Trade for your account.
MAM | PAMM | 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%).
*No teaching *No selling courses *No discussion *If yes, no reply!
Forex multi-account manager Z-X-N
Accepts global forex account operation, investment, and trading
Assists family office investment and autonomous management
Forex trading often faces numerous challenges, making it an extremely challenging profession. Those who recognize the challenges of this industry early on and prepare for them may be able to address and overcome them sooner, avoiding further hardship. However, the reality is that many traders enter the market unprepared and lack even a basic understanding of its complexities and risks.
Typically, those with sufficient funds do not need to rely on forex trading for returns, as they often have more stable and reliable ways to grow their wealth. In contrast, traders with limited funds, often driven by financial constraints, stumble upon the forex market, hoping to change their fortunes through this high-risk investment. They initially believe that forex trading offers a small-bucks-for-big-win strategy, a hope for the poor, hoping to seize a wave of opportunities and become rich overnight. However, due to a lack of in-depth market understanding and professional trading techniques, they often use high leverage and face overnight losses, causing their already limited capital to vanish in an instant, making life even more difficult.
Many losing traders, faced with difficulties, still cannot control their impulses and even resort to borrowing money to continue trading. This blindly following the crowd only leads them deeper into trouble, making their lives even more difficult. Lacking professional forex trading techniques, they often trade based solely on their intuition, gamble more and more as they lose, and eventually become trapped in a situation where they cannot extricate themselves.
Over the past two decades, central banks of major forex market countries have monitored currency fluctuations in real time and intervened to keep them within a narrow range in order to maintain national economic, financial, and foreign trade stability. This intervention has resulted in a lack of clear currency trends, making it extremely difficult to achieve significant profits through short-term trading. In contrast, long-term, light-weight investments might still yield some returns, but for retail traders with limited funds and limited patience, even if they have patience, their extremely limited funds make it difficult to effectively utilize them in long-term investments.
Short-term traders are unable to adopt long-term strategies because they hold positions for very short periods of time, often only tens of minutes or hours. After establishing a position, they often face the reality of floating losses. Lacking the time and patience to wait for the trend to fully develop, they often cut their losses within a short period of time. This trading pattern prevents them from truly understanding the true meaning of "buy low, buy low, sell high; sell high, sell high, buy low." Ultimately, they are forced to leave the forex trading market.
In the two-way trading field of forex investment, the industry's elimination rate is extremely brutal. Data and market practice both point to a consensus: approximately 99% of forex traders ultimately choose to leave this challenging investment and trading industry.
This high dropout rate stems from the combined effects of multiple factors—both the objective pressures posed by the market's inherent high volatility and high risk, and the subjective shortcomings of traders in terms of knowledge, mental endurance, and trading discipline. After experiencing repeated losses, depleted capital, and a collapse of confidence, many traders are forced to admit their lack of compatibility with the market and ultimately withdraw. The few who remain often develop trading systems that align with market principles through a long process of trial and error and review, and possess the mental resilience to withstand human weaknesses, enabling them to survive the fierce market competition.
Reviewing the logic of success in traditional society, it's easy to discern a universal pattern: Anyone who has overcome life's darkest moments and ultimately achieved success has experienced countless setbacks amidst adversity, only to rise again and again through sheer determination. Success is never achieved overnight or by chance; it is the result of a gradual, accumulating effort through persistent struggles against obstacles. If you easily give up when faced with setbacks, lacking the courage and perseverance to persevere, then what reason do you have to believe you can defeat others and achieve success? In fact, the road to success is ultimately less crowded precisely because the numerous difficulties along the way act as a series of "screening barriers"—those who lack patience, fear challenges, and are unwilling to make long-term efforts will choose to quit at various stages. Only the very few who remain true to their original aspirations and constantly strive to break through will ultimately reach the end of success. This principle also applies to the foreign exchange investment market, and is even more pronounced due to the unique characteristics of the market.
Returning to the two-way trading market for foreign exchange investment, the vast majority of forex traders are small-capital retail short-term traders. This group is often limited by their capital and cannot afford the costs and risks of long-term holding positions. Furthermore, driven by a "quick profit" mentality, they tend to pursue short-term price arbitrage gains through short-term trading. However, as mentioned earlier, the foreign exchange market, under the intervention of major central banks, has long exhibited narrow fluctuations. Short-term trading lacks stable trend support, making profitability extremely difficult. This significantly increases the probability of loss for small-capital retail short-term traders, ultimately leading 99% of them to completely leave the industry. After experiencing painful losses, most choose never to return.
