Gege’s June contract live-trade summary is here 👇 In June, we placed 26 trades and took 5 days off. There were 4 stop-loss trades, 22 profitable trades, for a win rate of 84.61%. Cumulative return: 7559.19%. Trading isn’t about how much you make from one or two trades—it’s about whether you can consistently and stably profit over the long term. This report from June is the best proof. Opportunities are everywhere every day—just calmly secure the profit that belongs to you. Keep it up in July—let’s keep going! 💪 If you’re still chasing and killing the trend, or you don’t know how to judge entry and exit points, come to the chat and talk with me.
Binance has now launched a new feature— you can chat with other users via private messages directly within the platform. If you need to connect or have questions, you can scan the QR code below to add. Your profile bio also includes a chat ID—search by the ID to add “Gege.” Trading follow-up discussions: Binance official chat room👇
Yesterday I was worried about a steady decline all the way from $LAB with no bottom in sight. Today, it directly stages an oversold-to-bullish turnaround: the 24-hour gain has surged to 63.06%. From the low of 5.519, it has been pulled up all the way to 10.34. The current price is 10.247. Many trapped holders finally can breathe again—but don’t blindly assume the reversal is彻底 (fully) here. $ARPA
Looking back at the full chart, the earlier phase saw a cliff-like, continuous selloff from the 11.395 peak. The low was smashed down to 5.519—almost cut in half again and again. Oversold conditions accumulated a large amount of bargain-buying capital, and short-term speculators also集中进场 (concentrated their entry), leading to a rebound characterized by consecutive bullish candles. The MACD golden cross keeps moving upward; short-term bulls’ momentum is at full throttle. $ETH
Key levels to mark—pressure and support: the first near-term resistance is 10.34, the intraday high. The stronger medium-term resistance is 11.395, the prior high. Only if it can stand firm above 11.4 can we truly say it has turned the long-term bearish trend. On the downside, short-term support is 9.1, and the core watershed is 7.8. This rebound started from that base; if it breaks below, the rebound setup is immediately considered over.
Two possible scenarios for the coming period hide different outcomes: 1) Strong continuation: hold above 10.34, push to challenge the 11.4 prior high, and unwind the previously trapped high-level positions. 2) Bearish fakeout pullback: 10.34 meets resistance, profit-taking is concentrated and exits, and then it retraces to the 9.1 support for a shakeout.
Trading reminders: absolutely don’t chase longs at the current price. The short-term rally has been heavily overextended, and the chase-high risk/reward is extremely poor. If you’re holding a position stuck in losses, take partial reductions on the rebound in batches and gradually lower your position size. If you’re on the sidelines, wait for a pullback and only try a light long once 9.0–9.1 stabilizes. Put the stop-loss below 7.8.
An oversold rebound doesn’t equal a full trend reversal. The prior trapped-position selling pressure is heavy. Whether it can break above the old 11.395 high is the key to judging how “real” this move is. The uncertainty is left to the next few hours of the market.
Follow Gege (发哥). No bragging, no empty promises—only practical experience that helps you survive in the circle. If you’re still repeatedly losing and restarting over and over, come talk to me—I’ll show you how to make trading simple.
Brothers, don’t rush to shout “empty” or blindly chase longs at this position: $ETH . $ARPA
Around 1776, there has been continuous pressure/attack, which indicates that supply overhead is indeed there. But the fact that there’s also clear capital support when price retraces toward 1750 is obvious. At the moment, the overall trend hasn’t turned bad—it’s more like switching hands and building momentum while trading in a high range.
Personally, I’m more inclined to believe that if it holds above 1765 and breaks 1776, there’s still a chance to continue challenging 1800. If it breaks down below 1750, then we should be on guard for a pullback to the 1730–1720 area. $LAB
What’s most taboo at this point is chasing rallies or panic-selling. Be patient and wait for direction to be confirmed—this matters more than betting on the market. Whichever side shows volume first, the price action will follow them. 📈
If you’re still chasing rallies and panic-selling, or you don’t know how to judge entry and exit points, come to the chat room to talk with me.
