Does trading really require innate talent?

It must be admitted that trading does require some talent, including quick judgment, a calm psychological quality, high market sensitivity, talent in numbers and logic, etc. These talents can help you navigate the market more steadily and quickly, but they are not decisive factors.

A common dilemma for many people is that with limited capital, they want to make money, so they pursue quick high profits, right? Otherwise, how can they accumulate capital?

In my view, this is the 'gambling mentality,' putting in 1 and hoping to get a return of 10. Once you taste this sweetness, who wants to work hard? Who wants to invest diligently?

Capital is capital, and profit is profit; these are completely different lines and cannot be generalized. If you want to expand your capital, then save money through work or gradually accumulate it through compound interest. If you want to accumulate capital through speculation, what you will get in return is repeated liquidation, just like how you can never become a winner at the gambling table.

Back to the topic of trading talent, most of us who trade have no special talent; we all started learning from scratch. No one is born with the ability to read the market, and we shouldn't blindly trust our 'intuition.' Even very talented traders, like Soros and Xu Xiang, need a lot of practical experience to hone their market sense. Their intuition is also based on historical judgment.

Our ordinary traders' talents are certainly not as good as those trading giants. If they still need to practice diligently, what reason do we have not to? This includes psychological quality and emotion management, which can also be stabilized through practice.

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