More importantly, in this results-oriented market, these losers often receive little attention. No market researchers devote the energy to analyzing their trading behavior and the reasons for their failures, and no industry peers pay much attention to their exits. The core reason for this situation lies in the widespread market belief that losers often leave the market due to their own inability to persevere—perhaps due to the psychological pressure of enduring long-term losses, a lack of patience for continuous learning and review, or a failure to establish effective trading discipline. These subjective shortcomings often lead to their failures being attributed to "individual incompetence" rather than systemic market risks or force majeure. Therefore, most people believe that studying the case studies of losers lacks practical value and cannot provide effective reference for optimizing market understanding and trading strategies. This also indirectly reflects the brutality and reality of competition in the forex market.
In two-way forex trading, traders' experience sharing should be rational, credible, and able to withstand the test of common sense.
However, in reality, some so-called "success experience sharing" often raises questions about its content. Some traders' claimed returns are excessively exaggerated, with unusually steep profit curves and staggeringly high profit rates. This phenomenon raises doubts about their authenticity, as even minors can easily discern that this violates the fundamental laws of market operation.
In the financial world, any investment product should exhibit a wave-like trend, with ups and downs, rises and falls. This is a fundamental characteristic of the market. Fluctuations in returns should also involve alternating periods of floating losses and floating gains, rather than a constant linear growth pattern. A reasonable profit curve is simply one in which floating gains slightly exceed floating losses. However, experiences that boast exaggerated returns, steep curves, and astonishingly high profit rates often have ulterior motives.
These seemingly enticing sharing experiences are often simply attempts to sell courses, collect tuition fees, or attract funds to earn management commissions. However, such behavior carries significant risks. If traders exaggerate returns to promote courses, students who realize they have been deceived may take action to pursue legal action, which could lead to embarrassment and potential legal consequences for the sharer. Such behavior, focused solely on immediate gains without considering the consequences, will ultimately only harm both oneself and others.
For those who attempt to attract investment by exaggerating returns, the challenges are even more daunting. Investors with large capital are no simple individuals; they possess extensive experience and keen judgment. It's nearly impossible to deceive these savvy investors through simple, exaggerated advertising. Those who successfully make significant profits are often well-thought-out, professional individuals with extensive experience. They aren't easily deceived by superficially high returns, but instead conduct in-depth analysis and investigation to assess the authenticity and reliability of investments. Therefore, attempts to attract investment by exaggerating returns are not only unlikely to succeed, but can also damage one's own credibility and reputation.
In the two-way trading landscape of forex investment, the core competitiveness of truly successful forex traders lies not in the "mysterious tools" circulating in the market, but rather in the rich experience accumulated through long-term market practice, as well as a deep understanding of market laws and the nature of risk.
There is no "secret trading system" that can permanently and permanently avoid losses. The forex market is influenced by multiple dynamic factors, including the global macroeconomy, monetary policy, and geopolitics, and price fluctuations are highly uncertain. Any attempt to achieve "never losing money" through a fixed system fundamentally violates the objective laws of the market. The key to successful traders' long-term success in the market lies in their ability to leverage experience to keenly identify opportunities in varying market conditions, rely on common sense to manage risk boundaries, and flexibly adjust strategies based on market fluctuations, rather than relying on a rigid "perfect system."
In forex trading, many novice traders often fall into a common misconception: they spend countless hours online, relentlessly searching and collating content shared by successful traders for years, hoping to discover and acquire a one-size-fits-all trading system that never loses money. However, the complexity of forex trading dictates that such a simple system doesn't exist. Successful traders' decisions are informed by accumulated experience and common sense. For example, when a once-in-a-lifetime long-term carry opportunity presents itself, they decisively invest in it. When a high-certainty long-term position opportunity arises, they deploy large sums of capital. When the market exhibits clear swing patterns, they readily switch to a swing trading mode. This flexible and adaptable trading strategy is based on dynamic adjustments based on experience and common sense, rather than relying on a fixed, unchanging "never-losing system." After all, market conditions are ever-changing, and a single system cannot cover all scenarios, let alone guarantee "never-losing."
