Friends with a principal of less than 1000U, stop and don't make reckless moves.

The crypto market is not a casino for guessing sizes; following the rules is the way to last.

The little Yang I brought in two months ago, just graduated and entered with 800U, now has almost 30,000U in the account, without ever getting liquidated.

Last week, BTC fluctuated between 42000-43500 USD, and he even made a small profit.

Do you think it was luck? It's all thanks to three hard rules, which is how I went from 5000U to being able to not watch the market.

First tip: Divide your money into three parts; reckless trading will lead to losses.

Little Yang started by splitting his 800U: 300U for day trading, only focusing on BTC/ETH, looking for small fluctuations of about 0.5% like last week, earning 3 points and then exiting;

300U for waiting for big market movements, like the Federal Reserve's interest rate hikes or ETF news, holding for 3-5 days to ensure profit;

200U as a reserve, when BTC fell below 40000, this money remained untouched, providing confidence for a comeback.

Second tip: Only go for the big gains, not the small ones.

90% of the time, the crypto market is sideways, and frequent trading just incurs fees.

Last week, before ETH broke 2200 USD, I had little Yang simply lie flat and wait until it broke before entering, taking profits of 15% and immediately transferring half to his bank card —

Numbers don’t count as money; having it in your pocket feels secure.

Third tip: Don't let emotions take charge.

Little Yang's stop-loss is always set at 1.5%, and when BTC dropped to 41500 USD last week, he cut it immediately, never relying on luck;

If profits exceed 3%, reduce half the position, and let the remaining profit run.

Never increase your position when in loss; this is a hard rule.

Having a small principal isn’t scary; what’s scary is rushing to “recover everything at once.”

If you’re losing sleep over fluctuations of a few U, I can teach you my methods of splitting funds and judging timing, saving you two years of blind stumbling. @bit冰