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Profits are shared by half (50%), and losses are shared by a quarter (25%).
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In forex trading, investors should carefully consider the decision to enter this field from another industry.
Even if you excel in your current industry, you should focus on your existing area, cultivate it diligently, and obtain stable and sustainable long-term returns. After all, starting or developing a business in a familiar industry increases the probability of success; accumulated resources and experience provide effective support, and there's no need to easily risk venturing into unknown territory.
Even if things aren't going well in your current industry and you intend to switch careers, it's not advisable to rashly jump into forex trading. If you can't even handle a relatively simple industry, how can you cope with this highly specialized and high-risk financial market? The forex market demands extremely high levels of professional knowledge, psychological resilience, and risk control capabilities. Entering without systematic training and practical experience often means the beginning of losses. Blindly participating not only fails to reverse a difficult situation but may also exacerbate financial pressure, resulting in more harm than good.
Even after entering this field, without the guidance of experienced and highly professional mentors, one will mostly encounter traders with limited skills, creating a typical "birds of a feather flock together" situation. This group is often filled with trading failures, a veritable hotbed of negative energy. They either blame others for their losses, attributing their failures to the platform, market conditions, or manipulation by others; or they indulge in get-rich-quick fantasies, indulging in high leverage and frequent trading, hoping to reap huge profits with minimal investment.
In such an environment, few people truly focus on improving their trading skills and building systematic methods. Speculation and the pursuit of shortcuts become the norm, emotions dominate decision-making, and discipline vanishes. Over time, not only is profitability difficult to achieve, but one will also become trapped in a cycle of losses, gradually losing rational judgment. Ultimately, what is wasted is not only capital, but also precious time, energy, and confidence.
Therefore, one should maintain a clear mind and a sense of awe when dealing with forex investment. Without sufficient preparation, systematic learning, and professional guidance, never enter the market rashly. True investment is never based on luck, but on cognition, discipline, and continuous improvement.
In the two-way forex trading market, the core reason why ordinary forex investors struggle to achieve consistent profits and are even ill-suited for trading lies in their severe cognitive deficiencies.
This cognitive gap has a decisive impact on a trader's career—investors who establish correct forex trading knowledge early and those who do so late will ultimately face drastically different trading fates. Once the golden period for cultivating this knowledge is missed, this cognitive gap is often difficult to bridge later, becoming a core obstacle that ordinary investors find hard to overcome.
The cognitive deficiencies of ordinary forex investors are primarily reflected in a flawed understanding of the essence of trading. Most ordinary investors cannot accurately grasp the core logic of profitable forex trading. They lack a deep understanding of market operating rules and have a significant deficiency in risk control capabilities. They struggle to correctly interpret various risk factors in the trading process and are unable to establish a scientific and effective risk management system. Furthermore, they suffer from serious biases in self-awareness and market assessment. They cannot objectively assess their own trading abilities and risk tolerance thresholds, nor can they fully recognize the complexity, volatility, and uncertainty of the forex market, leading to frequent misjudgments in trading decisions.
A deep analysis of the reasons for the cognitive deficiencies among ordinary forex investors reveals several key factors. First, they are closely related to their background and upbringing. Many ordinary investors come from modest backgrounds, and their upbringing is often limited by their parents' limited understanding, resulting in a lack of scientific guidance and access to quality educational resources, especially introductory financial and forex education. This leads to a weak foundation in early knowledge. Second, the development of some investors' worldview and values is relatively delayed. Often, by the time they enter the workforce and begin their cognitive development, they are already older, with diminished learning abilities, a greater capacity to adapt to new things, and a decreased willingness to change, increasing the difficulty of cognitive improvement. Third, compensating for these cognitive deficiencies faces numerous practical obstacles. Many investors are burdened by the dual pressures of busy work schedules and family responsibilities, lacking sufficient time and energy for systematic forex knowledge learning. They may even struggle to dedicate just one or two hours to professional study, causing their cognitive development to stagnate.
In addition, the lack of high-quality learning channels exacerbates the cognitive difficulties faced by ordinary investors. It's difficult to find formal, professional institutions or channels in the market that provide systematic and authoritative forex financial knowledge training and guidance. Furthermore, the high cost of formal forex professional training is beyond the reach of most ordinary investors, deterring many. Even if some investors acquire forex-related knowledge through fragmented methods, they struggle to form a deep understanding and systematic organization of the knowledge, failing to build a complete and scientific forex trading knowledge system. They may even be misled by false information and erroneous viewpoints in the market, further exacerbating cognitive biases.
