Having deep roots in the trading market for many years, I gradually shed the obsession with huge profits and short-term gambling that characterized my novice phase, and fully recognized the core essence of professional trading: trading is never a game of predicting market trends, but a systematic survival logic that prioritizes probabilities, risk control as a safety net, and disciplined execution. The market always lacks absolute certainty; price movements are never determined by personal will. All operations that attempt to precisely guess tops and bottoms or seek extreme single-shot gains are fundamentally driven by human greed and luck, and are the root causes of most traders’ losses.



The biggest difference between professional traders and retail traders is not in proficiency with technical indicators, but in the extreme divergence of cognition and execution ability. Beginners focus on profits, obsessing over the correctness of each trade and the daily rise and fall of their accounts; professional traders focus on systems, calmly accepting market uncertainty, and only engaging in opportunities within their understanding and rules. We never pursue profits every time; we adhere to the probability cycle of “small losses, small gains, big gains, and avoiding big losses,” understanding that the core profit logic of trading relies on the accumulation of multiple positive probability trades, covering stop-loss rates with risk-reward ratios, and using long-term compound interest to outperform short-term random market fluctuations. #美国5月CPI创三年新高 #美伊冲突升级
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