Forex investment experience sharing, Forex account managed and trading.
MAM | PAMM | POA.
Forex prop firm | Asset management company | Personal large funds.
Formal starting from $500,000, test starting from $50,000.
Profits are shared by half (50%), and losses are shared by a quarter (25%).
Forex multi-account manager Z-X-N
Accepts global forex account operation, investment, and trading
Assists family office investment and autonomous management
The internet has had a profound impact on preventing forex investment fraud, both positively and negatively.
From a positive perspective, the internet has greatly improved the efficiency of information dissemination, making it easier for investors to access forex investment knowledge and risk warnings. Through online educational resources, social media platforms, and professional financial websites, investors can easily learn the basics of forex investment, understand market trends, and master common fraud tactics and preventative measures. The widespread availability of this information helps enhance investors' risk awareness and discernment, thereby reducing the incidence of forex investment fraud to a certain extent. For example, financial regulators and professional institutions publish forex investment warnings and case studies online, providing important reference for investors.
Furthermore, the internet facilitates communication and information sharing among investors. Investors can share their investment experiences and insights through online forums and communities, fostering a positive atmosphere for mutual learning and oversight.
However, from a negative perspective, the internet's anonymity and cross-border nature also facilitate forex investment fraud. Scammers can easily exploit the virtual nature of the internet to create fake forex investment platforms and websites, luring investors with false advertising and exaggerated returns. The internet's cross-border nature allows scammers to easily transfer funds and information between countries and regions, evading regulation. This makes it even more difficult for regulators to combat forex investment fraud.
Furthermore, the information available online is complex and difficult to distinguish between truth and falsehood. Many investors, lacking discernment, are easily deceived by misinformation and fall prey to scams. Therefore, while the internet offers convenience in preventing forex investment fraud, it also requires concerted efforts by investors and regulators to enhance their risk awareness and regulatory capabilities to effectively curb the occurrence of forex investment fraud.
In the internet age, information disseminates rapidly and widely, making fraud untraceable. However, forex investment fraud remains rampant, and the reasons behind this are worth considering.
On the one hand, the complexity of the forex investment market provides opportunities for fraud. The foreign exchange market is characterized by complex trading rules and volatile market fluctuations. Ordinary investors often struggle to fully understand its operating mechanisms, creating opportunities for scammers. They exploit investors' unfamiliarity with the market and lure investors with false advertising and exaggerated returns.
Furthermore, the anonymity and cross-border nature of the internet make it easier for scammers to evade regulation. They can easily set up fake platforms online and operate under fictitious identities, thereby circumventing legal sanctions.
Furthermore, cross-border regulation is challenging, and regulatory policies vary across countries and regions, allowing some illegal platforms to persist for a long time.
Furthermore, scammers exploit investors' cognitive biases and psychological weaknesses. Without proper guidance, many investors are easily misled by misinformation and lack discernment, falling prey to scams.
Therefore, to effectively curb foreign exchange investment fraud, it is necessary to strengthen investor education, enhance risk awareness and discernment, improve cross-border regulatory mechanisms, and crack down on illegal platforms.
Forex traders have a low sense of identity, and one key reason is that the forex market is a hotbed for fraud.
Historically, any blind worship or fraudulent activity is linked to a lack of information flow. This information blockage makes it difficult for people to understand the truth. However, even with the rapid development of the internet and the breakdown of information barriers, forex investment fraud continues to occur frequently, a problem that urgently demands analysis.
Dig deeper into the root causes, revealing similarities with historical fraud incidents: forex investment fraud often occurs in environments where the sector is strictly restricted or prohibited. When forex investment is strictly regulated, legitimate trading platforms and a robust industry ecosystem cannot be established. Investors lack the proper channels for comparison and selection, and often mistake fraudulent companies for legitimate ones, which directly leads to the recurring fraud incidents. At the same time, although information barriers have been broken down, a lack of proper guidance on the relevant knowledge, common sense, experience, techniques, and psychological principles of forex investment can lead to a constant flow of misinformation. Without a discernible mechanism, investors can easily fall prey to scams.
In an environment where forex investment is strictly restricted or prohibited, the lack of legitimate trading platforms and ecosystems can lead some investors to develop a rebellious mentality. They mistakenly believe that profits in strictly prohibited areas must be lucrative, and thus mistakenly identify with fraudulent companies, mistaking them for legitimate ones.
