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In the forex market, the profit-driven desire of most investors often masks their underlying gambler's nature. This cognitive bias is the core reason why many retail investors fall into trading traps.
The forex market is not a "wishing well" for investors. There is no possibility of achieving profit simply by tossing a coin, nor is it a value haven where investors are guaranteed a corresponding return after investing time, effort, and capital. Essentially, it is a zero-sum or even negative-sum speculative market. Once investors are dominated by greed and fear, their trading behavior will completely fall into a typical gambler's mentality, ultimately deviating from the core logic of rational trading.
In traditional understanding, people generally link trading behavior directly to profit goals, believing that the core purpose of trading is to make money, and making money is to improve the quality of life. However, this understanding often becomes an excuse for investors to cover up their gambling nature, ignoring the essential law of forex trading as a speculative market—its zero-sum or even negative-sum market attribute determines that the acquisition of profits does not depend on simple cost investment, but is based on scientific analysis, rational decision-making, and strict execution.
In reality, many forex investors open accounts not based on a deep understanding of the market or a reserve of professional knowledge, but rather out of envy and jealousy of others' profitable cases. Driven by a "let's try it out" mentality and greed, they blindly enter the market, equating forex trading with a speculative game of "making money by luck," completely ignoring the risks and patterns behind market fluctuations.
In actual trading, these investors exhibit highly gambling-like behavior: when profitable, they blindly exaggerate their abilities, attributing accidental profits to their superior trading skills, thus fueling the impulse to overtrade; when losing, they fall into two extremes: either driven by fear, they engage in irrational "run for the kill" closing behavior, missing reasonable stop-loss and take-profit rhythms; or they stubbornly hold onto losses, refusing to admit mistakes, attributing losses to bad luck, abnormal market fluctuations, or targeted suppression by major funds, never willing to face the errors in their own trading decisions. In stark contrast, investors who genuinely love forex trading, actively and systematically learn forex trading theory, master technical and fundamental analysis methods, and maintain rational judgment, make objective decisions, and strictly execute trading plans are extremely rare in the market.
Looking at the overall structure of the forex market, a large number of retail investors participate with a "let's try it out" or "what if I make a profit" mentality, lacking professional trading systems and risk management capabilities. Their trading behavior is always dominated by gambling, and the market naturally tilts towards major institutions with advantages in capital, technology, and information. The scattered losses of retail investors eventually accumulate into the large-scale profits of major institutions.
Most investors are ensnared by greed, ignorance, a fascination with luck, and a desire for high-risk, high-reward trades, repeatedly engaging in high-risk ventures and gradually falling into the trap of trading addiction. They often regret their actions after continuous losses. However, it is worth noting that the market always leaves room for investors to awaken and change. What is truly terrifying is not temporary losses, but becoming unable to extricate oneself from gambling-like trading, ultimately losing even the opportunity for reflection and regret. For forex investors, only by acknowledging their inherent gambling nature and clearly recognizing the speculative nature and risk characteristics of the forex market can they gradually escape trading predicaments and return to the core of rational trading. The key lies in abandoning wishful thinking, proactively building a trading system suitable for oneself, and finding trading methods that match one's risk tolerance and trading habits. Only in this way can long-term, stable trading be achieved in the volatile forex market.
In the field of two-way forex trading, the root cause of traders' failures often traces back to the core bottleneck of capital constraints. Scarcity of funds is not merely a symptom, but a fundamental obstacle restricting trading performance.
If a trader possesses genuine professional skills, their capital accumulation should reflect this; if a trader has achieved success in other industries, it indicates they are not ordinary. However, the reality is that the vast majority of forex traders fall into the category of ordinary investors, a status that directly determines their disadvantaged position in the trading ecosystem.
