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All the problems in forex short-term trading,
Have answers here!
All the troubles in forex long-term investment,
Have echoes here!
All the psychological doubts in forex investment,
Have empathy here!


In forex trading, traders often struggle to maintain long-term positions, primarily due to insufficient skills and understanding across various aspects.
First, many traders lack a clear expectation of long-term market trends and their research into fundamentals and macroeconomics is insufficient. They fail to grasp the global economic landscape, monetary policy cycles, and the relative strength of major economies, thus failing to see the underlying logic and potential of market movements, making it difficult to establish a firm long-term conviction.
Second, their technical skills are also weak. Many traders habitually focus on daily charts or even shorter timeframes, frequently engaging in short-term trading, pursuing quick profits, yet unwilling to bear the floating losses from short-term fluctuations. This "quick in, quick out" trading habit not only consumes energy but also makes it difficult for them psychologically and operationally to adapt to the patience and discipline required for long-term holding.
Furthermore, the lack of a comprehensive strategy system exacerbates this problem. Some traders are eager to profit immediately upon entering the market, neglecting the scientific arrangement of position management and holding rhythm. When faced with short-term losses or several days without profit, traders often close positions prematurely out of anxiety, missing out on potential returns from a continued trend.
To truly execute effective long-term investing, traders need to improve simultaneously in three dimensions: philosophy, position sizing, and methodology. First, a clear long-term investment philosophy should be established, understanding that forex market trends are often driven by deep-seated economic factors and possess persistence and inertia.
Second, position sizing must be reasonable and decisive. This means, based on a thorough assessment of risk tolerance, daring to moderately concentrate positions in high-probability, high-certainty opportunities, rather than excessively diversifying or speculatively using small positions.
Finally, the principle of "adjusting positions without hasty closing" should be adhered to. Before a fundamental trend reversal, market fluctuations should be addressed through dynamic adjustments rather than hasty exits, always believing in and following the extension of the main trend, thus truly holding and securing long-term positions.

In the field of two-way forex trading, a trader's preference for solitude essentially stems from an extreme pursuit of focused trading concentration.
This solitude isn't about deliberate isolation, but rather about avoiding external interference that could disrupt trading decisions. The core of forex trading lies in the accurate capture of exchange rate fluctuations and market signals, coupled with rational decision-making. Any irrelevant interference can disrupt a trader's judgment rhythm, thereby affecting the effectiveness of their trading strategy.
For forex traders, establishing clear interpersonal boundaries and being wary of individuals who can disrupt their trading mindset is crucial. Traders need to clearly identify those "hidden disruptors" who might cause them to lose their composure. The core danger of these individuals is that they can gradually make traders doubt their own trading logic and generate anxiety and internal conflict. Even if the other party is a family member or close friend, or offers advice under the guise of "it's for your own good," if their behavior shakes the trader's decision-making resolve, it must be actively avoided.
In the long-term practice of forex trading, it's not uncommon to find individuals with distorted mindsets. These people often can't stand seeing others profit or maintain a smooth trading rhythm. Their words and actions easily trigger emotional fluctuations in traders. If traders get caught up in the words or stories fabricated by others, repeatedly pondering right and wrong, this meaningless internal conflict not only consumes a lot of time and energy but also wastes their trading potential. Ultimately, they will only be led astray by these individuals, missing market opportunities.
Therefore, forex traders who engage in two-way investment, while honing their trading skills and optimizing their strategies, must actively distance themselves from those who can diminish their trading motivation and enthusiasm. Maintaining independent judgment and a stable trading mindset is crucial. This is not only the core of mindset management in forex trading but also a vital prerequisite for achieving stable trading results in the long run.

In the forex two-way investment market, forex traders with limited capital find it difficult to achieve long-term stable profits and reach their trading goals. This is an objective fact that has been verified by the market over a long period.
For forex traders with substantial capital, a trading account holding $10 million in margin can generate $1 million in profit simply by capturing a single, valid trend, even with only a 10% profit. This is sufficient to cover their daily living expenses, allowing them to calmly exit the market and patiently await the next opportune moment, without the pressure of short-term gains leading to impulsive trading.
Forex traders with limited funds, such as those with only $100,000 in capital, would only earn $20,000 even with a 20% profit from short-term market fluctuations. This amount is often insufficient to cover daily living expenses, leading them into the trap of frequent trading and blindly seeking opportunities. Driven by a desperate desire to turn their fortunes around, they neglect trading rules and risk control, resulting in increasingly frequent operational errors and a vicious cycle of ever-growing losses. In reality, the true cause of their failure is not the volatility and uncertainty of the forex market itself, but rather the psychological burden of life's pressures and the operational anxiety caused by high-frequency trading.
The saying circulating in the market, "Fearful capital won't win, scarce capital won't win, stressed capital won't win, and capital urgently needed won't win," essentially conveys the same core logic—limited capital cannot cope with the volatility risks of the forex market, makes it difficult to achieve long-term profitability through proper money management, and hinders the implementation of a mature trading system. Essentially, traders with insufficient capital lack the basic financial conditions required for forex investment.
However, on current internet platforms, countless people blindly tout claims like "enlightened traders never lack capital." Such statements are either parroting others' opinions or simply copying popular rhetoric. They neither conform to the actual logic of forex trading nor are supported by concrete trading examples. They cannot withstand the test of market practice or reverse engineering and have no practical reference value.

