I’m 36 this year, a guy from Hunan, now settled in Shenzhen.
Eight years ago, I entered the market with 50,000 RMB. By the end of last year, my account had over 7 million. Last month alone, I netted 460,000 USDT.
There’s no secret weapon, nor do I understand high-frequency algorithms. I rely on a method that insiders call “slow and clumsy”—but it really works.
After 2,555 days and nights of trial and error, I’ve distilled my hard-earned lessons into six plain sentences. If you can stick to just one of them, you’ll save yourself at least 100,000 in tuition fees; nail three, and you’re already ahead of 80% of retail traders.
**First: If a coin surges hard but pulls back steadily, it’s usually the main players accumulating.**
If the price spikes fast and then starts a slow correction, don’t panic—this isn’t a top signal, it’s just clearing out short-term speculators.
What you really need to watch out for are those “spike up, crash down” moves—that’s classic pump-and-dump.
**Second: If it dumps hard but can’t bounce, funds are quietly leaving.**
After a flash crash, if there’s not even a decent rebound, don’t try to bottom fish.
This price isn’t a golden dip, it’s a slaughterhouse. The most toxic phrase in the market is: “It’s dropped this much already, how much lower can it go?”
**Third: High-volume at the top isn’t always the peak; low-volume at the top is scarier.**
If there’s still strong volume at the top, it means bulls and bears are still fighting—there may be another push left.
But if volume suddenly dries up at the top, that’s a sign buyers are exhausted—what follows is often a bloodless but brutal drop.
**Fourth: A single volume spike at the bottom doesn’t count, sustained volume does.**
One huge green candle could be a bull trap.
Only several days of continuous strong volume means real consensus is forming and big players are truly building positions.
**Fifth: You’re not trading charts—you’re trading human nature.**
Indicators can lie, price can fake you out.
But volume doesn’t lie—it’s like the market’s thermometer, directly reflecting the real attitude of money.
**Sixth: The ultimate trading mindset is four words—free from attachment.**
Don’t cling to positions, be ready to go all cash when needed.
Don’t get greedy chasing tops—if you miss out, just let it go.
Don’t fear volatility—be decisive when it’s time to act.
This is not just technical experience—it’s also the result of mental discipline.
There’s never a shortage of opportunities in the market. What’s lacking is your ability to read signals, hold your positions, and avoid traps.
Most people lose money not because of poor skills, but because they’re led by emotions and operate blindly.
You’re actually capable—it’s just that going it alone is damn exhausting. The market is chaotic, but the logic is always there.
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BackrowObserver
· 12-10 01:58
The trading volume is truly incredible; you really can't fake this stuff. I previously got burned by low volume at high levels—a hard lesson learned, brother.
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Ser_This_Is_A_Casino
· 12-10 01:56
Damn, this volume strategy is really amazing. I used to get wrecked by chasing highs when the volume was shrinking at the top.
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ForumLurker
· 12-10 01:34
Trading volume doesn't lie, but my wallet keeps deceiving me...
I’m 36 this year, a guy from Hunan, now settled in Shenzhen.
Eight years ago, I entered the market with 50,000 RMB. By the end of last year, my account had over 7 million. Last month alone, I netted 460,000 USDT.
There’s no secret weapon, nor do I understand high-frequency algorithms. I rely on a method that insiders call “slow and clumsy”—but it really works.
After 2,555 days and nights of trial and error, I’ve distilled my hard-earned lessons into six plain sentences. If you can stick to just one of them, you’ll save yourself at least 100,000 in tuition fees; nail three, and you’re already ahead of 80% of retail traders.
**First: If a coin surges hard but pulls back steadily, it’s usually the main players accumulating.**
If the price spikes fast and then starts a slow correction, don’t panic—this isn’t a top signal, it’s just clearing out short-term speculators.
What you really need to watch out for are those “spike up, crash down” moves—that’s classic pump-and-dump.
**Second: If it dumps hard but can’t bounce, funds are quietly leaving.**
After a flash crash, if there’s not even a decent rebound, don’t try to bottom fish.
This price isn’t a golden dip, it’s a slaughterhouse. The most toxic phrase in the market is: “It’s dropped this much already, how much lower can it go?”
**Third: High-volume at the top isn’t always the peak; low-volume at the top is scarier.**
If there’s still strong volume at the top, it means bulls and bears are still fighting—there may be another push left.
But if volume suddenly dries up at the top, that’s a sign buyers are exhausted—what follows is often a bloodless but brutal drop.
**Fourth: A single volume spike at the bottom doesn’t count, sustained volume does.**
One huge green candle could be a bull trap.
Only several days of continuous strong volume means real consensus is forming and big players are truly building positions.
**Fifth: You’re not trading charts—you’re trading human nature.**
Indicators can lie, price can fake you out.
But volume doesn’t lie—it’s like the market’s thermometer, directly reflecting the real attitude of money.
**Sixth: The ultimate trading mindset is four words—free from attachment.**
Don’t cling to positions, be ready to go all cash when needed.
Don’t get greedy chasing tops—if you miss out, just let it go.
Don’t fear volatility—be decisive when it’s time to act.
This is not just technical experience—it’s also the result of mental discipline.
There’s never a shortage of opportunities in the market. What’s lacking is your ability to read signals, hold your positions, and avoid traps.
Most people lose money not because of poor skills, but because they’re led by emotions and operate blindly.
You’re actually capable—it’s just that going it alone is damn exhausting. The market is chaotic, but the logic is always there.