There is a method of trading cryptocurrencies that seems the dumbest, yet is the most stable in the long term.

I relied on it to achieve a leap in assets, gradually building my account to eight figures.

Many people only see the results now, but they don't know how miserable the starting point was.

Seven years ago, I got divorced, was in debt, and was almost at zero. Later, I entered the cryptocurrency world, went through countless detours, tried various indicators, strategies, and shortcuts, and in the end, what remained was only this set—so simple that it’s extreme, yet repeatedly effective.

This method does not involve predictions or mystical elements, but revolves around four actions:

Choose coin → Enter market → Position size → Exit

I will fully explain it to you now.

Step 1: Only focus on daily trend, avoid noise

Open the daily chart, do not look at minute charts or small cycles.

The only condition: MACD forms a golden cross and is preferably near or above the zero line.

The essence of this step is not to grab points, but to confirm direction.

If the trend has not formed, any technique is just a drain.

Step 2: Keep only one line on the chart

On the daily chart, I only keep one moving average (medium-term daily moving average).

The rule is just one sentence:

If the price is above the line, continue to hold; if the price is below the line, decisively exit.

No discussions about feelings, no emotional trading, the K-line has already made the decision for you.

Step 3: Entry and position reduction, all written down

When the coin price stabilizes above the daily moving average, and the volume simultaneously increases, execute the entry.

Do not test in batches, complete the planned position all at once.

Selling is done in three steps:

Price increase ≈ 35%: reduce position by 1/3

Price increase ≈ 70%: reduce another 1/3

Break below the daily moving average: clear out the remaining position

Profits are locked in batches, risks are resolved all at once.

Step 4: Unexpected situations, zero hesitation

This is the most critical and counterintuitive point.

If you just entered the market and the next day it directly breaks below the daily moving average—

Clear everything unconditionally, no explanations, no fantasies.

Yes, this situation does not occur often,

but what truly destroys an account is never probability, but luck.

Selling wrong is not scary, holding wrong is fatal.

Wait for it to stabilize above the daily moving average again, then re-enter.

Many people find this method "slow", "dumb", "not exciting",

but it has a fatal advantage: it is replicable, executable, and can survive in the long term.

There are still spots available in the chat room; if you want to systematically learn the method and stabilize your account,

this time don’t rely on luck.