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%).
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, unsuccessful traders often share a common trait: they tend to complain, constantly looking for excuses rather than solutions. This negative attitude not only fails to improve their trading strategies, but actually further hinders their success.
Many unsuccessful traders often blame the forex market for "going the wrong way," believing its fluctuations are disorderly and unpredictable. However, this accusation is misplaced. The forex market itself isn't at fault; it's the trader's mindset that's at fault. The forex market is complex and volatile, but every fluctuation has its own inherent logic and patterns. A trader's task is to adapt to the market, respect it, and follow it, rather than complaining about its unpredictability.
This kind of complaining is also common in real life. Those who fail to achieve success often blame the market for unfairness and social injustice, blaming external circumstances for their failure. However, this kind of complaining is the behavior of losers. Successful investors understand that reality is fair, and so is the market. They understand that the market won't change because of individual complaints; the only thing that can change is the trader's own strategy and mindset.
Successful investors view the market as an immutable reality and achieve profits by following trends. They don't try to predict every market fluctuation, but instead adapt to market changes through analysis and strategy. This proactive attitude and methodology enables them to find opportunities in complex market environments and achieve long-term, stable profits.
Therefore, to succeed, forex traders must abandon the habit of complaining and making excuses and instead focus on finding solutions. They need to cultivate a positive mindset, respect the laws of the market, and follow market trends. Only in this way can they find their own path to success in the forex market.
In the field of forex trading, if a trader can achieve excellence in their trading, the experience and skills they accumulate will be widely transferable, enabling them to excel in other fields. This transfer of skills is not accidental; it stems from the comprehensive improvement of a person's overall qualities through forex trading.
Forex trading is not just a financial activity; it's also a comprehensive exercise in personal knowledge, skills, and mental fortitude. Through long-term practice, traders gradually refine their knowledge base, accumulate common sense, accumulate experience, and hone their skills. They also undergo rigorous psychological training, honing their mindset and enabling them to remain calm and rational in a complex and volatile market. Once traders have completed this accumulation and training, they often surpass most others in both cognition and competence.
This comprehensive improvement enables forex traders to quickly grasp the key points in other situations. They develop the ability to design and plan a blueprint, quickly constructing a framework for problem-solving. When faced with unfamiliar situations, they can quickly develop a blueprint for action, avoiding confusion and overwhelm. This ability stems from the systematic thinking and problem-solving skills they develop through forex trading.
In contrast, most people struggle to accomplish anything because they lack this systematic planning and blueprint. They often feel lost when faced with complex problems, unsure where to begin. Through long-term training, forex traders have developed this ability, quickly breaking down complex problems into actionable steps and developing clear action plans.
Thus, while performing their trading duties, forex traders are also invisibly improving their overall skills. This improvement in skills isn't limited to the financial sector; it has broad applicability. They are able to quickly identify entry points in other fields, develop effective solutions, and put them into practice. This transferability of skills enables forex traders to demonstrate exceptional adaptability and problem-solving skills in the face of various challenges.
In forex trading, the relationship between time invested and improved skills isn't a simple linear one. Even some traders with ten years of experience may never achieve "enlightenment," let alone reach the advanced trading realm of "comprehension, mastery, and thorough understanding."
This disconnect between time and results dispels the misconception that long-term investment guarantees success, revealing that success in forex trading requires not only time but also a deep understanding of the essence of trading and the selection of the right practical approach.
Based on the current state of forex trading, there's no inherent causal relationship between "long-term participation" and "achievement." The claim that "success is guaranteed in ten years" lacks practical basis. In reality, many traders, despite meeting the industry experience threshold of "10,000 hours of training," completing over 10,000 trades, and even engaging in intermittent trading for 10,000 days, still fail to break through the profit bottleneck. Some, even after decades of experience in the market, still haven't grasped the core logic of trading, mastered the underlying patterns of market fluctuations, or established a stable trading system. The root cause of this chronic lack of success isn't a lack of effort, but rather a reliance on ineffective accumulation: either traders consistently rely on fragmented trading knowledge without forming a systematic cognitive framework; or they repeatedly repeat poor trading habits (such as not using stop-loss orders or placing orders based on emotion) without correcting them through market review; or they blindly follow market trends and lack independent market judgment. These behaviors result in time investment simply accumulating trades rather than improving trading skills, ultimately making it difficult to make the transition from "novice" to "professional" trader.
