The recent market trend in A-shares is interesting—continuous gains combined with increased volume and a doji star pattern. This technical formation should be approached with caution. Frankly, this is not a buy signal; rather, it’s a prompt to reduce positions or take profits.
The next move will likely be one of two: either a sharp decline with a medium-sized bearish candle; or a rebound with a bullish candle that attracts buyers, followed by a drop. Either way, it’s a warning that a short-term top may be forming.
Where does the real second opportunity to re-enter appear? It’s when the price retraces to the support of the EXPMA white line or the previous top level. From a moving average perspective, the best entry points are near the 5-day or 10-day moving averages. These levels are the most worthwhile for re-positioning.
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SeasonedInvestor
· 2h ago
You're just trying to lure more in again. This trick is played out; wait for a pullback before entering to be safer.
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The doji star is basically saying goodbye to retail investors. Understand?
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That's right. Now holding a vacant position and waiting for opportunities is very comfortable.
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If I hadn't seen this analysis, I might have been caught again. Truly.
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The five-day moving average is indeed a good bottom-fishing point. Remember that.
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It's always the same. When prices go up, I don't dare to chase; when they fall, I panic.
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The topping signals are so obvious, yet some still chase the high. Serves them right for getting cut.
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Waiting for a pullback. There's no point in doing anything now; there's no patience at all.
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AllInAlice
· 8h ago
It's the same trick again. I've seen this doji at high levels before. It's just a trap to lure more buyers.
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ZeroRushCaptain
· 17h ago
Here comes another set of high sell and low buy theories. Why does this sound so familiar... Last time, I also made such precise judgments, and the result was a complete wipeout to zero.
Honestly, if this doji star could really crash down, I would have already bottomed out and gotten rich.
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ContractTester
· 01-07 12:06
I'm convinced by the idea that the doji star indicates a top, but I'm just worried it might be another game of bottom-fishing and getting caught with losses again.
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YieldWhisperer
· 01-07 10:52
The moment the doji appears, most people are still waiting for the second bullish candle.
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TokenVelocity
· 01-07 10:50
The thing about the doji star can indeed be misleading; I got trapped once before.
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PuzzledScholar
· 01-07 10:49
The doji is the easiest thing to fool retail investors with, I believed it.
If it rises again, it will crash directly. What are we betting on?
Wait for the 5-day moving average. This is really the last chance.
I've seen too many people chase high and get killed by doji patterns.
Only dare to slowly build positions near the 5-day moving average; the previous moves were all traps.
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WhaleStalker
· 01-07 10:47
Here comes the old trick of manipulating and accumulating again, and this time many people will probably get caught.
The doji star smashing the market—this move is too experienced.
Revisiting the 5-day moving average? I think I'll wait until the Year of the Monkey.
Instead of waiting for those levels, it's better to just go all in cash and relax, saving trouble.
This wave of market action is a perfect textbook example of "harvesting leek" (taking advantage of retail investors).
Taking profits and running is the way to go; don't be greedy.
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GasFeeDodger
· 01-07 10:47
It's the same trick again—attract them in first, then dump the market. I just want to see who can hit the five-day moving average precisely.
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BearMarketBarber
· 01-07 10:32
The doji is just playing psychological games with us
It's the same old trick, first诱多 then dumping, I'm already tired of it
Only dare to act when it retraces to the 5-day moving average, for now just watch the show honestly
This wave definitely needs to reduce positions, or else you'll get cut again
Ultimately, patience is key, wait for the best entry point before jumping in, no need to rush
The recent market trend in A-shares is interesting—continuous gains combined with increased volume and a doji star pattern. This technical formation should be approached with caution. Frankly, this is not a buy signal; rather, it’s a prompt to reduce positions or take profits.
The next move will likely be one of two: either a sharp decline with a medium-sized bearish candle; or a rebound with a bullish candle that attracts buyers, followed by a drop. Either way, it’s a warning that a short-term top may be forming.
Where does the real second opportunity to re-enter appear? It’s when the price retraces to the support of the EXPMA white line or the previous top level. From a moving average perspective, the best entry points are near the 5-day or 10-day moving averages. These levels are the most worthwhile for re-positioning.