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Profits are shared by half (50%), and losses are shared by a quarter (25%).
* Potential clients can access detailed position reports, which span over several years and involve tens of millions of dollars.
All the problems in forex short-term trading,
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All the troubles in forex long-term investment,
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All the psychological doubts in forex investment,
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In forex trading, long-term investment is the true path to steady wealth growth. The vast majority of investors who achieve consistent profitability follow a medium- to long-term investment strategy; in contrast, those who achieve long-term success through short-term trading are extremely rare.
While short-term trading may seem exciting and offers quick returns, it hides an extremely high failure rate. Occasionally, successful short-term trades are widely publicized, but the large number of retail investors who silently suffer losses are rarely mentioned. Compared to institutional investors with substantial capital and advanced quantitative algorithms, ordinary retail forex traders are inherently disadvantaged in terms of information access, execution speed, and risk control, making it difficult to succeed in high-frequency, short-cycle trading.
Short-term trading demands extremely high comprehensive qualities from traders: not only must they possess an extremely decisive personality, keen market intuition, and rapid reaction capabilities, but they must also be able to make accurate judgments in a very short time. The margin for error is extremely limited; even slight hesitation or misjudgment can lead to a reversal and losses.
In contrast, medium- to long-term investments place greater emphasis on logical support and trend judgment, especially in the selection of strong currency pairs, which often offer greater room for error and a higher success rate. By building positions in batches during periods of low valuation and high cost-effectiveness, investors can effectively diversify risk, optimize holding costs, and thus improve the overall stability and sustainability of their trading.
Although medium- to long-term investments yield results more slowly, their returns are built on solid market logic and systematic strategies, better aligning with the risk tolerance and money management goals of most forex investors. Therefore, if account security and long-term profitability are the primary considerations, medium- to long-term investments are undoubtedly a more rational and feasible choice.
In the two-way forex market, traders' understanding of trading principles varies in depth and dimension at different trading stages. Only when traders achieve relatively stable profitability and can rationally define their profit range and abandon the obsession with exorbitant profits will their trading philosophy and logic gradually mature and stabilize.
Those traders who achieve long-term success in the forex market have all, without exception, experienced the trials and tribulations of trading failures and the tempering of rebirth. They deeply understand the torment and cost of groping alone in the market's fog. Therefore, they are often willing to share their years of accumulated trading experience and core insights without reservation with newcomers to the market, helping them avoid common pitfalls, shorten their trading growth cycle, and reduce unnecessary trial-and-error costs.
In forex trading practice, traders do not need to be overly fixated on accurately predicting future market movements. Short-term market movements are highly random and uncertain. Rather than predicting trends, the core focus should be on establishing an efficient system for dealing with the current market conditions. The key lies in constructing scientific and rigorous trading rules and strictly adhering to them, always operating according to a pre-set trading plan, and using the objectivity of the rules to capture reasonable profit opportunities in the market, rather than relying on subjective judgment and blind trading.
There is no absolutely perfect trading method in the forex market. The core task for traders is to find a trading system that suits their trading habits and risk tolerance, enabling long-term stable profits, and then refine and consistently adhere to it. It's important to understand that losses and profits are equally integral parts of forex trading. Losses cannot be completely avoided, but they can be effectively controlled through scientific risk management. This requires traders to adhere to strict stop-loss principles, avoid holding losing positions, and always practice the trading logic of "small losses, big profits," achieving a positive balance between risk and return.
Profitability in forex trading does not stem from a high volume of frequent trades. Instead, traders need to slow down their trading pace, maintain sufficient patience to wait for high-quality trading signals, discard meaningless and ineffective trades, and focus on capturing high-probability opportunities. Profits will naturally materialize as the quality of trades improves.
The most difficult hurdle to overcome in forex trading is not refining trading techniques, but rather overcoming human weaknesses. Greed, fear, impulsiveness, and obsession are the real obstacles to long-term profitability. Only by actively correcting cognitive biases, restraining behavior, and learning to adapt to market rules rather than trying to fight them can traders advance their trading abilities.
Essentially, forex trading is a combination of probability and rule execution. Traders shouldn't dwell on the gains and losses of individual trades, but rather focus on overall returns over the long term. As long as they consistently adhere to established trading rules and maintain a consistent trading logic, long-term profitability is inevitable.
