With the market so chaotic, can small capital still get in? Recently, I’ve been asked this question quite often. Every time I hear it, I think back to when I was just starting out. Back then, I only had 5,000 U. I didn’t dare take too heavy a position when opening a trade, afraid that if my direction was slightly wrong, my funds would shrink by a large amount. Later, this 5,000 U gradually rolled up to more than 90,000 U. The process wasn’t easy. I’ve experienced chasing the price higher, following hot themes, and getting shaken out repeatedly in a choppy market. I lost money, and I also doubted myself. After going through all that, I finally understood one thing: whether a small account can grow isn’t about catching how big a surge you can grab, but whether you can control your position sizing and timing.
First, don’t try to double your money in one go. When I started with 5,000 U, I used only 20% to 25% of the position each time. After making 8% to 10%, I would lock in part of the profit first, then use the profit to make the next trade. I always kept the principal so I could still keep participating.
Second, if your direction is wrong, admit it. The earliest losses I suffered came from refusing to cut losses. Later, I changed it into a principle: if you’re wrong, exit—don’t bet on a rebound. A small loss isn’t scary. What’s scary is turning a small loss into a big one by dragging it out. As long as the principal remains, there will always be new opportunities later.
Third, rolling the account depends on discipline, not luck. From 5,000 U to over 90,000 U, it took me more than 40 days. There was no all-in, and no so-called insider information—mostly it was executing based on fixed rules. When to enter, when to reduce positions, and when to exit were all thought through in advance, not decided on the spot.
Many people think small capital can’t be made big. Actually, the real issue isn’t the amount of money—it’s the rhythm. If position sizing is messy, stop-losses are messy, and emotions are messy, then even the best market is hard to make money in. If you can first control risk, and then consider amplifying returns, small capital still has the chance to grow step by step. The market is always there, but there’s only one pot of principal. Protect the principal first—then the rest is much easier to handle.
If one person charges around blindly, sooner or later they’ll hit trouble; with someone to guide you, you can move more steadily. If you truly want to change, why not set up your plan with me a bit earlier?
Wake up. Most of the losses in the crypto market are created step by step by yourself. Many people think it’s because the market is bad or because they’re unlucky, but when people really lose money, it’s often their own trades. At the beginning, everyone has a bit of capital—thousands of U, tens of thousands of U. As long as you follow the rhythm and keep accumulating, opportunities are always there. But somehow, many people don’t want to do that. They spend every day checking messages and chasing hot trends. Whichever coin is pumping, they chase it. When they see others making money, they can’t help but rush in too. No independent judgment, no fixed method, and no sense of risk. When it rises a little, they think it can still keep going; when it dips a little, they start panicking. The whole pace is driven entirely by emotions. Others have already cashed out, but you’re just entering; others have started to exit, but you’re still fantasizing about it continuing to pump. There’s also another kind of person that’s even more common: after making money a few times in a row, they think they know everything, and their position size keeps getting bigger. When a pullback comes, they’re unwilling to accept the loss. A small loss drags into a big one, and in the end they give back not only the losses but also the profits they made earlier. Many people don’t actually not understand the market—they just can’t control themselves. They don’t want to spend time building rules, and they don’t want to make plans. They keep thinking about turning things around in one shot, putting all their hopes on luck. After staying in the crypto market for long enough, you’ll know: whether small capital can be built up doesn’t have as much to do with how good the行情 is as people imagine. What truly widens the gap is whether you have your own rhythm. If you protect your principal, opportunities will always be there. But if you keep following the crowd and chasing pumps or selling in panic, even the best market is hard to turn into your own money. Don’t keep blaming losses on luck. Controlling your own hands matters more than constantly hunting for the next opportunity. Want to succeed in turning things around? Want to bite off big chunks of profit? Want to double your account by doing it big? Follow Lin Xing in advance to secure your spot before the bull market’s main uptrend!!
The crypto world has never lacked opportunities; what’s missing is someone to pull you up when that chance appears. I’ve caught this round of the market—what about you?
If you’ve found me, then I’ll definitely pull you along to catch this profit with me!
$ETH Smart Money Recap|Prices are up, but smart money hasn’t gone long yet.
Today, ETH is trading above 1710. A lot of people are starting to shout for a continued push higher, but after looking at the smart money data, the market doesn’t seem as hot as you might imagine.
