What is the difference between left-side trading and right-side trading?
Left-side trading and right-side trading are two different buying and selling methods, and the core difference lies in the timing of buying and selling.
Left-side trading is to "buy the bottom and guess the top" in advance before the trend is fully formed.
For example, when the price falls, it is predicted that it will reach the bottom, so buy in advance; or when it rises, it is believed that it has reached the top according to technical standards and sell in advance.
Left-side trading requires predicting the turning point of the market. If the judgment is correct, the return is high. But the risk is also high, and it may be frequently stopped when encountering a large unilateral market.
Right-side trading is to follow the trend after the trend is clear.
For example, the price falls to the bottom and rebounds and breaks through the key position before buying. Right-side trading is equivalent to "seeing it before taking action", which has lower risks, but will miss the opportunity of the lowest or highest point, but the return is relatively stable.
In layman's terms, left-side trading is "buying the bottom" and "escaping the top", which is suitable for experienced investors who can bear high risks.
Right-side trading is "following the trend", which is suitable for stable investors or novices.
Both methods have their own advantages and disadvantages, and the key lies in one's own risk preference and trading style.