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Why do many people with smaller principal lose money faster?
To put it bluntly, there's only one reason—they're too impatient.
With a few hundred or thousand USDT in hand, people always feel like they need to make an aggressive move or they're wasting the opportunity. So they go all-in, use leverage, chase rallies and sell dips—they do it all.
When it goes up a bit, they think they're about to take off. When it drops slightly, their mindset collapses immediately. In the end, one bad move wipes them out.
Last year a brother came to me with only 700U left in his account. He was completely numb, even hesitating when placing orders.
I told him one thing back then: "Don't think about doubling your money. First, think about one thing—how to stop losing."
The first step is simple: divide your capital.
One portion for short-term trades—take profits and leave, don't be greedy.
One portion to wait for clear market direction, even if it takes days.
The rest—treat it like your lifeline, don't touch it easily.
Most people lose money because they go all-in with no backup plan.
The second step is to control your hands.
The biggest problem for beginners isn't that they don't understand the market—it's that they want to do everything.
Trade in sideways markets, trade in volatile markets, chase every candle move.
But most of the time, the market actually isn't worth touching.
Later he gradually changed his approach: no opportunity, no action. Wait for the opportunity, then move.
The third step, and the hardest—set the rules in stone.
Cut losses when you should, take some profits after wins, absolutely never add to losing positions or bet on reversals.
Many people die at this step: even when they're clearly wrong, they wait for "maybe it will come back."
The market loves harvesting this kind of wishful thinking.
So guess what happened?
In three months, he turned 700U into over 10,000U.
A bit later, he hit 30,000U.
But the key part wasn't how much he made—it was what he told me:
"I used to hunt for opportunities every day. Now I just wait for them."
The crypto market isn't that complicated.
The hard part isn't understanding the market—it's controlling your own hands.
Small capital isn't scary. What's scary is always wanting to flip your position in one shot.
As long as your account still exists, opportunities will always come.
But if you keep going all-in and gambling, no matter how good the market is, it has nothing to do with you.
The difference was never in the market. It's always in the person.
If you're currently trading small capital and bumping around the market every day, it's not that you're not trying hard enough—it's that you haven't found the right path yet.
$SIREN #币安人生 $pippin #币安人生 $BEAT