At the moment, smart money’s total open interest is $1.3 billion. The notional long-to-short ratio is only 33.22%. There are 1,168 shorts versus 868 longs—shorts still hold the advantage.
The average opening price for longs is 1801, and the overall position is still sitting at an unrealized loss. The average opening price for shorts is 1784, and they currently have more than $40 million in unrealized profit. This suggests that while the price has risen, it hasn’t climbed to the point that would make shorts start to panic.
In addition, net selling over the past 24 hours totaled $308 million, which is higher than net buying of $227 million. Yet the price has remained stable above 1700, implying that someone has been steadily stepping in to pick up the selling.
I still look at the 1700 level. As long as it isn’t broken, there’s a chance for the trend to continue moving toward the 1780–1800 area. That’s the shorts’ cost zone—the place where the next real long-versus-short battle will happen. There’s no need to rush to guess the top, and no need to chase higher. Let the market give you the answer on its own.
The heatmap is very clear—the target above is still 1725–1735. There are quite a few liquidation orders stacked here. As long as price continues pushing upward, there’s a chance to pull up another leg.
Around 1700 there’s already support. As long as that level doesn’t break, the momentum for the bulls is still intact. A minor pullback isn’t unusual; as long as it doesn’t drop straight back, the situation isn’t a big problem.
Recently, a lot of people have been waiting for a big retracement every day. If it drops a bit they don’t dare to buy; if it rises a bit they’re afraid of chasing. In the end, the trade plays out, and they just stand on the sidelines watching.
I still hold the same view: if 1700 can stay firm, there’s still room higher. First, we’ll see whether there’s any action around 1725.
A few days ago, when it dropped to around 0.36, the bearish voices were everywhere. Now, within the 4-hour timeframe, it has surged back to around 0.55 on increased volume. The Bollinger middle band has reclaimed above as well, and a MACD golden cross has appeared. The short-term trading rhythm is especially forceful.
Next, the 0.55 to 0.58 area may face some pressure. But as long as it holds here, then it’s aiming straight at 0.60—or even higher.
With this kind of price action, don’t get out just because it’s risen a bit. The best move is to reduce position size and continue holding.
Every market cycle is like this: when it’s falling, nobody dares to touch it. When it starts rising, people then worry that it’s too high. When the price keeps moving upward, that’s when people finally chase in—then after a pullback, everyone starts questioning everything.
I prefer waiting for signals before acting, rather than guessing tops and bottoms. MAGMA has already broken the weak momentum from earlier, at least for now. As long as the volume stays, then it’s worth doing!
Follow Linxing—together we’ll lay in a covert position for MAGMA and take a big bite of the profits!
Many small-cap players, once they enter the crypto world, think: “Turn 800U into 10,000. Turn 10,000 into 100,000.” Go all in and flip your life around. But more often than not, the money hasn’t doubled yet, and the account is already zero. If you want small capital to grow, it’s never about going all-in once. It’s about staying alive.
I’ve seen too many people: a few hundred U come in, and every day they’re thinking about doubling. They max out their positions, chase and sell in panic, and in the end they can’t even protect the principal. It’s not that the market is bad. It’s that from the moment they enter, they’re already rushing.
I once mentored a brother who started with 1,500U. In three months, he reached more than 10,000. In half a year, he got to over 30,000. During the whole time, he never blew up his account, and he didn’t do any crazy tricks.
What he did right comes down to three things: Don’t go all-in, operate less, and follow the rules. Use money separately—always leave yourself a backup. If there’s no good setup, wait. Don’t trade just to trade. Set a stop-loss when you should; take profit when you should. Don’t argue with the market, and don’t bet your emotions against your account. In crypto trading, it’s never about who’s the boldest. It’s about who can stay in the market for the long run.
The faster you try to make it happen, the easier it is to get knocked out. If you’re willing to slow down, you’re more likely to grow your account.
Follow Lin Xing. No boasting, no empty promises—just sharing practical experience that can help you survive in this space. If you’re still losing repeatedly and restarting over and over, come talk to me—I’ll help you make trading simple.
Is TLM going to start the second wave? A signal was already given 30 minutes ago.