More deeply, achieving enlightenment in forex trading is a step-by-step process, with different levels corresponding to distinct trading capabilities. "Enlightenment" is when a trader breaks through cognitive blind spots for the first time, understanding the core logic of "the market is unpredictable but manageable," and shedding the obsession with "perfect market predictions." "Understanding" is the ability to systematically master trading knowledge and skills, establish a trading strategy tailored to one's risk appetite, and achieve periodic, stable profits. "Mastering" involves meticulously optimizing the details of a trading strategy, flexibly adjusting operations based on market fluctuations, and elevating profit stability to even higher levels. "Complete understanding" achieves a state of "oneness between man and the market," enabling not only accurate grasp of market trends but also complete control over one's emotions, achieving long-term, sustainable compound growth. Most traders struggle to reach these advanced levels precisely because they lack proper guidance and deep self-reflection during the enlightenment process, failing to translate their time investment into the driving force of cognitive advancement.
For forex traders aspiring to success, "ten years of persistence on the right path" is a necessary prerequisite for achieving enlightenment and profitability. "Ten years of accumulation on the wrong path" can lead traders further away from success. Despite dedicating a decade to the market, some traders consistently employ flawed trading methods. For example, they chronically neglect risk control, equating trading with "gambling on the odds," attempting to profit from large positions in the short term. Another example involves obsessing over complex combinations of technical indicators while neglecting to analyze macroeconomic fundamentals and market sentiment. Finally, they attribute profits to "luck" and losses to "market unfairness," never examining the root causes of their own problems. These flawed practices not only fail to improve traders' skills, but actually reinforce negative trading habits and cognitive biases. Even with further investment, it's difficult for traders to grasp the true nature of trading, let alone master it. Therefore, forex traders who want to achieve enlightenment and success within a ten-year cycle must first identify the right path: On the intellectual level, they should build a systematic knowledge base encompassing macroeconomics, financial theory, and trading tools. On the practical level, they should adhere to the principle of "planned trading, trading plan," documenting the logic and gains and losses of each trade through a review log, and continuously optimizing their strategies. On the cognitive level, they should confront market uncertainty, accept that losses are part of trading, and gradually cultivate a rational trading mindset. Only by continuously investing time and energy on the right path can each trade and each experience become nourishment for enlightenment, ultimately achieving the transition from "ineffective accumulation" to "effective growth," and gradually reaching the advanced trading realm of understanding, mastery, and thoroughness.
In the field of forex investment and trading, many traders fail to achieve success because they lack the time and effort to commit. Success doesn't happen overnight; it requires long-term accumulation and unremitting effort.
In traditional society, temporary failure doesn't necessarily mean a lack of ability. There's no such thing as absolute failure in life; it's simply a matter of underperforming in a specific area. For example, a poor student might still become a successful, wealthy adult. Their academic shortcomings might stem from a lack of talent, but they might display exceptional talent in other areas. Furthermore, poor academic performance might stem from a lack of effort. Success in some areas makes it entirely possible to excel in others. With sufficient effort and time, success is only a matter of time.
In forex trading, success requires dedicated time and effort. Investors must redouble their efforts in the initial stages of learning the relevant knowledge, common sense, skills, mindset, and experience to quickly grasp the essence of forex trading. Without hard work, traders might never fully develop this knowledge, common sense, skills, mindset, and experience.
This process often takes over ten years, requiring systematic study of forex trading knowledge, common sense, experience, skills, and psychology. However, few people can persevere for ten years, and even fewer can make it five years. The vast majority choose to quit before the third year. The reasons behind this are multifaceted, including a lack of patience, an excessive pursuit of short-term gains, and a fear of long-term investment.
Nevertheless, as long as forex traders dedicate sufficient time and effort, success is only a matter of time. Success requires time to accumulate experience, refine skills, and be mentally prepared. Traders need to understand that forex trading is a long-term learning process, not a short-term speculative venture. Through continuous learning and practice, traders can gradually improve their trading skills and ultimately achieve success in the forex market.
