Forex investment experience sharing, Forex account managed and trading.
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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


In the world of forex trading, short-term trading presents numerous challenges for forex investors, and long-term investment is no easy feat either.
Short-term trading in any financial instrument is a directional bet. You must stop-loss orders that misjudged the trend, retain those that did, and use stop-loss orders as a cost, allowing those orders to realize profit growth. Then, take profit at the appropriate time and position. The appropriate time is usually the closing time, and the appropriate position is usually a retracement level. While the principle is simple and clear, its execution is quite challenging. Forex investors are human, not gods, and human flaws are unavoidable: they tend to take profits early when they're profitable, while they hesitate to cut losses when they're losing, holding on to losses.
Especially in current forex trading, most instruments are trending sideways, with few major trends. Opportunities for profit growth are few and far between. While traders might want to engage in short-term trading, the reality is that there simply aren't any such opportunities in the forex market.
Forex investors can only break this dilemma by choosing long-term investment strategies. By maintaining a small position, and by building numerous small positions along the way, they can mitigate both floating losses and floating profits, solving the problem of slow stop-losses and quick take-profits. However, this can also create new problems.
The trend of long-term investments often opposes the direction of the currency pair's interest rate. For example, if the EUR/USD currency pair is bullish in the long term, the interest differential can be negative. If a forex investor maintains thousands of small long positions in EUR/USD, over several years, the total interest earned on these positions can be a significant negative. If the profit margin from the EUR/USD's upward trend over several years cannot offset this negative interest, the investment direction may be correct but the returns may be negative.
Therefore, a small position, long-term strategy must be combined with interest differential statistics; otherwise, it will not be a profitable long-term investment strategy.

During forex trading, traders must be aware of the human flaws exposed by short-term stop-loss and take-profit strategies.
Short-term trading, regardless of the financial product, is essentially a gamble on the future direction of the market. By setting a stop-loss, you can promptly eliminate trades that misjudged the direction and retain those that correctly predicted the direction. Treat stop-loss as a necessary cost investment, allowing those correctly positioned trades to achieve sustained profit growth. Then, take profit at the appropriate time and position. Typically, the appropriate time to take profit is at the market close, while the appropriate position is during a price pullback.
However, while this trading logic seems clear in theory, it faces numerous difficulties in practice. This is because forex traders are ultimately human, not gods, and human weaknesses inevitably surface during trading: When profits are in hand, they are often eager to take profits and stop profits early; when losses occur, they often hesitate and delay stop-losses. In particular, the current foreign exchange market is mostly experiencing a consolidation trend, with major market trends being extremely rare. This means that opportunities for significant profit growth are correspondingly reduced. Therefore, for forex traders seeking short-term trading, the forex market offers few genuine short-term trading opportunities.
Forex traders can only effectively overcome this dilemma by shifting to long-term investment. By adopting a long-term strategy of maintaining a small position, gradually building up numerous small positions during the trading process, they can mitigate both floating losses and floating profits. This strategy effectively addresses the challenges of slow stop-losses and quick take-profits, thus paving a steady path for forex traders to gradually accumulate wealth.

In forex trading, traders must develop a dual perspective: objectively assess their own skills and experience level, and recognize the decisive role of initial capital size in determining long-term results.
Competition in traditional industries has long transcended the stage of "single skill winning." In today's highly transparent information landscape, comprehensive skills are crucial for success—the more diverse your skills, the greater your competitive advantage. Take website SEO technology, for example: Indian practitioners dominate the global market thanks to their combination of English proficiency and software development skills. Even though this work requires significant effort and offers relatively limited returns, they are able to secure global orders with this combined skill set. In contrast, some Chinese professionals in English or computer science still cling to the outdated "tool-first" mindset, believing that mastering a single skill promises "easy profits," ultimately trapping them in a rut of being neither high-achieving nor low-achieving.
Forex trading technology, as a tool, deserves a rational view of its value: mastering it may not necessarily lead to a fortune, but it will be enough to cover basic household expenses. However, traders must understand that, just as English and computers are merely tools, forex trading technology cannot directly lead to sudden wealth accumulation; wealth accumulation relies on long-term development.
Based on the principles of learning, anyone can master forex trading technology with sufficient financial support and time investment. This is similar to language learning—even ordinary people in English-speaking countries can become fluent in English over time. Mastering forex trading technology follows the same logic, with the only difference being the early and level of mastery.

In forex trading, investors need to understand their current environment and position, maintain a balanced mindset, and avoid self-deprecation.
Most investors enter the market with the expectation of getting rich overnight. However, this perception is skewed from the outset. They believe that forex trading is a guaranteed way to make money and become rich, overlooking the fact that forex trading is just one of many industries. Like traditional industries, its profit-loss ratio follows the same 80/20 rule, or even more stringently, the 90/10 rule. This is because forex trading requires more rigorous knowledge of psychology and finance, magnifying human flaws in this area and thus widening the profit-loss ratio.
As for the investment environment, China has restrictions on forex trading. Within this environment, Chinese investors who are able to engage in forex trading have a certain advantage, as most Chinese people face difficulties even remitting foreign currency abroad. However, once they venture abroad and break free from the constraints of national policies, Chinese investors find themselves on the same competitive playing field as global investors. At this point, Chinese investors are often at a disadvantage in terms of capital size. While many foreign investors possess millions of dollars in capital, relatively few Chinese investors reach this level. Internationally, Chinese investors do not have an advantage.
In short, due to policy restrictions, Chinese forex investors have a relative advantage domestically, but not internationally.

In forex trading, a trader's deepest regret is only truly understanding the true meaning of trading when their initial capital is depleted and they are forced to exit the market.
The market's demographic structure presents a striking contrast: small-capital retail investors, the largest group, occupy a marginal position within the market, forming the insignificant majority. Large-capital investors, though the smallest in number, occupy a core position, representing the crucial minority that determines market trends. The Forex SSI indicator was originally designed based on this principle of group differentiation, reflecting market sentiment by monitoring the holdings of retail and large investors.
Due to limited funds and the pressure of supporting families, small retail investors often lack the time and resources to explore the true essence of trading. The vast majority of them remain superficial in the market throughout their lives, with only a few achieving a breakthrough in their understanding as their capital depletes. However, real-world pressures (such as the urgency of supporting a family) force them to temporarily withdraw. Only by accumulating sufficient funds in the future can they return to the market with mature knowledge and continue their trading careers. This "mismatch between knowledge and capital" has become a fatal dilemma for countless retail traders.



13711580480@139.com
+86 137 1158 0480
+86 137 1158 0480
+86 137 1158 0480
Mr. Zhang
China · Guangzhou