No, it doesn't work like that, as you increase capital your returns reduce due to the various complexities of the financial markets. You can get to $1,000s at those returns, after that it effectively halves each range, I was discussing this somewhere else.
$1k unit investment 700%-1,000% per year return (Bitcoin)
$10k unit investment 300%-500% per year return (crypto)
$100k unit investment 150%-200% per year return (hybrid)
$1mn unit investment 70%-100% per year return (standard assets)
$10mn unit investment 30%-50% per year return (standard assets)
and so on …
But that's using institutional fintech, retail and semi/professional would generate high capital (lower) returns but with low unit capital. The lower down the food chain, the wider the spread between returns and capital deployed, once you know this it's easy to determine how much capital is deployed. I was just trading a small $1k mini crypto account, I wouldn't be able to do that with primary accounts, well not unless I wanted to evaporate my capital.