Many people think that having too little principal means no chance, and that the threshold for the crypto world is too high. In fact, quite the opposite — small funds are actually the best stage for trial and error. The issue is never about how much money you have; the key is whether you can make it grow steadily.
Take $120 as an example. Many people's first reaction is to go all-in on a coin that’s skyrocketing, winning double or losing everything. But that’s not trading; that’s gambling.
I have a friend who did exactly that — chasing hot trends every day, repeatedly getting caught and forced to cut losses, with his account shrinking more and more. Later, I advised him to change his approach: don’t try to become rich overnight, switch to a rolling position mode.
Earn a small profit each round, say $30 or $50, without chasing rallies or holding full positions. The first round grew to $160, the second to $220, then lock in half the profit and continue operating. At first, he thought it was too slow, but seeing the account curve steadily upward, his mindset became more solid.
The core of rolling positions is not speed, but controllability. Small positions for trial and error won’t hurt your core strength if you make mistakes; if you do well, gradually increase your stake. The main position aims for stability, while the auxiliary position is for rolling operations. Profits are taken promptly, avoiding betting on market extremes.
Small capital is never an obstacle; reckless operations are. Being able to repeatedly succeed with small amounts will naturally lead to capital accumulation and growth. Turning around depends not on luck, but on rhythm and patience. Taking it step by step is the right way.
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Many people think that having too little principal means no chance, and that the threshold for the crypto world is too high. In fact, quite the opposite — small funds are actually the best stage for trial and error. The issue is never about how much money you have; the key is whether you can make it grow steadily.
Take $120 as an example. Many people's first reaction is to go all-in on a coin that’s skyrocketing, winning double or losing everything. But that’s not trading; that’s gambling.
I have a friend who did exactly that — chasing hot trends every day, repeatedly getting caught and forced to cut losses, with his account shrinking more and more. Later, I advised him to change his approach: don’t try to become rich overnight, switch to a rolling position mode.
Earn a small profit each round, say $30 or $50, without chasing rallies or holding full positions. The first round grew to $160, the second to $220, then lock in half the profit and continue operating. At first, he thought it was too slow, but seeing the account curve steadily upward, his mindset became more solid.
The core of rolling positions is not speed, but controllability. Small positions for trial and error won’t hurt your core strength if you make mistakes; if you do well, gradually increase your stake. The main position aims for stability, while the auxiliary position is for rolling operations. Profits are taken promptly, avoiding betting on market extremes.
Small capital is never an obstacle; reckless operations are. Being able to repeatedly succeed with small amounts will naturally lead to capital accumulation and growth. Turning around depends not on luck, but on rhythm and patience. Taking it step by step is the right way.