Last year, I helped a fan start with 2600U, and in 4 months, the account grew to 48,000U, now stabilizing at 70,000U. This process relied not on mysterious tactics or luck, but entirely on a set of 'anti-anxiety' 'three no principles' — for small funds, avoiding the pit of 'wanting to earn quickly' is more important than learning to read K-lines.

One, fund triad method: provide small funds with a 'safety net'.

Small funds most fear 'all in', splitting 2600U into three parts, each with its mission; this is a hard rule:


  • Use 800U for 'flash positions': specifically target sudden market movements, such as CPI data releases or major upgrades to public chains. These opportunities require quick in and out, holding positions for no more than 48 hours, and leaving after earning 5%-8% — small funds are weak against risks, don’t be greedy for 'big trends', earning 'certain small price differences' is more stable.

  • Use 1000U for 'trend positions': only focus on weekly opportunities, for example, entering when a coin's weekly chart stabilizes above MA60 or when a sector rotates to leading sub-tracks. Trend positions are held for 1-2 weeks, not seeking to double overnight; once the trend is clear, 'taking a sip of soup' is enough, after all, small funds cannot afford 'choppy grinding'.

  • Keep 800U as 'revival money': this part must not be touched, even if the first two amounts hit stop-loss and exit, do not touch the 'revival money'. Once this part is used, forcibly delete the software and rest for two weeks — many people with small funds crash because they impulsively break into 'emergency funds' when losses pile up, leaving nothing to recover their principal.

Second, only eat the fish body: small funds should 'avoid pitfalls', not 'catch tops and bottoms'.

Small funds cannot afford to make mistakes; three methods to avoid 90% of traps, only eat from the middle of trends:


  • Avoid 'previous highs and lows by 5%': for example, if a certain coin's previous high was 10U, don't enter in the 9.5-10.5U range — this position is a 'long-short game zone', and the probability of a false breakout is over 90%; small funds can easily become 'cannon fodder' if they jump in. Wait until the price breaks through and stabilizes before entering.

  • Wait for 'secondary level pullback confirmation': even if you are bullish, don't chase the price. For instance, after a buy signal appears on the daily chart, wait until the 4-hour chart pulls back without breaking EMA20 before acting — the pullback is a 'litmus test of the market', filtering out 80% of 'tempting bullish trends'; small funds need 'stability' rather than 'speed'.

  • Withdraw principal after a 20% profit: for example, if you enter with 1000U and earn 200U, immediately withdraw the 1000U principal and keep playing with the 200U profit. This way, even if the market reverses later, the principal is not lost, and you’ve earned a 'testing fee' — for small funds, 'preserving the principal' is more critical than 'how much you earn'.

Three, robotic discipline: small funds compete on 'not making mistakes'.

For small funds to go far, it’s not about 'making money', but about 'losing less money'. Three rules must be executed like a robot:


  • Set a 4% stop-loss 'cut instantly': no matter how optimistic you are about the asset, set a 4% stop-loss upon entry and close it when it hits that point. Small funds have less capital; losing 10% requires an 11% gain to break even, losing 20% requires a 25% gain, but losing 4% only needs a 4.2% gain to recover — strict stop-losses allow for 'less loss and quicker recovery'.

  • Move stop-loss after an 8% floating profit: if your position has earned 8%, move the stop-loss line to the cost line. For example, if you bought at 1U and it rises to 1.08U, set the stop-loss at 1U — this way, even if the market retraces, you won’t lose, and you lock in 'certain profits' first.

  • Stop trading after a 10% loss in a single week: if total funds lose 10% within a week, stop immediately and don’t open new positions that week. Small funds have fragile mindsets; if they lose too quickly, they easily make erratic moves — 'stopping trading' prevents 'small losses' from turning into 'collapse', and you can re-enter after stabilizing your mindset.


The core of turning around small funds is actually 'against human nature': the market is always killing those who are 'anxious to recover losses'. Real opportunities to make money come only 2-3 times a month; living longer is 100 times more important than making money quickly.
Remember that saying: the method of turning 3000U into 30,000U and the path of losing from 30,000U to 3000U are often the same — it just depends on whether you follow the rules and 'climb slowly' or gamble recklessly. Starting with small funds is not scary; what is scary is having no rules and being too anxious.


Blindly going solo will never bring opportunities; follow Super Brother, and I will lead you to explore tenfold potential coins! Top-tier resources!

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