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All the problems in forex short-term trading,
Have answers here!
All the troubles in forex long-term investment,
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All the psychological doubts in forex investment,
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In the field of two-way forex trading, ordinary traders need to establish a rational understanding and avoid harboring a speculative mentality of getting rich overnight.
In fact, forex trading has never been a convenient path to wealth, nor is it an effective way for low-income groups to escape poverty and achieve upward social mobility. The forex market is inherently characterized by significant capital and information asymmetry. Often, institutions or individuals with strong financial resources dominate market trends, including speculators who manipulate the market and engage in malicious speculation for profit. Ordinary retail forex traders are naturally at a disadvantage in such a market environment.
Many retail forex traders are often overconfident, believing they possess strong judgment and high intelligence, blindly believing they can profit through forex trading, while ignoring the high volatility and high risk of the forex market. Ultimately, they often fall into the trap of "being too clever for their own good," finding it difficult to achieve sustained profits or even break even in the complex and volatile forex market.
Furthermore, some forex commentators lack professionalism and a sense of responsibility. Their inappropriate remarks and biased interpretations not only mislead ordinary traders' investment judgments but may also trigger irrational trading, thus exacerbating investment losses.
It is worth noting that successful forex traders do not need to actively discourage others from entering this field. Those with genuine trading talent, risk tolerance, and professional expertise will enter the market rationally without needing persuasion. Those lacking the necessary skills and blindly following the crowd, even after repeated dissuasion, will find it difficult to relinquish their speculative obsession and may ultimately suffer losses due to reckless trading.

In two-way forex trading, even experienced professional traders and fund managers find it difficult to achieve significant profits through short-term trading.
In fact, there are no truly "short-term trading masters" in the forex market—those so-called masters, often packaged as experts, are often merely products of marketing tactics, their purpose being precisely to maintain retail investors' enthusiasm for short-term trading. Once retail investors largely withdraw from short-term trading, market liquidity will shrink significantly, potentially even stagnating. Therefore, short-term trading inherently lacks a sustainable profit-making logic.
For ordinary forex investors, short-term trading is particularly unfeasible. Even professionals struggle to consistently outperform the market; ordinary investors lack the realistic foundation to become wealthy through short-term trading. The so-called "million-dollar monthly income" trading logs or "one-trade-per-day" legends circulating in the market are often manifestations of survivorship bias: people only see success stories, ignoring the fact that many losers have been eliminated by the market. These "success stories" are often deliberately pushed and carefully crafted illusions by trading platform algorithms to attract users to continuously participate in high-frequency trading.
Ordinary investors generally lack the necessary conditions for short-term trading: precise timing, stable psychological qualities, keen market intuition, and crucial information advantage. In reality, most people need to balance work, family, and daily chores, lacking sufficient time for monitoring and reviewing trades, and finding it difficult to strictly adhere to stop-loss discipline. They are more easily driven by emotions, falling into the trap of chasing highs and lows. In comparison, long-term investing is a more stable and rational choice. It's worth noting that many professional fund managers have mediocre long-term performance, even worse than ordinary investors who adhere to simple strategies.
True profits should be built on certainty, not on chance. Long-term investing effectively smooths out cost fluctuations, reduces emotional interference, and achieves the compounding effect of "slowly earning, steadily earning, and consistently earning." Ordinary forex investors should completely abandon the fantasy of "getting rich quick"—lacking both informational advantage and operational skills, blindly chasing short-term gains will only increase the risk of losses. The correct path is to accumulate wealth through the compounding effect and time, and ensure a stable off-exchange cash flow as support, in order to achieve long-term success in the forex market.

In the forex market, most investors maintain a calm trading mindset when operating with light positions, without excessive worry about the impact of short-term market fluctuations.
Long-term stable profits in forex trading are essentially inseparable from this logic of accumulating profits gradually with light positions. Conversely, overly heavy positions often hinder substantial profits and can even distort trading decisions due to position pressure.
In forex trading, position management and investor psychology are highly intertwined. When operating with light positions, investors are generally more likely to achieve positive returns. The core reason is that investors are less concerned about the profit or loss of a single trade, maintaining a calm and rational mindset. They are free from the fear of losses and the impatience of profits, allowing them to strictly adhere to their pre-set trading strategies.
Conversely, in scenarios involving heavily leveraged trading, investors' decisions are often driven by greed. They excessively pursue short-term high returns while ignoring potential market risks. Once the market reverses, they are often unable to withstand the floating losses from their positions, leading to irrational actions such as panicked closing of positions or adding to losing positions against the trend, ultimately resulting in expanded losses.
For mature forex traders, the ultimate goal is not absolute detachment or celibacy, but rather cultivating an observer's perspective. This involves clearly understanding one's own trading obsessions and emotional fluctuations, letting go of obsessions when they arise, transcending self-awareness, and rejecting greed. By maintaining a rational and neutral mindset in the face of market fluctuations, they can achieve long-term, stable trading goals.

