When others are entering the market, you choose to wait and see, hoping that the market will fall further. The bottom is usually formed by active buying behavior, not the result of simple waiting.

You have had many opportunities to buy at the bottom: the year before last, you hoped to enter the market below 10,000 US dollars, last year, you hoped to enter the market below 20,000 US dollars, at the beginning of this year, it was 30,000, in the first half of the year, it was 40,000, and after June, it was 50,000. Now the market gives you the opportunity of 50,000, but you expect 40,000. If the price really reaches 40,000, you may expect 30,000, or even 20,000. This endless expectation may lead to missing the actual entry opportunity.

What I want to express is that the market is not always a simple linear movement. It does not continue to fall every time it falls below a support level, nor does it continue to rise every time it breaks through a resistance level. This one-dimensional way of thinking may be correct most of the time, but in the current market environment, if you do not consider factors such as macroeconomics, liquidity and market sentiment, it is too one-sided.