In fact, the cost-effectiveness of trading with small funds is very low; it's better to do odd jobs or work.

Why?

Because when the principal is too small, what you earn is simply not enough to cover living expenses. For example, if you spend 4000U a month, even if you can achieve a 20% monthly return, you would need a principal of 20,000U just to cover your expenses.

So the approach should be like this:

1. When the principal is small: First focus on increasing the principal; odd jobs or working are both fine, but keep a small amount of money in the market to practice and maintain your feel for it.

2. When the principal reaches a certain threshold: Start trading and use risk and return to quickly grow the principal.

3. When the principal is larger: Don't take risks every day; you can cover your expenses with risk-free returns, and slowly accumulate the excess.

4. Keep a small portion of money: Continue to engage in risky trading; if you incur losses, return to the first step and start accumulating again.

It's like playing a game—if you fail, you go back to the first level; if you succeed once, you can level up, or even achieve financial freedom directly.

To summarize in one sentence:

Small funds → Increase principal

Medium funds → Risk trading

Large funds → Focus on stable financial management, while keeping some funds for further challenges

Trading is not linear; it’s a cyclical process of challenges. #撸羊毛 #空投大毛 #交易日常