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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
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In the field of forex trading, traders must clearly understand the logic behind the transition between trading theory and trading skills. This is the core prerequisite for building a mature trading system.
In the current market, many forex traders suffer from cognitive biases, the root of which lies in misplaced thinking caused by misjudgment of direction. Many traders believe that the more trading methods they master and the richer their theoretical knowledge, the higher their trading skills will inevitably be. They mistakenly believe that in-depth study of trading psychology will directly improve their market analysis skills. They even believe that participating in more training courses and listening to more experience sharing will be enough to build a high-quality trading system and achieve breakthrough trading performance. This linear thinking, equating "knowledge accumulation" with "ability improvement," ignores the essential principles of forex trading as a highly practical field.
In fact, the transition from trading methods, theoretical knowledge, and psychological principles to true trading skills lies in a systematic, practical training process. Traders should start with a small amount of capital and gradually transform theoretical knowledge into actionable trading decision-making capabilities through continuous market testing, targeted training, and real-world review. This is the essential path from "knowledge" to "profit."
However, most traders fail in the process of translating theory into practice. The core reason lies in impatience and a lack of patience: eager to pursue short-term gains like "get rich quick," they fail to give themselves sufficient time to fully develop their skills, resulting in a stalemate in achieving proficiency and stability in their practical skills. Market concepts like "10,000 trading practices," "10,000 hours of focused training," and "10,000 days of market experience" essentially emphasize the time and depth required to transform theory into practical skills. Unfortunately, many traders rush out of the market due to short-term losses before completing their foundational foundation, ultimately missing out on the opportunity to achieve breakthroughs in their trading skills.
In the field of forex trading, there are significant differences between professional and amateur investors, a key difference being their holding strategies for floating gains and losses.
Professional forex investors, after accurately grasping market trends and making the right directional judgments, typically maintain a steadfast holding strategy regardless of floating gains or losses. This strategy is based on a deep understanding of market trends and strict adherence to their trading plans. They understand that short-term price fluctuations do not necessarily reflect long-term trends. Therefore, as long as they are certain the trend remains intact, they will not easily change their positions based on short-term gains or losses. This steadfast holding strategy allows them to remain calm during market fluctuations and avoid missing out on greater profit opportunities due to emotional decisions.
In contrast, amateur investors often exhibit greater emotional volatility during trading. When they correctly judge the trend and achieve floating profits, they are often eager to close their positions to lock in their profits, fearing that the profits might disappear at any moment. When they experience a floating loss, they tend to panic and hold onto their positions, hoping the market will reverse and recoup their losses. This strategy often leads them to frequently enter and exit the market amidst market fluctuations, missing out on opportunities to further expand their profits while also increasing trading costs and risks.
In fact, if amateur investors can maintain a steadfast holding strategy after a floating loss turns into a floating profit, accumulating years of consistent holding experience, they may be able to gradually become professional investors. However, most amateur investors find it difficult to overcome this psychological barrier and immediately close their positions after a floating loss turns into a floating profit, thus missing out on the opportunity to hold onto profitable positions for the long term. This behavior not only limits their potential for greater gains but also hinders their progress towards becoming a professional investor.
Therefore, if amateur investors want to improve their trading skills, the key is to learn to control their emotions and develop a steadfast holding strategy. This requires strengthening their understanding of market trends, developing and strictly adhering to a trading plan, and gaining experience through demo trading or trading with small amounts, gradually overcoming the tendency to rush for profits and excessive panic. Only in this way can they gradually mature in forex trading and improve their trading performance.
A common phenomenon in the forex market is that the vast majority of traders are willing to invest time, energy, and money in learning trading knowledge, yet shy away from core practical training and real-world practice. This tendency to prioritize theoretical input over practical output reflects deep-seated cognitive biases and mindset issues.
The root cause of this behavior lies in traders' obsession with "trading shortcuts"—many subconsciously harbor a sense of luck and hope for "getting something for nothing," refusing to confront the essence of practical training: it's not simply repetition, but a arduous process of accumulating experience and calibrating decisions through tedious review and repeated trial and error. This avoidance of "boring training" is essentially a misperception of the practical nature of trading. Improving trading skills isn't simply a matter of accumulating knowledge; it's the result of continuously honing your skills and decision-making logic through real-world practice.