Perfect entry points are a trap, not an opportunity $LAB Do you often do this? You spot a coin, think it’s about to rise, but don’t enter. You tell yourself, “I’ll wait. When it retraces to XX, I’ll buy.” Then the market never turns back—it just keeps running higher, and you slap your forehead. Later, it really does retrace. Then you think, “I’ll wait a bit more. What if it drops even lower?” Finally, it rockets—yet you’re still waiting. $VELVET What you’re waiting for isn’t a retracement—it’s an illusion. You’re chasing not precision, but perfection. But in trading, there simply is no perfect entry point. There’s only one low—so why do you think it will be yours? There’s only one high—so why do you think you’ll sell at it? $M I know a friend who trades aggressively—he never waits. When a signal appears, he enters with a portion of the position first. If he’s wrong, it’s a small loss; if he’s right, he adds. He says, “I never expect to buy at the absolute low. I just don’t want to miss the move.” Look back: among the trades that made you money, how many were actually bought at the low? Most were simply “close enough” entries. And the ones that made you slap your forehead were the ones trapped in “wait a little more”… until it was gone. So stop waiting for perfect points. Replace going all-in with scaling in. Replace guessing tops and bottoms with a trailing stop. You don’t need to win every time—you just need to avoid missing out. If you’re still chasing and killing trades, or you don’t know how to judge entry and exit points, come find me in the chat room to talk.
A successful trade once ruined my three months of good momentum $M Tell you something you might not believe: when I was at my worst, it wasn’t during the streak of stop-outs—it was after a single windfall profit. $LAB For a period last year, my luck was unbelievable. One short position took more than 400 points, and my account doubled overnight. In those days, I walked like I had the wind at my back, thinking I was the chosen one of fate. When I shouted trade calls in the group, my voice even sounded louder. $VELVET Then I made three mistakes: First, I started going heavy, thinking, “I’ve already made so much—losing a bit doesn’t matter.” Second, I started holding positions and hoping, thinking, “With my skill, I can definitely ride it back.” Third, I entered “feelings trading” mode—I stopped strictly following the stop-loss. What happened? In just two weeks, I not only gave back all the profit from that doubled gain, but also lost 20% of my principal. That day, I just stared at my account, asking myself: Why did making money lead to an even worse situation? Later I understood this: a single big win is easier to destroy a person than a single big loss. A big loss hurts—you remember the lesson. A big win makes you float—you forget every rule. And once you’re floating, falling isn’t far behind. Since then, I’ve set a rule for myself: after I make a big profit, I must stop trading for one day. It’s not because I’m afraid the market will disappear—it’s because I’m afraid I’ll get carried away. That day, I do nothing but stay calm, review, and remind myself: you’re still the kind of person who needs to trade according to rules—you’re not a god. After your last big win, did you get carried away or did you stay steady? If you got carried away, then next time you make money, maybe try stopping for a bit. The market doesn’t lack opportunities for a single day, but you do lack a clear-minded you. If you’re still chasing prices, buying high and selling low, or you don’t know how to judge entry and exit points, come to the chat room and find me to exchange ideas.
I’ll never forget it—the way you cried and told me that fairytales are all lies. Gege, how much U do you have to make before you quit and return to normal life? $HMSTR
Too exhausting. I traded crypto for 3 years, and ended up losing friends and being abandoned.
After I rolled 10,000 U into 1.2 million U, I finally understood the most ruthless 6 rules in the crypto world. $ARPA
Last year, I used 10,000 U to slowly reach 1.2 million U—no inside information, and no outrageous, unbelievable big market moves. I just relied on a set of very “stupid” methods and executed them repeatedly. $LAB
This year, I’m only doing one thing: Treat trading like leveling up by defeating monsters.
No rush, no random moves. I watch the charts every day, review and adjust the pace. Over time, I realized that many veteran players are actually following some very simple rules.
Rule one: When the price rises fast and falls slowly, it’s often not the end.
After a quick surge, a gradual pullback is often just a consolidation wash. The real top usually comes after a strong breakout with volume—then a sudden, rapid drop.
