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, investors must be patient and wait for the dawn of success. This process may take ten years or even longer, so investors should set a ten-year deadline for success.
During trading, investors should not be overly focused on short-term gains. Daily, weekly, or monthly profits are largely determined by luck, not the investor's investment skills, experience, or ability. If an investor doubles their assets in a given month, this is likely a result of luck, not skill. Comparisons should be made over a three-, five-, or even ten-year period. Many investors may no longer participate in the market after ten years.
Therefore, whether an investor makes a profit in a particular month, week, or day is immaterial. If an investor is no longer in the market ten years from now, why should they be overly concerned with a single week's gains or losses? The investor's goal should be to achieve long-term, stable profits. Excessive focus on short-term gains will only make investors anxious, leading to mounting losses.
There are significant behavioral differences between investors who consistently generate profits over the long term and those who consistently experience losses. Those experiencing losses are often preoccupied with investment analysis and commentary, deciphering the details of the forex market, and attempting to predict future market trends. Meanwhile, those experiencing profits consistently focus on a single goal: following a unique, comprehensive system. This system encompasses forex trading knowledge, common sense, experience, and mindset. Beyond that, they pay no attention to anything else.
On the path to advanced forex trading, the line between "ineffective effort" and "effective accumulation" is often not immediately clear.
Even if a trader's initial attempts at exploration are later proven ineffective, they subtly form the foundation for a deeper understanding. The value of this "ineffectiveness" lies in providing a framework for subsequent "effectiveness."
Just like those seemingly erroneous detours in life's growth, they are actually crucial nodes in the construction of a cognitive coordinate system. Without experiencing the confusion of choice and the cost of trial and error, it's difficult to truly understand the meaning of "effectiveness." In forex trading, the process of reading a large number of useless books is essentially building an "ineffectiveness identification mechanism"—through comparison and screening, gradually clarifying which knowledge can truly guide practice and which is merely empty theory. This discernment requires sufficient "ineffective input."
When a trader's understanding of the trading system reaches a level of clarity, they can quickly distinguish between ineffective and effective information or behaviors. However, this does not mean that ineffective efforts disappear completely. On the contrary, the core challenge of trading becomes: resisting the temptation of ineffective trades during the long wait, and sticking to the precise selection of effective opportunities, entry timing, and positions. This perseverance itself is a proactive transformation from ineffectiveness to effectiveness.
Life constantly evolves within the dialectical relationship between effectiveness and ineffectiveness. Identifying ineffectiveness and consolidating effectiveness is both a trading discipline and a lifelong cognitive upgrade. It requires a dynamic perspective on the value of effort, and through continuous screening and optimization, ensures that every effort moves closer to the core goal.
The essence of long-term forex investment lies in the restraint of "light positions" and the wisdom of "prudent action," forging steady progress amidst the tide of trends.
The so-called "not trading lightly" reflects a reverence for the market. It requires investors to abandon the obsession with "constant presence" and instead focus on truly certain trend opportunities, building a framework for long-term profitability through prudent position allocation.
The art of waiting is brought to its peak in long-term trading. When opportunities are not yet available, "holding your hands" tests one's self-discipline to resist temptation; when opportunities arise, "entering the market decisively" demonstrates confidence in one's judgment of the trend. This measured trading rhythm stems from a deep understanding of market principles: true major trends are not fleeting, and frequent trading only drains energy and distorts judgment.
Evenly distributing positions along the major trend serves as a protective shield for long-term investors against volatility. Over-accumulating positions within a particular price range can lead to significant unrealized losses during a normal pullback. Such fluctuations can easily break through psychological barriers, causing investors to rush out before the trend reverses. Whether one can hold onto a position directly determines whether one can fully reap the benefits of the trend. Investors forced out due to partial position imbalances have essentially lost to their own mentality, not the market itself.
