If you’ve been in the trading world for any amount of time, you know how easy it is to get overwhelmed. There are endless indicators, strategies, and YouTube gurus promising quick wins. I’ve been there. I’ve spent months hopping from one method to another, thinking the next indicator would be the holy grail.
Spoiler alert: it wasn’t.
What finally changed things for me was this realization — I didn’t need a complicated system. I needed a simple, repeatable process that matched my personality and the market conditions I traded.
This post is about exactly that: how I built a simple trading system that works for me. I’ll break it down step by step, share the principles behind it, and explain how you can build something similar without overcomplicating your life.
Why I Ditched Complex Strategies
Before I built this system, I tried everything: scalping with five indicators, algorithmic bots, Fibonacci clusters, and strategies that looked like they needed a Ph.D. to understand.
The problem? Too many moving parts.
When you rely on ten different signals to make a decision, your confidence is low because the signals often contradict each other. One indicator says “buy,” another says “sell,” and you’re stuck second-guessing.
The breakthrough came when I started asking myself a simple question:
“If I stripped away all the noise, what’s the core of every good trade?”
For me, that boiled down to trend, level, and trigger.
Step 1: Start with the Trend
Every good trading system starts by answering one question: Am I trading with the market or against it?
For my system, trend comes first. I use a very simple tool for this — the 50-period and 200-period moving averages on the daily chart.
If the 50 MA is above the 200 MA, I only look for buys.If the 50 MA is below the 200 MA, I only look for sells.
Why these? Because they show the big picture without clutter. I don’t need to know every tiny fluctuation — I want the general direction of money flow.
This one rule alone eliminated 50% of my bad trades. Most of my previous losses came from trying to fight the trend.
Step 2: Identify Key Levels
Once I know the trend, I look for areas where the market is likely to react.
This means support and resistance levels drawn on the higher timeframe (daily or 4-hour). No fancy tools — just the obvious levels where price has bounced multiple times.
Here’s how I pick them:
Look for zones where price reversed at least twice.The more recent the reaction, the better.Round numbers (like $20,000 or $25,000 for BTC) often matter because traders cluster orders there.
Key levels are like magnets — they attract price and often create trade opportunities.
Step 3: The Trigger (My Entry Rule)
Here’s where most traders complicate things. They add five oscillators, divergences, and signals from Twitter. I keep it simple: I only enter after a clear price action signal at my level, in the direction of the trend.
For me, that’s usually one of these:
Bullish/bearish engulfing candlePin bar rejectionBreak-and-retest of the level
That’s it. No MACD, no RSI, no stochastic. Price action tells me what I need.
If the trend is bullish and price pulls back to a strong support level, then prints a bullish engulfing candle, I enter long. My stop goes below the low of the setup candle, and my target is at least 2R (twice my risk).
Step 4: Risk Management (The Non-Negotiable)
Before this system, I was all over the place with risk. Some trades risked 5%, others 0.5%. That inconsistency killed my account more than bad entries ever did.
Now, I have a rule: risk 1% per trade, no exceptions.
It doesn’t matter how “sure” I feel — if the trade fails (and some will), I only lose 1%. This rule alone can save you from blowing your account.
Step 5: Backtest Before You Trade Live
One mistake I made early on was going live with a system I had zero data for. That’s gambling.
When I came up with this strategy, I went back six months on BTC and ETH charts and manually marked trades that fit the rules. I noted win rate, average R-multiple, and drawdowns.
Results:
Win rate: ~48%Average R: 2.1RExpectancy: Positive
That was enough proof for me to go live with small risk.
Why This System Works for Me
Here’s the thing — a trading system isn’t just about technicals. It’s about psychology.
This system works for me because:
It’s simple — fewer decisions, less stress.It fits my timeframe — I trade swing moves, not scalp.It respects market structure — trend and levels matter more than indicators.
Most importantly, it removes the urge to overtrade. I have clear rules. If the setup isn’t there, I don’t trade.
What I Learned While Building It
A few lessons stood out during this process:
Simplicity beats complexity.
I know traders with 10 indicators who still lose. Complexity doesn’t equal profitability.Backtesting is underrated.
Most people want shortcuts, but testing your system gives you confidence when the market throws curveballs.You need discipline, not more tools.
No system works if you can’t follow the rules.
How You Can Build Your Own System
Here’s my advice if you want to create a system that works for you:
Start with the basics — trend, levels, and price action.Add rules slowly — don’t pile on indicators for no reason.Backtest everything — if you can’t prove it works historically, don’t risk money.Adapt it to your personality — if you hate waiting, don’t build a swing strategy. If you can’t watch charts all day, avoid scalping.
The Bottom Line
You don’t need a secret indicator or a $2,000 course to make trading work. You need a simple, repeatable system and the discipline to follow it.
My system isn’t flashy. It doesn’t promise 90% win rates or Lambos in six months. But it works because it’s built on sound principles, tested over time, and designed for my psychology.
If you’ve been chasing complexity, maybe it’s time to strip things down and build your own simple system. You might be surprised how freeing it feels.
How I Built a Simple Trading System That Works was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.