Many people think trading is difficult, but the core logic boils down to two words—timing. Small market movements with light positions help you find the feel, while large market trends with heavy positions maximize gains. This is the essence of rolling positions. Honestly, succeeding in rolling positions three or four times in a lifetime, from zero to millions, is not a dream.
When is a good opportunity to roll positions? Pay attention to these three points: First, during long periods of sideways movement with almost zero volatility, the market is about to choose a direction; second, after a sharp rise in a bull market followed by a quick decline, such emotional dips often present golden opportunities; third, when major resistance levels on the weekly chart are broken or major support levels are breached, a trend reversal is imminent.
How to execute rolling positions steadily? Both methods are good—adding to winning positions, simply put, buying more after profits, with the key being to continuously lower the average cost; or combining core holdings with T+0 trading, holding a portion long-term as the base, and actively buying low and selling high with the other portion. This approach ensures stability without sacrificing gains.
What signals to look for when adding positions? First, decisively add when the trend breaks out of a convergence zone to ride the main upward wave—take profits when the move looks exhausted and avoid greed; second, during a pullback to a key moving average, add in stages and patiently wait for the next wave to start.
There are some iron rules to remember in practice: During a major market crash, hold your coins to resist declines—there’s a high probability that funds will support the market; beginners should keep it simple—look at the 5-day moving average for short-term and the 20-day for mid-term, and exit immediately if the level breaks; a lack of volume during a main upward wave can be a buy signal, while a volume surge indicates a strong hold; if there’s no gain in three days, exit decisively; if losses reach 5%, cut your losses; a decline of over 50% at high levels and a week of continuous decline often trigger a rebound; always buy leading coins, follow the trend, and avoid guessing bottoms.
Finally—don’t get carried away after making profits. The value of review is far greater than placing orders. Trading is never about explosive power but endurance. Build your own trading system, find the right rhythm, and wealth will naturally come to you.
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BearMarketLightning
· 12-27 01:55
There's nothing wrong with that, but the execution is difficult. How many people understand the theory but still cut their losses during a dip...
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SchrodingersPaper
· 12-27 01:55
It sounds good, but how many can actually do it? I'm the kind of person who gets the trend right but fails in execution—panicking and selling when prices drop, regretting not holding more when prices rise. That's my daily routine, haha.
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WalletInspector
· 12-27 01:50
It sounds good, but how many people can truly stick to it? Most people still can't resist, and they panic at the sight of a pullback.
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GweiWatcher
· 12-27 01:43
It sounds good, but how many people can really keep the rhythm? Most people are still repeatedly taking losses.
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ParallelChainMaxi
· 12-27 01:34
There's nothing wrong with that, but the key is still the mindset. Most people get caught up in their emotions.
Many people think trading is difficult, but the core logic boils down to two words—timing. Small market movements with light positions help you find the feel, while large market trends with heavy positions maximize gains. This is the essence of rolling positions. Honestly, succeeding in rolling positions three or four times in a lifetime, from zero to millions, is not a dream.
When is a good opportunity to roll positions? Pay attention to these three points: First, during long periods of sideways movement with almost zero volatility, the market is about to choose a direction; second, after a sharp rise in a bull market followed by a quick decline, such emotional dips often present golden opportunities; third, when major resistance levels on the weekly chart are broken or major support levels are breached, a trend reversal is imminent.
How to execute rolling positions steadily? Both methods are good—adding to winning positions, simply put, buying more after profits, with the key being to continuously lower the average cost; or combining core holdings with T+0 trading, holding a portion long-term as the base, and actively buying low and selling high with the other portion. This approach ensures stability without sacrificing gains.
What signals to look for when adding positions? First, decisively add when the trend breaks out of a convergence zone to ride the main upward wave—take profits when the move looks exhausted and avoid greed; second, during a pullback to a key moving average, add in stages and patiently wait for the next wave to start.
There are some iron rules to remember in practice: During a major market crash, hold your coins to resist declines—there’s a high probability that funds will support the market; beginners should keep it simple—look at the 5-day moving average for short-term and the 20-day for mid-term, and exit immediately if the level breaks; a lack of volume during a main upward wave can be a buy signal, while a volume surge indicates a strong hold; if there’s no gain in three days, exit decisively; if losses reach 5%, cut your losses; a decline of over 50% at high levels and a week of continuous decline often trigger a rebound; always buy leading coins, follow the trend, and avoid guessing bottoms.
Finally—don’t get carried away after making profits. The value of review is far greater than placing orders. Trading is never about explosive power but endurance. Build your own trading system, find the right rhythm, and wealth will naturally come to you.