At the same time, the limited energy of ordinary investors also restricts the efficiency of cognitive improvement. Their spare time outside of work is already limited, and the allure of fragmented entertainment such as short videos makes it difficult for investors to concentrate on efficient learning, ultimately leading to slow progress in cognitive improvement and making it difficult to bridge the cognitive gap with professional traders.
In forex two-way investment trading, investors should not blindly believe in so-called "gurus."
True trading growth stems from learning from outstanding traders—their knowledge systems, analytical logic, trading methods, and higher-level cognitive abilities. These are the core elements for improving one's trading skills and ultimately achieving stable profits. The most dangerous thing is blindly accepting the publicly available opinions of "gurus," because blindly following others' judgments can solidify thinking, weaken independent decision-making ability, and ultimately become an invisible barrier to profitability.
Traders must abandon a dependency mentality, especially towards those "gurus" packaged online. Once dependency develops, one easily becomes a target for exploitation—either hunted by market manipulators and opposing traders, or having one's traffic and trust harvested by self-media "gurus." There are no saviors in the forex market. If there are any "gods," they are those traders who consistently rely on their own efforts, continuous learning and reflection, and constant improvement of their cognitive and practical abilities. They are not superstitious, do not complain, and are adept at integrating resources and information for their own use, rather than being manipulated by external forces.
The more ignorant one is, the more easily one becomes superstitious; the more superstitious one is, the harder it is to be independent. Many online "gurus" are actually products of marketing and packaging, often with hidden commercial motives. Even those with genuine expertise rarely share their core trading secrets free of charge, as truly valuable strategies are never easily passed on. When faced with the views and strategies shared by these "gurus," traders must maintain independent judgment, actively verify their effectiveness, and avoid blindly following them. It is crucial to understand that the market is constantly changing, and any strategy has a limited lifespan; even the most experienced trader cannot guarantee continuous success.
Therefore, the success of these "gurus" should not be mythologized, nor should they be followed unconditionally. Otherwise, not only will it harm one's own interests, but it may also damage the other party's reputation. Traders should focus on absorbing their methodologies and thought processes, rather than copying their views. Every trade should aim for both financial gain and cognitive improvement. Even losses, if the reasons are understood, are progress, helping to avoid similar mistakes and improve long-term win rates.
Ultimately, traders must eliminate dependence and superstition, and steadfastly pursue a path of self-growth. Through continuous learning and practical experience, build your own trading system to achieve truly independent, rational, and sustainable profitability in the ever-changing forex market.
In the forex two-way investment market, traders must be wary of various myths and illusions of "easy profits," and avoid being driven by such false temptations to blindly participate in trading.
In fact, the initial motivation for most forex traders to enter the market stems from the impulse to follow others after seeing them profit from trading. After all, profitability is one of the core objectives of participating in forex trading, and as market participants, traders' survival-level profit needs naturally make forex trading a potential profit-making path for many. However, the true ecosystem of the forex trading market is far more brutal than it appears on the surface. The percentage of profitable traders is extremely low. Among all participants intending to profit through trading, less than 5% can survive long-term and achieve stable profits. The vast majority of traders will ultimately be eliminated by the market due to factors such as market volatility and insufficient risk management, becoming "victims" of market fluctuations.
It's worth noting a significant "profit illusion bias" exists in the forex trading market: traders who suffer losses are often reluctant to disclose their trading failures due to embarrassment, and may even deliberately embellish their results and conceal their losses; while traders who truly achieve consistent profits are well aware of the counterintuitive nature of forex trading, the market's high volatility and uncertainty, and the risks that human weaknesses can trigger during trading. They tend to maintain a low profile, deliberately avoiding or even concealing details of their profits, and are unwilling to overly reveal their trading logic and operational strategies. This information asymmetry further amplifies the false impression that "trading is easy to profit from," misleading a large number of potential traders.
