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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, long-term investors, even when faced with large intraday short-term fluctuations, can control their impulses and avoid rash trades unless the opportunity is favorable for establishing or increasing long-term positions. This is a hallmark of mature investors.
Long-term investors often experience complex psychological processes during trading. Forex market movements often surge within minutes, followed by a lengthy period of consolidation. Faced with sudden, large moves, investors may feel frustrated at missing out on profit. However, mature investors understand that entering the market at this time is highly likely to be trapped by a pullback. Such opportunities are not favorable opportunities, but rather clear traps. Controlling impulsive trading is key. Patiently waiting for the market to pull back to a relatively favorable position before entering the market is the wisest course of action. This is because long-term investing primarily relies on establishing and increasing positions during pullbacks, not during breakouts. In forex trading, short-term investors often suffer the most losses when the market suddenly starts to move. Due to a lack of pre-placed orders, they miss the opportunity to build and increase their positions in the breakout zone, resulting in a high probability of being trapped. This is the most disadvantageous aspect of short-term trading. Short-term traders often increase their positions after a breakout. Once trapped in a pullback, this can lead to increased panic, and closing positions in panic can lead to significant losses. In contrast, long-term investors typically adopt a strategy of building and increasing positions with a light position. Even if they build and increase positions in the breakout zone, even if a pullback occurs, the floating loss is generally not significant, making it unnecessary to panic and affordable. Even if long-term investors impulsively enter the market, this is not a problem. However, the cost of building and increasing positions during a breakout is higher than that of building and increasing positions during a pullback. From a long-term cost perspective, building and increasing positions during a pullback is a more reasonable strategy.
Of course, building and increasing positions during a breakout zone is not a mistake for long-term investors, as a light position is a prerequisite.
During forex trading, forex brokers generally avoid allocating high-interest currency pairs. This is because if retail investors continuously hold these pairs, the brokers could face significant losses.
In forex trading, forex brokers are often the counterparty to retail investors. When a high-interest currency is purchased, if there are no sellers, the broker is forced to act as the counterparty. In this situation, the retail investor holds the high-interest currency pair, while the broker holds a negative value. If the retail investor holds the high-interest currency pair for a year, the broker will also hold a negative value for the same pair. In this case, the broker's losses would be substantial.
Of course, astute traders can determine a forex broker's primary business model by observing whether it allocates high-interest currency pairs. If a forex broker simply dumps orders into the forex trading market, then there will be no shortage of high-interest currency pairs. Interested forex traders can make a judgment by comparing the product lists of different forex brokers. If a forex broker's product list doesn't include high-interest currency pairs, it's likely a pure arbitrage model; if it includes several high-interest currency pairs, it suggests it's also actively trading in the forex market.
Regarding forex stop-loss orders, profits are generally earned by the forex broker through arbitrage. For example, the situation is different in Japan. In Japanese forex trading, it's common for the counterparty to earn profits from stop-loss orders. This is because Japanese forex trades are prioritized within the platform, reducing costs and avoiding profiteering from intermediary orders.
Stop-loss orders in the stock market differ from those in the forex market. Generally speaking, it's best not to execute stop-loss orders on high-quality stocks. Once a stop-loss order is executed, the stock will be acquired by investors waiting to buy. This is a common phenomenon in the stock market: high-quality stocks are sometimes forced to sell by large investors using massive amounts of capital, forcing retail investors to stop losses and then taking over and building positions. Another method is to hype bad news in the market, triggering a panic sell-off of high-quality stocks, which then allows large investors to take advantage and build positions.
Forex investors, the first thing to understand is a core fact: there are no such things as "technical secrets." Many technical analysis articles on the market are misleading. Forex brokers using technical analysis as a pretext for market manipulation should be viewed with extreme caution.
Based on the market power structure, retail investors need to clearly understand the roles of various parties involved: the world's top ten foreign exchange banks, as rule-makers, effectively control price trends; major currency central banks directly participate in price setting; commercial banks are passive in implementing central bank interventions, not for profit; and sovereign institutions, investment banks, and funds leverage their capital scale to influence the market. A common characteristic among these groups is their complete disregard for technical analysis, as they fully understand that technical indicators are merely the product of their own actions, not the basis for decision-making.
