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Refine a trading strategy that navigates through bull and bear markets, so that compound interest keeps running forever.
First, you must have your own trading model. The model includes position allocation, fixed static elements like buy and sell points and extreme stop-losses, and it also includes dynamic elements that incorporate the bigger picture—things like the market’s current profit effect! Second, when stocks rise, it is always driven by capital; it has little to do with technical indicators! Third, for short-term trades, you must focus only on popularity, chips, recognizability, and market position! Fourth, the essence of making money in stocks is buying at a relatively low position and selling at a higher position than the buy point—that is a successful trade! Fifth, how do you combine the first four to form your own stable-earning model, and be able to ride through bull and bear markets! For example, there are many patterns that market participants widely recognize, and many live-trading traders have emerged with them: a leading stock’s pullback and rebound Step one: Identify the leader. In simple terms, it’s when it has risen to the point where the whole market can see it. The chips have gone through sufficient rotation and turnover. Whether up or down is not decided by a single block of capital, but by the market’s collective force. What is collective force? In simple terms, it’s when there are the most retail investors—there is also quantitative capital, and there are also funds/tactical speculators at work!) Step two: The buy point is its first pullback after it becomes a leader—about 20% to 30%. If the market environment is good, the pullback is smaller; if the market environment is poor, the pullback is larger. Buy in stages at the 20% to 30% pullback area, with the position size at 20%. The sell point is near the double-top area! Step three: The difficulty of this model is how to identify the leader. A true leader will definitely rebound; it will not do an A-kill. A true leader has the ability to drive the sector to rise for a longer time, with uniqueness and scarcity!(Afraid of being wrong and betting on the wrong leader, you set an extreme stop-loss level. For example, if Yuneng made a new high on March 12 with market popularity #1, and after three consecutive days of pullback it dropped about 25 points, around 13.5 is the buy point. Buy 10% to 20% of the position. Set the extreme stop-loss at 11.5. The sell point expectation is around 17.88, say about 17.5, based on the chip structure concentrating around 13 to 17.5.)For example: Fuhe, Pingtan, Aerospace Development in the second half of 25, and Yuneng in 26! Summary: Different market environments lead to different leading-stock behavior, but what never changes is the game of chip costs—the mix of high popularity, high recognizability, and stocks with status. Use relatively low-cost chips to play the market’s rebound, selling to the players who act after the fact, as the leader breaks out into wave two—earn the money from those who were ahead of time! (This model is suitable for slow starters who accumulate on dips; the pullbacks are relatively controllable and the success rate is also relatively high. The difficulty is that holding the stock is tough and wears people down—buy points aren’t rushed, and sell points must be decisive and decisive in action.)