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Why do people with small principal lose money the fastest?
The answer is actually simple: it's not that the market is difficult, it's that you have no discipline.
The one mistake small accounts make is just one word: impatience.
With only a few hundred or thousand USDT in your account, you're constantly thinking about doubling it in one move. Full position entries, maxed-out leverage, chasing rallies and selling dips. When it goes up, you feel like you're about to take off. When it drops, you're wiped out.
Last year, a brother came to me with an account that had been beaten down to just 700U. The guy was completely lost.
I told him one thing: stop thinking about doubling your money. First, learn how to survive.
The first thing we did was simple—we broke down that 700U.
Not throwing it all in at once, but dividing it into several portions and playing slowly.
One portion for day trading only—take profits and exit when you see gains, no greed.
One portion to wait for a clear trend before moving—willing to wait a few extra days.
And one portion we don't touch at all—emergency fund.
It looks slow doing it this way, but it has one huge advantage: no matter how crazy the market gets, you won't get kicked out in one hit.
The second thing is keeping your hands under control.
The biggest problem for beginners isn't understanding the market—it's wanting to trade every scenario.
Trading sideways markets, trading chop, getting itchy fingers whenever a candle moves.
Later I told him: 80% of the time, the market isn't worth trading.
Wait for real opportunities, stay put when there aren't any.
The most critical step is locking down your rules permanently.
When your stop loss is hit, you exit. When you make a profit, you take some off the table. When you're losing, you absolutely do not add to the position.
Most people fail right here:
They know they're wrong but think "maybe it'll come back if I wait a bit longer."
The market loves harvesting this mentality of luck.
Three months later, he sent me a screenshot.
That 700U had slowly grown to over 10K.
By month five, the account was over 30K.
What struck me most wasn't the numbers—it was what he said later: "Before, I was chasing opportunities every day. Now I just wait for them."
Making money in crypto isn't that mystical.
The real difficulty was never understanding the market—it's controlling yourself.
A small account isn't scary. What's scary is always trying to make one big bet.
As long as your account still exists, opportunities still exist.
But if you keep going all-in time after time, even the best market has nothing to do with you.