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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 two-way trading field of forex investment, traders should deeply understand an important fact: any industry with a barrier to entry often contains value, while those seemingly barrier-free fields are actually full of challenges and uncertainties.
Forex investment trading is such an industry; its entry barrier is extremely low, and almost anyone can easily participate. However, it is precisely this low barrier to entry that makes fierce market competition the sole criterion for selecting success. Countless participants flood into the market, but only a few can stand out in the fierce competition, while most are gradually eliminated after experiencing setbacks.
This reality prompts many traders to search everywhere for so-called "winning formulas," eager to find the secret to success in short-term trading. However, even if someone selflessly shares their successful experience, it is difficult to gain the recognition and following of others. Those successful traders who can truly selflessly share their trading systems are often those who have a deep understanding of human nature. They understand that for those lacking experience or with limited comprehension, even sharing extensive experience and strategies won't guarantee true understanding and application. For intelligent and promising traders, sharing experience might save them time and effort. However, even without sharing, as long as they possess unwavering perseverance and a spirit of continuous exploration, they will eventually find their own path to success; it's just a matter of time.
Of course, there's also the possibility that some intelligent traders might give up prematurely due to the lengthy exploration process. If successful traders can offer timely guidance, they might be able to retain some of those who would otherwise have given up. This is a rational analysis, but it's also closely related to chance or fate. Some successful traders might have been unwilling to share their experience ten years ago, but now choose to share selflessly. This shift might stem from a deep understanding of human nature, a detachment from fame and fortune, or a desire to leave a mark on the trading community by sharing their experiences so that future successful traders will remember them.
In short, success in the world of forex trading is not accidental; it requires traders to possess unwavering conviction, keen insight, and continuous learning ability. Those successful individuals willing to share their experiences often have deeper underlying thoughts and motivations.

A simpler forex trading system is better, but this is based on a deep understanding of market opportunities and a clear awareness of one's own capabilities.
In fact, signal recognition in forex trading cannot rely on a single indicator for accurate judgment. From initially capturing market signals to filtering out invalid signals, and finally forming executable trading decisions, the entire process requires long-term market practice and deep understanding, and cannot be mastered through short-term learning or simple imitation. Generally speaking, developing this ability requires at least ten years of market immersion. During this time, one must not only withstand the test of different market cycles (such as sideways markets and trending markets), but also continuously summarize the differences in the effectiveness of signals under different market conditions, gradually forming a profound understanding of market patterns.
It is worth noting that when the forex market is in a trend breakout phase, it often presents the appearance that "all indicators show positive signals." In this situation, the reference value of a single indicator is greatly amplified, but this does not mean that a single indicator has the ability to generate continuous profits—the consistency of indicators during a trend breakout is more a concentrated manifestation of the market trend force than the independent effect of a single tool. Truly mature traders often follow an evolutionary logic of "from simple to complex, and then from complex to simple" when building their trading systems: Initially, they build a basic framework around simple indicators; as their understanding of the market deepens, they gradually introduce more multi-dimensional analytical tools (such as trading volume, macroeconomic data, and fund flows), making the system more complex; and after long-term practical verification, based on a profound understanding of the market's essence, they eliminate redundant and inefficient analytical dimensions, retaining only the most core and effective signal logic, ultimately achieving a "simplification of complexity" in the system. However, this simplification is not a return to the single logic of "a single moving average," but rather the formation of a trading system centered on "overall continuous signal recognition + multi-dimensional filtering verification." While the final judgment of market initiation conditions may appear simple—"a single moving average can be identified"—it actually relies on a complete signal verification system; the single moving average is merely the most intuitive presentation within the entire system.
Furthermore, the statement that "the simpler the trading system, the better" doesn't essentially refer to a system with a single, simplistic structure. Rather, it stems from a mature trader's rational selection of market opportunities. The reason expert traders can make their systems concise and efficient is that they proactively forgo ambiguous or risk-reward imbalanced trading opportunities, focusing only on market types they have thoroughly tested and are highly familiar with. In these familiar market environments, they can achieve stable profits using relatively simple indicator combinations and signal logic, based on a precise grasp of signal patterns. This "simplicity" is built on a foundation of in-depth screening of market opportunities and a clear understanding of their own capabilities. Conversely, ignoring one's own capabilities and attempting to capture all types of market opportunities with a simple system, or blindly imitating others' "simple systems" without understanding their underlying logic, often leads to inability to cope with complex market changes, resulting in flawed trading decisions and unstable profitability. Therefore, the "simplification" of a forex trading system is essentially a highly refined understanding of the market after a trader's skills have matured, rather than a blind simplification without practical verification.

