Recently, there are always people who find me with one or two thousand U, their eyes full of expectations for "getting rich overnight," hoping to multiply their funds tenfold by following trades.
Every time, I have to honestly tell them: I don't have that ability; what I've always excelled at is a steady and methodical approach.
Those fans who have truly turned their fortunes around by following me did so not through fantasies of "critical hits," but through the patience they cultivated over time.
When they first started following me, most only had one or two thousand U, but no one was in a rush for quick gains; they accumulated bit by bit, allowing their accounts to "grow" slowly—
Only when the account size increases can one withstand the volatility risks of the market; this is the survival strategy for small funds.
I have a brother who once found his account down to just 300 U, and he was in a desperate situation. But he didn’t give up; instead, he took the time to reflect on the problems, and the first step was to kick the habit of "going all in."
He realized: not every market wave requires action, especially in contracts; the time spent waiting without positions must be longer than the time spent in positions.
By resisting 80% of the temptations and only capturing the 20% of trades with the highest probability, his funds truly began to "grow."
In trading, having a sense of rhythm is crucial. Drawing lines and watching indicators are just the basics; more importantly, one must feel the "breath" of the market:
During low-volume fluctuations, don’t fantasize about making big money; only small positions should be tried, and stop losses need to be set tightly; wait for a real volume breakout and for support levels to stabilize before increasing positions to ride the trend and capture the full wave of profits.
Small funds should avoid "random hopping"; chasing DeFi today, trading AI tomorrow, and following meme coins the day after will only scatter attention and funds.
My brother later focused on two or three familiar coins, understanding their K-lines, capital flow, and sentiment, which is far more reliable than aimlessly fidgeting.
In fact, the core of turning around small funds is not about "struggling hard," but about "surviving." As long as the account hasn’t hit zero, there’s always a chance.
The cycles of the market are much longer than we imagine; there’s no need to rush for every wave. Just wait for the opportunity that belongs to you and then seize it tightly.
A correct method, combined with stable execution, is far more useful than a person blindly rushing around.
I never rely on gambling when trading; it's all about grasping the rhythm. Follow @趋势猎手老金 . (Only strong executors are accepted.)