In the past few days, the fermentation of emotions has already begun.
As the saying goes, one positive change can alter three perspectives; if it doesn't work, just a few positive lines will definitely make everyone say the bull market has arrived.
Similarly, if a negative change cannot alter three perspectives, then just a few negative lines will definitely make everyone say the bull is dead.
In reality, there have been many instances of face-slapping.
After continuous rises, the bull may not necessarily come; the main force might be cashing out at high positions.
After continuous declines, the bull may not necessarily leave; the low-position chips have all been picked up by the main force.
The key issue is whether yesterday's judgment of 98,000 was high or low. Once this question is clarified, one will know what to do.
The endless small essays and the overlapping analyses are all things that disturb market emotions.
In the end, those who are indecisive, even if they get low-position chips, will leave the market after making a small profit.
The opportunity to feast on profit ultimately goes to those cunning and shrewd individuals.
It is said that in a bull market, one should hold on tightly. But when exactly to hold on, for how long, no one will tell you.
If you've held on for several months and realize you were wrong, what should you do?
Where to hold, at what price, and at what time to sell, will also leave people confused.
Without one's own logic, the phrase 'one should hold in a bull market' is not an antidote; perhaps it is a poison instead.
The market trend in January is almost identical to the battle map updated at the beginning of the month.
Be patient and wait for the breakout; there are still 1-2 weeks left.