In the forex trading world, the definition of "financial freedom" is not a unified, fixed standard, but rather exhibits significant individual differences. Different traders' criteria for achieving and maintaining financial freedom often vary greatly depending on their trading abilities, risk preferences, lifestyle needs, and psychological perspectives.
This diversity is reflected not only in the measurement of "profit stability" but also in the expectation of "wealth accumulation," ultimately forming a personalized system for evaluating financial freedom.
From the perspective of profit performance, there is a clear divergence in the annual profit levels of forex traders, and there is no direct linear correlation between "profit margin" and "whether or not sustainable financial freedom has been achieved." In practice, annual profit rates vary significantly among traders: some achieve a 30% annual return, others maintain a steady level of around 10%, and a few achieve a whopping 50% profit growth rate. However, it's important to note that high profit margins don't equate to "sustained financial freedom." For example, a trader may achieve a 50% annual profit rate for three consecutive years. However, this profit model likely relies on a high-position, high-risk trading strategy. While this strategy may generate impressive short-term returns, it carries significant potential risks. If the market experiences unexpected volatility (such as a black swan event or an exchange rate gap caused by a policy shift), the high-risk exposure can easily lead to significant losses in the account, potentially wiping out all previously accumulated profits and instantly destroying the "sustained financial freedom" scenario. Conversely, traders who achieve stable profits for more than ten consecutive years, despite only a 10%-20% annual profit rate, through strict position management and comprehensive risk control strategies, are more likely to maintain long-term financial freedom. This demonstrates that the core criterion for "sustained financial freedom" lies in the stability and sustainability of profits, not simply the magnitude of short-term gains. This leads to fundamental differences in how traders with different risk appetites perceive financial freedom.
From the perspective of wealth accumulation, forex traders' perceptions of the amount needed to achieve financial freedom also vary significantly depending on their individual life scenarios and expectations. This difference is particularly evident when comparing regional consumption levels. In high-cost-of-living areas such as first-tier cities or international financial centers, even if a trader has accumulated tens of millions of yuan in wealth, they may still believe they haven't reached financial freedom. Housing costs, education expenses, social consumption, and future risk reserves are high in these areas. Tens of millions of yuan in wealth may only cover basic living expenses in the medium and long term, and may not support the freedom of "no longer worrying about money." In contrast, in third- and fourth-tier cities or other areas with lower costs of living, traders who have accumulated tens of millions of yuan in wealth often consider themselves financially free. Lower housing prices and commodity prices in these areas mean that tens of millions of yuan in assets not only cover daily consumption needs but also allow for passive income to cover living expenses through sensible asset allocation (such as low-risk wealth management and stable investments), thus completely freeing themselves from the pressure of "trading for the sake of profit."
More deeply, forex traders' perceptions of "financial freedom" are essentially the result of a combination of psychological perceptions and life expectations, and are highly flexible. This flexibility is reflected in the fact that the amount of wealth freedom is not uniformly defined by the market or industry, but is determined by the trader's own "mental account" - if the trader has high expectations for future life (such as pursuing high-quality consumption, global travel, overseas education for children, etc.), then the threshold for wealth freedom he sets will be correspondingly increased; if the trader prefers a simple and pragmatic lifestyle and has lower expectations for material needs, then a lower amount of wealth accumulation can satisfy his perception of wealth freedom. In addition A trader's risk tolerance and anxiety about the future also influence their judgment of financial freedom. Some traders, even with significant wealth, still consider themselves to be financially free due to concerns about future market volatility, unexpected expenses, and other risks. Others, confident in their trading abilities and the prospect of continued profitability, consider themselves financially free once their wealth reaches a certain level.
In summary, the standard for financial freedom in forex trading is a combination of objective profitability and subjective psychological perception: objectively, stable and sustainable profitability is required, while subjectively, it must satisfy one's own lifestyle needs and expectations. This differentiated standard reminds every trader: in the pursuit of financial freedom, one should not blindly follow others' profit goals or wealth figures. Instead, one should develop a personalized financial freedom assessment system based on one's own risk tolerance, lifestyle plans, and psychological state. Furthermore, through continuous optimization of trading strategies, risk management, and ensuring stable profits, one can truly achieve sustainable financial freedom that meets one's needs.
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