For long-term investors, maintaining a light position and exercising caution are not just trading strategies but also a form of spiritual practice. They enable one to maintain inner peace amidst the ups and downs of the market, unburdened by short-term fluctuations or driven by greed. Ultimately, by adhering to the trend, one can achieve both financial and intellectual growth.
In the field of forex trading, a notable phenomenon is that semi-expert investors often mislead non-experts.
Meanwhile, truly experienced investors often find it difficult to interject, or even have the opportunity to express their opinions, opting instead to remain silent or remain deaf and dumb. This phenomenon has led to a serious distortion in the dissemination of forex trading knowledge.
Forex novice traders often begin by reading numerous forex trading textbooks. However, after investing considerable time and effort, they discover that much of the content in these books is written by laypeople, some of whom even lack any understanding of forex trading. These books are often plagiarized or copied from books on stocks and futures, primarily for the purpose of selling them for profit. This phenomenon severely misleads new forex traders.
When new traders realize the unreliability of textbooks, they often turn to the internet, seeking a vast library of articles to read and learn from. However, after investing considerable time and effort, they discovered that the majority of these articles were written by laypeople or novice forex traders, primarily for advertising and marketing purposes to attract clients for forex brokers. This phenomenon further exacerbates the misleading of novice forex traders.
Furthermore, major countries around the world often ban or restrict the forex trading industry for reasons of financial stability, foreign trade stability, and currency stability. These policy restrictions have significantly impacted forex trading textbooks, the ecosystem, and communication channels. Since no one wants to work in a banned or restricted industry, this leaves ample room for fraudulent activities. Free training provided by forex brokers often contains numerous loopholes, such as encouraging short-term trading and setting narrow stop-loss orders. These practices severely mislead novice forex traders and are difficult to correct quickly. Consequently, forex fraud remains prevalent, with numerous victims.
However, free educational information provided by truly knowledgeable forex investors struggles to gain widespread distribution. On the one hand, this may be because reviewers are unable to understand this specialized content. On the other hand, brokers may be deliberately blocking professional investors from sharing their knowledge to protect their own interests, and may even repeatedly report articles by truly knowledgeable investors. In this situation, those who truly understand forex trading become the targets of restriction. This is undoubtedly a significant flaw in the dissemination of forex trading knowledge, common sense, techniques, and mindset management.
Success in forex trading begins with redefining the holding period: Traders must successively break through the holding period thresholds of three months, one year, and several years, building the ability to resonate with market trends over time.
Cultivating this ability is essentially about restraining the desire for "instant feedback." Just as in agriculture, farmers must wait for the crops to cycle through the seasons before harvesting, traders must also accept that trends take time to form and mature. The prevalence of short-term trading in the current market stems largely from misleading guidance: some forex brokers instill the concept of "narrow stop-loss" through free training, compressing stop-loss points to as little as ten to twenty pips. This setting may appear to control risk, but in reality it contradicts the very nature of forex trading. In a low-volatility, high-consolidation market, narrow stop-loss ranges inevitably lead to frequent stop-losses, causing traders to continuously lose capital through ineffective trading, and becoming "constant contributors" to the broker. The key to overcoming this dilemma lies in developing a trading philosophy of "trading time for space": recognizing the time lag between sowing and harvesting, and accepting a waiting period of more than three months for holding positions. While maintaining a light position, forgoing unnecessary stop-loss settings can help prevent being squeezed out by normal market fluctuations. This doesn't mean ignoring risk, but rather shifting the definition of risk from "short-term fluctuations" to "trend reversals," thereby preserving the core benefits of the trend. When traders break free from the shackles of the "must-set stop-loss" mindset, they escape the cognitive cage created by brokers and gain true trading freedom. At this point, holding a position is no longer an ordeal, but a process of growing alongside the trend; profits no longer rely on luck, but are the natural result of time and knowledge. For traders, the moment they learn to hold a position for the long term marks the beginning of a reconciliation with the market and the prelude to success.
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