Design your swing trading strategy around a simple framework. Take pullback trading as an example: you're looking to catch a stock or asset that's in a strong long-term uptrend by entering when it dips back to support.
First, confirm the asset is genuinely in an uptrend—check if it's trading above the 200-day moving average. That's your baseline for bullish momentum. Next, watch for a pullback toward the 50-day MA, which often acts as dynamic support during healthy uptrends. Once price approaches that level, that's your potential entry zone.
This approach filters out weak moves and keeps you aligned with the dominant trend. The key is building checklists like this into your workflow: verify the macro trend, identify your entry trigger, size appropriately. Consistency beats chasing every signal.
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0xSoulless
· 45m ago
If you can make money just by staying above the 200-day moving average, are there still any new investors? Wake up, everyone.
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MevHunter
· 13h ago
I've heard the 200-day moving average theory too many times, but the real challenge is when to actually exit the position...
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WenAirdrop
· 13h ago
Above the 200-day moving average, then go for it? I think it also depends on the volume; rebounds without volume are all fake.
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ProposalManiac
· 13h ago
200-day moving average + 50-day moving average, this framework essentially turns "trend following" into an SOP process—applying mechanism design thinking to trading, which is quite interesting. The key is to prevent "incentive failure," otherwise even the most rigorous rules can be challenged by the market.
Design your swing trading strategy around a simple framework. Take pullback trading as an example: you're looking to catch a stock or asset that's in a strong long-term uptrend by entering when it dips back to support.
First, confirm the asset is genuinely in an uptrend—check if it's trading above the 200-day moving average. That's your baseline for bullish momentum. Next, watch for a pullback toward the 50-day MA, which often acts as dynamic support during healthy uptrends. Once price approaches that level, that's your potential entry zone.
This approach filters out weak moves and keeps you aligned with the dominant trend. The key is building checklists like this into your workflow: verify the macro trend, identify your entry trigger, size appropriately. Consistency beats chasing every signal.