Trade for your account.
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%).
*No teaching *No selling courses *No discussion *If yes, no reply!
Forex multi-account manager Z-X-N
Accepts global forex account operation, investment, and trading
Assists family office investment and autonomous management
In the operation of financial markets, a fund manager's individual investment skills are not the key factor. In the primary market, fund companies prioritize a fund manager's ability to attract large amounts of capital; in the secondary market, the key lies in whether the fund manager can successfully market the fund products.
Large fund companies generally don't place much emphasis on a fund manager's individual investment skills. They expect fund managers to attract large amounts of capital in the primary market and effectively market fund products in the secondary market. So-called "star fund managers" are often simply brand images created by fund companies through team packaging. They often possess prestigious academic backgrounds and a carefully crafted image, such as the beauty of female fund managers or the handsomeness of male fund managers, which enhances their appeal to a certain extent. However, this packaging often obscures their true abilities.
From the perspective of fund companies and fund managers, the career path of fund managers appears to follow a logical sequence from public funds to private funds and then to proprietary firms. Despite the abundant platform resources available in public funds, fund managers' incomes are relatively limited. In pursuit of higher incomes, many fund managers choose to switch to private equity. However, despite the higher returns offered by private equity, fund managers still work for others. In contrast, proprietary trading firms appear to offer greater autonomy and potential returns, as fund managers can directly manage their own funds and retain all profits.
However, this seemingly reasonable approach is often difficult to achieve in practice. The success of many public fund managers relies on the platform value and rich information access of large fund companies. When they leave these platforms and turn to managing their own proprietary funds, they often underperform due to a lack of external support. Those "star fund managers" who are often blinded by the publicity and misattribute the platform's success to their own abilities. Fund managers with truly exceptional investment capabilities often remain relatively unknown and low-key, focusing on achieving investment returns through professional skills rather than relying on high-profile publicity to attract attention.
In the forex trading world, short-term traders typically focus on daily profits, while long-term investors focus on overall returns over several years. These different investment strategies reflect how traders respond to market fluctuations.
However, there's a widespread myth in the forex market: the so-called "stable profits." In reality, the essence of forex trading is relatively simple: whether a trader can profit primarily depends on whether they hold a position when the market moves, and the amount of profit depends entirely on market trends. Most of the time, forex traders may only experience small gains and losses, with relatively limited fluctuations over several months. However, when the market experiences significant fluctuations, traders can achieve significant gains within a week. Therefore, the so-called "stable daily profits" do not exist in forex trading. Forex trading is not like opening a shop every day, offering a steady income; it's more like patiently waiting for the right opportunity. Just like a small shop, customers may not arrive every day, and sometimes there may even be no revenue at all for an entire day. This situation is also common in forex investing.
While calculating monthly profits is feasible in forex trading, traders can never accurately predict when a key winning trade will occur. Forex traders who claim to consistently make money every day are mostly exaggerating. Nine out of ten of these people are likely scammers. Forex trading requires traders to understand the rhythm of gains and losses, maintain patience, wait for the right opportunities, and follow the trend, rather than blindly pursuing unrealistic, daily, stable profits. This rational investment approach helps traders maintain stability in complex market environments and achieve long-term sustainable development.
In forex trading, traders often need to accumulate experience through actual trading, and this experience is often accumulated through losses.
New forex traders often mistakenly believe that trading experience can be acquired through learning. However, this idea is mistaken. In reality, trading experience is accumulated through gradual practice and through the experience of losses.
The forex market can be considered an "open game," its rules and strategies well-known to the public. Yet, despite this, why do most forex traders still lose money? The problem isn't a lack of understanding the rules, but a lack of patience and perseverance. During market fluctuations, traders often instinctively assume a reversal is imminent, reacting faster than their brains and making premature decisions. When their accounts experience drawdowns, fear often overwhelms reason, leading them to sell their positions at the lowest point. Although the signals from a trading system may be simple, after three consecutive stop-loss orders, traders often begin to doubt their strategies. Ultimately, they realize their losses weren't due to the system itself, but rather to their own impatience and a tendency to rely on luck.
