How to roll over small funds? I once leveraged 900U to 31,000 in the crypto world, the method is simple but very stable.

Let me ask you a question—have you also suffered losses?

Lost to the point of not wanting to look at K-lines, lost to the point of doubting your own IQ, lost to the point where even 1000U has to be carefully considered?

I have too.

The most exaggerated time, I went from 5400U down to only 900U.

I was directly stunned. It was this 900U,

that allowed me to roll to 31,000U. It’s not relying on genius logic,

but rather a set of "violent rolling rhythm" exclusive to small funds.

Don’t have money now? Small funds need to rely on rolling, not gambling.

(1) The underlying logic of rolling small funds: it’s not about speed, but about "cleanliness."

Don’t talk to me about trend judgment, MACD golden cross, or pattern breakthroughs—

small funds simply can’t afford that. The truth for small funds is just one sentence:

It's not that you lack skills, it's that you lack margin for error.

So rolling small funds only looks at one thing:

Is it clean? Clean market:

Clear direction, rhythmic fluctuations, short shadows, smooth breakouts,

steady pullbacks, K-lines not jumping around.

Unclean market:

Jumping around, yin and yang fighting each other, emotional market conditions are volatile.

Understanding this will save you half the losses.

How to roll? I only use this simple and crude rhythm.

① 1–2 trades a day, eat the most stable segment.

Those who want to turn around don’t need to do many,

they need to be accurate.

I used to do more than ten trades a day,

four trades profitable, six trades losing,

in the end it was all in vain.

Later, I only did one segment of "the smoothest move in a clean trend" a day.

Eating 8–15% at a time,

profits roll into the next trade.

Looking back after half a year:

It turns out that turning around isn’t about high frequency,

it’s about waiting.

② Never go all in, small funds also can’t gamble their lives.

There’s an iron rule for rolling small funds:

The principal cannot die.

I only put down the first trade with 15–20%,

profits roll into the next trade.

The principal is always a safe position.

When others are liquidated,

I only lose profits at most.

You think I’m stable?

No, I just don’t engage in reckless behavior.

③ Stop loss settings must be very small, using "quick retreat" to exchange for "steady rolling."

A key point:

Stop losses for small funds cannot be large.

Lose 3%, lose 5% and just retreat.

If you don’t adhere to small losses quickly and large profits slowly,

rolling over will never succeed.

LUNA

#ETH #ZEC