In two-way trading in forex investment, traders should avoid frequently using the term "doubling" to describe expected returns.
This aggressive expression can mislead investors, causing them to have unrealistic expectations of the market. A proper understanding of the forex investment industry is crucial. Investors should establish a reasonable concept of returns; even small gains, as long as there is no loss, should be considered a success. In fact, an annualized return of around 20% is not unattainable, but this requires investors to maintain a calm mindset. Forex investment is like a slow and steady stream; it requires patience to accumulate returns gradually. Being impatient and excessively pursuing short-term high returns can easily lead to a gambling-like trading pattern, thereby increasing risk.
Forex traders' losses often stem from an overly impatient mindset. This mindset is closely related to their living environment. In a lack of a relaxed environment, busy people are more prone to becoming impatient. Many forex traders dream of quick riches and overnight fortunes, rather than achieving wealth through long-term, stable accumulation. However, everything has energy, and impatience is a form of energy. Truly capable individuals can absorb this energy and transform it into positive motivation for their own use. The more negative emotions one experiences externally, the more likely one is to achieve personal strength.
Forex traders must understand that forex trading is not a gambling or short-term game, but a market for long-term investment. Only by adhering to a long-term investment strategy can most investors potentially succeed. However, in reality, most investors often fail, primarily due to human weaknesses. More accurately, it is most traders, not investors, who are prone to failure. Traders tend towards short-term behavior, while investors focus on long-term planning. The essence of the problem is that most so-called "investors" are actually short-term traders; they are more like short-term online gamblers than true long-term investors. Investment and trading are two completely different concepts, and a deep understanding and distinction between them is a prerequisite for becoming a successful investor.

In the two-way trading field of forex investment, an objective and undeniable fact is that participants who have never experienced trading failures often have fabricated a so-called "successful resume."
The forex market is influenced by multiple complex factors such as the global macroeconomy, geopolitics, and liquidity, resulting in highly uncertain price fluctuations. Even experienced traders find it difficult to completely avoid losses caused by sudden market changes or decision-making errors. Traders with absolutely no record of failures are virtually nonexistent in real-world forex trading scenarios. Such a "perfect trading image" lacking the support of past failures fundamentally violates the operating rules of the forex market.
In the two-way trading ecosystem of forex investment, a special type of market player has long existed—participants whose main business is selling trading courses and promoting trading software. They often deliberately create a false legend of "invincible" trading through marketing and promotion, such as exaggerating historical win rates, concealing loss records, and fabricating short-term high-profit cases, to attract inexperienced novice investors. However, from the perspective of market fundamentals, this kind of "zero-failure" advertising clearly contradicts the real trading environment and constitutes typical misleading marketing. This phenomenon is not difficult to understand by analogy to the cognitive logic of traditional social life: only those who have personally experienced unfair treatment can deeply appreciate the precious value of fairness; similarly, in forex trading, investors who have never experienced failure not only find it difficult to develop a sense of awe for market risks, but are also more likely to make unrealistic judgments due to a distorted understanding of the difficulty of trading, and even fabricate false statements that contradict common sense to cover up their lack of understanding.
In the two-way trading of forex investment, traders inevitably encounter periods of "bad luck" throughout their long trading careers. For example, a black swan event in the market might trigger stop-loss orders, or a misjudgment of short-term trends might cause them to miss profit opportunities. However, it is precisely these seemingly "unlucky" experiences that allow traders to truly realize the crucial role that probability and opportunity play in trading decisions and even life choices. When traders review their trades and discover that a successful trade was not only due to the effectiveness of their own strategy but also benefited from a favorable market environment, while others' losses might not be due to a lack of ability but rather to uncontrollable external factors, they gradually abandon the one-sided perception that "success is predetermined and failure is inevitable," and view the relationship between trading results and market rules with a more rational and objective mindset.
In the two-way trading scenario of forex investment, when traders experience periodic setbacks, they often face schadenfreude from some peers—this negative feedback stemming from a competitive mentality can precisely help traders deeply understand the importance of "sportsmanship" in the market. However, it's important to note that forex trading is inherently a highly private personal activity. Most traders choose to remain silent about their failures, neither proactively disclosing their loss records nor easily sharing the flaws in their decision-making behind those failures. Even forex brokers, acting as intermediaries, while possessing data on traders' account profits and losses, are unlikely to dedicate sufficient time to monitoring individual traders' failures due to their focus on trading platform maintenance and compliance management. They certainly won't proactively release such information to the market, further exacerbating the "hidden nature" of forex trading failures.
In the two-way trading of forex, only when traders have personally experienced the "pain" of failure—such as a significant loss of account funds due to major decision-making errors, or systemic losses caused by neglecting risk control—can they truly develop empathy for losses. This insight, stemming from personal painful experience, allows traders to move beyond a detached, bystander perspective when faced with the failures of other investors. Instead, they gain a deeper understanding of the complex factors behind these failures, considering aspects such as risk perception, strategic flaws, and emotional management. This leads to a more comprehensive understanding of market risk and cultivates greater empathy for peers. This shift in perception—"understanding others' difficulties because of one's own mistakes"—is a crucial marker of a trader's progression from "novice" to "mature professional."

In the two-way trading of forex, traders often mistake a rebound in a downtrend for a reversal, and vice versa. This misunderstanding is common in the forex investment field. In reality, the vast majority of traders in two-way forex trading are investors with limited capital.
Due to limited funds, many novice traders often fantasize about precisely catching market bottoms and tops, hoping for a major trend reversal so they can ride the trend and reap substantial profits once and for all.
However, trends in the forex market rarely reverse suddenly—a consensus among experienced traders. From another perspective, this also explains why the vast majority of forex traders ultimately lose money. This is because most are contrarian traders, while simultaneously being keen on short-term bottom-fishing and top-picking. This is the current state of forex trading: waves of investors with limited funds flood the market, experience losses, and leave, only to be replaced by new investors with limited funds, in a vicious cycle.
However, in recent decades, more and more investors with limited funds have begun to realize this truth, and the number of them participating in forex trading has gradually decreased. With the loss of fresh blood, the fervor for forex investment has gradually declined. Lacking a continuous stream of losers to provide financial support, the forex market has become unusually calm, like stagnant water generally speaking.



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