$APE When I first started trading contracts, I was just like most people, overcomplicating the charts.

One screen full of indicators: MACD, RSI, Bollinger Bands, all turned on.

Making dozens of trades a day, wanting to run at the slightest profit and holding on through small losses.

The result was— the market didn't defeat you, but your emotions drained you first.

Gradually, I started simplifying things, and it actually stabilized my trading.

The core is a very simple trend system.

1. Use only a set of moving averages to determine direction $ZKJ

Using EMA (21 and 55)

EMA21 crosses above EMA55 → bullish

EMA21 crosses below EMA55 → bearish

No predictions, just follow the trend.

2. Only trade on the 4-hour time frame

Only look for signals on the 4-hour chart: $ORCA

Bullish: golden cross + close above

Bearish: death cross + close below

Abandon choppy ranges, don’t participate.

Trading less isn’t missing out; it’s filtering out the noise.

3. Fixed risk, no holding positions

Define each trade first: stop loss set at the nearest structure high/low.

Limit single trade losses to 3%-5%.

In the past, I used to take big losses thinking “it will come back.”

Now the rule is simple: if the stop loss hits, exit, no excuses.

4. Scale in only with the trend, not by betting on direction

It’s not about infinitely adding to positions, but rather: if there’s profit → scale in slightly.

If the trend remains unchanged → hold.

If EMA structure breaks → exit.

The essence isn’t about “rolling positions” but “letting the trend dictate position size.”

The longer you trade, the more you realize: it’s not about how accurately you judge, but how few mistakes you make.

The market doesn’t reward frequent trading; it rewards those who “survive the longest.”

Less trading, more waiting, ironically leads to more stability.
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