To all friends who want to achieve financial freedom through trading, some heartfelt words.



When a strong coin drops for 9 consecutive days at a high level, follow decisively. But any coin that rises for 2 days in a row should be sold immediately. This sounds contradictory, but it actually tests your judgment of trend reversals. Coins that surge more than 7% are likely to continue higher the next day, so you can keep observing. But don’t chase after major bull coins; learn to wait for the pullback to end before entering.

A market that remains flat with little volatility for 3 days needs another 3 days of observation. If there’s still no change, it’s time to decisively switch to a different asset. A key indicator is: if you can’t recover the previous day’s cost the next day, exit immediately. Stop-loss is very important. The top gainers follow a pattern: three must lead to five, five must lead to seven. When this happens, if the coin rises for 2 days in a row, buy on dips; by the fifth day, it’s suitable to sell.

Volume-price relationship is the soul of trading. Focus on volume breakthroughs at low levels, and if volume surges at high levels without price increase, exit quickly. My selection criteria for coins are to only trade in upward trends: 3-day moving average trending up with short-term gains, 30-day moving average trending up in mid-term, 80-day main upward wave starting, and 120-day long-term also rising.

Small funds can also turn around, relying on correct methods, stable mindset, strict execution, and most importantly, patience to wait for opportunities. The system is simple to the point of being laughable: don’t shoot the eagle until you see the rabbit, but hit the tiger hard when you see it. This logic applies to BTC, ETH, SOL, and other such assets.
BTC0.65%
ETH0.72%
SOL0.4%
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MelonFieldvip
· 7h ago
What is this, reducing positions after two days of continuous rise, chasing after nine days of continuous decline? The more I think about this logic, the more headache I get. Is it true? If volume-price relationship is so important, why didn't I pay attention to it before? You make it sound so easy, but can your mindset stay stable during actual operation? I just want to know. Waiting for a pullback sounds easy in theory, but can you really resist when your finger is on the trigger? Small funds turning around is just for psychological comfort; whether you make money or not is another story. This system sounds so simple that it’s a bit painful; why do I feel like I’ve wasted so many years paying tuition? The pattern on the gain ranking list is indeed interesting, but I always feel like the market is fooling me.
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AirdropFatiguevip
· 23h ago
Sounds good, but actual trading is a different story. After a few pullbacks, panic sets in. This logic is easy to say, but executing it requires a steel-like mindset. Most people get shaken out before they even get the chance. I agree with stop-loss strategies; I'm just worried about getting itchy and watching the price drop without doing anything. The relationship between volume and price is indeed important, but I often misjudge situations where volume increases at high levels without a price rise, and I end up taking some losses. The methodology isn't wrong; the key is to withstand the time cost. Turning around with small funds requires not only a strategy but also luck. That's quite right, but most people, including myself, simply can't execute it.
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SellLowExpertvip
· 12-17 15:47
After nine consecutive days of decline, I follow up; after two days of rise, I reduce my position. It sounds easy, but actually doing it requires a lot of discipline. If I can't recover the previous day's cost, I immediately exit. This stop-loss standard is a bit hardcore. I feel like I'm punishing myself. I've heard countless times that waiting for a pullback before re-entering is the way to go, but I can never be sure when a "pullback" actually ends. Price and volume are correct, but why is it so hard to find coins with increased volume at low levels? Most of the time, volume only increases at high levels. It's so simple it's almost laughable, but executing it strictly would cause many to go bankrupt. I like the saying "Don't shoot the eagle until you see the rabbit," but when the tiger comes, my hands tremble, and I have no strength left to strike hard. Having the three-day, thirty-day, and eighty-day moving averages all aligned is a rare condition that might only occur a few times a year. Financial freedom sounds beautiful, but in reality, it just means being able to keep a steady mindset and not be greedy.
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GateUser-e51e87c7vip
· 12-17 15:46
It sounds good, but the key still depends on execution. I just lost because of my mindset—I wanted to go all in after just two days of gains...
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GasWranglervip
· 12-17 15:44
technically speaking, this whole "9-day dip entry" framework is demonstrably sub-optimal if you're not analyzing the actual mempool dynamics and gas efficiency of your execution strategy. most retail traders just chase volume spikes without examining the transaction throughput cost-benefit analysis, which is empirically proven inefficient.
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CodeAuditQueenvip
· 12-17 15:31
The logic of the price-volume relationship... Simply put, it's about finding reentrancy vulnerabilities in smart contracts. Once abnormal signals are detected, retreat immediately. The problem is that most people simply can't do it.
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