After struggling in the cryptocurrency world for a full 7 years, from an initial capital of 100,000 to now achieving financial freedom.

Along the way, I have experienced three cycles of bull and bear markets, and I have almost stepped into all the pitfalls, but it is these experiences that have allowed me to develop my own stable profit system.

First step: Add cryptocurrencies that have risen in the ranking within 11 days to your watchlist, but note that any cryptocurrencies that have fallen for more than three days should be excluded to avoid capital escape after profit.

Second step: Open the candlestick chart and only look at cryptocurrencies with a monthly MACD golden cross.

Third step: Open the daily candlestick chart, here only look at a 60-day moving average; as long as the price retraces near the 60-day moving average and a volume candlestick appears, then enter the market with a large position.

Fourth step: After entering the market, use the 60-day moving average as the standard; if it is above, hold; if it is below, exit and sell. This is divided into three details.

The first is when the segment increase exceeds 30%, sell one-third.

The second is when the segment increase exceeds 50%, sell another one-third.

The third is the most important, and it is the core that determines whether you can make a profit, which is if you buy on that day and the next day an unexpected situation occurs where the price directly breaks below the 60-day moving average, then you must exit completely, without any luck mentality. Although the probability of breaking below the 60-day moving average through this method of selecting cryptocurrencies based on the monthly and daily lines is very small, we still need to have risk awareness.

In the cryptocurrency world, the most important thing is to protect your capital. However, even if you have already sold, you can wait until it meets the buying criteria again to buy back.

So, finding your own set of money-making theories is the golden key to stable income; treat others' experiences as fertilizer, as a reference standard for determining whether your own theory is feasible.