The simpler, the more profitable. This sounds like a motivational quote, but after years in the crypto market, I increasingly believe in this principle.



I've seen too many traders fall into the same trap: the more they lose, the more indicators they add. Their charts are covered with MA, MACD, KDJ, Bollinger Bands... a sea of colors, all afraid of missing the "golden buy point." They are searching for a perfect system, thinking that as long as they have enough indicators and precise parameters, they can make guaranteed profits. But in reality? The more complicated, the faster they die.

Among the traders I’ve seen consistently making profits, none have systems that are outrageously complex. Their trading logic is often so simple it’s shocking—this simplicity, in fact, becomes their moat.

Legendary investor Philip Fisher once said something very insightful: "Smart people learn from their mistakes, fools never do." This is especially true in trading. Most people, after being taught a harsh lesson by the market, don’t reflect and simplify; instead, they go all out—adding more indicators, more rules, stacking their systems into monsters. As a result, their systems become so complicated they can’t even explain their own rules.

I want to talk about a seemingly too simple, yet extremely effective trading philosophy. This set of principles has carried me through multiple bull and bear cycles.

**Four sentences, sixteen characters—that’s my trading foundation.**

Trend is in the coin, trend increases coin increases, trend decreases coin decreases, trend moves coin moves.

These sixteen words are not something I came up with on a whim—they are lessons learned through paying high tuition fees and repeatedly tested in the market. Whether it’s a coin hyped up by project teams or a hot project pushed by top traders in groups, once you stick to this principle, you’ll have a clear battle map. No matter how noisy the market gets, you won’t be swayed by chaotic voices.

So, what exactly is "trend"? Simply put, it’s a trend line. More complex could be a combination of moving averages. But the core is: we need a clear basis for judgment, not relying on intuition, feelings, or "I think it can go up" to gamble.

**Trend is in the coin**—if the price is in an uptrend, hold. Think about it: in this market environment, you can only profit from going long. Why go against the trend? Following the trend is the easiest choice.

**Trend increases coin increases**—when the trend strength grows, add to your position. At this point, it’s not about whether to buy or not, but whether to add more.

**Trend decreases coin decreases**—when the trend weakens and signals become fuzzy, reduce your position manually. Many people fail at this step, always thinking "a dip is an opportunity," but end up getting deeper into a trap.

**Trend moves coin moves**—when the trend completely reverses and signals fail, it’s time to exit. As long as the green mountain remains, there’s firewood to burn.

Simple, right? But with these four straightforward sentences, you can filter out 80% of the noise. You don’t need to watch ten influencers every day, worry about bottom-fishing, or be carried away by market sentiment.

The real difference between profitable and losing traders isn’t how many indicators they use or how much they analyze, but whether they stick to their discipline. Simple system + strict execution > complex system + frequent breaches.

This is the final lesson I want to leave in the crypto market: find a simple, effective rule, and execute it relentlessly. Don’t overestimate your intuition, don’t be intimidated by market complexity. The path to wealth is simple at its core.
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DaoDevelopervip
· 12-29 05:39
tbh the trend-following primitives outlined here map really well to state machine design patterns. the composability angle is where it gets interesting—once you abstract "势" as a signal oracle, you can layer risk management contracts on top. seen similar implementations in yearn's vault architecture.
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StableGeniusDegenvip
· 12-29 03:04
To be honest, this "momentum" logic is indeed powerful, and discipline in execution is more important than anything else.
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AllInAlicevip
· 12-28 18:33
There's nothing wrong with that, but the key is whether you can really hold on. I've seen too many people swear to keep trading simple, only to be overwhelmed when the market suddenly crashes.
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GasGuruvip
· 12-27 19:50
There's nothing wrong with what you're saying, but execution is too difficult. I'm currently struggling with the "reducing momentum, reducing coins" step; I always mess it up. As soon as the price drops, I want to buy the dip, then get trapped and start doubting life.
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rugpull_ptsdvip
· 12-27 19:49
That's so right. Filling the screen with indicators is actually a sign of courting disaster.
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UnluckyValidatorvip
· 12-27 19:45
Exactly right, I only lost so much because there are too many indicators.
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GateUser-5854de8bvip
· 12-27 19:42
You're right, I was really fooled by all the indicators on the screen. Now I just look at the trend line, much cleaner.
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OldLeekMastervip
· 12-27 19:30
That's right. Over the past two years, I've suffered losses from overfilling the quota, working myself to exhaustion only to lose even more.
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