Long-term profitable forex traders aren't gifted, but rather able to persevere through moments they know are difficult but must face. When the currency market consolidates for a month, experienced traders can wait patiently. Even after ten consecutive losses, they won't hesitate to enter and hold a position when a favorable opportunity arises. Unlike other traders who anxiously chase the ups and downs, experienced traders stick to their trading system and remain steadfast. The secret to forex traders' success lies in repeating simple actions ten thousand times, until periods of volatility become their filter and drawdowns their touchstone.
The market never truly bullies experienced forex traders; it simply eliminates those who can't tolerate loneliness and solitude.
In forex trading, the key to controlling drawdowns lies in position management.
A light-weight, long-term investment strategy, combined with a pyramid-style position structure, is an effective approach. This strategy not only helps mitigate the fear of short-term losses but also resists the temptation of greed triggered by short-term gains. Essentially, it combines psychological tactics with strategic thinking, helping traders maintain composure during market fluctuations and avoid emotionally driven errors.
During an uptrend, a light-weight, long-term strategy employs a progressively increasing pyramid-like structure. Specifically, traders open multiple small positions, which are arranged in a pyramid-like structure to form a large portfolio. This structure effectively manages risk, as the size of each new position gradually increases while maintaining a low average overall position cost. This allows traders to better manage potential drawdowns during market fluctuations.
During a downtrend, a light-weight, long-term strategy employs an inverted pyramid-like structure. Traders also open multiple small positions, but these positions are arranged in an inverted pyramid-like structure. This strategy also effectively manages risk, as the size of each new position gradually decreases, preventing overexposure during a prolonged market decline. This allows traders to gradually mitigate losses during a market decline while simultaneously preparing for a reversal.
This light-weight, long-term strategy, combined with pyramid-style position management, is not only a risk management tool but also a psychological adjustment mechanism. It helps traders maintain rationality during market fluctuations and avoid impulsive decisions driven by short-term fluctuations. This strategy allows traders to better navigate market uncertainty and achieve long-term, stable returns.
In the forex investment world, the key to building a stable and profitable trading system lies in internalizing the trading system into "muscle memory"—an instinctive reaction that requires no deliberate thought.
This instinct, developed through long-term, focused, and deliberate training, is not simply innate, but a crucial prerequisite for traders to establish a probabilistic advantage in the complex and volatile forex market.
To make a trading system instinctive, traders must first "lock in their methodology": identifying and finalizing a set of strategies (such as top-bottom reversals, trend following, and oscillating breakouts) that are highly compatible with their risk appetite, trading cycle, and analytical habits. This prevents training fragmentation caused by frequent strategy switching. After locking in their methodology, they must enter the "intensive trial trading" phase. Through extensive historical market review and simulated trading, they strengthen their strategy execution logic through a "repetition + focus" approach. Traders only trade in markets that align with their strategy signals, resolutely filtering out opportunities that don't, and deeply integrating their strategy rules with their decision-making habits.
The ultimate goal of this training is to achieve a "subconscious rapport between the strategy and the trader." Taking the top-bottom conversion strategy as an example, once the training volume reaches a critical mass, traders can instantly discern three types of market conditions by scanning candlestick charts, eliminating the need for lengthy analysis through indicator overlays and timeframe switching. First, "core opportunities" fully meet the strategy's entry criteria and have a high success rate; second, "marginal opportunities" with ambiguous signals requiring further observation; and third, "excluded opportunities" that clearly violate the strategy's logic and are extremely risky. At this point, market judgment has shifted from "rational analysis" to "intuitive reaction." This intuition is essentially the product of strategy rules becoming conditioned reflexes through long-term repetition.
It's worth emphasizing that the core value of "trading instinct" lies in enhancing decisiveness and consistency in market response. When market signals appear, traders can avoid missing opportunities due to hesitation or deviating from their strategies due to emotional interference. When market conditions deviate from expectations, they can instinctively execute stop-loss orders quickly, minimizing losses and escalating risks. Ultimately, when the trading system and instinct are fully aligned, traders gain not only a probability advantage in short-term profits but also the core competency for long-term stable trading—a true competitive advantage in the forex market.
13711580480@139.com
+86 137 1158 0480
+86 137 1158 0480
+86 137 1158 0480
z.x.n@139.com
Mr. Z-X-N
China · Guangzhou