On the 30-minute timeframe, this TLM wave saw a surge in volume and a rally, directly breaking above the Bollinger middle band. A single strong bullish candle broke through the previous consolidation range, and short-term funds have started to flow back in.
The MACD has already formed a golden cross; the green histogram has turned red, and momentum is also increasing. This indicates that short-term bulls have begun to regain control. If the MACD continues to diverge upward, there should be further upside space.
What needs to be watched now is whether it can hold steady around 0.00155. This area has turned from prior resistance into a new support. As long as it pulls back without breaking below, and the funds continue to underwrite, there is potential to challenge the previous high zone above, and even attempt to target around 0.0017.
If the next 30-minute candlestick continues to expand in volume, it means this rally is not a one-off raid, but a sustained push by capital. Conversely, if after the volume spike it gets immediately knocked back below the Bollinger middle band, then be careful—it may just be a short-term spike.
Right now, it looks like the bulls are starting to gain strength, and the pace is clearly stronger than the past few days. In the short term, focus on how well it is supported after pullbacks. As long as the volume does not noticeably wither, the outlook for this move to continue upward remains.
The specific strategy has already been laid out in the small circle—come quickly and take the meat!
At 2 a.m., he went all-in with 10,000U, then asked me where his position went—his voice was even trembling
Brothers from Jiangsu: put in 9,500U directly, use 10x leverage, and don’t set a stop-loss. After the market dips 3%, the position is gone
He asked me where he went wrong
I said, it wasn’t the leverage that ruined you—it was that you staked 95% of your principal to gamble
Many people think liquidation happens because leverage is too high. Actually, no. In a 10,000U account, opening 10x with 9,500U—any fluctuation and you’re out. But if you only use 2,000U with the same 10x, and you misjudge the top, you’ll only lose part of it. You still have a chance to turn it around
Position sizing is life, not leverage
I only follow three rules
First: no single trade can exceed 20% In a 10,000U account, use at most 2,000U per trade. A small loss is acceptable; a big loss will destroy your mindset. Once your mindset breaks, the rest will be nothing but bad trades
Second: per-trade loss must not exceed 3% of total capital If you open with 2,000U, set the stop-loss in advance—if you lose 300U, you exit. Admit it when you’re wrong; once you admit it, you can keep trading. Don’t take the loss, and next time you won’t even have the right to sit at the table
Third: don’t trade sideways—only trade trends Real money is always made when the trend is clearest. Sideways movement, messy chop, and needle-like wicks—looks exciting, but they’re the easiest thing to wipe people out
Earlier, I had a follower with 5,000U who blew up four times in one month. I forced him to follow these three rules. After three months, he reached 8,000U—and he never got liquidated again
He said: I used to think going all-in was ruthless. Later I realized controlling position size is the real skill
The crypto market isn’t short of opportunities—what it lacks is knowing when you should enter and when you should stop
Follow Big Star. No boasting, no empty promises—just sharing practical experience that helps you survive in this space. If you’re still repeatedly losing and repeatedly starting over, come talk to me—I’ll teach you how to make trading simple
Want to make a living trading with contracts? First engrave these 10 rules into your bones
This isn’t any deep theory. It’s the rules I earned with real money in the market.
Rule 1: When a strong coin keeps falling from a high for 9 days, follow through in time Funds are withdrawing—it's very clear. Don’t wait until the drop is fully played out before reacting.
Rule 2: Any coin that rises two days in a row—reduce your position without fail When it goes up, someone is looking to sell. Take some profits first; don’t be greedy for the last slice.
Rule 3: If it surges more than 7% in a single day, there may still be upside the next day You can keep watching, but don’t chase. Wait for a pullback to enter.
Rule 4: Only enter after a strong coin finishes its pullback Chasing is the classic way retail traders end up losing. Let it catch its breath, then go in.
Rule 5: After three days of fairly flat, low-volatility movement, observe for three more days If nothing changes, switch coins. Don’t waste time stuck in dead water.
Rule 6: If the next day can’t reclaim the previous day’s cost price, exit in time The market is telling you the direction is wrong—don’t stubbornly hold on.
Rule 7: On the gainers list, when there are three, there are usually five; when there are five, there are usually seven Coins that keep rising for two days should be entered on pullbacks. The fifth day is often a good point to reduce positions.