Rule two: When the price falls fast and rises slowly, stay on high alert.
If the price suddenly drops and then slowly rebounds, this structure very likely means capital is gradually exiting. Once the trend changes, your actions must be decisive.
Rule three: High-volume in a high position doesn’t necessarily mean it’s over; low-volume is even more dangerous.
If there’s still active trading at the top, the trend sometimes can continue. But once the high level starts to become quiet, it often means the momentum is fading.
Rule four: Don’t rush into a surge after a volume breakout at the bottom.
A one-time surge in volume might just be a trap. A truly reliable bottom often first goes through a period of consolidation, and then—only then—comes a run of consecutive high-volume rallies.
Rule five: Market sentiment is hidden in trading volume.
Candlesticks are just the surface. Volume is the real action by money. When volume suddenly expands, it usually means new capital is starting to enter.
Rule six: Being in cash is also a kind of ability.
Many people, at the start of the day, just want to trade. It feels like if you miss one candlestick you’ll lose money. But the truly steady ones are those who can endure waiting.
Once you’ve been in crypto long enough, you’ll understand:
Trading isn’t about who’s more aggressive—it’s about who has more patience.
When you stop trying to grab every fluctuation and only focus on the opportunities that are truly worth acting on, your account’s curve will often change slowly.
Maybe one day, once you’ve earned enough, you’ll leave. But before that,
First, make every trade right. But let me be clear: this time I’m only talking to people on the same frequency—the ones who truly want to turn things around.
Why do some people turn 5,000U into 500,000U, while others lose 500,000U down to 5,000U?$BTC The difference isn’t skill, it’s whether they have rules. A lot of people enter the crypto world looking for a “get rich quick code.” Today they chase hot trends, tomorrow they go all-in on altcoins. If they’re lucky, they make money twice, and then the last trade gives it all back. The people who truly grow their money never rely on one reckless bet; they rely on these simple rules below.$M When a strong coin has fallen for 7-9 days, don’t panic. A gradual drop followed by sudden low volume is often the main players shaking out weak hands. Try a small position, and it’s easy to catch the next big move. After two straight days of gains, sell half first. If you can’t bear to sell, the market will sell for you. Take profits first, then go after the rest.$LAB Don’t chase a coin that has surged. If it’s pumping 7 or 8 percent in a day, you’re just jumping in to take the last seat. Wait until it can still hold up and keep volume the next day—that’s when it’s truly strong. If it doesn’t move for three days, switch immediately. Holding a dead coin while watching others make money is the biggest waste. If you’re down 5%, you must exit. Don’t average down, and don’t bet that it will come back. If you can’t bear a 5% loss today, the market will make you lose 50% later. Low-level volume expansion can be watched; high-level volume expansion must be sold. Volume at the bottom means someone is accumulating; volume at the top means someone is exiting. In the crypto world, the ones who end up making money aren’t the smartest—they’re the ones who best stick to the rules. When others are euphoric, stay in cash; when others are going all-in, leave yourself a way out. I’ve gone from a few thousand U to where I am now not because of luck, but because surviving is more important than making money fast. If you’re still chasing pumps and dumping bottoms, or you don’t know how to judge entry and exit points, come to the chat room and talk to me.
To be honest, having a small principal isn’t scary—the scary part is always trying to eat yourself fat in one bite. With 1500U rolling up to 56,000U, it’s not luck. It’s this hard logic that locks risk down and lets profits run.
If you’re still tossing and turning over fluctuations of a few hundred U, or you don’t know how to judge trends and control position sizing, come find me anytime. I’ll break down and explain every detail of scaling in, the tricks to find the timing, and the “temperature control” of execution—so you don’t take three extra years of detours, because that’s worth more than anything.
Brothers, first things first—this isn’t to show off. Take a look at how I and the fans I’ve taught make money in the crypto market!
