Profits come only when there's small profit to build on.


Small funds can't grow big? It's not that your principal is too small, but that you want to "eat the whole pie at once"!
Having a few hundred or thousand dollars, you're eager to double it, jealous when others make money, going all-in with heavy leverage and full positions.
And the result? A slight misdirection, and your account is directly "cut in half."
The deadliest thing about small funds isn't losing once, but having too low a tolerance for errors—one mistake could lead to total ruin.
With less capital, you must embed risk into your bones.
Don't go all-in at once, and don't dream of getting rich overnight every day.
A reliable approach is: diversify your layout, combining short-term and long-term strategies.
Some trade short-term, take profits and exit;
some wait for trends, stay out when the market is unclear;
and set aside some "life-saving money" to prevent total elimination after mistakes.
Playing this way, although slow, can help you survive longer.
Many people lose money not because they can't analyze, but because their hands are too greedy.
Chasing after small rises, copying during dips, and even during sideways markets, they can't sit still.
In fact, the truly worthwhile opportunities in the market are scarce.
When there are no signals, doing nothing is the best move.
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