[FX Compound Interest Simulation] Visualizing Why Funds Don't Increase—Capital Design Tool Released to Verify Yield, Monthly Profit, and Compounding Effects
PhoenixConnect Co., Ltd. has released an 'FX Compound Interest Simulation' tool that visualizes capital growth curves based on yield and compounding frequency, helping traders move from intuition-based to data-driven strategies.
📋 Article Processing Timeline
- 📰 Published: March 31, 2026 at 19:00
- 🔍 Collected: April 1, 2026 at 13:39 (18h 39m after Published)
- 🤖 AI Analyzed: April 21, 2026 at 11:02 (477h 23m after Collected)
PhoenixConnect Co., Ltd. (Representative: Yasuyuki Takiuchi) has released the [FX Compound Interest Simulation] to solve challenges faced by experienced FX traders, such as 'win rates are not bad, but funds aren't increasing' and 'uncertainty about whether monthly profit targets are realistic.' By simply entering initial capital, yield, compounding frequency, and savings amount, this tool visualizes future capital trends and compound growth curves. It enables users to numerically verify whether lot management and monthly profit designs are appropriate, supporting the construction of reproducible capital growth strategies and moving away from asset management based on intuition.
■ Winning but not increasing—the cause is not the method
You've been trading for several years. Your entry precision has improved, and your win rate has stabilized. Yet, your funds aren't increasing as expected. If this sounds familiar, the problem is not your method. The biggest cause is operating with compound interest while your capital design remains vague.
■ Is 5% monthly profit realistic? Have you verified it first?
Many traders say they aim for '5% monthly profit' or '10% monthly profit.' However, have you ever accurately calculated how much your funds would increase if you maintained that yield for one year? The FX Compound Interest Simulation visualizes the future capital curve just by entering the monthly profit. You can instantly distinguish whether your goal is a 'wish' or a 'design.'
■ What you must check before increasing lots
'I'm doing well this month, so I'll increase my lot size.' This judgment is both a chance for accelerated compounding and a risk for expanded drawdowns. In the simulation, by changing the yield and compounding frequency, you can also check the future if you push too hard. Seeing the capital curve in advance prevents decisions based on emotion.
■ Compounding can be a weapon or a lethal instrument
Compounding accelerates capital growth if used correctly. However, excessive yield settings or unplanned lot increases will accelerate capital collapse. The FX Compound Interest Simulation is a tool to visualize 'sustainable compound design' rather than an 'ideal.'
■ The concept of seeing the capital curve in advance
When aiming for prop firm evaluations or funding, what is valued is not your win rate, but a stable capital curve and reproducibility. By checking capital trends 1 or 3 years into the future with a simulation, realistic goals and points for correction become clear.
■ Only 'design that can be continued' survives
To survive in FX, what is needed is not explosive monthly profits, but a design that does not collapse. Are yields realistic? Can you withstand drawdowns? Is the compounding frequency appropriate? Unless you confirm these with numbers, reproducibility will not be born.
■ Winning but not increasing—the cause is not the method
You've been trading for several years. Your entry precision has improved, and your win rate has stabilized. Yet, your funds aren't increasing as expected. If this sounds familiar, the problem is not your method. The biggest cause is operating with compound interest while your capital design remains vague.
■ Is 5% monthly profit realistic? Have you verified it first?
Many traders say they aim for '5% monthly profit' or '10% monthly profit.' However, have you ever accurately calculated how much your funds would increase if you maintained that yield for one year? The FX Compound Interest Simulation visualizes the future capital curve just by entering the monthly profit. You can instantly distinguish whether your goal is a 'wish' or a 'design.'
■ What you must check before increasing lots
'I'm doing well this month, so I'll increase my lot size.' This judgment is both a chance for accelerated compounding and a risk for expanded drawdowns. In the simulation, by changing the yield and compounding frequency, you can also check the future if you push too hard. Seeing the capital curve in advance prevents decisions based on emotion.
■ Compounding can be a weapon or a lethal instrument
Compounding accelerates capital growth if used correctly. However, excessive yield settings or unplanned lot increases will accelerate capital collapse. The FX Compound Interest Simulation is a tool to visualize 'sustainable compound design' rather than an 'ideal.'
■ The concept of seeing the capital curve in advance
When aiming for prop firm evaluations or funding, what is valued is not your win rate, but a stable capital curve and reproducibility. By checking capital trends 1 or 3 years into the future with a simulation, realistic goals and points for correction become clear.
■ Only 'design that can be continued' survives
To survive in FX, what is needed is not explosive monthly profits, but a design that does not collapse. Are yields realistic? Can you withstand drawdowns? Is the compounding frequency appropriate? Unless you confirm these with numbers, reproducibility will not be born.