Rule 8: Volume and price are the soul If volume expands on a breakout from a low level, focus closely. If volume expands but stalls at a high level, leave decisively. Trading volume won’t lie.
Rule 9: Only trade coins in an uptrend A breakout/turn on the 3-day line is a short-term opportunity. A turn on the 30-day line is for the medium term. A turn on the 80-day line signals the start of the main rally. A turn on the 120-day line is for long-term positioning. Trade with the trend to have a real chance to win.
Rule 10: Small capital isn’t a disadvantage—your mindset is If you get the method right, have patience to wait for signals, and execute strictly, small capital can still roll forward.
Making money in crypto has never depended on luck. It depends on rules and execution Follow Xingge. No boasting, no hype—just practical experience that helps you survive in this market. If you’re still repeatedly losing and starting over again and again, come talk to me—I’ll help you make trading simple.
Contract flip? Don’t rely on brute force—rely on rolling your positions. First, burn these 8 rules into your head
I’ve taken losses and also turned things around. If you really want to make money from contracts, rules matter more than direction.
The core reason people lose money is never that they guessed the direction wrong—it’s that there are no rules at all.
Rule 1: Split your principal If you throw 1000U into one trade, and a single round of drawdown hits, you’re done. I always split into 200U blocks, roll them forward. Add when the direction is right; cut when it’s wrong—leave yourself a way out, always.
Rule 2: Not executing a stop-loss is the same as going to zero You don’t lose because you used the wrong stop-loss—you lose because you didn’t cut. When you’re wrong, cut. The market never caters to your emotions.
Rule 3: Take only half the profit and keep rolling Make a win and cash it all out? You won’t be able to roll positions. For each profit cycle, take half to protect gains, and keep the other half pushing—no greed, but also no wasting the trend.
Rule 4: Don’t trade hot coins—trade coins you know well Chasing memes today and AI tomorrow means you have no rhythm. I only focus on two coins I’m familiar with. After doing this for long enough, you can see the rinse-and-repeat tricks at a glance.
Rule 5: Increase volume + emotion + structure If all three conditions aren’t met, you don’t enter. If volume doesn’t follow, if the sentiment hasn’t turned, and if the structure isn’t complete—don’t move. I’d rather miss a few bites than go deliver “meat” to the slaughter.
Rule 6: If drawdown exceeds 15%, forced rest Once emotions get out of control, everything is ruined. If your weekly drawdown exceeds 15%, go flat for three days—better to miss the trade than to keep trading with emotions.
Rule 7: Write a plan before trading; write a review after Today’s loss is because you didn’t summarize yesterday. Log your entry logic, stop-loss level, mindset, and structure—step by step. After enough time, you’ll improve naturally.
Rule 8: Don’t ask if you can double—ask if you can avoid blowing up Futures contracts are a risk amplifier, not a printing machine. Roll steadily for three months, and your account will change by itself.
Wanted to pump it up to lure the long crowd onto the train, but the price dropped too fast—there was basically nobody to take the bag 😂
Instead, it ended up feeding the short side really well! The fan who took profit yesterday was a bit too early; they missed out on the rest of the meat afterward. Such a pity.
But no worries—today’s new trap positions have already started showing profit!
Hurry up and catch up with Lin Xing—let’s rush in and go feast on the big gains!
The harshest lesson in the crypto world: making profits doesn’t mean you’ve actually kept them Don’t average down, don’t stubbornly hold to the death, and don’t fantasize that it will turn back. These three rules—I’ve paid for each of them with real money. You ask why? Because I’ve seen too many people. Their accounts may have shown a six-figure floating profit, yet in the end they couldn’t even保住 the principal. It’s not that the market never gave opportunities—it's that they treated “wait a bit longer” as a strategy. Once the trend breaks, it’s broken. Whether you hold for a day or hold for a week only changes how much you lose, not the outcome. Averaging down just pulls you from one pit into a deeper one. Hoping for a rebound? The market has a way of curing “I think it can come back.” The real people who can survive in crypto aren’t the best at bottom-picking—they’re the best at knowing when to “stop.” Be willing to sell, be willing to call it quits, and be willing to withdraw the money you’ve actually earned from your account. Remember: floating profit isn’t real profit—taking it out is. If you don’t take it, it isn’t yours. Follow Lin Xing. No hype, no empty promises—just practical experience that helps you survive in this space. If you’re still repeating the cycle of losing, restarting, and losing again, come talk to me—I’ll teach you how to make trading simple.