As retail investors, if you attempt to rely on technical analysis to participate in trading, you must be aware of its limitations. Trend lines, support lines, and other indicators visible to retail investors differ fundamentally from the underlying technical patterns formed by massive capital flows. The former cannot reflect the true market logic. More importantly, it is important to recognize the misleading strategies of some brokers. They often use free training to entice retail investors into short-term trading and set narrow stop-loss orders at technically defined levels. This practice is highly likely to trigger stop-loss orders, ultimately harming retail investors (such brokers are often their direct counterparties).
To address this situation, retail investors can adopt the following strategies:
Approach technical analysis rationally and not rely solely on it for decision-making;
Be cautious of broker training content, especially wary of "narrow stop-loss combined with short-term trading" recommendations;
Understand the differences between market tiers, recognize the information and funding asymmetries between you and core participants, and avoid blindly applying technical indicators to trading.
It should be emphasized that top global banks, central banks, and other institutions will not target retail investors with technical misleading. Retail investors should primarily focus on inappropriate misleading by non-mainstream brokers.
In the world of forex trading, the hardships experienced by investors often become crucial factors in their growth.
For investors who have experienced significant setbacks, these past experiences can become valuable assets for survival and development at critical moments. Gains and losses are normal in the trading process, so investors should not become distressed by temporary losses, let alone develop extreme behavior.
In traditional industries, many successful individuals have experienced tremendous challenges and hardships. These experiences drove them to strive for success and prove their worth, otherwise they would not be able to justify the hardships they endured. In real life, everyone inevitably experiences difficult times. Whether in other fields or at specific stages of life, hardship can shape a unique life trajectory. Pain is an essential part of personal growth. Those who have never experienced hardship, while their life path may seem smooth, often find it difficult to cope with minor setbacks, potentially leading to extreme behavior. However, for those who have experienced significant hardship, such suffering may seem like minor scratches, unworthy of excessive attention.
In forex trading, pain is a necessary process for investors. Different investors react to pain in different ways: some wallow in it, unable to extricate themselves; others reflect and identify problems; and still others use it to grow and accumulate experience. For forex investors, pain is a constant companion, and they must become accustomed to it and accept it as part of the trading process. Since pain cannot be avoided, investors should learn to embrace it. Those who have never experienced pain cannot be considered qualified forex traders.
Only after experiencing the most painful phase can investors truly understand that the pain they endured was worthwhile. Pain is not just an external experience; it is also the accumulation of perspectives and experience. It is pain that allows investors to remember lessons; without pain, it is difficult to leave a deep impression. Sometimes, an investor's paranoia may seem like a flaw, but it's precisely this paranoia that leads them into pain. Life is inherently filled with suffering. As long as investors can steadfastly and persistently endure pain and weather those difficult trials, they can emerge from the darkness and embrace the light.
In forex trading, the pain investors endure primarily manifests during periods of floating losses and long periods of consolidation. When investors enter periods of floating profits, the pain and fear seem to disappear. However, during this period of floating profits, investors must also face the temptation of greed. This is a painful decision, not as intense as the fear of floating losses, but it also requires careful consideration.
Long-term, stable profits in forex trading are essentially the product of a trader's behavioral patterns and cognitive systems. The randomness of short-term gains makes them unsuitable as a criterion for judging ability.
There's a fundamental difference in the daily behavior of two types of traders: chronically losing traders often devote their energy to listening to investment analysis, interpreting market details, and predicting short-term trends, attempting to profit by capitalizing on immediate opportunities. Chronic profitable traders, on the other hand, focus on adhering to a personalized, comprehensive system that integrates trading knowledge, market common sense, practical experience, and mindset management, effectively shutting out any market noise outside of their system.
The root of this behavioral difference lies in their differing understanding of the time dimension. Short-term gains and losses (such as those within a single day, week, or month) are driven by luck; even doubling returns over a specific period of time can hardly be attributed to skill. Consistent returns over three to ten years truly reflect a trader's core competence. Unfortunately, most traders are eliminated by the market within ten years. From this perspective, obsessing over short-term gains and losses is of little value.
Excessive comparison of short-term gains can lead to an imbalanced mindset, distorted trading practices, and ultimately, a quagmire of losses. Only by setting your sights on long-term goals ten years from now and patiently cultivating a dedicated trading system can you achieve the transition from "survival" to "stable profitability" in the forex market—this is both a return to the essence of trading and a true commitment to your own abilities.
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