#美国核心物价涨幅不及市场预估 Small funds, don't mess around! 1200U grows to 45,000U, not by luck but by execution.



Brothers with small accounts, listen up: having less money can actually be an advantage, as long as you know the rules.

In the crypto contract world, the smaller the capital, the easier it is to panic. Many people with accounts under 1000U get nervous just by opening their positions, and a single loss makes them want to recover immediately. This mindset only leads to losing all their small money.

I've seen a real case. A young guy started with 1200U, and in three months, he reached 25,000U, and in five months, he hit 45,000U. The whole process had zero margin calls. He didn't have any secret tricks, just stuck to three principles that everyone has heard of but few can stick to:

**First: Always leave a backup**

Never go all-in with 1200U. While others double their funds and go all-in, his thinking was straightforward — keep some capital, keep some hope. This isn't weakness, it's clarity. The smaller the account, the more a single full position explosion means game over.

**Second: Follow the trend, avoid gambling on volatility**

When the market has no direction, he chooses to lie flat, not move at all. Others think it's slow, but he believes losing money is the real loss. Once a trend emerges, be ruthless when needed. Take profits and leave, don't be greedy, and don't fantasize about doubling again in the opposite direction.

**Third: Use rules to control emotions**

Cut losses at 2%, take profits at 4%. Don't chase losses or add positions out of frustration. Don't add to losing trades or revenge trade. While most are dragged by the market, he uses strict rules to pull himself out of emotional traps.

In the end, turning 1200U into 45,000U isn't about luck; it's about discipline. In today's highly competitive market, those who survive and profit are always the ones who can stay calm. Small funds are not the problem; impatience is the real enemy.
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WhaleSurfervip
· 7h ago
Really, small funds are most afraid of being impatient. When my account was less than 500 before, I lost half of it within a month, just because I wanted to quickly recover, and the more anxious I was, the more I lost. Now I understand that rules are much more reliable than luck.
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LiquidationTherapistvip
· 7h ago
That's right, the key point is not to go all-in. How many people have died by betting everything? No, you take profit at 4% and then reduce your position? You must be very patient. I've wanted to run away for a long time. Impatience is indeed a big enemy. That's my problem—when I see the market rising, I want to go all in. 1200 to 45,000, execution is really not something to boast about; discipline is the true talent for making money. Lying flat and not moving is really uncomfortable, but on the other hand, losing money is the real loss. That saying really hits home.
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RooftopReservervip
· 7h ago
Really, small accounts are most afraid of impatience. I've seen too many people lose thousands of yuan to anxiety.
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SerRugResistantvip
· 7h ago
No way, is this real? This guy hasn't had a margin call in five months? I feel like stories are always told this way, but what about in reality... But on the other hand, saving some capital is definitely right. Those who go all-in all die—who's seen anyone come out alive?
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