Hand Over Your Account, I Trade & Profit for You!
MAM | PAMM | LAMM | 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, moving average trading is a technical manifestation of a trend-following strategy.
Investors use moving averages to position their positions and closely follow price movements. If each daily candlestick is considered a small position, the investor's position will always keep pace with the market. If the trend persists for several years, the investor's total position will ultimately be profitable. The logic of this strategy is simple, but its practical implementation is extremely challenging.
Although moving average trading is essentially a trend-following strategy, its core principle is to maintain a small position, i.e., to build an overall position through numerous small positions. If each daily candlestick corresponds to a small position, the investor's position will always keep pace with the market. However, this is easier said than done, and most investors cannot consistently maintain a small position. These seemingly simple principles of small positions, following the trend, repetition, and persistence are actually difficult for most investors to adhere to.
A long-term strategy of light positions, following the trend, repeating, and persisting can both withstand market pullbacks and volatility and capitalize on trend breakouts and extensions. This strategy embodies the true essence of moving average trading and trend following strategies in forex trading. It requires investors to possess a high degree of discipline and patience, as well as a keen insight into market trends. Only by adhering to this strategy over the long term can investors achieve steady profits in the forex market.

In forex trading, currency trading is a highly volatile commodity, and the probability of a strong trend is extremely low, making the strategy of "cutting losses and letting profits run" impractical.
In recent decades, central banks issuing major currencies have adopted competitive devaluation strategies to maintain their trade competitiveness. Low, zero, and even negative interest rates have become commonplace. Furthermore, to ensure currency stability, central banks have been forced to frequently intervene in exchange rates to keep them within a relatively narrow range. This directly leads to currency trading becoming a low-risk, low-return, and highly volatile investment product. The "cut losses and let profits run" logic is untenable here. Specifically, after establishing a position, it's often difficult to generate floating profits. Instead, it can lead to continuous losses and repeated stop-loss orders. The highly volatile market also makes "profit run" difficult to achieve, effectively preventing profit extension. This is a reality and a harsh reality in forex trading.
Although it's difficult to achieve "cut losses and let profits run" with a single position, the concept can be more vividly and easily implemented through a combination of numerous small positions. Interpreting it solely through a single position is nearly impossible to achieve and has no practical significance. Novice forex traders often suffer significant losses due to misleading, misunderstanding, and misinterpretation of this strategy.
In forex trading, "letting profits run" isn't a matter of technical skill or a single position. On the surface, it involves the layout of countless positions; more fundamentally, it's a matter of mindset. Only by consistently executing a strategy can traders effectively extend profits. The specific approach is to maintain a large, light position in the direction of the trend. This approach can both resist the temptation of greed brought on by floating profits during a significant trend extension and withstand the fear of floating losses during a significant trend pullback, truly achieving the goal of "letting profits run wild." However, the key here is not "cutting losses" but "holding floating losses and letting profits run wild."

In the forex trading market, investors face a crucial choice: to indulge in sweet talk or to seek rebirth amidst harsh advice.
Many investors once believed that a smart trader was one with precise analysis, sharp operations, and lucrative returns. However, the reality is that most investors prefer to bask in the praise and false optimism of others rather than face advice that may be harsh but closer to the truth. Successful forex investors often understand this, but they rarely speak out because most investors simply cannot accept harsh advice and may even feel resentment, resistance, and disgust towards the advice of successful investors.
Successful forex investors understand that a novice's success in forex trading depends not on whether someone enlightens them, but on their willingness to truly confront themselves and engage in self-reflection. They understand that if a novice fails to accept advice, they will only sink deeper into trouble. Therefore, they prefer to engage with those who understand and accept advice, because only when communicating with those on the same wavelength can advice be meaningful.
In the forex market, trading is not just a test of skill but also a test of character. The more experienced a trader, the better they understand when to remain silent, when not to argue, and when not to speak out. They understand that everyone must forge their own path, and true growth can only be achieved through self-awareness and self-reflection.

In forex trading, traders navigate ups and downs, sharp rises and falls, losses, and endure the boredom of trading. This process is the transformation from immaturity to maturity.
When faced with volatile market fluctuations, experienced forex traders remain calm. While others are ecstatic or devastated by volatile market swings, they remain as composed as an outsider. This isn't indifference, but rather a realization that emotions are the biggest cost of trading, and stability is the prerequisite for reaping huge profits.
At this point, traders no longer dwell on whether the market will rise or fall tomorrow. They understand that the market is unpredictable, and the only correct approach is to be prepared for any eventuality. Expert traders focus on probability, while novice traders are obsessed with betting on the direction of the market. Their trading plans no longer contain subjective assumptions like "what I feel"; instead, they have clear plans for how to handle and respond if a certain situation arises.
After experiencing losses, experienced traders no longer feel frustrated; instead, they accept them as normal. They truly understand that losses are an inevitable cost of trading, just like running a factory requires paying workers' wages and rent. For them, stopping losses no longer caused pain; they became instinctive, as natural as breathing. Their trading became incredibly boring: the same signal appeared, the same trade was executed, and this process repeated thousands of times. There were no surprises or excitement, yet their account balance steadily grew. Only then did they truly understand that simplicity is the key to stable profits, and that this tedious yet unwavering discipline is the essence.

In forex trading, investors' waiting isn't passive; it's a strategic, intelligent form of dormancy.
This waiting is based on a rigorous trading system and a precise understanding of the market's pulse. For example, long-term breakout traders patiently await breakthroughs at key levels and trend extensions, searching for secondary expansion patterns within the trend to identify more robust entry points.
For swing traders, waiting means searching for retracements and stabilization points within the trend extension, allowing them to re-enter the market after a market correction. Oscillating traders focus on waiting for confirmation of support and resistance lines, as well as highs and lows, within a trading range to capture price fluctuations. Reversal traders await key market turning points, such as divergences in important technical indicators or the development of significant news events, to capitalize on potential reversals. News traders wait for the release of key information and news, and their market impact, to profit from market fluctuations.
This methodical approach to waiting is essentially the art of transforming market volatility into a probabilistic advantage. Investors choose a trading model that suits them, patiently awaiting the most comfortable and stable opportunities, and maximize the effectiveness of their stable trading system. They avoid rash moves without system signals, nor blindly increase their positions before reaching their capital management limits. They adhere to a sound trading philosophy and act decisively only when multiple factors and dimensions align with their trading model. This purposeful approach to waiting avoids the risks associated with blindly frequent trading and ultimately translates into compound growth in their accounts.



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