In short-term small-band operations, if you are always worried about the decline, frequently stop profit too early, and then become anxious because the market continues to rise, you need to maintain a calm mentality at this time:

1. If you have time to watch the market in real time, you can choose a low point between the intraday lowest point and the historical highest point to enter the market, and carry out ultra-short quick battle and quick decision operations, that is, look for short-term long opportunities in the lower track of the 1-hour chart and the lower track of the 4-hour chart. If you want to operate simply, just wait for the next low-long opportunity to enter the market. 1-2 orders per day are more suitable, and new low-long opportunities usually appear every 12 hours. If you enter the market too frequently, you must make a quick decision, because trading between the lowest and highest points of the day has limited amplitude and profit space. Once the price leaves this range, it is easy to be trapped.

2. When the market is in a state of sideways fluctuation or slow decline, rather than continuous decline, low long orders should develop the habit of taking profits in batches and retaining tail positions. The tail position ratio is generally controlled at 10-15%. When the market is good, after each small band reaches the take-profit target, 20% of the tail position can be retained. The purpose of retaining the tail position is to prevent the market from continuing to rise after exceeding the take-profit target, or chasing high when rebounding to a new high, to avoid taking profits too early and missing out on the whole position, or being temporarily trapped due to the current price rush. In most conventional market conditions, as long as the position is covered near the next support level, the tail position will basically not affect the average cost price, and it is easy to generate floating profits during the rebound. In order to avoid the risk of continuous decline, the tail position of each band needs to set a principal-protecting stop loss in time, and adopt a floating take-profit strategy.