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 forex trading, margin calls are most likely to occur only with small traders and are almost impossible for large investors.
The two main causes of margin calls are: heavy trading and the failure to set or avoid using stop-loss orders. Small traders often employ trading strategies involving scalping, heavy trading, averaging, and no stop-loss orders. Scalping refers to the constant attempt to buy at the top or bottom, heavy trading involves using high leverage, averaging involves indulging in greed, and no stop-loss order involves not setting or avoiding stop-loss orders, hoping for a market reversal and a miracle. These behaviors significantly increase the risk of margin calls.
In contrast, large investors rarely make the mistake of scalping or heavy trading. Due to their large capital base, they typically adopt a long-term strategy of following the market trend with light positions. Scaling and using no stop-loss orders are common practices among large forex investors, but these strategies are not fatal and will not lead to margin calls. Large investors, with their capital advantages and robust trading strategies, are better able to navigate market fluctuations, effectively reducing the likelihood of a margin call.
In forex trading, if a trader asks whether a scalping system can make money, they are likely a novice.
From a forex trading perspective, a scalping system typically refers to an intraday trading strategy. This question is often asked repeatedly by beginners. For experienced or seasoned traders, whether short-term trading can make money is not their primary concern. If a so-called "experienced" or "experienced" trader is still struggling with the question of whether short-term trading can make money, they are not truly experienced or proficient. While they may have been trading for a long time, their mindset and maturity are still that of a novice.
After a period of investment and trading, most traders typically overcome the struggles of short-term trading early on, as it is difficult to generate sustained profits. If short-term trading could truly generate consistent profits, investment banks, fund companies, and sovereign wealth institutions would undoubtedly establish independent departments dedicated to short-term trading experts.
In forex trading, established and successful traders generally refrain from recommending forex trading books to beginners.
It's not that they're reluctant to praise others, nor are they jealous of the authors' achievements; rather, they're reluctant to mislead or harm beginners.
As forex traders continue to learn, delve into, and refine their knowledge, common sense, experience, skills, and psychology, they will gradually become experienced and will undoubtedly question the books recommended by established and successful traders.
Beginners will realize that most forex trading books are either repurposed from stock trading or based on subjective assumptions. Some are even not written by actual traders, simply cobbled together. They offer little help in improving trading skills and are a complete waste of time. Mature and successful traders don't recommend books because they worry that new traders might realize their recommendations are useless as they mature, and they might be revisited, criticized, or even verbally attacked. By not recommending, they can avoid all potential risks.
In forex trading, even if a new trader uses the systems of successful traders, they can still lose money.
This shows that strategy and method are only a small factor in success. Capital size and mindset are the key factors that determine success or failure.
New forex traders typically don't have the same capital as successful traders. For traders with larger capital, it's relatively easy to make $10,000 from $1 million. For traders with smaller capital, making $1 million from $10,000 is very difficult. This clearly demonstrates the crucial role capital size plays in trading.
New forex traders often have limited capital. When their capital is small, their mindset can easily become unbalanced. As capital scale increases, traders' mindsets naturally improve, their courage grows, and they become more daring, venturing into various operations without fear, trepidation, timidity, or mental imbalance.
In forex trading, the fact that the vast majority of traders suffer losses is a statistical phenomenon, not due to the inherent nature of forex trading.
From the perspective of capital scale, this phenomenon is closely related to the high proportion of small-capital retail investors among traders, a matter of probability and statistics.
Assuming that capital scale for forex investment is restricted and 90% of participants are large, the proportion of profitable traders is likely to reach 90%. The situation in Japan is a case in point: retail forex traders there tend to favor long-term arbitrage investments, and the majority of them achieve profitability. Statistics show that among Japanese forex investors, the vast majority of long-term arbitrage traders are profitable. The accumulation of daily interest income over time creates a high probability of eventual profitability.
However, in other countries, according to conventional statistical standards, the vast majority of forex traders still end up losing money.
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+86 137 1158 0480
+86 137 1158 0480
Mr. Zhang
China · Guangzhou