There was a fan before who lost over 3 million, and during that bear market year, he was hit so hard that he almost fell apart. He cleared his social media, family didn't understand, and friends avoided him. In that state, to be honest, many people can't handle it.
Later, I told him one thing: "No matter how much you lose, it's just the beginning; holding on until the end is what truly means defeat."
He said that moment suddenly made him wake up.
His account only had 3500U left, which was really the last bottom line.
But this time he didn't gamble, and told me: he just wanted to steadily make a comeback and see if it could really work.
He started rolling over positions.
He didn't gamble on luck, didn't randomly add positions, didn't bet on miracle trades, but cut his rhythm precisely.
He split the 3500U into two parts, half for defense and half for offense, only trading trends he understood.
Every trade he took, he moved out at 5%–10%, cut losses when possible, and never held onto losing trades.
In the first week, he made it to 5200; in the second week, 8600.
By the sixth week, his account was already over 40K.
That day he sent a message saying he wasn't excited for making money for the first time, but felt that he had finally crawled out of the deep pit.
I clearly saw this operation.
It wasn't about luck; he really changed all his previous mistakes.
He didn't rush, didn't be greedy, didn't panic; every trade followed the rhythm, and if it was wrong, he exited without emotional interference.
So when you ask me if small funds can still turn around?
I use his example to reply directly: Yes, but you really have to change.
Turning around isn't about shouting slogans; it's about taking trading seriously.
Once the rhythm stabilizes, the funds will naturally grow.
There are opportunities every day; it just depends on whether you want to turn around or not.