In forex two-way investment trading, inexperienced traders often misunderstand "profits can be made in both long and short positions" as "easy profits."
This cognitive bias stems from a misunderstanding of the nature of two-way trading. In fact, while the forex market allows investors to go long when exchange rates rise and short when they fall, theoretically offering the possibility of profit in any market condition, this does not mean that trading itself becomes easier or that profits become more certain. On the contrary, two-way trading places higher demands on traders' analytical abilities, discipline, and psychological resilience.
Truly effective two-way trading is not based on random operations, but rather on a comprehensive analysis of multiple factors, including macroeconomic data, monetary policy trends, geopolitical risks, and technical structures. Traders must simultaneously focus on the potential driving logic and signal verification in both long and short directions to identify entry points with positive expected value amidst complex market fluctuations. Without a systematic trading framework and strict risk control, frequently entering and exiting the market based solely on the vague idea that "I can go long or short anyway" often leads to amplified losses rather than accumulated gains.
In reality, many beginners have a deep-seated misconception: they believe that two-way trading is inherently superior to traditional one-way investment models, even regarding it as a "sure-fire" shortcut. They overlook the fact that regardless of the direction chosen, the essence of forex trading remains a game of probability and risk management. Two-way trading does not increase the win rate, but rather enhances strategic flexibility—provided the trader has the ability to manage this flexibility.
More alarmingly, the tradable nature of two-way trading can actually become a psychological burden in practice. Faced with the same market trend, traders easily oscillate between "going long or short," becoming paralyzed in their decision-making; or, after incurring losses, they rush to reverse their positions to "recover," leading to emotional trading. This indecisive and inconsistent strategy not only weakens the stability of the trading system but can also amplify drawdown risks.
Therefore, the advantage of two-way forex trading does not stem from the arbitrariness of operations or the freedom of directional choice, but from the investor's ability to maintain rationality and restraint during shifts between long and short positions, based on a solid understanding of the market, a clear trading plan, and strict execution discipline. Only in this way can the two-way mechanism truly transform into a sustainable profit-making tool, rather than a trap that exacerbates losses.

In the forex two-way investment market, mature forex investors should abandon various immature and disdainful behaviors prevalent in the financial field. These behaviors are essentially typical manifestations of market participants' immature mindsets.
In the forex and financial trading field as a whole, a hierarchy of disdain is prevalent. The most common manifestation is the antagonistic disdain between analytical schools of thought—fundamental analysts and technical analysts often contradict each other, each believing their own analytical system is more scientific and reasonable, while viewing the other's analytical logic as fundamentally flawed, thus forming a entrenched hierarchy of disdain. Simultaneously, disdain based on trading experience is also widespread. Experienced traders are prone to cognitive biases against novice traders, and some investors who achieve short-term trading profits may develop a blind sense of superiority, looking down on other traders, thus extending into a cascading hierarchy of disdain based on experience.
In fact, regardless of its form, this kind of hierarchy of disdain is a core manifestation of the immaturity of forex traders. Truly skilled traders with profound trading expertise and mature investment philosophies always maintain a calm and rational attitude towards various trading schools of thought and traders at different levels, clearly recognizing that different analytical methods and trading strategies each have their applicable scenarios and core advantages, and there is no absolute superiority or inferiority. Once traders become trapped in a hierarchy of disdain, they are prone to developing arrogance, falling into the "grassroots effect" and the trap of reinforced self-perception. This prevents them from objectively judging market trends and rationally examining the shortcomings of their own trading strategies, ultimately leading to a loss of competitiveness in the ever-changing forex market and their gradual elimination.
It is important to clarify that the core requirements for traders in the forex two-way investment market dynamically change depending on individual trading suitability, market volatility cycles, the characteristics of the trading instruments, and the structure of market participants. There is no single "optimal trading standard," and therefore, one should not use their own perceptions as a benchmark to look down on the trading choices and operating methods of other traders.
In the foreign exchange investment market, the only ones who deserve our vigilance but do not need our approval are those traders who lack trading logic in the long run, operate blindly, and continuously generate irrational losses in the market, effectively "transferring funds into the market." Mature forex investors should always maintain an open and inclusive trading mindset, objectively acknowledging their own limitations and shortcomings, while also respecting and recognizing the strengths and value of other traders. They should proactively accept different trading methods, techniques, and philosophies, and improve their own trading system through inclusiveness to achieve long-term, stable trading goals.



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+86 137 1158 0480
+86 137 1158 0480
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Mr. Z-X-N
China · Guangzhou