500U, can it really turn things around?


When many people hear it, they immediately shake their heads: the principal is too small—you can’t make money without going all-in. But the reality is, it’s exactly this kind of thinking that makes most people lose more and faster.
I’ve seen someone use tens of thousands of U and get liquidated in one go, and I’ve seen someone use 500U and roll it up little by little to 1万U.
The difference isn’t in the size of the capital.
It’s in two words: rhythm $INJ
At the beginning, I was also working with a small amount of capital. I never open orders recklessly. In a day, at most one or two trades—I only watch the strongest coins and the cleanest trends. For choppy sideways ranges I don’t understand, I just give up; I don’t clash head-on with the market.
The game, actually, is very simple: enter with a light position only after a breakout holds steady, take 3%~5% profit and exit—no greed.
For each trade, I only use a small portion of my position to test. If I lose, it won’t damage the principal. If I win, I use the profits to roll the position. What’s hardest for small capital is never having fewer opportunities, but having an itchy hand—wanting to trade during consolidation, wanting to chase a surge, going back and forth, and in the end turning everything into nothing but wasted effort $ING
Later, I set a few hard-and-fast rules for myself: no trading without volume, no trading without a breakout, and a daily limit on the number of trades.
Slowly, 500U turned into 800U, then to 1500U. Once the rhythm stays steady, the money naturally starts to roll.
To put it plainly: for small capital to turn around, it’s not about courage—it’s about self-control.
As long as your principal is still there, opportunities are always present $IN
#美伊局势和谈与增兵博弈
#WCTC交易赛瓜分800万USDT
INJ0.91%
ING0.41%
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FelixRiver
· 2h ago
Could you give me some guidance, expert?
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FeeArbitrage
· 7h ago
Really
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