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#数字货币市场回升 Newbies playing ZEC often fall into two traps: focusing on a single time frame and making trades based solely on intuition. What’s the result? They stubbornly hold on against the trend until they get liquidated, or they chase the price and get played for suckers repeatedly.



To survive in this market, multi-time frame analysis is a fundamental skill. The method I have developed over seven years revolves around three key steps: first determine the direction, then find the position, and finally time the entry.

First, let's determine the direction. Open the 4-hour K-line, this is your navigation tool. Are the highs and lows moving upwards? Then wait for a pullback to find an opportunity to go long. Conversely, if the highs and lows are continuously moving downwards, a rebound is your signal to exit. What to do when facing a sideways consolidation? Just stay put and wait for the direction to become clear. If the direction is wrong, it doesn't matter what you do afterwards.

The direction is set, next look at the 1-hour chart to find specific positions. Previous lows, key moving averages, and trend lines nearby are potential entry zones. Previous highs or obvious resistance areas are where you should consider taking profits. Mark these key price levels so you won't panic when placing orders.

Finally, it's the 15-minute chart. In this step, you only do one thing - wait for the confirmation signal. When the price reaches the position you marked on the 1-hour chart, check for any reversal patterns or volume accompanying the breakout. If there's a signal, enter; if not, continue to wait. Most losses occur because of the urge to enter prematurely.

The entire process is: set the overall direction in 4 hours, find the key levels in 1 hour, and wait for the entry signal for 15 minutes. If signals from different time frames conflict, don’t hesitate; staying in cash and observing is the safest.

Four tips for newbies: always set stop losses for each trade; always go with the trend; observe more and predict less; stable profits rely on discipline, not on a big gamble to turn things around.

This market is not about who makes the most money, but about who can survive until the end. I am Da Sen, and I only talk about things that are truly useful in practical combat.
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GateUser-a5fa8bd0vip
· 1h ago
Goodness, after seven years of exploration, this is it? I feel like I'm still gambling.
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BrokenRugsvip
· 11-30 21:02
Sounds good, but I still think most people can't do it. This itchiness is a disease that can't be cured.
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LiquidationWatchervip
· 11-30 14:20
After all that has been said, it still boils down to discipline issues; most people fail because they can't control their impulses.
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digital_archaeologistvip
· 11-30 14:20
You're not wrong; multi-timeframe analysis is indeed a fundamental skill, but executing it tests human nature too much. As for stop loss, it's really easier said than done. Seeing losses makes everyone want to stubbornly hold on.
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HappyToBeDumpedvip
· 11-30 14:13
Sounds reasonable, but I lost what I had spent seven years figuring out in just three months, haha.
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GasFeeVictimvip
· 11-30 14:04
Sounds good, but I still think that for most people, looking at multiple time frames is pointless; without discipline, everything is empty.
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CounterIndicatorvip
· 11-30 14:03
Sounds good, but I find that most people can't stick with it for seven years. The habit of being impulsive is hard to cure; any method is futile.
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MetaverseLandladyvip
· 11-30 13:53
Seven years of experience is indeed valuable, but to be honest, most people can't stick to this discipline at all. I really relate to the feeling of wanting to act on impulse; every time I want to buy the dip early, I end up cutting losses repeatedly.
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