The point exactly, wish forex was easy as posting a thread or reply here life would be much better. I believe you have to take full advantage of all avenue of the market before you succeed well.You are sounding just like a newbie. If Forex was that easy, we'll all be very rich by now. Is something not telling you deep inside that you are getting it all wrong? I bet that's why you decided to create this thread because you know deep down, it is not a that easy. You need to learn a good strategy. Here is a post I found recently, might be helpful: https://nogold.com/forex-trading-strategies-for-beginner/
Whether or not many agree or are against demo trading, it doesn't change these two facts;
- Demo trade does help a trader in some way
- It's not the same with live trading
It's a good advise indeed, one you should never forget. This is especially important for newbies, you can't just expect to jump in and not get some bad results.I will never forget what a friend told me from the onset; he said: "Hey man remember to start small and don't rush or be too hasty". Those words have guided me over the years.
Exactly, there is no Holy Grail in the market. You might get fortunate sometimes, true, but you should not expect it to happen all the time.They get greedy and are not patient
For 5 years? When he expect to move to live account? I think he really got some mental issues at least skewed perception of trading risks. He should be then too aggressive or too conservative in trading when his account hit losses.I have a buddy with a live futures account, and has been on demo mode for about 5 years. I think in that time he has taken 6 trades total, all intraday, not swings or long-term. Almost every month he is "trying out" some new indicator, tool, signal service, or whatever.
This is a prime example of too much demo mode actually causing mental issues, well beyond the necessity of understanding how your platform works, and the particulars of the instruments one wishes to trade. At this point, I suggest his demo mode instilled habits and the psychological issues it has caused, are irreversible, or at best, have zero impact for creating a long-term successful trading income should he ever begin pulling the trigger for real.
I've played tennis for 20 years without ever making a dime or expecting to. Does that mean I must have mental issues? After all, professionals make money at this so that must be the only reason to do it right?For 5 years? When he expect to move to live account? I think he really got some mental issues at least skewed perception of trading risks. He should be then too aggressive or too conservative in trading when his account hit losses.