In the counterfeit season, all kinds of weird demons and monsters come out. $TAIKO has been going down ever since the contract went live on June 11—down from 0.56 to 0.06, down almost 90%. Today, a single needle just plunged it back to 0.53! The shorts all dead, right?
If you ask me whether I’m going long or short right now—since the funding rate is -1, I don’t dare to short. I choose to go long and bet on the next round of gains.
Move fast and keep up with me—I’ll take you through this wave of profit, steady and sure!
ETH this 24-hour “smart money” data has me shaking my head
Brothers, the 24-hour data for ETH’s whales is out, and after reading it, I really don’t know what to say.
The bears have the numbers—2230 against 973—clearly holding the advantage. They’re still making big money, with an overall profitable rate of 55%. But the harshest part is that in the past day, the bears actually quietly started distributing and taking profits into their pockets!
Meanwhile, the bulls, though far fewer in number, were ruthless enough to smash in $247 million to bottom-fish. They’re still at a loss right now, but nearly half of them have already started clawing back—clearly they feel the current level is a spot worth betting on.
When the price surged to around 1617, the bulls fought desperately to pull it up, but the bears started cutting positions and walking away… This scene is genuinely pretty exciting.
Right now, the bears are still the comfortable side, but the bulls have started to counterattack. In the short term, it’ll likely just chop around and wear people out, with no clear big direction. If you’re playing, keep your position size in check—don’t go too hard. The market’s emotions are way too chaotic right now.
Follow Lin Xing—less impulsiveness, more patience, and the “meat” will last longer to eat! 😤
I took him from 3,500U all the way to 170,000U, and in the end I still had to block him. It wasn’t that he lost it all—it’s that I genuinely couldn’t hold him back anymore.
The first time he came to me was after a liquidation. He sent me screenshots: his account only had 3,500U left, and the records were a mess, like an EKG.
He said, “Brother Xing, if I make another mistake, I’m going to quit the scene.”
I replied to him very directly: “If you want to stay, first shrink your position into a small one.”
I set three rules for him: one single position must not exceed one-fifth; when the stop-loss hits, you immediately close the screen; and before bed every day, you must review—if you can’t write at least fifty characters, you’re not allowed to sleep.
He really followed through. During that time, it was like grabbing a life-saving straw.
In the first week, after an 8% sharp drop in Ethereum, he was trembling and asked me whether he should go all-in and buy the bottom.
I cursed him awake: “The thing that lets you turn things around isn’t a single trade—it’s whether you can survive to the next one.”
He stayed in cash and made it through. He caught a small profit and started to get a bit confident, thinking the market had begun to fear him.
Later, we broke down the candlesticks one by one—starting from 3,500U to 8,000, then 30,000, 70,000, 100,000, and finally pushing up to 170,000. The pace was steady.
He even learned to split the profits into three parts: one to keep rolling, one to withdraw, and one as insurance.
The problem was that he started thinking he was good enough.
One day he said, “Brother Xing, I also want to bring along followers.”
At that moment, I went silent, because I knew the risk had changed.
Sure enough, not long after, he secretly went in with 20x leverage. He got stabbed back immediately, and 40% was gone.
At around midnight, he sent me a voice message—his voice was trembling: “I think I’m back to the way I used to be.”
I only replied with one line: “The market isn’t ‘maybe good’—it’s either yes or no.”
I told him to clear his positions and stay calm for three days. He agreed very well. Two hours later, when I checked, he was already back to full positions. In that moment, I understood: I could save his account, but I couldn’t save his hands.
I sent him the last part of what I had to say, and then I blocked him right away: You can still make money again, but you only have one life—discipline is the only thing that matters. What you lose isn’t the market; it’s every time you say, “Just this once, let it be an exception.”
Come find me again after you’ve removed the habit of making exceptions from your life. In this crypto world, the ones who live to the end aren’t the most daring gamblers—they’re the ones who can not gamble at all.
If you’re still losing over and over, starting over again and again, then come talk to me. I’ll teach you how to make trading simple.