I mentored a beginner who went in with 1500U, turned it into 28,000U in three months. Now the account has rolled up to 56,000U+—and he never blew up his positions the whole time. You think it was luck? Wrong. These three hard logics—today I’ll break them down for you for free:
This is also the core secret of how I went from making a profit from over 7,000 of the principal to my current financial freedom:
First move: Split the funds into a “triangle.” Going all-in is death. 1500U is split into three parts:
500U for intraday: watch one trade per day, exit on time, don’t be greedy.
500U for swings: don’t act for ten days or half a month. Once you act, go for the big meat.
500U for the “bottom card”: don’t move it—leave room to turn things around.
Many people go all-in and get liquidated. Surviving is what earns you the right to talk about profit.
Second move: Only eat the “thick profit,” refuse random tinkering In crypto, 80% of the time is sideways consolidation. Moving around wildly is just handing out money. Lie flat through the range—enter when the trend is clear. When profit hits your target, lock it in. If you exceed the principal by 20%, immediately take a third out. Real experts: “No openings means nothing—once in, eat for three years.”
Third move: Use machine-thinking. Emotion is the enemy
Cut losses at 2%—must be cut.
If you’re up 4%, reduce position first.
Never add to a losing position.
Set the rules and execute according to the plan. Don’t do random trades. The ultimate state of making money is: let the money run—don’t let emotions run.
If you’re still chasing pumps and selling dumps, or you don’t know how to judge the entry and exit points, come to the chat and let’s talk.
Many people enter the crypto market because they’re chasing high leverage and high returns. At first, they fantasize about “getting rich overnight,” but in the end they end up as “fodder.” Why? It’s not that they can’t make money—it’s that they never really thought about how to protect the profits they’ve earned.$M
You might be able to flip the account several hundred times and taste the thrill of making tens of thousands of USDT in a single day. But the real question is: are you still willing to go back and slowly build up a few thousand dollars? Most people don’t lack technical skills—their mindset collapses. When they make too much, they can’t bear to leave; when they lose too much, they desperately want to get it back. They end up getting deeper and deeper into the trap.$LAB
So here are a few pieces of advice, all learned the hard way:
1. Trade less; observe more. Don’t jump in right away. The market isn’t offering chances every day. Missing out shouldn’t make you anxious. In the crypto world, opportunities are never in short supply.$ETH
2. Don’t go against the trend. When you see a crowd rushing in, do you insist on trying to bottom-pick and top-tick? Then you end up becoming the one holding the bag after everyone else leaves. Remember: trading with the trend is the basic rule.
3. Have your own boundaries, and don’t let emotions control you. Set take-profit and stop-loss levels in advance. When they’re hit, execute—no greed, no hesitation. You’ll never know where the real “bottom” or “top” is. The moment you get greedy, it’s easy to turn a win into a loss.
Trading crypto isn’t gambling, and it’s not a luck game. What you’re competing with is strategy, patience, and self-control.
Those who manage to survive in the crypto market are never the ones who earn the most—they are the ones who can afford to lose and know when to stop.
Follow Gege. No bragging, no empty promises—only real experience you can use to survive in this space. If you’re still losing over and over and starting again from scratch, message me—we’ll talk, and I’ll teach you how to make trading simple.
When I was in college, I used my own savings of 50,000 as capital and made about over 10 million in the crypto market. Speaking of which, I’m actually quite “non-mainstream”—after graduating college, I never really looked for a proper job. I stayed in Wuxi and Suzhou most of the time. Back then I had no house, no car, and spending 3,000 yuan a month was enough.$M
People always ask, “Why do you have to get into the crypto world?” I want to say: if you really want to change ordinary people’s fate, you should give this space a try. If you can’t even抓住 opportunities in crypto, then in all likelihood, the rest of your life will just be routine—day by day.$BTC
My initial 50,000 yuan capital was something I saved little by little in college—doing business as a Taobao affiliate to earn commissions, helping people place orders to earn the price difference, delivering packages by running errands, and even going onto apps to do tasks for account top-ups and activities. I tried all kinds of small projects I could get my hands on. Later, when I entered the crypto market, I thought Bitcoin’s price was too high per coin, so I focused on Ethereum instead—it lets you use leverage, with a larger space for operation; sometimes I also bought some altcoins’ spot holdings. In fact, the logic is very simple: choose the right coin, manage your position well, and then grind away at this approach to the end. When the market is bad, you just take small losses; when the market turns, returns will naturally go up.