Ordinary forex traders often struggle to access high-quality market information, professional analytical tools, institutional trading resources, and quality investment opportunities. This lack of access creates a vicious cycle, hindering their trading performance. More critically, ordinary traders often suffer from weak emotional management, personality traits that impede trading decisions, and a limited cognitive level. These psychological and cognitive deficiencies constitute the most severe internal obstacles in forex investment. Forex trading is inherently a highly specialized financial activity, requiring solid technical analysis skills, risk management literacy, money management strategies, and market insight. Ambitious trading, time investment, or prolonged monitoring are insufficient for sustained profitability; building practical professional skills is the cornerstone of trading success.
From a realistic perspective, the probability of ordinary forex traders achieving upward social mobility through trading is extremely low. A combination of factors—lack of capital, incomplete knowledge, limited understanding, insufficient mental maturity, and limited resource channels—determines that the vast majority of ordinary traders cannot achieve stable profits in the forex market. However, this does not mean that ordinary traders are destined to remain at the bottom forever. Traders who can overcome unrealistic ambitions, mental inertia, and lax behavior; objectively assess their own capabilities; rationally formulate trading decisions; and diligently execute their trading plans still have the potential to overcome difficulties. For forex traders, poverty itself is not an absolute obstacle; the key lies in how they perceive poverty—viewing it as a driving force for self-improvement rather than an obstacle to decline. Only then can they find a glimmer of hope on the challenging path of forex trading.
In the field of two-way forex trading, for traders with limited risk tolerance—that is, those who "can afford to win but cannot afford to lose"—it is crucial to avoid investing family savings in the trading market as a gamble. Such funds are directly linked to the family's basic living security; losses due to the volatility of the forex market will directly impact the family's normal operations.
The core purpose of forex traders participating in two-way investment should be to improve family wealth and quality of life through reasonable and compliant trading operations, not to allow trading risks to negatively impact family life. If forex trading fails to bring positive benefits to life and may instead drag traders into financial difficulties due to unknown market risks (such as sharp exchange rate fluctuations, policy changes, and liquidity risks), or if traders themselves have a risk deficiency of "being able to win but not afford to lose," they should decisively abandon greed and blind, reckless speculation, and adhere to the bottom line of rational investment.
For forex traders, it's better to return to rationality and cultivate sound trading logic than to lose direction and waste capital and energy in high-risk speculation. It's better to move steadily forward in the ordinary course of trading and life, transforming every trading effort and wealth accumulation into a force supporting family warmth and safeguarding peace of life. Ordinary life may lack the short-term fluctuations of speculative profits, but it offers the most solid and genuine happiness. Nurturing family and cherishing loved ones is a true essence of life that transcends trading itself and is worth upholding. This is also the core premise that forex investment should always adhere to—trading serves life, not supersedes it.
In the field of two-way forex investment, the negative impact of trading activities on investors' physical and mental health has become an industry phenomenon that cannot be ignored.
The emotional fluctuations, psychological stress, and physiological damage caused by forex trading have systemic characteristics. From the perspective of traditional Chinese medicine, anger injures the liver, joy injures the heart, worry injures the lungs, overthinking injures the spleen, and fear injures the kidneys. Being in a trading state for a long time will continuously deplete one's vital energy and spirit.
The harms of forex trading are widespread. Whether a trader is an occasional retail investor or a professional trader, prolonged immersion in trading activities can significantly damage their physical and mental health. The cost goes far beyond financial losses; the psychological burden is equally heavy. Most ordinary forex traders make trading decisions driven by desire, experiencing a huge psychological letdown alongside financial losses, resulting in a multiplier effect of physical and mental harm.
Psychological problems arising from trading are mainly manifested in the frequent alternation of mental activity and emotional fluctuations. During trading, continuous market analysis, opportunity observation, and order placement decisions are required. After placing an order, it's easy to develop fantasies of profit; profits lead to euphoria, while losses result in regret and panic. These emotional fluctuations are frequent and unpredictable. Long-term accumulated psychological pressure can easily induce mental disorders such as anxiety and depression.
