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Lately I see many traders interested in scalp trading as a strategy to capture small movements in the crypto market. Honestly, if done well, it can be interesting, but it requires discipline and a good technical setup.
The foundation of effective scalp trading starts with choosing the right platform. You need something fast and reliable with low fees because when you make many trades in a short time, costs add up quickly. You can't afford to pay too much per trade.
In my opinion, selecting the cryptocurrencies is crucial. Focus on assets with high liquidity and decent volatility—Bitcoin, Ethereum, and the main altcoins are a good starting point. Without sufficient volume, your scalp trading becomes risky and hard to execute.
Regarding indicators, most traders I know use a combination of moving averages, RSI, and Bollinger Bands. The 5 and 20-period moving averages help identify the trend, RSI below 30 signals oversold conditions, while above 70 indicates overbought. Bollinger Bands are great for reading volatility and spotting potential rebounds. Volume is your ally—when it rises, it often precedes significant movements.
In concrete scalp trading, the setup that works well is this: a 5-minute chart with EMA 5 and EMA 20, 14-period RSI, and standard Bollinger Bands. Enter when EMA 5 crosses above EMA 20, RSI is below 30, and the price is near the lower band. Exit when the price touches the upper band or RSI rises above 70.
For risk management, set a tight stop loss—usually 1% below the entry point—and a proportionate take profit, between 1% and 2% above. The risk-reward ratio should be consistent, ideally 1:1 or 1:2.
One thing I’ve learned is that scalp trading doesn’t forgive negligence. You must constantly monitor the market because conditions change rapidly. Avoid trading during low liquidity periods when spreads and slippage become killers. And most importantly, stick to your plan—emotional trading is the number one enemy.
Final tip: continually review what you do. Analyze your trades, adapt the strategy based on actual results and market conditions. Scalping isn’t a magic formula, but if you treat it like a real profession—with discipline and preparation—it can give you interesting results.