Dealing with being trapped: Divide funds into five parts, only invest one-fifth each time, and set a 10% stop-loss. Even if there are five mistakes, the loss will only be 10% of the total funds. If profitable, set a take-profit above 10%, so there is no need to worry about being trapped.

Many people understand this principle, but it is difficult to implement because the challenge is not the market, but oneself. Improving win rate: Avoid counter-trend operations and always follow the major trend. Do not be greedy for rebounds; focus on trend strategies.

In a downtrend, each rebound is often a trap, while in an uptrend, a pullback may be an opportunity. Which is easier for profit, bottom-fishing or buying low? The importance of choice: Try to avoid investing in cryptocurrencies that have sharply risen in the short term. Cryptocurrencies that can experience several rounds of major upward trends are very rare, and the difficulty of continuing to rise after a short-term surge is extremely high. High positions often stagnate before falling; this principle is simple, but many people still hold onto a mindset of luck.

Using indicators: Utilize practical technical indicators such as MACD, RSI, and VPVR. MACD is suitable for judging major trends; do not easily trust golden crosses; RSI can help identify strength and weakness signals, determining entry or exit timing; VPVR is used to observe support and resistance levels. Cautious scaling up: Many people keep increasing their positions when losing, resulting in greater losses; this is a major taboo in trading.

Try to scale up during profitable times rather than averaging down during losses. Pay attention to volume and price: When there is a significant breakout during consolidation at low levels, it deserves attention; when there is a high volume stagnation at high levels, decisively choose to exit. Focus on multiple time frames: hourly, four-hour, daily, and weekly trends. Many people may be confused about which time point to focus on. I suggest choosing the corresponding time frame based on whether you are doing long-term or short-term trading, combining the major and minor trends to determine the best entry timing.

Stick to reviewing trades: After each trade, review to check if the holding logic has changed, whether the weekly K-line trend matches your judgment, and if the trend has changed; adjust trading strategies in time. Pay less attention to overnight wealth stories, and focus more on learning and improvement.