1. I'm glad that we were not scared off by the sharp drop in the market today. This morning, we dived near the closing, and many people thought that it would fall sharply in the afternoon. I wrote several times in the intraday trading today that we should treat it normally, and the market trend is still fluctuating upward, so there is nothing to worry about.Then the question is coming. If the market opens higher, will there be another arbitrage market like before?1. I'm glad that we were not scared off by the sharp drop in the market today. This morning, we dived near the closing, and many people thought that it would fall sharply in the afternoon. I wrote several times in the intraday trading today that we should treat it normally, and the market trend is still fluctuating upward, so there is nothing to worry about.
First, judging from the external performance after the market closed, the market didn't soar before three o'clock, which shows that it is very good to keep the news secret, and only those who dare to play games can know it. Tomorrow, the opening of the A-share market will inevitably make up for the increase.3. For tomorrow's market, I think tomorrow is the least suspense, and tomorrow is a big sunny line:Third, which sectors may rise sharply tomorrow?
Then the question is coming. If the market opens higher, will there be another arbitrage market like before?If you don't have this belief, I believe many people will be washed out today. I'm not sure if you understand the meaning of my post today. I want you to be rational and don't want you to panic. If you can calm down your shareholding today, you will be lucky tomorrow.(1) First, the signal of policy release is very strong. After all, it is the first time in 14 years that "moderate easing" has been mentioned. It is said that there is no bear market under the release of water. Now we are not releasing water, but moderate easing means the appropriate way. If there is sufficient liquidity, the market trend is slow cattle;
Strategy guide
Strategy guide
Strategy guide