Small capital can also make a comeback

Many people always think: starting late, having little capital, and lacking resources are reasons why they can't make a comeback.

But the reality is — those traders with five-digit, six-digit, or even larger accounts mostly started with just a few hundred U or a few thousand U and slowly built it up.

I've seen too many examples: some started with only 500 U and managed to multiply it several times in half a year by being steady and controlling drawdowns.

There are also those who hold tens of thousands of U, but still lose thousands in a day, unable to even protect their principal.

Do you think this is luck? Actually, it’s that they understand the rhythm, have strategies, and can control themselves.

If you want to make a comeback with small capital, you must do the following:

Step 1: Recognize the current situation, don’t fantasize about achieving everything in one go

Small capital doesn’t qualify for speed contests, and you definitely can’t follow the crowd blindly. What you should focus on right now is to survive.

Step 2: Establish a trading system suitable for yourself

Determine whether you are doing swing trading, day trading, or medium to long-term trading? Don't try to do everything; with small capital, focus on one direction to practice.

Step 3: Every trade has a plan

With small capital, you need to be more meticulous with your trades. Before opening a position, ask yourself:

What is the risk-reward ratio? Where is the stop loss? What is the profit target? Is the current position reasonable?

Step 4: Control the rhythm, do less and observe more

Market opportunities are not available every day; small capital fears frequent operations and overtrading the most. Wait more and act less, and only choose the most assured opportunities.

Step 5: Learn to roll over positions, let profits generate more profits

When capital is small, don’t rely on explosive gains, but on continuous accumulation. After profits come in, use those profits for the next trade, so even if you make a mistake once, it won’t hurt too much.

In this circle, only those who can survive have the right to talk about making money. Small principal is not scary; what’s scary is having no methods, no execution, and no direction.

If you currently have little capital, don’t lose heart, and don’t rush into it. Focus on the path of success that belongs to you with small capital.