If you always buy the dip during a surge and cut losses during a drop—it's not the market's fault, but rather the lack of a set of 'survival rules'.

Last December, when Bitcoin dropped to 38,000, the whole network panicked, shouting 'it's going to fall below 20,000', but we made profits against the trend with three steps:

👉 Step One: Data Minefield

Monitor on-chain: Discovered that whale addresses accumulated BTC for three consecutive weeks (total of 122,000 coins) miners' holdings: Transaction fee income ratio dropped to 15% (historical bottom signal)

→ Conclusion: It's the accumulation phase for major players; the probability of a crash is low.

👉 Step Two: Establish Dead Rules

Give fans clear instructions:

✅ If it falls below the previous low of 36,800, then stop loss.

✅ When the price ≥ 40,000, invest in batches (increase position by 5% for every $500 rise)

✅ Total position ≤ 40% of principal.

👉 Step Three: Execute Against Human Nature

The most feedback from fans was:

"When it rose to 43,000, I wanted to wait for a pullback, but I gritted my teeth and followed the rules."

"I panicked and lost sleep when it fell back to 39,500 but resisted cutting losses."

→ Four months later, BTC broke 60,000, and executors made an average profit of 48%.

The same logic saves lives when topping out:

This June, when the whole network enthusiastically shouted 'ETH will break 8,000', we:

Discovered data anomalies: Exchange ETH inventory surged by over 30%+ (selling pressure warning) activated profit-taking rules: For every 3% increase above 4,500, reduce position by 10%, clear out if it breaks 4,200, and refuse FOMO temptation: firmly do not chase the currently hyped 'layer 2 ecosystem coins'.

→ Two weeks later, ETH crashed to 3,100, and operators who followed the rules locked in over 65% profit.

Why can't 90% of retail investors do it?

❌ Information Poisoning—watching 100 KOLs is not as good as focusing on 3 core indicators (exchange balances/stablecoin inflow/long-short ratio)

❌ Vague Decision-Making—cut losses when 'feeling it will drop', go all in when 'feeling it can rise'

❌ Greed at Play—always wanting to sell at the highest point, only to get stuck instead.

I only teach my fans three moves:

Use on-chain data instead of rumors (tools and monitoring checklists can be shared) Write down before trading: buy/sell/stop-loss prices (print it out and stick it on your computer) Single stop loss ≤ 5% of principal (only hold what you can afford to lose)

If you:

Want to replace emotional trading with data

Need a specific template for buying and selling rules

Are fed up with being repeatedly harvested by big players

Used to stumble around in the dark alone, but now the light is in my hands.

The light is always on, will you follow? @币来财888