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Many people ask me: can you really make money with a small account?
You think you can't make money because your capital is too small. But that's not it—the real issue is you can't handle the volatility.
Here's a real example: I had a follower with about 60K in their account. When they started, things were stable. They could accept 2-3K swings per trade.
Then a market move came. They nailed several trades in a row, and their account jumped close to 100K.
That's where the problem started.
Once people make money, their hands get heavy.
They originally risked only 20% per trade. Then it became 50%. Then they went all-in, thinking they'd "figured out the market."
Then the market pulled back. They went from profit straight back to square one. In two days—back down to just over 60K.
It wasn't a technical problem. The person changed.
The most honest truth about this market is: it won't keep paying you just because you made money once. Instead, it hits you hardest when you're most confident.
Right after making a win, you feel like there are opportunities everywhere—so you trade more frequently.
The moment you take a small drawdown, you panic and try to scalp it back—adding positions, averaging down, holding losers.
Before you know it, it's not about being wrong on direction. Your whole rhythm falls apart.
You'll realize: when you make money, it's the market. When you lose money, it's all you.
Bottom line: you can't scale a small account because you can't control yourself.
Heavy positions make you panic.
Floating losses make you irrational.
Market swings make you overtrade.
The people who actually turn 10K into 100K? They're all disciplined.
They don't trade what they don't understand. They'd rather miss it than force it.
Their position size always leaves room to breathe. They never go all-in on direction.
They take profits and cash out—not chase higher forever.
Sounds simple, right? But honestly, very few people can actually stick to these three things long-term.
If you can control your position size, keep your rhythm steady, and manage your emotions, the money will naturally compound.
In this market, as long as you don't get wiped out, opportunities will come your way eventually.
If you're in that cycle right now—making back some losses, then giving them back, or just stuck at the same level—it's not that you can't do it. Your rhythm is just off.
I've seen this stage too many times. Some patterns are hard for you to spot yourself, but others see them immediately.
If you want to straighten out your rhythm and avoid some painful detours, let's talk.
From the 4-hour structure perspective, the price has currently touched the upper channel resistance, with short-term signs of obstruction appearing. The support level below is roughly around 274, and as the trend progresses, this support will continue to gradually rise.
From a volume perspective, the overall performance is quite healthy with good fund participation, indicating the trend hasn't deteriorated. In the short term, it's more likely to consolidate at high levels for a period of time, then look for new upward momentum.
If the structure remains intact, after this consolidation period, there's still an opportunity to make another push toward new highs, with targets around 332.
Operationally, it's not recommended to chase the highs at this position. The more ideal approach would be to wait for a pullback to the support level below for confirmation, then consider entering on dips. This way the risk-reward ratio would be more reasonable.