After trading coins for several years, I finally realized that making money relies entirely on these 8 principles.

I used to think that trading coins required constant monitoring and frequent operations to make a profit.

After losing several rounds, I found that what truly kept me alive was not how many trades I made, but how well I controlled my impulses.

When I don’t understand the market and insist on entering, it’s likely that I’m just giving my head away. When the opportunity is unclear, forcing a trade is mostly just paying tuition to the market.

Here are 8 principles that I exchanged with real money:

1. If a strong coin has dropped for 9 consecutive days, don’t deceive yourself into thinking it’s a "correction". This is a signal of loosening chips; stop loss when necessary, observe when needed, and don’t wait until you’ve lost half to regret it.

2. For coins that have risen for 2 consecutive days, reducing your position is always the right move. Coins that rise quickly usually fall quickly, and being greedy for that last cent often results in losing both the principal and profits.

3. If a coin rises more than 7% in a single day, don’t chase it the next day. This kind of trend is basically looking for someone to take over, and the moment you jump in could be the peak.

4. Even the strongest coins need to wait for a correction. The ones who chase after strong coins are the ones who die the fastest; wait for it to catch its breath before entering, or the cost will be far off.

5. If it’s been 3 days in a sideways market with no movement, don’t be foolish and wait. If no capital enters the market, you can’t afford to wait; switching to a more active target is better than holding onto a dead one.

6. If you haven’t recovered yesterday’s losses the next day, make a decisive exit. Weakness is weakness; the market won’t reward you just because you held on longer, it will only make you lose more.

7. There’s a rhythm to the rise charts: 3-5-7. If it rises for 2 consecutive days, pay attention to the opportunity for low absorption; the 5th day is often a selling point. Hitting the rhythm accurately is better than guessing.

8. Trading volume is more accurate than anything else. Increased volume at low prices is an opportunity, while increased volume at high prices is a signal to escape. Don’t just look at the candlestick chart; volume is the real money.

When the market is bad, staying in cash is a profit; having the patience to wait until the opportunity arises is a skill.

After spending a long time in the coin circle, I finally understand that making money isn’t about how many operations you perform, but about making fewer mistakes and surviving longer.

I am not an expert; I’ve just lost a lot and summarized a few principles to minimize my losses. If you also have experiences gained through blood and tears, feel free to share. #国际油价下跌 #美国加密法案再次遇阻 #Trump hopes to quickly end the war with Iran.