For friends with principal under 1000U, don't rush to get on board. Let me tell you how a beginner I mentored last year turned 600U into 200,000U.
At first, he operated very conservatively, worried that a single trade would wipe out his principal. I told him one thing: crypto is not a casino, and small capital actually requires more strategic planning.
One month later his account had grown to 6,000U. Two months after that, it shot up to 200,000U. He never had a liquidation throughout the entire process. Some say it was luck, but I disagree. All results come from three iron-clad rules.
**Rule One: Divide funds into three portions**
We divided the 600U like this:
200U for short-term trading, focusing only on mainstream coins, taking profits at 3-5% gains and exiting immediately. This portion requires fast entry and exit, no greed.
Another 200U for swing trading, entering only when you've identified the market rhythm, holding positions for several days to capture larger gains. This portion relies on patience and trend judgment.
The final 200U is locked away indefinitely, no matter how bullish the market gets. This is your last line of defense, your survival money.
I've seen too many people put all their assets in. They get euphoric when making money, but collapse completely once losses hit. Traders who truly survive understand how to leave themselves an exit route.
**Rule Two: Only operate when there's a clear trend**
You need to understand this reality: the market spends 90% of the time in consolidation. What looks like opportunity is usually a trap. When there's no clear direction, rest. Not every fluctuation deserves participation.
Waiting itself is a trading strategy. Strike decisively when opportunities arrive, stand still when the market sends no clear signals. This sense of timing is critical.
Banking profits is equally key. When you're up 12%, withdraw half the gains immediately. Cash in hand is truly yours. Let the remaining position continue running—this way you secure returns while preserving upside potential.
That beginner was able to multiply his capital because he had patience. When the market was hot, he didn't chase highs. When he needed to wait, he waited patiently. When it was time to collect profits, he did it cleanly and decisively.
**Rule Three: Discipline every single trade**
Set a maximum loss limit of 2% of total principal per trade. Once you hit your stop loss, cut it immediately—no wishful thinking. Many people can't bear to cut losses, turning small losses into big ones.
When up 4%, reduce position by half immediately. Let that half of profits continue to capture more upside while you lock in base returns. This is smart execution.
The worst mistake is adding to positions when losing money. Always wanting to lower your average cost to break even—that mindset has already lost. Loss of emotional control is often more dangerous than market volatility.
**The truth is this simple**
Making money isn't about predicting accurately; it's about executing correctly every single time. No one can be 100% accurate reading market direction, but you can absolutely make every trade follow the rules.
The biggest enemy of small capital is the mentality of overnight breakthroughs. Watching him turn 600U into 200,000U last year, it wasn't luck—it was strict adherence to rules and commitment to patience. If you can truly execute these three disciplines, small capital can achieve big results. The key question is whether you're truly willing to trust this system.
For friends with principal under 1000U, don't rush to get on board. Let me tell you how a beginner I mentored last year turned 600U into 200,000U.
At first, he operated very conservatively, worried that a single trade would wipe out his principal. I told him one thing: crypto is not a casino, and small capital actually requires more strategic planning.
One month later his account had grown to 6,000U. Two months after that, it shot up to 200,000U. He never had a liquidation throughout the entire process. Some say it was luck, but I disagree. All results come from three iron-clad rules.
**Rule One: Divide funds into three portions**
We divided the 600U like this:
200U for short-term trading, focusing only on mainstream coins, taking profits at 3-5% gains and exiting immediately. This portion requires fast entry and exit, no greed.
Another 200U for swing trading, entering only when you've identified the market rhythm, holding positions for several days to capture larger gains. This portion relies on patience and trend judgment.
The final 200U is locked away indefinitely, no matter how bullish the market gets. This is your last line of defense, your survival money.
I've seen too many people put all their assets in. They get euphoric when making money, but collapse completely once losses hit. Traders who truly survive understand how to leave themselves an exit route.
**Rule Two: Only operate when there's a clear trend**
You need to understand this reality: the market spends 90% of the time in consolidation. What looks like opportunity is usually a trap. When there's no clear direction, rest. Not every fluctuation deserves participation.
Waiting itself is a trading strategy. Strike decisively when opportunities arrive, stand still when the market sends no clear signals. This sense of timing is critical.
Banking profits is equally key. When you're up 12%, withdraw half the gains immediately. Cash in hand is truly yours. Let the remaining position continue running—this way you secure returns while preserving upside potential.
That beginner was able to multiply his capital because he had patience. When the market was hot, he didn't chase highs. When he needed to wait, he waited patiently. When it was time to collect profits, he did it cleanly and decisively.
**Rule Three: Discipline every single trade**
Set a maximum loss limit of 2% of total principal per trade. Once you hit your stop loss, cut it immediately—no wishful thinking. Many people can't bear to cut losses, turning small losses into big ones.
When up 4%, reduce position by half immediately. Let that half of profits continue to capture more upside while you lock in base returns. This is smart execution.
The worst mistake is adding to positions when losing money. Always wanting to lower your average cost to break even—that mindset has already lost. Loss of emotional control is often more dangerous than market volatility.
**The truth is this simple**
Making money isn't about predicting accurately; it's about executing correctly every single time. No one can be 100% accurate reading market direction, but you can absolutely make every trade follow the rules.
The biggest enemy of small capital is the mentality of overnight breakthroughs. Watching him turn 600U into 200,000U last year, it wasn't luck—it was strict adherence to rules and commitment to patience. If you can truly execute these three disciplines, small capital can achieve big results. The key question is whether you're truly willing to trust this system.