From the perspective of a trader's cognitive growth, the knowledge base required for forex trading can be likened to a complex framework consisting of 10,000 key points. A trader's mastery of these key points directly determines their mindset and decision-making stability in the market. If one has mastered only 500 key points, this means that one's understanding of the market is still fragmented. Faced with complex market conditions, one is easily lost due to information gaps, naturally filled with panic, and easily influenced by emotions when making decisions. By the time one has mastered 5,000 key points, one has a preliminary and complete understanding of the market's core logic and operating principles, enabling one to navigate most conventional market conditions. This allows one to maintain a relatively stable mindset and significantly reduce panic. By further mastering 8,000 key points, one's understanding of the market has deepened to a detailed level, enabling one to predict potential market trends and risk points. This allows one to become calmer and make more rational decisions. By the time one has mastered nearly 9,000 key points, one's understanding of the market has become nearly comprehensive, enabling one to calmly navigate various complex scenarios and achieve a high level of inner composure. Finally, by truly mastering all 10,000 key points, one has thoroughly understood every aspect of forex trading, from intricacies to subtleties. One's understanding of the market has evolved from "cognition" to "insight," and one can now operate freely without breaking the rules—capturing opportunities with precision and mitigating risks effectively. It is at this stage that traders fully understand that there is no such thing as a one-and-done, secret, and infallible trading system. All successful operations stem from the flexible application of knowledge and the rational transformation of experience.
From the perspective of market participants' mindsets and cognitive levels, several behavioral traits directly indicate a trader's "novice nature": First, they are still obsessed with searching for a one-and-done, secret, and infallible trading system, pinning their hopes for profit on some external tool rather than improving their own skills. Second, they frequently discuss these "perfect systems," viewing them as the sole key to trading success, ignoring the importance of market principles and their own understanding. Third, they obsess over whether to teach such systems to others, fundamentally reflecting the misconception that "systems determine success or failure." Fourth, they argue about whether systems should be passed on to others, citing the sayings "doctors don't knock on doors, teachers don't stop by, truths aren't passed on lightly, and techniques aren't sold cheaply," falling into a formalistic cognitive misunderstanding. It's worth noting that this group includes not only new traders entering the market, but also "newbies" with years of experience who haven't achieved a breakthrough in their understanding. Despite their trading experience, they haven't completely shed their reliance on a "perfect system," and their mindset and understanding remain at the novice level. Without exception, these individuals remain at the same level.
In two-way forex trading, it's common for novice traders to frequently adjust technical indicator parameters.
This is an inevitable stage in their journey to learn technical analysis. New traders often believe their inability to capitalize on market opportunities stems from inaccurate technical indicators. Consequently, they relentlessly experiment with indicator parameters, attempting to find the so-called "holy grail" of trading by overfitting historical data or even employing seemingly mysterious parameter combinations. However, this approach is often futile.
In reality, no matter how traders adjust parameters, these adjustments often have no effect in actual trading. The difficulties in forex trading don't stem from improper indicator parameters, but rather from the inherent limitations of most technical indicators. With the exception of moving averages and candlestick charts, almost all technical indicators struggle to be truly effective in actual trading. Especially those that are detached from price trends, such as the MACD, RSI, KDJ, and STC, have minimal value in actual trading, or can even be considered useless.
In two-way forex trading, the role of technical analysis is significantly overestimated. In reality, capital size is the most important factor, directly impacting a trader's risk tolerance and market influence. Secondly, investment psychology is also crucial, determining a trader's decision-making ability in the face of market fluctuations. While technical analysis is often mentioned, it ranks only third in importance, and this importance is only relative.
Therefore, traders should not focus excessively on adjusting technical indicator parameters, nor should they overly rely on it. For technical analysis, focus solely on moving averages and candlestick charts. While candlestick charts can provide intuitive insights into market sentiment, traders shouldn't be misled by the details of individual ups and downs, as this can distort their understanding of the overall market trend.
I once spent years reprogramming and testing every indicator on the MT4 platform, only to find that most were useless. Only moving averages and candlestick charts offered any real-world reference value. Any other efforts were often a waste of time.
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