The physical damage is equally significant. Trading habits such as staying up all night staring at the market and prolonged sitting can easily lead to insomnia, cervical spondylosis, vision loss, obesity, and other health problems. Prolonged psychological stress can trigger neuroendocrine system disorders, activate the sympathetic nervous system, leading to inflammatory responses and microvascular dysfunction, significantly increasing the risk of cardiovascular disease. Some traders may even experience acute events such as stroke or myocardial infarction due to emotional impulses, potentially resulting in sudden death in extreme cases.
In the forex two-way investment market, professional traders generally agree that investors should resolutely abandon passive copy trading models such as following community trading signals or expert guidance. Such trading behaviors often harbor high investment risks and do not conform to the professional logic and core principles of forex trading.
In actual trading scenarios, many forex investors are lured into copy trading through referrals from acquaintances or online advertisements. This type of inducement is often accompanied by a false professional facade—some individuals claiming to be forex trading experts often present a polished image and highly persuasive rhetoric, deliberately showcasing embellished trading performance records and fabricated screenshots of client praise. They use enticing rhetoric about potential profits or deliberately exaggerate market volatility risks, implying that only by following their trades can investors mitigate risk, gradually leading investors to develop the irrational belief that they can become their mentor and quickly earn high returns.
From the perspective of the nature of forex trading, the profit-seeking mentality of investors is the core driving force behind their participation. Pursuing reasonable returns is understandable, but it is crucial to adhere to compliant trading and rational investment principles. It's essential to understand that there is no "free lunch" in the forex market, nor are there any shortcuts to guaranteed profits. While copy trading may seem to lower the operational threshold and shorten the profit cycle, it is actually a trap that harbors the risk of huge losses. Even if there are short-term cases of profit from copy trading, these are merely typical examples of survivorship bias. From a long-term trading perspective, if investors do not exit irrational copy trading in time, they will inevitably face losses and exit the market.
It is alarming that a large number of self-proclaimed "trading gurus" on online platforms engage in activities primarily characterized by boasting of high trading profits and frequent interactions with retail investors to gain attention. These individuals typically lack genuine forex trading expertise and compliant trading qualifications. Their frequent interactions and profit boasts often conceal clear marketing inducements or profit-driven motives. Many novice forex traders, lacking professional market judgment and risk identification abilities, are easily misled into believing these individuals as "industry gurus," blindly following their trading recommendations, ultimately resulting in substantial financial losses while still clinging to the hope of making a profit.
From the perspective of the professional nature of forex trading, establishing correct trading concepts is a prerequisite for long-term, stable trading. The core issue is to proactively distance oneself from so-called "trading gurus" with strong marketing motives and unclear qualifications, and resolutely refuse to believe exaggerated profit promises and extravagant profit claims. Foreign exchange trading, as a highly specialized financial investment activity, demands exceptional financial planning skills, market awareness, emotional control, technical analysis abilities, and risk tolerance from participants. Without meeting market trading standards, even relying on others for guidance will not guarantee long-term profitability. However, as investors gradually improve their overall trading skills and establish a sound trading system, they can achieve reasonable profits through professional judgment without depending on so-called "gurus."
Furthermore, forex investors must understand that the core responsibility for trading lies with themselves. Throughout the entire investment and trading process, they must always adhere to their own judgment. Even when participating in professional learning or exchanges, they should maintain independent thinking, proactively implement trading decisions and risk management measures, firmly grasp the initiative in their own hands, and resolutely avoid irrational behavior such as blindly relying on others or readily accepting external trading signals.
Ultimately, the key to long-term profitability for forex investors lies in the continuous improvement of their professional skills. Only by firmly believing in themselves, continuously refining their trading techniques, perfecting their trading system, and gradually growing into professional traders with independent trading capabilities, becoming their own "trading guru," can they achieve steady development in the volatile two-way forex market and truly avoid the various risks brought about by irrational copy trading.
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+86 137 1158 0480
+86 137 1158 0480
+86 137 1158 0480
z.x.n@139.com
Mr. Z-X-N
China · Guangzhou