Furthermore, traders need to be keenly aware of the skill gap between themselves and successful traders. The existence of a few successful trading examples around them does not mean they can replicate such success. This phenomenon is not only a classic case of survivorship bias—people often only focus on the selected successful cases while ignoring the countless failures eliminated by the market—but more importantly, it reflects fundamental differences in traders' professional abilities, risk management levels, and psychological control. Just as a tiger can easily leap over a cliff through its own strength, while a rabbit blindly imitating it will only end up smashed to pieces, in forex trading, traders lured by profits and filled with greed often only focus on the glamour of a few successful cases, actively ignoring the hardships and struggles behind the countless failures, ultimately squandering their trading capital in blindly following the crowd.
Even more alarming is that those who control the forex market often deliberately showcase its alluring aspects, fabricating stories of "short-term windfalls" and "easy doubling of profits" to precisely exploit participants' greed and ignorance. In today's online environment, the live trading records publicly shared by some so-called forex trading "gurus" are likely carefully crafted fabrications. With increasingly advanced technology, falsifying trading records and embellishing profit data have become common misleading tactics in the industry, further exacerbating information asymmetry in the market.
For forex traders, true trading wisdom lies in seeing through the fog of market appearances, recognizing the high-risk, high-volatility nature of forex trading, and not being misled by various profit illusions. Before officially participating in two-way forex investment, traders should first comprehensively assess their professional capabilities, risk tolerance, and financial strength, establish a rational understanding of trading, abandon the mentality of blindly following the crowd, and build a sound risk management system. Only in this way can they effectively avoid various trading traps in the market and achieve long-term survival in the complex and ever-changing forex market, rather than becoming victims of market exploitation.
In two-way forex trading, ordinary traders often find themselves trapped in a psychological dilemma due to survival pressures and resource scarcity.
Prolonged high-pressure situations lead to excessive cortisol secretion. While this physiological response can enhance alertness and responsiveness in moderation, sustained excess suppresses the immune system, disrupts thought processes, and severely impacts decision-making quality. The stress mechanisms that the human body evolved to cope with short-term survival threats are continuously activated in the modern high-frequency, high-volatility trading environment, ironically becoming obstacles to rational thinking and stable execution.
Under high pressure, the brain tends to seek immediate gratification, neglecting the sustained investment required for learning, research, and strategy refinement, instead indulging in short-term pleasurable behaviors such as games, short videos, or sleep. This psychological mechanism weakens self-discipline, creating a vicious cycle of "the less resources available, the harder it is to be self-disciplined; the less self-disciplined, the more resources lost." Self-discipline is not simply a manifestation of willpower, but rather the result of the combined effects of physical and mental state, resource support, and environmental feedback. When the body is constantly under stress, the foundation of self-discipline is shaken.
The pressure in trading differs from the benign stimulation of traditional life; it's a dual pressure on both body and mind, easily triggering the vulnerabilities of human nature. While daily stress might motivate effort, the pressure in the forex market is persistent, uncertain, and has high consequences, often driving traders into a "fight or flight" instinctive reaction, marginalizing rational thinking. This environment not only tests technical skills but also constantly tests the limits of human nature.
Under intense pressure, traders often experience physiological reactions such as trembling, rapid breathing, and weak, trembling speech. Psychologically, this manifests as emotional fluctuations, impulsive trading, or falling into anxiety and fear, with extreme risk preferences—either completely avoiding risk and refusing to open positions, or gambling everything on high-risk opportunities. The brain may experience brief periods of excitement under stress, but this excitement is often accompanied by decreased judgment, emotional decision-making, and difficulty maintaining consistent trading discipline.
Over time, the courage to face market changes gradually fades, leading to a dependence on the status quo, preferring to cling to inefficient patterns rather than break through and change. Even knowing that a current strategy is ineffective, fear of failure and loss leads to avoidance of adjustments, resulting in a self-protective stalemate. This resistance to change is not laziness, but a manifestation of psychological energy depletion under long-term pressure, ultimately causing missed opportunities for growth within the illusion of self-protection.
The lack of self-discipline does not stem from weak willpower, but is an inevitable result of the intertwining of long-term pressure and physiological imbalance. Ordinary traders who cannot recognize the essence of this cycle—the chain reaction between pressure, physiology, behavior, and results—are highly susceptible to continuous decline in the volatile market. Only by starting with mental and physical adjustment, rebuilding resource bases, and improving coping mechanisms can one truly break the vicious cycle and achieve sustainable growth and stability in complex markets.
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Mr. Z-X-N
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