In two-way forex trading, short-term trading is an extremely mentally taxing approach for forex investors.
Due to high trading frequency and short holding periods, price fluctuations can easily trigger intense emotional swings—sudden market changes often cause adrenaline spikes, causing traders to oscillate between excitement and fear. Over time, this not only depletes mental energy but also poses a potential threat to physical health.
Short-term trading requires investors to constantly monitor the market, maintaining a high level of sensitivity to market liquidity, technical indicators, news events, and even global macroeconomic data. This sustained high-intensity focus often leads to a state of chronic tension, easily causing anxiety, insomnia, and even decision fatigue. Once emotions dominate trading behavior, it is easy to fall into a vicious cycle of chasing highs and lows, frequent stop-loss orders, or overtrading, ultimately eroding account funds.
For the vast majority of retail investors, it is not advisable to venture into short-term trading without systematically learning trading logic, deeply experiencing market rhythms, and continuously reflecting on and summarizing trading behavior. Compared to institutional investors, retail investors typically lack professional tools, real-time information support, and a rigorous risk management system. Under the dual pressure of information asymmetry and psychological disadvantage, the success rate of short-term trading is generally low. Therefore, it is recommended that ordinary investors prioritize solidifying their fundamental knowledge, starting with simulated trading or medium- to long-term strategies, gradually cultivating discipline and market awareness. Only after developing a stable profit model and sound psychological qualities should they cautiously consider participating in short-term trading.

In the field of two-way forex trading, short-term trading strategies consistently face extremely high profit thresholds. This phenomenon has become a common consensus in the global forex market. The vast majority of investors practicing short-term trading, even those with some market knowledge and operational experience, ultimately find it difficult to escape the predicament of losses.
Short-term trading itself places extremely high demands on investors' market judgment, operational speed, and psychological control. However, the forex market is influenced by multiple factors such as the global macroeconomy, geopolitics, and monetary policy, resulting in highly random and sudden fluctuations. Short-term market trends are difficult to predict accurately, which fundamentally determines the high risk of short-term trading.
From the long-term operating patterns of the foreign exchange market, core trading opportunities are not always present. Typically, only one or two core market movements with clear trends, sustainability, and operability occur annually. These core market movements often coincide with the release of major policies, the release of economic data, or the unfolding of global events. The market direction is clear, and the volatility is ample. If investors can accurately grasp the entry and exit points of these market movements and reasonably control position risk, they can often achieve considerable investment profits. However, most of the time, the foreign exchange market is in a consolidation phase lacking clear market guidance. During this period, the market's fluctuation range is narrow, and the trend is weak, making it difficult to form stable profit margins.
However, many investors are eager to obtain short-term gains during consolidation periods, blindly engaging in short-term trading, attempting to profit from price differences through frequent buying and selling. Even if they can capture small, sporadic profits in the short term, in the long run, multiple factors such as accumulated transaction costs, misjudgments of market trends, and inappropriate stop-loss settings will lead to overall losses. The cumulative impact of transaction costs is particularly significant. While the spreads and fees in short-term forex trading may seem small per transaction, with frequent trading, these costs accumulate, gradually eroding meager profits and even leading to losses.
Given this characteristic of the forex market, we advise investors to avoid short-term trading as much as possible. From a practical perspective, short-term trading requires investors to monitor the market for extended periods daily, closely observing every short-term price fluctuation. This not only consumes a significant amount of time and energy, severely impacting normal work and life rhythms, but also poses a potential and ongoing threat to investors' health. Prolonged sitting while monitoring the market can easily lead to skeletal problems such as lumbar disc herniation and cervical strain. Furthermore, the profit pressure and loss anxiety brought about by market fluctuations can cause a series of psychological and physiological problems, including insomnia, mood disorders, and difficulty concentrating, which are detrimental to long-term investment and life.
Ultimately, the core of forex investment and trading lies in "following the trend," rather than blindly gambling. The foreign exchange market spends most of its time in a state of fluctuation without clear trading value. Engaging in short-term trading during this period is essentially searching for certainty amidst uncertainty, which is tantamount to blind gambling and often results in losses. For most ordinary investors, abandoning short-term trading and patiently waiting for core market trends is a more stable and sustainable approach to forex investment.



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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