Many people always say that with small funds there are no opportunities. Stop joking; if making money really depended on large capital, then there would be no poor people in the crypto world anymore.
Let me ask you a question:
You have 100U and want to turn it into 1000U. Do you want to go all-in and bet 10 times, or do you want to steadily use "rolling positions" to slowly gain?
If you choose the former, it basically means gambling your life.
But if you're willing to listen to me explain how to play rolling positions, you might start to gradually turn the situation around.
Rolling positions, at its core, is not about violent profits, but about steadily increasing profits and minimizing risks.
I've guided followers before; when they first came, they only had two or three hundred U, and at most could only place a small order, not even willing to set a stop loss.
But how did I guide them?
First, set a goal, for example, turning 100U into 300U. We break it down into three rounds, with each round only aiming for 30-50U. After one round, lock in a portion of the profits and keep a portion rolling.
Like ants moving a house, we take it bite by bite, and the profits accumulate steadily.
You might feel the process is slow, but the advantage is that it's stress-resistant, prevents liquidation, and allows for compound interest to accumulate. Step by step, you can really make it.
I also operate like this: large positions steadily gain, small positions flexibly roll, and secondary positions lock in profits to prevent drawdowns.
The essence of rolling positions is actually to establish your "repeated game ability" in the market.
You don’t need to maximize every single trade, but you must ensure that the overall direction is correct, small mistakes can be covered, and profits can be solidified.
For example, now the market is volatile, and many people go all-in and get washed out. I, on the other hand, explore with a light position, confirm the signal before adding more. If it doesn't work, I cut losses; it’s not a big deal. But once it goes right, the profits can make up for all previous small losses.
This is called the logic of rolling: first seek survival, then stability, and finally amplify.
So stop telling me that "small funds can't play."
With small funds, rolling is even more necessary. Don't always think about going all-in; first, set up the system properly, lay the foundation step by step. Once it rises, you will thank these days of laying the foundation.
Rolling positions is not about getting rich overnight; it's about rolling out profits.