Hand Over Your Account, I Trade & Profit for You!
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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 the world of forex trading, no trader achieves success without a single setback.
Those who first give in to the pressure often end up losing. Success doesn't happen overnight; it requires a significant investment of time and effort. Generally speaking, mastering the extensive knowledge, common sense, experience, skills, and psychology required for forex trading can take ten years or even longer. However, few can persevere for ten years, and even fewer can manage five. The vast majority of traders withdraw from the market within three years due to the pressures of reality, as family financial obligations prohibit them from sustaining long-term losses without gaining anything.
"A hero's origins are not judged." In forex trading, traders should never underestimate their potential. For those who can afford to commit to the forex market for the long term, they have ample time to deeply understand, master, and thoroughly master all aspects of forex trading, including the knowledge, common sense, experience, skills, and psychology involved. If traders are not constrained by family financial pressures and can diligently and consistently invest for more than ten years, success is inevitable.
In forex trading, traders must clearly understand the strong correlation between mindset and capital availability.
Many traders attribute investment failures to mindset issues. While this view has some truth to it, it's not entirely accurate. In reality, capital availability is the most critical factor. For example, for a trader with a large capital base, it's relatively easy to earn $10,000 with $1 million. However, for a trader with a smaller capital base, it's extremely difficult to earn $1 million with $10,000 relying solely on technical analysis. This clearly demonstrates that capital size is far more important than technical analysis.
In forex trading, the trader's mindset is the second most important factor. Even with ample capital, a trader with a timid mindset struggles to make decisive decisions during trading. Indecision often leads to missed opportunities, impacting trading results. Furthermore, if a trader experiences consistent losses, it's difficult to maintain a positive mindset. A positive mindset and confidence are often built on profits: the greater the profit, the more motivated a trader is to continue trading. Conversely, if losses persist, maintaining a positive mindset becomes meaningless.
In the forex market, the vast majority of small-capital retail traders are the primary group experiencing losses, largely due to their lack of a positive mindset. These small-capital retail traders often have limited funds and face significant pressures, such as the burden of supporting a family and daily financial needs. These external pressures can easily distort their trading mindset. In contrast, only well-funded retail traders are likely to possess a positive mindset. However, these traders may not be short of money themselves, so they lack a strong investment drive and struggle to achieve significant success. This presents a dilemma.
In forex trading, traders who experience short-term losses should not be underestimated, nor should those who achieve short-term profits be overly praised.
Forex trading is a long-term endeavor, not a short-term speculative venture. Only by viewing forex trading as a career can traders develop long-term plans, thereby avoiding the threat of short-term fluctuations or the temptation of short-term gains. Forex trading is cyclical, and large drawdowns and fluctuations caused by market fluctuations are a natural part of the market, not a problem of the trader's individual investment skills.
Typically, only small-capital, short-term traders are particularly concerned with and focused on short-term fluctuations. This is because their trading strategies primarily focus on short-term, intraday, or weekly trading, with returns measured in hours, days, or weeks. Under this trading model, it is difficult for short-term traders to ignore their short-term gains.
In contrast, long-term investors typically adopt a light-weight strategy, gradually building up thousands or even tens of thousands of small positions over several years. They focus on establishing, increasing, and accumulating positions, rather than frequently closing them for profit. Long-term investors accumulate long-term wealth, not short-term profits and gains. Because they don't frequently close positions to take profits, they struggle to focus on short-term gains, as these gains don't exist.
In forex trading, traders should focus on familiar currency pairs to achieve profitability.
The forex market has a relatively limited number of currency pairs, primarily consisting of eight major currencies: the US dollar, euro, yen, British pound, Australian dollar, Canadian dollar, Swiss franc, and New Zealand dollar, totaling 28 pairs. Among these, the seven major currency pairs—the US dollar against the euro, yen, British pound, Australian dollar, Canadian dollar, Swiss franc, and New Zealand dollar—are the primary trading instruments in the global forex market. In addition, gold/dollar and oil/dollar pairs are also highly liquid and popular investment products. Therefore, globally, there are only nine categories of the most liquid and popular forex investment products.
In addition to the nine major currency pairs and commodity pairs mentioned above, the forex market also includes emerging currencies such as the Turkish lira, the South African rand, and the Mexican peso. However, currencies like the Brazilian real are generally not offered for trading by most forex brokers, and the Russian ruble is often banned due to geopolitical factors.
Forex traders should thoroughly research and familiarize themselves with the characteristics of specific currencies, including their price fluctuation patterns. By tracking these currency pairs over the long term, traders can better grasp their trend patterns, thereby reducing the adjustment costs associated with cross-currency trading. Furthermore, through repeated market analysis, traders can accumulate specialized experience, reduce the risk of decision-making errors, and ultimately build a stable trading system, improving trading stability and operational proficiency.
Forex traders adhere to familiar currency pairs because, while they cannot accurately predict their short-term trends, long-term observation and analysis can more accurately determine their overall trends over the next one, three, or five years. This long-term perspective helps traders seize relatively certain opportunities amidst uncertainty.
In forex trading, traders should balance work and rest during their learning and trading processes. Diligence is required in the early stages of learning, while a moderate degree of relaxation is recommended in the later stages of trading.
This alternating strategy of effort and laziness helps traders leverage their strengths at different stages while avoiding the risks associated with overwork or overtrading.
Learning Stage: Diligence and Hard Work to Lay a Solid Foundation.
In the early stages of forex trading, traders must invest considerable time and energy in developing relevant knowledge, common sense, skills, mindset, and experience. This is a crucial stage for quickly mastering the fundamentals of forex trading. Through systematic study, traders can gain a deep understanding of the forex market's operating mechanisms, technical analysis tools, risk management strategies, and psychological adjustment methods. Diligent learning during this stage is the foundation for success; otherwise, a trader may never fully develop the knowledge and skills necessary for forex trading.
Trading Stage: Relax appropriately and avoid overtrading.
After completing the initial learning process and entering the actual trading phase, traders should adjust their pace appropriately and avoid excessive diligence. Extensive data shows that excessive diligence often leads to high-frequency trading, which in turn increases the probability of losses. Conversely, maintaining a moderate level of laziness helps traders remain calm and rational, avoiding emotionally induced errors. During trading, traders should focus on maintaining a stable trading rhythm, avoid excessive anxiety and tension, and reduce unnecessary trading frequency to mitigate risk.
Mature Stage: Lightweight, long-term positions, and a steady investment strategy.
In the mature stage of forex trading, traders can view trading as a form of entertainment and leisure, or even a means of retirement. At this stage, traders should adopt a light-weight, long-term investment strategy, gradually building multiple small positions along the moving average. This strategy can mitigate both the fear of floating losses caused by large pullbacks and the temptation of floating profits caused by large extensions. By maintaining a light-weight position, traders can avoid premature stop-losses or take-profits, thereby achieving steady long-term returns. In short, forex traders should flexibly adjust their learning and trading strategies at different stages. In the early stages, diligently study to solidify your foundation; in the later stages, relax your trading to avoid overtrading; and in the mature stages, prioritize a light-weight, long-term strategy to maintain physical and mental health and steadily accumulate wealth.
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