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Forex multi-account manager Z-X-N
Accepts global forex account operation, investment, and trading
Assists family office investment and autonomous management




The complexity of foreign exchange investment trading lies in that it not only tests investors' professional knowledge, but also tests their ability to control their emotions.
During the trading process, foreign exchange traders who are overly happy about making money are often in great pain when facing losses. This huge emotional gap is essentially a manifestation of the weakness of human nature that has not been overcome. Although the generation of emotions is somewhat spontaneous, for investors who pursue long-term stable profits, it is urgent to cultivate their character and control their emotions.
The joy of foreign exchange traders when they make profits will turn into intense pain when they lose money, which will in turn give rise to the urge to recover their investment. This impulse prompts investors to make wrong decisions such as holding on to losses and trading frequently, which leads to further losses. The root cause of investors' repeated mistakes is that they cannot bear the pain brought by losses. Therefore, restraining the excitement when making profits and treating each transaction with a calm mind is the key to foreign exchange investment traders' breakthroughs. From the mental performance of investors when they make profits, it can be judged whether they have the potential to obtain high returns in the foreign exchange market. In addition, those investors who frequently show off their trading results are most likely to be in a state of continuous loss, seeking psychological comfort by showing off to cover up the fact of trading failure.

In foreign exchange investment and trading, traders often have an illusion that they are being targeted by the market.
Many traders feel that the foreign exchange market seems to always be against them, as if it is always against them. They often encounter such a situation: the price falls as soon as they buy, and rises as soon as they sell. This experience undoubtedly brings great pressure to traders.
However, it is not the market that really opposes traders, but the strong desire of traders to "make money". This desire makes traders unable to accept the reverse fluctuation of market conditions. This is actually the true psychology of most traders, but few people will reflect on the truth behind it.
Traders need to reduce this unrealistic desire and learn to wait patiently for opportunities. When the market retreats, floating losses can be accepted; when the market continues, floating profits can be accepted. Once traders have the expectation of "must make money", they cannot tolerate floating losses, and then they will feel that the market is always against them.
In fact, the foreign exchange market is not against traders. What is really against them is the desire of traders to "must make money". It is this strong desire that makes traders feel stressed, not the market itself. If traders can abandon this desire of "must make money", they can accept random results, the feeling of being targeted by the market will disappear, and the investment process will become easier and no longer have huge pressure.
Therefore, the enemy of traders is not the market, but the strong desire of "must make money".

In foreign exchange investment transactions, those traders who are still setting profit targets often lack in-depth understanding of the industry, or even have not yet started.
Many traders will make detailed money-making plans. For example, assuming that they can earn 2% every day, how much can they earn after compounding for a year? Assuming that you can earn 5% per week, how much can you earn after compounding for a year? Assuming that you can earn 15% per month, how much can you earn after a year? However, these seemingly beautiful plans often ignore the uncertainty and risks of the market.
If traders make a detailed money-making plan, their mentality will often deteriorate once they encounter losses. They will become eager for success and cannot tolerate losses. Once they suffer consecutive losses, the gambling nature of traders will increase. Therefore, those traders who make money-making plans often end up losing money, without exception.
Really mature and successful foreign exchange investment traders do not make money-making plans. They understand that the only thing they can really control is the extent of their losses. Setting loss expectations is what they can control. Those traders who have made loss plans often have a very good mentality, are not eager for success, and are very patient.
In addition, many investment managers often promise to achieve a certain annual profit figure when investing on behalf of others. This promise of future market profits that have not yet occurred is anti-scientific. In fact, the total floating profit of the foreign exchange market is only 20% throughout the year, but traders have made a 50% profit plan, which is not only embarrassing themselves, but also deceiving customers.

The false belief of "short-term wealth" in the field of foreign exchange investment is essentially the product of the industry's interest chain and investors' cognitive game.
For foreign exchange trading stakeholders (such as brokers, shouting teams, etc.), maintaining the "wealth creation myth" is the core means of making profits - only by making investors believe that they can make a lot of money in the short term can they attract them to continue to deposit funds and trade frequently, thereby making profits through fees, spreads, etc.
This interest logic has spawned a systematic deception mechanism. Fabricating the story of "30,000 US dollars turning into 300 million US dollars" seems absurd, but it can accurately screen out the target group: those investors who are unwilling to learn professional knowledge and are eager to get rich overnight. This group of people lacks risk awareness and is easily coerced by high-yield promises, becoming the "source of profit" for the stakeholders. The cruel reality is that the more investors lack cognitive ability, the more likely they are to believe that they can surpass professionals. This illusion of "survivor bias" makes them sink deeper and deeper into the edge of loss.
From the perspective of the industry ecology, the prevalence of this false belief is the sadness of the foreign exchange trading community. It not only distorts the values of investors, but also puts the industry into the dilemma of "bad money driving out good money" - rational investors gradually leave the market, while novices attracted by the myth of getting rich quickly continue to pour in, forming a vicious cycle of "loss-reinvestment", and eventually becoming a cash machine for the interested parties.

In the world of foreign exchange investment and trading, trading itself is not only a financial operation, but also a kind of training and practice for investors themselves.
For foreign exchange investment traders, to achieve long-term and stable profits, they must undergo a series of profound inner changes. They need to be trained to no longer care about gains and losses, abandon unrealistic fantasies, and even reach a state of transcendence. This process may make traders physically and mentally exhausted, but only when they completely let go of their emotions and achieve inner transformation can they truly be reborn.
As long as foreign exchange traders still have concerns about costs, entanglements with profits and losses, fear of missing out or being stuck, and even regard account funds as actual wealth, it will be difficult to succeed in trading. Only by treating foreign exchange investment trading as a game can foreign exchange investment traders remain calm and rational in trading decisions, and buy when they should buy, sell when they should sell, and wait when they should wait.
Therefore, foreign exchange investment traders with relatively affluent economic conditions and no shortage of money tend to be more likely to do a good job of trading, while those traders who pay too much attention to funds and profits and losses often find it difficult to succeed. This may be a certain "unfairness" of the market.




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