Just say in the past month—my capital directly increased by 50x. If it weren’t for me withdrawing money twice in the middle to buy a house, it could have been as high as 85x. After grinding in this space for so long, I’ve basically tried about 80% of the technical skills and methods available in the market.
After this, I’ll slowly share the most useful “golden buy/sell rules” from real practice, as well as 5 tricks that have never failed. If you use these well, earning 30% consistently in a month isn’t hard.
If you’re still chasing pumps and panic-selling, or you don’t know how to judge when to enter and when to exit, come to the chat room and talk with me.
500U roll into 100k? Do it at this pace! $M Many people ask me: “Bro, how exactly do you roll positions?” Today I’ll explain it all in one go! $LAB Rolling positions isn’t going all-in with a heavy position, and it isn’t relying on daily critical hits. It’s about rhythm + position control + executing step by step until you roll it out! $ETH 500U Rolling-Position Practical Steps ① Start with a position size ≤ 50% For the first trade, only use 200–300U to test the waters. Life first. Aim to achieve: “No blow-up, and no 20% pullback.” ② Only trade what you can clearly understand Have support/resistance + a trend + risk-reward ratio ≥ 2:1. Goal: place one trade, and survive one trade. ③ Write your stop-loss first Per-trade loss ≤ 5%–7% of your account. For a 1000U account, don’t set stop-loss beyond 50–70U. Never change it on the spot! ④ Take profit without greed Small swing: 30–50 points Big rhythm: 80–150 points Medium/long-term: risk-reward ratio ≥ 3:1 ⑤ When rolling to 3000U → increase speed by adding capital Per-trade position size: 800–1000U. Lower risk to 3%–5% of the account; drawdown ≤ 15%. ⑥ Every time you double → withdraw money first to lock profits 1000U → 3000U: withdraw 500U first. Even if the account pulls back, your mindset stays steady. Remember: In the small-money stage, focus on survival. In the mid-money stage, speed up. In the big-money stage, protect your gains. If you’re still alive, you’re the one who has the right to “roll up”! Hold this rhythm and keep doing it for 30 days—your account equity curve will tell you the answer.
This counterfeit $ARPA shows a classic hot-money violent pump followed by profit-taking pullback. We’ll break down the market opportunity and risks in detail and give everyone a clear trading approach.
In the early stage, the market started from the low of 0.00807. With concentrated capital entering, it moved up through a series of consecutive large bullish candles and rapidly surged to a peak of 0.01327, with the short-term gain approaching 65%. Moving averages rose sharply in sync, and bullish sentiment was fully maxed out. But after hitting the top, bullish funds quickly locked in profits and exited, leading to consecutive bearish closes and a pullback. The current price is 0.01208, which has already fallen below the short-term moving average, and upward momentum has clearly weakened. $ETH
Key resistance and support levels are clearly defined: strong resistance above is the prior high at 0.01327. Only if it reclaims and holds above this level with increased volume can the second round of gains potentially restart; short-term support is 0.01100, and the pivot for this rally is 0.0108. Once 0.0108 is broken, this bullish run will be considered over and a deeper correction will begin. $BTC
Two possible future scenarios: first, it retests support near 0.011 and stabilizes, then after digesting floating profits through consolidation, it challenges the prior high again; second, selling pressure continues to release, breaking below 0.011 support and pulling back deeply into the 0.0108 area. The latter currently has a higher probability.
In practice, do not bottom-fish at the current price expecting a rebound. Bottom-fishing during a high-level pullback phase is very likely to trap you again. If you are already holding and trapped, use rebounds near 0.0125 to reduce positions in batches and cut losses; if you are in cash, patiently wait for a pullback to 0.011 support, then look for a bullish close and enter lightly. Use a 20% starter position, with a stop-loss below 0.0108.
