Lesson on basic strategies

Let's start with one of the easiest and safest for newcomers: it's called Dollar Cost Averaging (DCA)

The idea is this: instead of investing all your money at once, invest a fixed amount every so often, regardless of whether the price is high or low. It works particularly well in downtrends or bear markets; it's a valid accumulation technique..

your average cost decreases and you don't have to watch the charts; you only do this with projects you know will definitely exist in 5 years.

Another way is to chase breakouts. Here you look at the price of an asset that moves within a range, like between 10 and 15.. and you wait for it to "break" upwards, exceeding 15. When it happens, with high volume, you enter and buy, hoping it continues to rise. But be careful, because sometimes it's a false breakout and the price goes back down. This technique is not simple at first and you often get hurt; I advise against it..

Another basic strategy is trend following: follow the direction of the market. If it's rising, buy; if it's falling, sell..

Look at the MAs or better the EMAs..

Don't fight the river; swim with it.

(keep in mind value investing: buy undervalued things, like a crypto that is worth 100 but is being sold for 70 because the market is scared.

Buying where you find extremely low RSI on wide time frames is often a good move)

A super simple, profitable strategy that requires discipline, patience, and hours of work on charts is the crossover of the 5 and 10 EMAs..

Put a low time frame 3-5-15 min (it should be clean without unpredictable ups and downs) buy and sell on the EMA crossovers; when the 5 EMA crosses above the 10, buy, and when it crosses below, sell..

great technique, requires time, there's a specific indicator

Start small, study a bit every day, and don't risk money you need to live.

Think carefully about how much time you are willing to invest and you will find the strategy that suits you

If you have questions or requests for topics, write to me

I think the next lessons are on other indicators (EMA, RSI, and MACD we have already seen)