A more critical misconception lies in the fact that most traders underestimate the complexity of forex trading, blindly believing that "the entry threshold is low and profits are easy." They even develop a complacent mindset that "losses only happen to others," believing that their "intelligence" can mitigate risk. This cognitive bias directly leads them into a "technical learning maze": constantly chasing new technical indicators and trading methods, eagerly switching to the next after learning one, but never deeply integrating any technical system with practical scenarios. They appear to have mastered a variety of tools, but in reality, they fail to develop a stable trading logic, let alone validate the applicability and limitations of their techniques through practical experience.
Ultimately, these traders fall into the dilemma of "knowing but not practicing": they appear to understand numerous trading theories and techniques, but due to a lack of real-world testing and systematic practical training, they fail to transform their knowledge into practical trading skills. This "gap between knowledge accumulation and practical experience" is the fundamental flaw that prevents most traders from breaking through the profit bottleneck.
In the field of forex trading, developing trading skills isn't simply achieved through theoretical study; rather, they require continuous practice. While theoretical learning is fundamental, true trading prowess is honed through practice.
Forex trading is essentially a skill, and mastery of this skill requires practical application. If investors simply focus on learning without engaging in actual trading, they will ultimately only accumulate theoretical knowledge and methods without truly transforming them into effective trading skills. Success in forex trading relies not only on theoretical knowledge but also on continuous accumulation of practical experience, validating and fine-tuning learned strategies through real-world operations.
Many investors enhance their trading skills by reading numerous books, attending training courses, or studying various technical indicators. However, no matter how much knowledge and techniques they acquire, these are merely theoretical. To truly master these skills, investors must devote sufficient time to practical practice. Only through hundreds or even thousands of trading sessions can investors gradually become familiar with market fluctuations, master the trading rhythm, and truly transform theoretical knowledge into practical trading skills. Unfortunately, most investors fail to realize this, leading them to invest too much energy in theoretical learning and neglect the importance of practice.
During their learning process, investors are often exposed to a wide variety of knowledge and techniques, such as trading methods, technical indicators, candlestick chart analysis, and trading code programming. While rich and diverse, this knowledge is often fragmented and fragmented. If investors do not integrate this knowledge through extensive practice and error correction, even if they learn more methods and techniques, they will not be able to truly digest and absorb them. Ultimately, this knowledge will remain superficial, unable to be transformed into practical trading skills, and investors will find it difficult to escape persistent losses.
Therefore, when learning forex trading, investors should focus on integrating theory with practice. After mastering basic theoretical knowledge, they should quickly verify and consolidate what they have learned through actual trading. Through continuous practice, investors can not only improve their trading skills but also continuously adjust and optimize their trading strategies in practice, gradually moving towards success.
In the logic of profit in forex trading, a trader's ability to execute and hold positions is the core factor determining long-term returns and market viability, far more important than short-term market analysis or the use of technical indicators.
From the perspective of profit accumulation, forex trading profits do not come from the "frequent gambling" of high-frequency trading, but rather rely on the long-term holding of profitable positions. By continuously seizing trending opportunities, floating profits can accumulate as the trend continues, ultimately achieving compound growth. Therefore, if traders want to survive in the highly volatile forex market over the long term, they must systematically train their "execution ability" and "position holding ability" as the core goals of their trading system.
Specifically, the core of executing a position lies in "discipline and strategy": When prices reach a pre-defined trading range (such as a key support or resistance level, or a trend structure node), one must boldly enter the market according to the trading plan, decisively increasing positions while maintaining risk control, and optimizing position flexibility and risk diversification by placing multiple, small-volume orders, thus avoiding large losses caused by a single misjudgment.
The key to maintaining a position is "trend confidence and patience": Assuming the trend direction is correct and the trading logic is intact, one must be able to withstand periodic fluctuations in the position (to resist the impact of short-term fluctuations on one's mindset) and firmly hold on to positions that have generated floating profits. This holding period can last for months, or even years in large-scale trend markets, until a clear trend reversal signal appears.
It's important to understand that mature execution and position-holding abilities aren't achieved through short-term training. They often require five to ten years of continuous, hands-on practice. Only through repeated operational verification, market review and optimization, and position management practice can discipline and patience be internalized into stable trading habits. However, in reality, most traders give up midway, unable to withstand the tedium of long-term training and the pressure of short-term losses. Only those who persevere in training and continuously improve will eventually break through their bottlenecks and achieve the transition from "losses" to "stable profits."
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