Short-term hot-money-driven altcoin pumps are extremely volatile. After a sharp rise, a deep shakeout is inevitable. Don’t be misled by the earlier series of bullish candles; blindly chasing higher prices will only end up absorbing the main force’s selling pressure.
If you are still chasing rises and dumping on dips, or don’t know how to judge entry and exit points, come to the chatroom and talk to me.
Damn, Ethereum $ETH is about to blast off! From the chart’s trend, you can see that ETH’s bottom at 1657 initiated a step-by-step rally. The entire move kept bouncing higher while relying on moving-average support throughout, with almost no deep pullbacks. Bullish capital has been continuously absorbing. In the short term, it surged to the stage high at 1749.5; the current price is 1745.6. Price is hugging the prior high area, and the hourly chart’s bullish trend is complete. $M
Clear levels for resistance and support: Short-term resistance is 1749.5. Only with a breakout on increased volume can new upside space be opened. The first support is 1730 (the short-term moving average). The key line between bulls and bears is 1700—so long as price does not break below 1700, the uptrend won’t break down. $ARPA
Two risks to pay attention to: 1. In the short term, a continuous one-way surge piles up a large amount of floating-profit positions in the market. If bullish momentum fades, a quick pullback and shakeout can happen at any time. 2. This is a rotation market driven by limited capital. After the Non-Farm Payrolls data landed yesterday, the market direction became briefly clear, but sell pressure above is gradually increasing. There’s no basis for a mindless, straight-line one-way pump.
Practical playbook: I don’t recommend chasing at the current price with a heavy position—the risk/reward at a high level is very poor. For the more cautious, wait for a pullback near 1730, enter lightly, allocate 20% as a core position, and place your stop-loss below 1700. If you already hold long positions, set a moving take-profit: if profits retrace by 10%, exit immediately to lock in gains—don’t get greedy and hold on hoping for higher prices.
In a one-way sequence of green candles, it’s easy to develop the illusion that things are “about to blast off.” Trading should always leave room for pullbacks; don’t let consecutive bullish candles mislead your judgment.
If you’re still chasing and selling impulsively, or you don’t know how to judge entry and exit points, come find me in the chat room to discuss.
Many people grab a few hundred U or a few thousand U and rush into the crypto market, immediately going in with maximum leverage and going all-in. They think: my principal is small, so I can only gamble on speed.
But the results are often very consistent—profits don’t come as fast as blowups.
I coached a newcomer with 800 U who grew it to 28,000 U in three months, with zero liquidations the whole time. It wasn’t luck—it was because he listened.
He only does three things:
First, he opens positions only when there’s a trend.
If there’s no signal, he stays out. He doesn’t keep checking the charts just to scratch an itch. He can wait.
Second, his position size is always separated; he never leaves himself with no escape route.
Every time, he gives himself a way out and never bets everything at once.
Third, once he hits the stop-loss, he leaves immediately.
No averaging down, no holding a losing trade, and no gambling his life.
Many people trade every day, from morning to night. It looks like they’re working hard, but really they’re just delivering money to the market.
For small capital, the opportunity was never about going all-in to multiply fast. It’s about staying alive first, then slowly compounding into something bigger.
In the end, what the crypto market really tests isn’t who dares to charge the hardest—it’s who can keep from dying.
Stop asking why it can go up 40%—$ARPA . What you really should ask is: why did it choose today to run? In just two short hours, it jumped straight to the third spot on the gainers list—up 45%. One candle after another pushes higher, leaving you no time to think. $M A lot of people are now staring at the candlestick chart to study technicals, but it’s already too late. Because this kind of move isn’t “made” by technicals in the first place—it’s determined by money. The most realistic saying in the crypto space is: $ETH Without capital paying attention, even the best candlestick chart is just useless paper; with capital coming in, even a terrible chart can be pulled into a monster run. So which two types of people feel the worst right now? One is the ones who sold too early, watching it climb all the way—regretting more and more as they watch. The other is the ones getting ready to jump in now, thinking it could still double. What the main players like most is exactly these two emotions. So when I see a market like this, I won’t be envious or jealous. If you didn’t get on the train, wait for the next one; if it’s already surged 40%, don’t turn yourself into a bag-holder just to chase the last bit of profit. There are “monster coins” every day in the market, but the principal is only one. Follow Brother Ge. No boasting, no empty promises—just sharing practical experience that helps you survive in this space. If you’re still losing repeatedly and starting over again and again, come talk to me—I’ll teach you how to make trading simple.
