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
In the world of foreign exchange trading, there's often a mismatch between the costs of growth and maturity and the ultimate returns.
The cost of becoming a truly successful forex trader is far greater than many investors anticipate. This is similar to the high tuition fees at many private universities in China, where students, after four years of hard work, still struggle to cover their four-year university expenses.
Similarly, in forex trading, the time cost to investors is extremely high, a cost no one can afford. Excluding the growth period, a person's prime time for striving only lasts approximately thirty years. The forex trading market itself is an extremely demanding field. While in other industries, one might be able to get by, in the forex market, there are only two outcomes: success or failure.
According to relevant statistical analysis, achieving success in forex trading takes an average of five to ten years and involves incurring over $100,000 in sunk costs. Most forex traders spend their entire lives simply playing the game, wasting countless hours without reaping the rewards, ultimately leaving the forex market with regret.
So, how can one become a successful forex trader? The answer is persistence. Indeed, only those who maintain confidence and persevere in forex trading despite experiencing numerous losses can achieve success. All forex traders know that the road to forex trading is fraught with difficulties and obstacles, and the pain and suffering they endure is long and profound. Without perseverance and unwavering determination, it's difficult to persevere. A forex trader who aspires to success must endure pain and suffering that is unbearable for ordinary people.
All forex traders understand that the price of forex trading is extremely high. Only those willing to pay the price can reap the rewards. However, this high price is a harsh reality for forex traders. Many investors dedicate their entire lives to the forex market, only to exit with regret, having wasted both time and youth. This is the reality.
In the field of foreign exchange investment and trading, large, long-term investors often ignore short-term traders.
This is because their investment philosophies are completely different, lacking a common basis for communication, and any attempt to share and interact with them would only waste time.
Sophisticated, large-scale investors pay no attention to self-proclaimed "successful" short-term traders. In essence, short-term trading objectively does not meet the criteria for successful investing: it cannot achieve sustained profitability, and the scarcity of capital makes it even more difficult to succeed. The "success" claimed by short-term traders is merely false pretense, neither worth the effort nor the value of justification—such arguments are of no benefit to investment practice.
If short-term trading truly could generate high profits, then well-resourced entities like sovereign institutions, funds, and investment banks would undoubtedly recruit these skilled short-term traders to maximize their returns. However, in reality, these institutions have not adopted this approach, demonstrating that the probability of success in short-term trading is extremely low. Don't blindly believe in a few "fund myths." Even if the individuals behind these cases are no longer around, if the model truly works, investment banks will undoubtedly actively participate. In fact, many so-called "myths" may be elaborate scams that have simply gone unexamined. The Ponzi scheme involving the former Nasdaq chairman is a prime example.
In the field of foreign exchange investment and trading, the value of qualifications must be viewed with caution. In some cases, they can become a shackle that restricts market vitality.
The decline of Hong Kong's foreign exchange market is closely linked to its stringent licensing regulations. While the rigorous review and approval process for individual and corporate licenses may appear standardized, it actually becomes a shackle that restricts the development of investment and trading.
In the Hong Kong foreign exchange market, qualified brokers generally suffer from a reluctance to take risks and a lack of practical trading skills. Their certifications offer no real benefit in practical trading. Conversely, unqualified but capable traders are willing to take risks, but the lack of a local MAM or PAMM manager system hinders market recognition and opportunities.
This creates a contradiction: like the requirement that a diploma be required to participate in forex trading, the inherent riskiness of forex investment conflicts with the risk aversion of certified traders. This contradiction has led to the erosion of vitality in the Hong Kong forex market. The individual qualification system is only one contributing factor, but other factors should not be overlooked.
Fundamentally, the root cause of this predicament lies in the fact that the management of the Hong Kong forex market is dominated by entities unfamiliar with the fundamentals of the industry.
During forex trading, many traders lack awareness of the negative impact of high leverage, leaving them vulnerable to rapid losses and even margin calls within a short period of time.
In the foreign exchange market, small retail investors make up the vast majority of traders. These small retail investors often share the following common characteristics: limited investment experience, unprepared trading psychology, and often enter the market with unrealistic fantasies of getting rich overnight. However, they are also the group with the most limited capital. Due to their small capital, they often unconsciously choose to use leverage. While foreign exchange trading inherently carries leverage, small retail investors are largely unaware of the potential risks of leverage.
It's no surprise, therefore, that small retail investors compare leverage to usury. Typically, the poor resort to usury due to financial constraints, while the wealthy, with their ample funds, avoid it. However, once resorting to usury, they are highly likely to be robbed by it, a practice that countries around the world are cracking down on. Poor people often resort to loan sharks out of desperation, ultimately leaving them in dire straits. Unless they can double their profits in a short period of time and repay the loan promptly, this scenario is practically a miracle in real life.
Of course, even well-funded forex investors can find themselves at a disadvantage if they use high leverage. Simply because they have ample funds, they typically avoid using leverage. Even if they do, they risk falling into a trap. However, because their funds are so abundant, even using leverage is essentially free, so they often choose not to use it. This is also why forex trading platforms and brokers are not welcoming large investors—they cannot profit from stop-loss orders or margin calls, and can only watch as large investors use their platforms for free to reap huge profits.
In forex trading, whether investors can fully absorb all market fluctuations (both positive and negative) after building and increasing their positions is a key indicator of trading success.
In practice, many investors tend to panic when their total positions turn negative, fearing continued losses. However, it's important to understand that if the entry point is within a historical extreme (bottom or top) and the investor is accumulating a base position for a multi-year long-term position, such fluctuations are an inevitable part of normal trading and there's no need for excessive anxiety.
The operating models of large financial institutions offer important insights: Funds, institutions, and sovereign wealth funds typically build positions against market trends, inevitably resulting in significant floating losses. This "active assumption of losses" is an inherent characteristic of their operations. Due to the sheer volume of capital involved, building positions isn't a quick process. Even if they're buying on dips to build long-term rising positions, or selling on rallies to establish long-term falling positions, it takes time to complete. This fundamentally differs from the operations of retail investors with smaller capital—who, with their smaller capital, can build long-term positions in days, if not hours.
Ultimately, investors spend years honing their trading psychology, ultimately aiming for the following: the ability to withstand floating losses during the pre-trend buildup phase and to protect floating profits during the continuation of the trend. This seemingly simple principle, however, becomes a lifelong bottleneck for most investors, and the fundamental reason they struggle to achieve significant wealth growth.
13711580480@139.com
+86 137 1158 0480
+86 137 1158 0480
+86 137 1158 0480
Mr. Zhang
China · Guangzhou