Last week, before the CPI data was released, we didn't bet on the direction of the market movement. Instead, we divided our tasks—some focused on macro market sentiment, others tracked on-chain fund flows, and I transformed this information into actionable trading plans. When the data came out below expectations, we followed our pre-set plan and placed long positions during the sharp decline, then gradually reduced our positions after the rebound. Those who kept up with the rhythm profited from this understandable market trend.
The CLO move was similar. When it hit 0.45, I advised going long—not because it suddenly became popular, but because the technicals reached a support zone and volume was cooperating. When it approached 0.72, I called a top, since the previous high resistance was right there, and there was no need to bet on a breakout. The entire process had a clear rhythm and was executed properly—that's the profitable logic that can be replicated.
I never promote "magic signals" when guiding others. Every trade I make is accompanied by a clear rationale: Why enter at this level? How to stop loss if wrong? Where is the target? For example, in the XMR market, I bought at 557 and sold at 631, earning from the recognition premium of the breakout and subsequent pullback.
There are many people who are always chasing highs and lows, frequently changing their strategies, and getting more confused. Trading, in essence, isn't about betting on directions but about making plans, following the rhythm, and maintaining discipline. Finding the right method is far more effective than blindly messing around for half a year.
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.
13 Likes
Reward
13
4
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
ApeEscapeArtist
· 1h ago
This is what trading should look like—it's not gambling, it's a system.
View OriginalReply0
ZKProofEnthusiast
· 01-14 07:49
This logic indeed hits the mark, but in reality, not many people can truly stick to discipline.
View OriginalReply0
BearMarketBuyer
· 01-14 07:42
This methodology is indeed powerful. Not hyping or criticizing, it's more reliable than those who call signals every day.
View OriginalReply0
OldLeekNewSickle
· 01-14 07:27
Oh no, it's that narrative of "I have a system and I have discipline" again, sounding quite impressive.
From 0.45 precisely bottoming out to 0.72 reaching the top, the rhythm is extremely tight— but honestly, how many people can actually replicate it if they say it out loud?
Last week, before the CPI data was released, we didn't bet on the direction of the market movement. Instead, we divided our tasks—some focused on macro market sentiment, others tracked on-chain fund flows, and I transformed this information into actionable trading plans. When the data came out below expectations, we followed our pre-set plan and placed long positions during the sharp decline, then gradually reduced our positions after the rebound. Those who kept up with the rhythm profited from this understandable market trend.
The CLO move was similar. When it hit 0.45, I advised going long—not because it suddenly became popular, but because the technicals reached a support zone and volume was cooperating. When it approached 0.72, I called a top, since the previous high resistance was right there, and there was no need to bet on a breakout. The entire process had a clear rhythm and was executed properly—that's the profitable logic that can be replicated.
I never promote "magic signals" when guiding others. Every trade I make is accompanied by a clear rationale: Why enter at this level? How to stop loss if wrong? Where is the target? For example, in the XMR market, I bought at 557 and sold at 631, earning from the recognition premium of the breakout and subsequent pullback.
There are many people who are always chasing highs and lows, frequently changing their strategies, and getting more confused. Trading, in essence, isn't about betting on directions but about making plans, following the rhythm, and maintaining discipline. Finding the right method is far more effective than blindly messing around for half a year.