Using the 'Limit Orders' feature on Binance, I can set these three orders in advance and go to sleep or attend to my business. The platform makes the purchase for me when the price is reached.

2. Defining Exit Points and Risk Management (OCO Orders)

After each purchase, we should place a double sell order (OCO) to protect the trade, my dear friend:

Example after DCA 3 (average cost): Let's assume the average purchase price after the three orders is $38,000.

Entry point (DCA Spot) target price (Limit orders on Binance) action taken logic

DCA 1 $42,000 buying for $1,000 first major correction, RSI indicator started touching 40.

DCA 2 $38,000 buying for $1,000 strong previous support area, RSI indicator approaching 35.

DCA 3 $34,000 buying for $1,000 psychological support area and where the market is in "extreme fear".

🎯 Apply a disciplined accumulation strategy on Bitcoin (BTC/USDT)

📈 Scenario: entering a correction phase (Bearish Phase)

Let's assume we were in a bearish phase, where the price of Bitcoin (BTC) was trading below the 200-day exponential moving average (200-Day EMA). The 200 EMA line was at $50,000, and the price started to retreat from this level.

1. Identify defensive buying zones (DCA)

Since we are below the 200-Day EMA, we are in a defensive position, and the goal is to accumulate at true value levels.

Allocated capital: Let's assume we allocated $10,000 to invest in Bitcoin.

Capital allocation: We will divide the amount into 10 parts, that is $1,000 for each purchase (DCA).

Target price action tool on Binance logic

Target 1 (Take Profit) $47,500 (25% profit) limit sell order to sell 50% of the amount lock in profits once returning to the 200-Day EMA area.

Stop loss $34,200 (10% loss) stop loss order to sell the remaining amount protecting capital in case the market crashes unexpectedly.

. 🚀 Transitioning to offensive mode (Bullish Phase)

Let's assume Bitcoin rebounded strongly and surpassed the 200-day moving average ($50,000) and closed strongly above it.

Action: We allocate an additional $2,000 (part of the remaining capital) to buy above $50,000.

Logic: This purchase is a "strength" purchase. We are paying for confirmation that the trend has changed for the better. Buying at this level, although higher, ensures that we are part of the large upward wave that usually follows a successful breakout of long-term averages.

"This strategy makes you buy when the price is cheap (below average) and ensures you're in when the price becomes expensive (above average). The important thing is that I did not rely on any feelings of fear or greed, but on clear numbers that define when and how to act."