions: When MACD has a death cross above the 0 axis and starts to go down, move!

MACD looks like a scientific experiment, but it’s actually a lifesaving candlestick tool.

5. Those who add to their positions are emotional traders, while those who increase their holdings are professionals.

Losing money and adding to positions: You are an emotional player; when others drop, you drop even more, endlessly.

Making money and increasing positions: This is the mindset of going with the trend; following victory will prevent you from getting lost.

Additionally, remember to observe the relationship between volume and price:

Low volume breakout = opportunity.

High volume stagnation = run!

The crypto world is not a paradise for workers; it’s a battlefield for high-IQ players.

If you want to find opportunities to dig deep into trends and accurately seize trading opportunities, welcome to Wu Ge's 'main job'!

Daily sharing, industry techniques, market analysis, and breaking down essentials, guiding you to understand the volatility logic of ETH!