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What is the easiest vicious cycle to fall into in the crypto world? It’s often not the newbies’ accounts, but those who work the hardest. Staying glued to candlestick charts every day, memorizing MACD and RSI inside out, staying up late analyzing patterns has become routine, yet the account keeps spinning in place, sometimes even experiencing margin calls.
I know a fan who is a perfect example of this. In his early days, he was a technical trader, using a full set of indicators. He would make profits and losses, but couldn’t break out of this cycle. One day, he asked me for advice, and I told him: Don’t overcomplicate trading; simplicity is the key.
What I taught him was a seemingly simple but actually very steady method—343 phased position building. The core logic is not to predict market rises or falls, but to follow your own rhythm completely.
First, allocate 30% of your funds as a foundation, only choose mainstream coins, and never go all-in. Then, reserve 40% as a flexible reserve; if the price rises, resist the urge to chase, and if it drops, add to your position according to your predetermined plan, gradually lowering your average cost. Finally, the remaining 10% is only added once the trend is truly confirmed. At the same time, use a trailing stop mechanism to let profits run on their own.
He strictly followed this framework for two years, turning an initial 200,000 into over 50 million.
Later, during a chat, he said something quite interesting: Making money isn’t really about predicting the top or bottom, but about making fewer mistakes and surviving long enough. The brilliance of this method lies in the fact that you don’t need to guess the peak or the bottom; you just need to stick to your rules during volatility.
The method itself isn’t complicated; what’s complicated is controlling those hands and resisting various temptations. In the end, the crypto world’s competition has never been about who is the smartest, but about who can stay in the game continuously.