There was a time when I was also enthusiastic, making trading plans early and writing trading insights late; victory brought joy and madness, while defeat brought sorrow and confusion. I once made significant profits in a large directional market and couldn’t sleep for several days, and I also simmered slowly in warm water, sustaining considerable losses, feeling hesitant and fearful.
After experiencing peaks and troughs, basking in the sun, and witnessing the bright moon. Regardless of whether people gather or disperse, regardless of heights and distances, I am there, neither big nor small, and no one knows.
Seeing through human nature and uncovering the essence, there is not much superficiality to sway emotions. I slowly expand my own profits and quietly share many personal experiences in the futures world that few know about.
These stories have a beginning, but not necessarily an end. These stories occurred in the past, truly and profoundly, evoking many emotions, but these stories will also happen in the future, because human nature is difficult to change, and there is hardly anything new under the sun. The 80/20 rule existed in the past, is playing out now, and will continue to be relevant in the future.
I am a capital manager who can achieve stable profits, merely serving as the eyes for everyone, as I am deeply embedded in the core circle of futures investment; describing it as being at the forefront is not an exaggeration.
As long as everyone is interested in knowing certain things, I will do my best to share everything. As for whether what I say is true, those who have been in the circle know clearly; the wise are clear, and the pure are plain. This information is quite significant for investors who are struggling to grasp the essence within the circle.
Over the years, I've made money in the market, but I understand in my heart that it's all funds from ordinary investors. I cannot make any significant contributions, but I am willing to share my years of experience and insights with investors as a form of return.
Hope is good, but futures investment cannot be thoroughly understood in just one or two days. My suggestion is to not invest any money at first. If you truly want to excel in futures investment, you need to patiently do your homework before entering; the best way is to have a good mentor guide you, helping you to learn and improve quickly, which can save you four to five years of exploration time.
First, do not invest a single penny. Because newcomers are too unfamiliar with this place, any slight unfamiliarity or oversight may result in losses, and even more so, it may lead to emotional fluctuations, causing even greater losses.
Preventing large-scale single losses and avoiding multiple consecutive small losses is an important aspect of risk control in futures investment. Secondly, feel and understand. You can open a simulated account to familiarize yourself with the various environments and mindsets of futures trading while operating through the simulated account. This is a process that requires time. This process can help you gradually become less unfamiliar with many aspects of futures, laying a good foundation for future trading.
Again. Confirm your basic operational strategy and make a very small exploratory investment, testing the waters. From the perspective of your personal investment strategy, unfamiliarity means risk; therefore, making exploratory investments that do not affect the overall situation in the face of unclear risks is a wise move.
There are many ways to profit, but only long-term, stable, and reasonably ideal profit models count as genuine.
If this characteristic is not reflected, profits and losses will alternate, sometimes peaking and sometimes dipping, ultimately resulting in little benefit. After clarifying this concept, I can recall many successful investors I have a slight understanding of. They have different styles: some profit from technical indicators (good psychological quality, long-term persistence), some profit from intuition (excellent psychological quality, extraordinary talent), some profit from macroeconomic strategic thinking (good psychological quality, extremely strong patience), and some profit from being cautious (average psychological quality, but their timid nature prompts them to cut losses decisively).
All of the above have their own characteristics and have withstood the long-term test of the market; at least so far, they have been relatively successful. The methods of making profits vary; you need to conduct a self-analysis first, determine what type of person you are, what style of work you are inclined to do, and develop a trading model that suits you.
Perhaps it's not suitable for others, but it is for you. What is suitable is the most reasonable and the best. If what I said is inappropriate, please be understanding.
I have seen people make quick profits; electric cars really turned into Mercedes, but ultimately they lost quickly as well; it's not surprising for a Mercedes to revert back to an electric car. I don't particularly like the empty joy of paper wealth; my own results are not the best, but my overall style is relatively stable.
These days, I am preparing for the imminent launch of an incredible trading plan!!!
Comment 168, get on board!!!
Impermanence brings impermanence brings impermanence!!!
Important things should be said three times!!!