Let me give you one piece of advice: if you’re in the few hundred to a few thousand USD (U) phase, don’t learn those complicated methods.


On-chain tracking, arbitrage models, complex indicators, and all kinds of advanced strategies sound really impressive, but most of them aren’t suitable for people with only a few thousand USD in capital. With small funds, your biggest advantage isn’t taking desperate risks—it’s adjusting quickly and keeping trial-and-error costs low. A common problem for many newcomers is that they don’t have much principal, yet they want to trade like institutional players. In the end, they learn a bunch of stuff, their trade logic gets more and more messy, and finally they don’t even know why they’re losing. The method that’s truly suitable for growing small capital is actually just three words: do simple.

First, don’t research a bunch of coins at the same time.
There are thousands of projects on the market—it's impossible to fully understand all of them. It’s far more reliable to pick a few coins with strong liquidity and high market attention to watch long-term than to chase hotspots every day. What you need to study isn’t how much it will rise tomorrow, but its volatility patterns, capital behavior habits, and key levels.

Second, stick to one trading style.
Some people like to chase breakouts, some are good at doing pullbacks in trends, and others focus on swings. Don’t learn this today and switch to that tomorrow. Trading is most afraid of being indecisive. Training one approach until it’s熟练 is more important than knowing ten half-baked tricks.

Third, make a risk plan in advance.
Before every position entry, think clearly about what you’ll do if you’re wrong. Once the stop-loss is hit, execute—don’t gamble on a rebound just because you can’t bear to take a small loss. Small principal isn’t the scary part. Random trading is. Protect your capital first, then wait for opportunities.
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