The ultimate goal of forex trading is to achieve a state of profound understanding, a state of "selflessness." Truly enlightened traders trade with the natural flow of breathing, without excessive emotional fluctuations due to market volatility. They strictly follow trading rules, earning reasonable profits from the market. They possess both a stable and actionable trading logic and a clear understanding of human weaknesses with strong self-control.
In forex trading, short-term traders find it more difficult to achieve consistent profits compared to long-term investors.
While high-frequency trading may seem active, excessively high trading frequency within a year can accumulate huge spread costs, leaving little actual net profit after deducting transaction fees.
Furthermore, the forex market is highly random in the short term. Currency pair prices are affected by multiple factors, and fluctuations lack a clear direction, making short-term trading inherently a low-probability strategy.
Emotional management is also a major challenge for short-term traders: they are easily attracted by the rapid rise of short-term strong currencies and tend to buy at high prices. However, historical experience shows that such currency pairs that experience sharp short-term gains often face a high probability of correction or consolidation in the medium to long term.
If short-term traders cannot strictly adhere to established stop-loss discipline and trading plans, their risk of loss will increase significantly, ultimately leading to a deterioration in overall trading performance.
In the forex two-way investment market, the core reason why most investors suffer losses is that even with a wealth of trading theory and strategy knowledge, if they cannot translate it into consistent and standardized practical action, all theoretical reserves become worthless, amounting to nothing more than empty talk.
The core problem of investors' "knowing but not acting" lies firstly in the lack of systematic practical training. Most people remain at the level of theoretical understanding, without extensive targeted intensive training and execution experience in real trading scenarios. They cannot transform superficial knowledge into muscle memory-like practical ability, making it difficult to effectively connect theory and practice. Secondly, there is a vague understanding of trading operation standards. They fail to fully grasp the underlying logic and quantitative standards of core operational aspects such as the selection logic of forex trading targets, the judgment of entry timing, and the setting of stop-loss and take-profit orders. This results in a lack of clear guidance during operation and makes it difficult to form a habit of standardized execution.
This further highlights the necessity of practical training in forex trading. Forex trading skills cannot be acquired in a short time; they require hundreds or even thousands of simulated trades and real-world scenarios. Through repeated practice, review, and optimization, these skills are gradually honed and refined. It cannot be mastered quickly simply by learning theory.
The core significance of extensive practical experience lies in helping investors build operational trust in their own trading system. Only through long-term practical verification can investors firmly execute their trading strategies, avoiding deviations caused by doubt or hesitation in their actions. Without this trust, even a scientifically sound trading system will fail to achieve its intended effect due to inadequate execution, ultimately rendering the system ineffective and unable to support investors in mitigating risk and achieving profits.
In two-way forex trading, there is a fundamental difference between short-term traders who learn quickly and those who have undergone long-term systematic training.
While knowledge of forex trading can be acquired through learning, true practical skills can only be gradually improved through extensive, continuous, and targeted intensive training. From a knowledge perspective, short-term learning typically only allows traders to gain a basic understanding of market mechanisms and fundamental operations, insufficient to support the comprehensive judgment and execution abilities required for stable profits. Long-term training, on the other hand, focuses on refining skills and building practical capabilities—just like management, sales, and public speaking skills, trading ability is also "practiced," not simply "learned."
Analogous to top-level competitive sports in traditional societies, international Olympic athletes often undergo years of high-intensity, repetitive training, practicing individual technical movements tens or even hundreds of thousands of times to develop stable muscle memory and conditioned reflexes. The same applies to forex trading. Key trading actions such as stop-loss execution, capital allocation, and position control also require thousands upon thousands of deliberate practices to internalize into automated, highly efficient operating habits. Without this intensive training, traders are highly susceptible to repeating mistakes in real market environments, falling into the trap of emotional or irrational decision-making.
In this process, error-correction training is particularly crucial. By continuously identifying and correcting poor trading behaviors during intensive training, while simultaneously reinforcing correct operating patterns, traders can effectively eliminate habitual errors and solidify efficient strategies. Ultimately, through extensive repetitive training and systematic error correction, traders can not only significantly reduce their operational error rate but also gradually establish disciplined and logically clear trading habits, thus truly achieving the leap from "theoretical knowledge" to "unity of knowledge and action," avoiding the predicament of having only theoretical knowledge but being unable to consistently execute it.
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