Several hundred USDT users always want to double in the short term, but most of them leave before three months.


When several hundred USDT enter the market with the goal of doubling, they basically can’t hold on for more than three months; in the end, most lose and exit anyway.
The biggest trap for small capital is never misreading the market—it’s going all-in with a heavy position at the drop of a hat. If the market moves slightly against you, losses get amplified immediately, leaving no room to recover.
Trading doesn’t rely on a high win rate to make money—scientific position-splitting is the core. Split your principal: part for short-term swing trades, part to build long-term trend positions, and keep idle funds to wait for high-certainty opportunities. The progress may look gradual, but it helps you avoid the risk of one trade wiping out your account.
Learning to stay flat (no position) is the first lesson when getting started in trading. Many people’s root cause of losses is that they can’t control their hands—when it rises they chase, when it falls they try to bottom-buy, and even during ranging markets they still enter to gamble. There just aren’t that many high-quality opportunities in the market; frequent trading only burns your principal for nothing.
Trading discipline must be strictly followed: when you hit your stop-loss level, exit decisively. After you’re in profit, take profits in batches—don’t hold fantasies of a rebound to get back to break-even.
The market specifically harvests traders who are desperate to get their money back quickly and try to get rich fast. If small capital wants to grow slowly, the first priority is to protect the principal and survive—calm down, wait for big opportunities, and only then will there be a chance to turn things around.
Let yourself settle into a stable, position-splitting trading approach, steady your mindset, and accumulate gradually—that’s the way for small capital to keep going for the long run. #PreIPOs第二期OpenAI认购 $BTC
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