Want to turn things around in the crypto world? Let me share a trading method I’ve used that’s simple to understand and practical to implement.
The core idea is this: divide your money into five equal parts. For example, if you have 10,000 yuan, each part is 2,000. During trading, only use one part at a time.
How does it work? First, buy a certain coin at the current price. If the coin price drops 10%? Don’t panic, buy another part. If the coin price rises 10%? Sell one part to lock in profits. Repeat this process until all five parts are used up or the coin is completely sold out.
The cleverest part of this strategy is: as long as you have a position, a price drop is actually an opportunity. Because when the price falls, we keep buying. Think about it—if all five parts are used, that means the coin’s price must have dropped nearly 50%. Unless there’s a massive crash, it’s unlikely to fall that hard.
From a profit perspective, each sale can lock in a 10% gain. For example, with a 100,000 yuan capital and using 20,000 yuan each time, each sale nets 2,000 yuan. Sounds pretty good, right?
However, there’s a small issue with this method. A 10% fluctuation isn’t small, and sometimes your orders might not fill immediately, forcing you to wait. This reduces capital efficiency—you’re either sitting idle or getting stuck with a coin that won’t move.
The solution isn’t complicated. One approach is to choose mainstream coins with relatively stable price fluctuations. Another is to wait during these price swings and put your money into financial products to earn some interest. That way, you can wait for the market while earning additional income.
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CryptoDouble-O-Seven
· 10h ago
It sounds very well thought out, but in actual operation, can you really wait for a 10% fluctuation? My experience is that most of the time, the price of the coin either soars or drops sharply, making it difficult to steadily progress by 10%.
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LightningSentry
· 13h ago
Sounds good, but in practice, a 10% fluctuation is enough to wipe out someone, and the market doesn't follow such regular patterns every day.
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PonziDetector
· 13h ago
Sounds nice, the five rules sound like the Federal Reserve's quantitative easing haha. But I want to ask, can we really wait for a 10% fluctuation in this crazy market?
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GasFeeNightmare
· 13h ago
It sounds like an improved version of grid trading, but is a 10% fluctuation really stable enough? Mainstream coins are all volatile players.
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TopEscapeArtist
· 13h ago
Sounds like a grid trading scheme with a different disguise. A 10% take profit and stop loss sounds great, but in actual operation, even the MACD golden cross can't fool me, let alone reliably capture 10% fluctuations. I've tried it, and in the end, I was stuck in the middle, waiting for a rebound even after bearish signals appeared, wasting capital efficiency.
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MetaverseHobo
· 13h ago
Five equal parts sound good, but in practice, can I really sell exactly 10% each time? Why do my orders always get stuck?
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failed_dev_successful_ape
· 14h ago
It sounds like the grid trading approach, but the risk seems to be wrapped up too gently.
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DaoTherapy
· 14h ago
It sounds similar to grid trading, mainly about averaging costs, right?
Want to turn things around in the crypto world? Let me share a trading method I’ve used that’s simple to understand and practical to implement.
The core idea is this: divide your money into five equal parts. For example, if you have 10,000 yuan, each part is 2,000. During trading, only use one part at a time.
How does it work? First, buy a certain coin at the current price. If the coin price drops 10%? Don’t panic, buy another part. If the coin price rises 10%? Sell one part to lock in profits. Repeat this process until all five parts are used up or the coin is completely sold out.
The cleverest part of this strategy is: as long as you have a position, a price drop is actually an opportunity. Because when the price falls, we keep buying. Think about it—if all five parts are used, that means the coin’s price must have dropped nearly 50%. Unless there’s a massive crash, it’s unlikely to fall that hard.
From a profit perspective, each sale can lock in a 10% gain. For example, with a 100,000 yuan capital and using 20,000 yuan each time, each sale nets 2,000 yuan. Sounds pretty good, right?
However, there’s a small issue with this method. A 10% fluctuation isn’t small, and sometimes your orders might not fill immediately, forcing you to wait. This reduces capital efficiency—you’re either sitting idle or getting stuck with a coin that won’t move.
The solution isn’t complicated. One approach is to choose mainstream coins with relatively stable price fluctuations. Another is to wait during these price swings and put your money into financial products to earn some interest. That way, you can wait for the market while earning additional income.