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Friends with less than 10,000 USDT, don’t rush.
The market’s favorite prey is "people hoping to double their money." I’ve seen too many cases—small capital combined with a bunch of aggressive moves, indicators maxed out, full position, and in the end, only one sentence left: "The market is too fake."
Actually, it’s not that the market has a problem; it’s that you haven’t lived through the next phase of the market.
I’ll only share one mindset that can help small funds survive—not a get-rich-quick guide, but a survival guide.
**Step 1: Just need one entry reason**
Daily MACD golden cross. That’s it. Don’t stack indicators, don’t listen to messages in groups. It’s best when it’s above the zero line—that’s when the trend truly starts. If this condition isn’t met, no matter how hot the market is, it doesn’t matter to you.
**Step 2: Give yourself an exit route**
The daily moving average is your safety rope. When the price is above it, hold; once it breaks below, exit immediately. You’re not here to prove how smart you are; you’re here to make money.
**Step 3: Only take risks when it’s appropriate**
When the price stands above the line and volume picks up, that’s when it’s worth investing a bit more. Take profits at 40%, lock in some; at 80%, take another cut. Let the rest run—however much it runs, so be it.
**Step 4: Don’t get emotionally attached to the market**
If the closing price breaks the line, leave the next day. Don’t regret rebounds either. A lucky break can wipe out half a year’s effort.
This logic isn’t flashy, but it can prevent your principal from going to zero, keep your emotions stable, and slowly grow your account. The market isn’t short of opportunities; what’s missing is the patience to wait for them. If you’re still messing around, holding blindly, and have no plan, it’s not the market you lack—it’s a real, executable strategy.
Stay tuned: $BEAT $ZBT $ZEC
Now I actually think that the MACD system has some substance, much better than the hype from those big V influencers I used to listen to.
Breaking the daily moving average and then running away sounds simple, but it's really hard to do, especially when watching the rebound.