Brothers, today I’m going to share something that can keep you alive in the crypto market: “MACD divergence.” It’s a life-saving trick I pulled out of the wreckage after I got liquidated three times and lost over a million. In 2021, when BTC surged to 69,000, I went all-in with leveraged long positions. I had unrealized profits of 4 million. Everyone in the group was shouting, “Break 100k!” But I noticed that the MACD red histogram bars were getting shorter and shorter—price made a new high, yet the bars were only about half the previous length. At 3 a.m., remembering the lesson from ETH three years earlier, I gritted my teeth and closed everything. The next day BTC crashed 58%. The screams of liquidation back then—thinking about it now is still too loud. That’s top divergence: when the market maker pumps, they already signal “time to run” through the energy histogram—yet most people get blinded by greed. When LUNA went to zero in 2023, the market was cursing it as a “pyramid scheme.” But I saw the trick in the weekly chart: price made a new low, while the green energy histogram was only 60% as long as the last drop—that’s bottom divergence. The fall can’t keep going, and the market maker is secretly accumulating. On-chain data shows whale 0x5f3 has been eating 20 million UST every day for three straight weeks. I built my position in three batches, held through the panic phase, and the next year when the RWA narrative took off, I more than made back 3 million. Remember: top divergence is “price makes a new high + histogram shrinking.” Bottom divergence is “price makes a new low + histogram shrinking.” Last year, when DOGE surged to 0.35, I watched the histogram shrink to 30% of the previous high. I cleared out immediately and avoided a 70% crash. Many people rush in when they see a golden cross. That’s the life you get—getting cut. In 2024, during the first golden cross on PEPE’s daily chart, OKEx’s hot wallet was moving 20 million USDT in and out—classic test trading. Three days later it dropped 20%. The real opportunity is the second golden cross: when the 30-minute and 4-hour MACD cross together, and on-chain large transfers run ahead of the 24-hour average by 3x. Last year when SOL broke $100, I waited for the 4-hour second golden cross. Volume exploded to 5 times the usual. I added 30% to my position, and within 15 days it doubled 2x. An eight-year iron rule: three-timeframe resonance (use the 30-minute chart to set direction, the 4-hour chart to judge strength, and the daily chart to lock the trend); if there’s top divergence plus net whale outflows over 5 million—cut immediately. When it’s bottom divergence—only act when the long/short ratio on futures is below 0.7. MACD is the market maker’s mirror. If you understand how the histogram stretches and shrinks, you’ll know whether they’re accumulating or distributing. Follow Brother Fage. No bragging, no empty hype—just share real-world experience that helps you survive in this space. If you’re still losing money over and over and starting over again, come talk to me—I’ll help you make trading simple.
The harder they try, the more they end up feeding the market with their funds.
And the people I guide don’t need to be that smart.
They only need three things: be able to listen to advice, understand the rhythm, and execute.
The real core was never about how “flashy” a trading strategy is.
It’s about—rhythm control, position-splitting layout, adjusting positions, and having exit plans.
I won’t write these as a “formula.” Because once written, most people won’t even understand it.
But if you put it into practice even once, you’ll realize this is a completely different world from “betting on up/betting on down.” Stop relying on luck.
Too many people think: “Next trade will turn things around.” But what they actually get is: turn it around once, and lose three times.
They kill their confidence and recover their principal.
The crypto market has never lacked opportunities. What it lacks is a sense of direction—and real exit logic that can keep you alive.
If you’re dealing with any of these right now:
You trade frequently but keep getting more and more losses; You get the direction right but still give it back; You can’t control your hand or hold onto your profits; After running a strategy, all that’s left is emotion.
