Brothers with limited capital, listen to Brother Cat first before taking action.


Don't rush to go all-in with small funds.
The crypto world is not a casino; it's a battlefield where small funds grow through discipline like a snowball.
Among my apprentices, there's a girl who started very low, a complete novice who couldn't even understand candlestick charts.
After a period of time, her account reached a good number, all without a single liquidation.
It's not luck, but a few ironclad rules.
Divide your money into several parts, keep your bottom line.
Split your funds into several portions: one for intraday trading, only play mainstream coins, and exit on small fluctuations to accumulate more.
One for swing trading, wait for the trend to clarify before entering, hold for a few days.
The last part stays still, even if the sky falls, never touch it—that's the confidence to turn things around.
I've seen too many go all-in, rise and then crash, losing everything in a few waves.
Only follow the trend, avoid oscillations.
Most of the market time is tormenting people; frequent trading is just working for the exchange.
Rest when there's no signal, act when there's a signal.
Take half of the profits once they reach a certain percentage, let the rest run.
The points where you double your money are all waiting for the right moment, not chasing after it.
Rules lock in emotions.
Set a strict stop-loss for each trade at a small percentage, exit mechanically at the set point;
Take half of the profits when exceeding a certain percentage; never add to losing positions.
You don't have to be right every time, but you must do right every time.
Making money relies on systems that control your hands, not feelings.
The biggest advantage of small capital is being able to afford to lose time, not impulsively rushing.
Reaching good results from a low starting point is not about gambling; it's about waiting, patience, and rules.
Brother Cat has been crawling, climbing, and fighting for years, now leading others to run together.
The light is on—are you coming or not?
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