Small funds, slow is fast
In the cryptocurrency world, with 30,000 yuan trying to roll to 300,000, the first step is not to stare at the K-line, but to change the script.
Most people's default script is: short-term → compound interest → huge profits.
The correct script is just one sentence: compress 'the number of times' into 'a very small number of large multiples'.
So, what exactly should be done? Three steps:
Step 1: Choose the right situation
30,000 yuan is only suitable for doing one thing: waiting for a 'visibly apparent' cyclical bottom.
Using monthly K, weekly charts, or any price level that you can determine at a glance as 'having been reached, and likely will be reached again'. Choosing the right timing is better than all short-term operations.
Step 2: Go all in
Don't listen to those 'position management' nonsense. The less capital you have, the more you should go all in, but you can only go all in once—at the position where you confirm 'if it drops again, I will jump off the building'.
Set a firm stop-loss: sell if it drops below the previous low by 10%, no averaging down, no averaging out. Acknowledge when you are wrong and take advantage when you are right. Small funds have no qualification to diversify; you can only go all out once.
Step 3: Lock in and wait
After doubling the initial amount, withdraw the principal, and let the remaining profits continue to run. At this point, your account is still 30,000, but psychologically you have achieved 'zero cost'. Next, every time you double your profit, withdraw half of the profit and do not re-enter. This is the only safeguard against 'earning by luck, losing by strength'.
The core of the whole process is not in technology, but in screening for 'the moments worth going all in'. How many opportunities can there be in a year? Just one or two. The rest of the time, you just stay out of the market, watch the show, or play games, just don't let your hands get itchy. Compressing 'trading desire' into 'a fatal blow' is the survival strategy for small funds.
Summary:
Small funds = high volatility tickets, don't use them to pay transaction fees, but to wait for historical turning points;
Long-term ≠ long time, but 'not moving is safer than moving chaotically';
Doubling depends on position, compound interest depends on withdrawing principal, discipline depends on stop-loss at the point of jumping off the building.
Make the right moves twice in three years, 30,000 → 270,000 → 810,000, just folding the paper twice. The universe can hold it, and you can let it go too.