Admittedly, if investors had a clear understanding of the relevant knowledge, common sense, experience, techniques, and psychological principles of forex trading, they would be less susceptible to scams. However, the reality is that the lack of legitimate trading platforms and ecosystems provides unscrupulous forex brokers with opportunities and space for exaggerated advertising. Misguided investment concepts such as "get rich quick" and "always use stop-loss orders" are prevalent. The "get rich quick" concept attracts and exploits aggressive short-term traders, while the "always use stop-loss orders" misleads and exploits conservative long-term investors, resulting in a "double kill" for different investor types. Many forex traders exit the market prematurely, before they understand the realities of forex trading.
In forex trading, investors' profits don't rely on innate talent, but rather on a deep desire for money and a passionate pursuit of the process.
This love of money and pursuit of profit, coupled with practical action and ultimate results, are the key elements of a successful forex trader. In reality, forex trading is more like a liberal arts discipline; it doesn't require special talent, but rather requires investors to understand and memorize the relevant knowledge and rules. With this foundation, combined with the drive to act, the ability to execute, and sustained effort, investors can potentially reap rich rewards.
In traditional society, most people have a relatively limited understanding of finance. Some believe that banks' profits primarily come from interest rate differentials, while those with a deeper understanding of finance recognize that the insurance industry operates under a Ponzi scheme, whereby later funds are used to cover earlier losses. Those who delve deeper will mention phenomena like buying low and selling high and market manipulation in stock trading. These different levels of cognition are often shaped by the environment in which one is exposed. If the environment fails to provide common sense for making money, it will be difficult for people to acquire relevant knowledge and insights.
Take foreign exchange investment trading as an example. Chinese banks generally offer currency exchange services, which is essentially a miniature form of foreign exchange investment and currency trading. However, Chinese citizens are limited to a foreign exchange exchange quota of US$50,000 per year, a restriction that significantly constrains people's financial thinking and foreign exchange investment awareness. Suppose someone has 6 million RMB in their account and the USD/RMB exchange rate is 6. They can convert the 6 million RMB into US$1 million online. After two years of accumulation and market fluctuations, if the USD/RMB exchange rate rises to 7, they can convert the US$1 million back into RMB, leaving an additional 1 million RMB in their account. This real-time investment method based on foreign exchange exchange was well-known in China in the 1990s, but due to foreign exchange quota controls, it has gradually become less popular in China. However, in countries and regions around the world without foreign exchange controls, this method of spot currency investment remains effective.
As a large investor, I employ a relatively conservative investment approach. Specifically, I first exchange currencies, then use the converted currencies (such as British pounds, euros, and yen) as margin to trade on a foreign exchange bank's margin trading platform. While it may appear to be leverage-free, it's actually equivalent to double leverage. This safe, long-term investment method has consistently proven effective. Furthermore, when combined with a long-term carry strategy, investment returns can be even more substantial. It's a secret investment method that can be passed down to future generations. Of course, it's impossible to implement in China.
So, is this method feasible in Hong Kong? Spot foreign exchange exchange for value-added is permitted in Hong Kong, but using stable currencies like British pounds, euros, and yen as margin is not permitted. Margin in Hong Kong can only be in Hong Kong dollars and US dollars. Therefore, this secondary investment method I employ can only be implemented in regions with liberal financial and foreign exchange markets, such as Switzerland and London.
In forex trading, experienced traders should understand: never underestimate a novice trader.
There's a common wisdom: a farmer in the city who doesn't understand traffic lights isn't stupid; it's simply because he's never encountered them. A city dweller in the countryside who can't recognize crops isn't dumb; it's because he's never seen them. Differences in people's cognition often stem from the amount of experience, the breadth of their knowledge, and the early or late stages of their enlightenment, rather than inherent superiority or inferiority. Unexperienced things, unseen objects, and uncomprehended principles naturally lead to different understandings.
In forex trading, experienced traders are simply those who start early, just like taking a few steps ahead when walking; novice traders are those who start later, the difference being the timing.
Newcomers aren't necessarily "newbies"; they may be rising stars who have accumulated considerable experience. Just like in running, some people start slow but gain momentum, eventually surpassing those who started first. Such "coming from behind" situations are common in the trading market.
Thus, in the free and fair competition of forex trading, all investors are forging ahead against the current. Only by maintaining humility can we understand that the fairness of the market lies in the fact that everyone has the opportunity to be the ultimate winner, regardless of starting early or late.
13711580480@139.com
+86 137 1158 0480
+86 137 1158 0480
+86 137 1158 0480
Mr. Zhang
China · Guangzhou