Can 500 USDT be made to work? Yes, but it’s not about gambling on a single breakout


When many people don’t have much principal, the most common mistake they make is being too impatient. They always think about catching a pump-and-dump coin that can jump violently and turn things around in one go. In the end, before they even get a chance, their principal gets depleted by their own actions
There was a friend of mine who started with 800 USDT. At first, he did the same thing: chasing when it went up, holding through declines. After a few rounds, his account became harder and harder to manage
Later, I had him change his approach. He split his funds, stopped going all-in at once, and only traded the setups he could understand. Before each entry, he would think through risk and the exit level $BSB
After taking profit, he would protect a portion first, then let the remaining funds gradually roll forward—rather than making a little profit and then increasing his position size, sending the earlier gains back to the market
For small capital to grow, the real key isn’t catching one sudden huge move—it’s whether you can consistently get a few simple things right $LAB
Once the account starts growing, you also need to adjust your trading style: take short-term trades to catch opportunities, swing trade with the range and ride trends. When a bigger move comes, then plan your layout. Don’t trade every day just for the sake of trading
The market always has opportunities, but not every fluctuation is worth getting involved in
People who can stay in the market long-term don’t rely on luck—they rely on position control, trading discipline, and stable execution $SKHY
First protect your principal, then think about how to grow the account
If you’re still chasing breakouts and cutting losses, or averaging down and holding bags to “fix it,” come find Zege—so you can take fewer detours
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