In the crypto space, small funds (such as within 2000u) wanting to gradually grow through secondary trading must avoid the trap of 'immediate gains' and choose strategies based on their own risk tolerance. Here are some practical thoughts and suggestions based on actual combat:
First, understand the common paths on Twitter to avoid pitfalls.
1. Make money from the big trends: Requires a certain amount of capital and patience to wait. If small funds choose this route, they need to be prepared for long-term holdings, which is not suitable for those seeking quick doubling.
2. '10U War God' mode: Mostly for show, it may work in the short term to attract attention, but frequent operations in the long term are likely to incur losses due to fees or mistakes, making it hard to sustain.
3. Heavy positions to win the first pot of gold: after earning startup capital with a heavy single position, one either continues to hold heavily out of greed, leading to a final liquidation, or promptly shifts to a stable strategy to truly step up - but this model carries extremely high risk and is not recommended for beginners to imitate.
Facing small funds of 1000-2000U, there are two core strategies.
1. Aggressive type: single-point investments in quality altcoin spots.
From a technical perspective (such as trend patterns, trading volume) and fundamental perspective (such as project implementation, ecological progress), select one promising altcoin and invest all in spot trading. If the target explodes, it can quickly double the funds; however, one must bear the short-term risk of being trapped and avoid worthless coins.
2. Conservative type: split positions + zero-cost holding.
◦ Split the principal into 2-3 parts, and buy 2-3 quality altcoin spots, diversifying the risk of a single target;
◦ Once a position generates profit, first withdraw the principal and use the 'profit' to continue holding that target, achieving 'zero-cost holding';
◦ The freed-up principal is then used to look for the next target, operating in cycles.
This method is slow, but it can reduce the risk of loss; unfortunately, most people find it difficult to persist because they want to 'double quickly.'
Regarding contracts: newcomers should be cautious, veterans need to control risks.
• Newcomer advice: directly avoid contracts; if really wanting to learn, first practice with simulated positions or use 'Ant Warehouse' (such as using only 50U each time) for real trading tests. Familiarize yourself with the rules and risks before considering further.
• Prerequisite for veterans: must meet 'continuous high win rate + low drawdown' in order to use small funds to roll the contracts - if the technology is not up to par, it is difficult to maintain a high win rate, and ultimately, large drawdowns can easily wipe out the principal.
The core logic of making small funds grow large: rely on compound interest, not on gambling.
1. High win rate is prioritized over high profit-loss ratio: small funds have weak risk tolerance; although a high profit-loss ratio brings more profit per trade, a low win rate leads to larger drawdowns and can easily cause a psychological collapse; in contrast, a high win rate can maintain low drawdowns, allowing funds to grow steadily through compound interest.
2. Time cycles are not important; strategy adaptation is key: some make profits in daily cycles, while others have high win rates in hourly cycles. There is no need to blindly follow big names (such as Bitcoin fat house, bit wave's high profit-loss ratio model); just choose the cycle that one can manage and maintain a high win rate.
3. Absolutely avoid 'heavy positions for a big win': those who succeed on Twitter with heavy positions have 'super high win rates + strong risk control' behind them. Ordinary people blindly imitate, and there is a high probability of being eliminated due to a single loss.
The key to making small funds grow large is 'first survive, then slowly earn.'
1. The core is 'mainly stable, trying not to lose'; slow and continuous profits are the positive cycle.
2. As funds increase gradually through compound interest, the position size can also be increased, and operational confidence will be stronger;
3. Always ensure that 'profits can cover potential losses'; do not pursue short-term high profits to allow small funds to grow step by step.



