Live Trade Walkthrough: Crypto Trading Plan (Binance / TradingView)
Here’s a two-in-one trading setup for you: 📌 Crypto Trading Plan (Binance / TradingView) Style: Swing + Short-term trades Assets: BTC, ETH, and 2–3 trending alts (not too many to avoid overtrading)
▶️ Indicators: 🕐 EMA 50 & EMA 200 → trend direction 🕝 RSI (14) → overbought/oversold 🕞 MACD → momentum shifts 🕓 Support/Resistance levels → entries/exits
▶️ Risk Management: - Max 2–3% of portfolio per trade - Always set stop-loss below support (longs) or above resistance (shorts) - Risk-to-reward ratio = at least 1:2
▶️ Indicators: ~ EMA 50 & 200 → golden cross / death cross signals ~ Volume profile → confirm moves ~ RSI (weekly chart) → avoid buying overbought stocks
▶️ Risk Management: # 70% → long-term ETF & top stocks (hold for years) # 30% → short-term swing trades # Use stop-loss at 8–10% below entry for swings
✅ Live Trade Walkthrough (How we’ll do it) 1. Current Price Overview Bitcoin is trading around $115,300–$115,400 USD, with a 24-hour drop of around –1.3% . CoinGecko reflects a similar level at $115,391 USD .
2. Key Support & Resistance Levels According to Barchart, primary resistance lies at $119,035, while immediate support is near $113,303, with deeper support down to $109,624 . FXLeaders lists support zones at $114,700, $114,450, and $114,200, with resistance at $116,000, $116,300, and $116,500 . TradingView-based analyses suggest resistance clusters at $114,600–$115,680, with lower support around $111,910–$110,400 .
Summary Table: Level Type: Zones (approx.) Immediate Support $114,200–$114,700 Secondary Support $113,300; deeper: $110,400–$109,600 Immediate Resistance $115,680–$116,500 Secondary Resistance ~$119,035
Leverage in Trading (Simple, Clear & Beginner-Friendly: Part One
Learn with YawPlay 📘
🔹 What Is Leverage? Leverage means borrowing money from your broker to control a bigger trade than your own money allows. 👉 It’s like using a small key to open a very big door.
Your money is the key. Leverage gives it power.
🔹 How Leverage Is Written Leverage is written like this: 1:10, 1:100, 1:500, etc. This means: Leverage Your Money Trade You Control 1:10 $10 $100 1:100 $10 $1,000 1:500 $10 $5,000 The second number is the multiplier (power).
🔹 Easy Trading Example You deposit $100. Your broker gives 1:100 leverage. You can now trade: > $100 × 100 = $10,000 ⚠️ Important: That $10,000 is not yours — it is mostly borrowed money.
🔹 Why Traders Like Leverage Because profits grow faster. If price moves 1% with 1:100 leverage 1% of $10,000 = $100 profit Without leverage: 1% of $100 = $1 profit. Same market move. Much bigger result.
🔹 The Dangerous Side ⚠️ Leverage is a double-edged sword. Losses also multiply. If price moves against you by 1%, you lose $100. Your entire $100 account can be wiped out. That’s why many beginners blow accounts in minutes using high leverage.
🔹 Margin (Very Important) Margin = the money the broker locks to keep your trade open. If losses grow and your money is not enough: (Follow to get more updates on Margins) ➡ Margin Call ➡ Stop Out ➡ Trade closes automatically 👉 You can lose everything very fast.
🔹 Safe vs Risky Leverage Leverage Risk Level 1:10 – 1:50 Safer (good for beginners) 1:100 Medium risk 1:500+ Very risky / account killer
🔹 Simple Way to Remember Leverage is like: Driving a car with a turbo engine You reach profit faster… But you can crash faster too.
🔹 Golden Rule 🏆 Professional traders survive because they: ✔ Use small lot sizes ✔ Always use stop loss ✔ Risk only 1–2% per trade ✔ Respect leverage
🔹 Final One-Line Summary Leverage in trading is borrowed power that increases both profit and loss — use it carefully, or it will destroy your account. Follow for more Part Two: Realistic examples in trade and Liquidation. Comment and Share...
🔹 What is a Pullback? A pullback is a short-term drop in price during a longer-term uptrend. Think of it as the market “taking a breather” before moving again.
🔹 Why it happens:
1. Profit-taking by traders
2. Market corrections
3. Natural pauses in trends
🔹 What traders do: ✅ Spot pullbacks to enter at lower prices ✅ Manage risk — not every pullback recovers ✅ Stay calm, focus on the bigger picture
📊 Understanding pullbacks helps you trade smarter.