If you’re still chasing pumps and selling dumps—or you don’t know how to judge entry and exit points—come to the chat room and talk to me.
How many people come to the crypto world for financial freedom, only to end up sacrificing the freedom of normal life as well? Earn 1 million USDT and you feel like you just got on board; earn 10 million USDT and you still think you’re a greenhorn—earn 100 million USDT and you finally realize: being poor was never about the money. It was that ever-insatiable version of yourself. The most absurd illusion in the crypto world: a few more zeros in your wallet, but your soul gets lighter and lighter. Like a balloon inflated by wealth—ready to burst at any moment. We desperately chase financial freedom, but in the end we become slaves to wealth—watching charts by day, scrolling candlesticks by night. Even your dreams are calculating unrealized gains. The real you has already gone offline. When you’re poor, you think having money will let you find yourself again. But once you have it, you realize your sense of self was long ago replaced—completely—by greed, fear, and FOMO. The old greenhorn standing at the top of wealth most often asks not “How much more do I need?” but “Who am I really? Where did the pure me from back then go?” Wealth in the crypto world is like a mirror: the brighter it reflects, the clearer you can see how ugly you are—selfishness, anxiety, vanity—all magnified endlessly. No matter how many USDT you earn, you can’t buy back the peace you had at the beginning, because what we sell was never just coins—it was that simple hope for life. On the surface, wealth is growing; in reality, the self is collapsing: from believing in “changing the world” to only believing in “just one more round of rolling over”—your persona has already fallen apart beyond repair. The most ironic part is that the wealth we traded all our youth and health for can ultimately only be used to heal the body and soul that wealth destroyed. The real absurdity in the crypto world is this: you think you’re earning wealth, but actually wealth is earning away your self—by the time you finally realize it, it’s already too late to go back. If you’re still chasing pumps and dumps, or you don’t know how to judge your entry and exit points, come find me in the chat room and let’s talk.
I’ve seen too many people just coming in, holding a few thousand U with blood boiling. Every day they watch the K-line, chase FOMO signals, follow hot trends—once the market moves, they go All in. Then: three days of passion, five days to liquidation, and ten days later they disappear. Brothers, remember this one line: the worst thing in the crypto world isn’t losing—it’s getting liquidated. Especially for beginners with less than ten thousand U—one full-send can send you on your way immediately. You think you’re risking your life, but in reality you’re just lighting a fire and cheering for the old hands. Back then I was the same. With 20,000 U, full of confidence, I thought I could double it. Following the crowd, averaging down, panic—after a round of aggressive operations, my account dropped to only half a breath left. Until I calmed down and made risk control a habit. In four months, I steadily grew my funds to 100,000 U—no liquidations at all. Later, I summarized my experience into “three lines of capital protection.” Simple and straightforward, but it saved my life. First line: never let position size exceed half. No matter how good the opportunity is, you can’t full-send (all in). There are always opportunities in the crypto world, but your principal only comes once. Keep your ammo—then you have a chance to turn the tables; when the market goes your way, add slowly; if it’s wrong, withdraw immediately. Second line: take-profit and stop-loss must be firm. Don’t hold losses. Don’t drag out profits. The biggest problem for beginners is that they can’t bear to sell. But crypto drawdowns have no mercy. Give you a red candle, and your profits can be wiped out instantly. Stop-loss and take-profit are the bottom line—not cowardice. Third line: don’t touch coins you don’t understand. Coins that people shout about in groups, accounts that are bragging, and short videos that push— 90% of them are traps. If you haven’t even figured out what the project is for, what basis do you have to “judge”? Better to miss out than to buy blindly. When the market is on fire, you need to stay calm. When the market is choppy, you need to be patient. Protect your 10,000 U—then it has a chance to grow into the 100,000 U you want. If you can keep discipline, the market won’t charge you tuition. The crypto world never lacks people who want to make fast money. What’s missing are people who can steady their minds. Don’t rush to get rich. First, protect your principal. Opportunities won’t run away—liquidation is the true end point. These three safety locks can turn you from a “newbie” into someone who can truly live long enough.