How to break through within 10,000 USDT? Many retail investors are stuck at this stage because they are using the wrong approach. Chasing news, trading contracts, frequent operations—your principal gets smaller and smaller with each round of turbulence. Actually, what retail investors need most is not complicated techniques, but a set of disciplined rules they can stick to.



Today, I’m sharing a four-step trading framework that doesn’t require watching the charts all the time, is less likely to lead to liquidation, and has helped many turn five-figure amounts into seven-figure sums using this logic. $SOL $ETH This type of mainstream coin is most suitable for execution.

**Step 1: Choose coins with daily MACD golden cross**
Forget about rumors; focus on technical analysis. Prioritize coins where the MACD forms a golden cross above the zero line, indicating that the bulls are in control and the probability of an upward move is significantly higher. News can be manipulated, but technical signals are more consistent.

**Step 2: Strictly adhere to the daily moving average line discipline**
After building a position, only watch one line—the daily moving average. Hold firmly as long as the closing price stays above it. Don’t expect reversals, don’t chase highs, don’t panic. If the price falls below the moving average, exit immediately—no exceptions. This is an iron discipline.

**Step 3: Confirm entries and exits with dual verification**
Before entering, wait for the price to break above the moving average and for the trading volume to increase beyond the average line before acting. For exits, do it in stages: when gains reach 40%, reduce some to lock in profits; at 80%, exit some more. If the price falls below the moving average, clear all positions without hesitation.

**Step 4: Stick to one rule for stop-loss**
If the closing price falls below the daily moving average, you must exit the next day—no “wait and see.” Better to miss a trade than to turn small losses into big ones. Wait for the technical indicator to show a new golden cross before re-entering.

This method may seem simple, but it’s precisely because of its simplicity that retail investors can truly follow through. During the previous SOL rally, some traders using this approach captured a significant portion of the main upward wave profits.

The market isn’t lacking opportunities; it’s lacking disciplined people who can stick to their rules. If you’re still wavering between different strategies, it’s better to follow this framework, accurately identify signals, avoid traps, and gradually turn small money into big money.
SOL2,42%
ETH6,32%
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • 8
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
0/400
Layer2Arbitrageurvip
· 6h ago
honestly the volume confirmation part is where most people fumble the execution... you're leaving basis points on the table if you're not optimizing entry timing across the ma crossover. ngmi if you're still manually checking charts lmao
Reply0
ProveMyZKvip
· 8h ago
Discipline is easy to talk about but hard to practice. Very few can truly stick to the moving average. Every time there's a bullish trend, I want to chase; when it drops, I want to buy the dip. In the end, I didn't catch any of it. I tried this method, and the SOL wave was indeed satisfying, but I couldn't stand the loneliness and kept wanting to optimize. Honestly, it's a game that tests human nature; technical skills are actually secondary. I agree with the MACD golden cross point; news can really be a tool for profit-taking, but looking at charts is more reliable. Turning ten thousand dollars into a seven-figure sum sounds very internet-famous, is it just survivor bias? The key is to have a stop-loss mindset. Without stop-loss, there's no discipline. If your execution is poor, don't bother messing around. Following the framework can actually be more profitable.
View OriginalReply0
BridgeJumpervip
· 01-11 10:27
To be honest, there's nothing wrong with discipline, but it's just too hard to execute. Seeing a golden cross makes you want to rush in, but as soon as you buy, it crashes. When the moving average touches, you want to run, missing the rebound. Most people fail because of the gap between "knowing" and "doing." However, some people did catch that SOL wave, and the key was not having FOMO, sticking firmly to that line.
View OriginalReply0
NewDAOdreamervip
· 01-11 09:51
It's easy to say, but very few people can truly stick to it. Holding onto the moving average sounds easy, but when the price drops, people still get nervous. Discipline is correct, but the key is how long you can坚持"no exceptions." Can 10,000 yuan really grow into seven figures? It's a bit uncertain. The news can indeed be manipulated easily; it's better to rely on the actual market data. The core of this framework is not to tinker, but unfortunately, most people can't break the habit of frequent trading. Selling when breaking below the moving average sounds simple, but actually doing it is difficult. How many times must one experience emotional pain from cutting losses before they can endure? I didn't catch the SOL wave, mainly because I didn't wait for the golden cross signal. Simple and straightforward rules are actually the most effective, much more reliable than complex indicator combinations.
View OriginalReply0
DYORMastervip
· 01-11 09:51
Discipline is easy to talk about but hard to do; the key is to endure without moving. By the way, can you really stick to this moving average discipline? Another MACD golden cross... Someone promoted this strategy half a year ago. Wait, if the price breaks below the moving average and the next day must sell, isn't that just inviting a shakeout and being completely wiped out? I just want to know how those who went from five figures to seven figures are doing now. Actually, the hardest part is controlling your mindset, isn't it? Technical analysis and other factors are secondary. I don't deny that the logic is clear, but when the market suddenly changes, everyone's discipline is useless.
View OriginalReply0
LiquidityNinjavip
· 01-11 09:44
That's right, discipline is the key, but I've always wondered why so many people are unwilling to stick to it. They shout every day about persistence, but as soon as the price drops below the moving average, they start making all kinds of excuses to delay, it's really unbelievable. I've used the daily moving average trick before, but the key is to be ruthless in execution, otherwise it's all for nothing. Hearing about five figures to seven figures sounds nice, but in reality, how many can really do that? The news trading is the most annoying; chasing around just gets you cut, it's more reliable to look at charts. Reducing position by 40% shows a lot of restraint; most people can't be that greedy. For those brothers who get liquidated on contracts, it's actually because they lack patience to follow a steady framework and just have to gamble it all. The MACD golden cross is indeed simple and straightforward, but I'm worried that once executed, people might start messing with the rules again.
View OriginalReply0
DegenGamblervip
· 01-11 09:37
Discipline is easy to talk about but hard to practice. How many people can truly stick to it... Bro, this framework looks pretty good, but I always feel like those cases of "five figures reaching seven figures" are just armchair strategies in hindsight. I've tried moving averages, but they tend to get you chopped up in sideways markets. MACD golden cross sounds simple, but the signal delay during actual trading is really annoying. Honestly, it all comes down to execution. How many people can really walk away the moment the price breaks below? I did catch the wave with SOL, but I missed the next few moves, so discipline is really key. This logic is quite practical, but if you want to turn small money into big money, you need to have the mental resilience to handle it.
View OriginalReply0
SybilSlayervip
· 01-11 09:23
Discipline is easy to talk about, but very few people can truly stick to it. Spending half a day on ten thousand yuan still results in ten thousand yuan; I have deep personal experience with this. The daily moving average sounds too simple, so simple that I even start to doubt it. The core of this logic is not to be greedy, but isn't that the hardest part for retail investors? That wave of SOL indeed made some people profit, but most still got caught chasing the high and got trapped. Technical analysis is more reliable than news, I agree with that. Waiting for a golden cross tests patience the most; it's easy to miss out or regret chasing. Discipline > skills, this phrase is worth repeating. The problem is human nature; once the price breaks below the moving average, it's very hard to fully clear out. The four-step framework is logical and well-founded, but the key is to withstand the psychological pressure of pullbacks.
View OriginalReply0
  • Pin

Trade Crypto Anywhere Anytime
qrCode
Scan to download Gate App
Community
  • 简体中文
  • English
  • Tiếng Việt
  • 繁體中文
  • Español
  • Русский
  • Français (Afrique)
  • Português (Portugal)
  • Bahasa Indonesia
  • 日本語
  • بالعربية
  • Українська
  • Português (Brasil)