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, successful investors often say "it's simple," but they don't seem to share much substance.
They might say, "Buy low and sell high during an uptrend; sell high and buy low during a downtrend." This explains the general principles of trading during both up and downtrends. However, they may not detail the subtleties: During an uptrend, buying low can be done countless times, while selling high can be done just once or with a single click; during a downtrend, selling high can be done countless times, while buying low can be done just once or with a single click.
Successful investors may also say, "Buy low during an uptrend; sell high during a downtrend." However, they may not detail the key details: During an uptrend, buying low means placing buy orders continuously when the trend retraces to support levels; during a downtrend, selling high means placing sell orders continuously when the trend rebounds to resistance levels.
These successful investors have outlined their buying and selling points, but the precise buying and selling points—the exact positions—are often uncertain even for the investors themselves. This requires waiting for the right opportunities, relying on on-the-spot skills, and relying entirely on experience, intuition, and ruthlessness. These flexible positions aren't determined by others; they require the investor's own understanding.
Just as "there are a thousand Hamlets in a thousand eyes," a thousand forex investors will have a thousand different trading methods. Even the same investor can't always execute the same strategy. This is just a rough guide.
In the world of forex trading, traders who persistently pursue their dreams will eventually achieve success.
If traders consistently search for a solution and never give up, success is only a matter of time. The most worrying thing is to passively wait and see or to quit trading out of discouragement.
This is consistent with traditional logic: wealthy people may look down on the poor after profiting in their areas of expertise, but once the intelligent poor discover their strengths, they can also create wealth. Poverty itself isn't terrible; what's terrible is aimlessness and passively waiting. In this situation, being looked down upon is inevitable. However, if you remain reflective and curious, actively seeking opportunities, you will never remain in poverty for long.
In forex trading, it's normal for beginners to struggle to make a profit in the early stages. With continuous effort, you accumulate trading knowledge, common sense, experience, skills, and a strong mindset. When this accumulation is sufficient to transform into investment and trading proficiency, and then translate that proficiency into tangible results of making money and accumulating wealth, you reach success.
As long as beginners in forex trading have sufficient time and funds, and put in enough effort, they will generally succeed. Failure suggests that some areas of accumulation are lacking.
In forex trading, unsuccessful investors often lack initiative and execution.
In traditional society, there are many theoretical gurus and eloquent speakers who spend their lives talking, yet never truly put their ideas into practice. Not only do they lack practical skills, they even dislike them, believing that hands-on work is a skill reserved for working people. As theoretical experts, they simply enjoy easy work and never have to do anything. Despite their eloquence, these individuals often achieve nothing because they lack the drive to act, never truly taking action, let alone the ability to execute.
In computer programming, and even in website programming, people often have a variety of approaches to choose from when designing a web page. When faced with so many options, the best approach is to start by programming and choosing the method you enjoy and are most comfortable with. It may feel daunting at first, but as you code, your thinking will become clearer, and you will ultimately achieve success.
The same is true for the learning and research process of forex traders. Investors must first learn and accumulate knowledge and experience. Once they have accumulated enough, they can then filter, screen, and refine this knowledge, ultimately developing their own unique strategies and methods. Only then will they achieve success.
The most important thing is to take action first: learn, delve into, and accumulate. In a word: start first.
In the field of foreign exchange investment and trading, some traders are easily misled by false "myths" and mistakenly regard short-term trading as the golden rule.
The story of the "man who broke the Bank of England" profiting through short-term trading has been repeatedly exaggerated: he held a short position on the British pound for just over a dozen hours, netting approximately $1 billion and bringing down the Bank of England. The widespread dissemination of this story essentially endorses short-term trading, giving forex traders the illusion that short-term trading can easily yield wins.
However, the signal conveyed by this myth seriously deviates from market principles. Since then, the widespread losses associated with short-term trading in the forex market have deterred most participants, leading to a gradual loss of vitality and a dwindling number of participants. The trader who targeted the British pound may have seemingly achieved a profit miracle, but in reality, he had broken the sound rules of forex trading and had a devastating impact on the market ecosystem.
As previously emphasized, success in forex trading stems from sustained action, deep accumulation, and long-term thinking. The myth of short-term trading not only distorts traders' perceptions but also contradicts the fundamental principle of "accumulating and transforming capabilities for long-term, stable profits," becoming a hidden danger hindering the healthy development of the market.
In the forex investment and trading world, Japanese candlestick charting is widely used as a basic tool, similar to the way Chinese pinyin letters are combined to form pronunciations, or how English letters form words.
From a positioning perspective, Japanese candlestick charting, as a basic tool, is more suitable for beginners and is not a so-called secret recipe. However, it's important to note that this technique can be misleading to the uninformed: if traders fixate solely on individual candlestick patterns, they lose sight of the overall trend reflected by the entire candlestick chart, much like seeing only a single leaf and ignoring the entire forest.
Japanese candlestick charting techniques cannot function in isolation and must be used in conjunction with other analytical methods. However, most traders engage in "single-minded thinking," focusing too much on a single candlestick pattern while ignoring the overall market trend. This leads to a cognitive error similar to "seeing the forest for the trees" or "the blind men and the elephant." Under these circumstances, it's understandable that traders may feel misled by market appearances.
In forex trading, when traders can clearly discern the pros and cons of Japanese candlestick charting, they're close to success.
13711580480@139.com
+86 137 1158 0480
+86 137 1158 0480
+86 137 1158 0480
Mr. Zhang
China · Guangzhou