What are some unknown techniques in the stock market? Practical Skills

For most retail investors, due to their limited understanding of the stock market. So analyzing the stock market situation often lacks a sense of direction, let alone how the trading goes in the end.

For experienced investors and even professional traders, there may be blind spots or areas that are easily overlooked. For those places in the stock market that we are not familiar with, they can be called unknown skills.

Next, based on my years of experience in institutional trading, I will briefly share my insights.

There are many techniques for stock trading: stock selection skills, news interpretation skills, trading skills, and so on, all of which have a great impact on our actual trading. I won't delve into techniques such as stock selection and news interpretation. Because stock selection and news analysis and interpretation are all preparation for trading, we will only provide a simple analysis of our own summarized trading techniques.

Due to human nature, the vast majority of retail investors in the market blindly pursue gains and losses, resulting in a situation where they lose more and earn less. Actually, everyone knows that this method is not advisable, but it is powerless to reverse this habit. As an experienced person, I personally think that trading is nothing more than seizing the timing of buying and selling! Due to my previous experience as a trader, I often used nearly twenty stocks as our trading targets.

The trading strategy is to focus on long-term operations and short-term trading.

Taking a stock as an example, firstly, we need to conduct excessive analysis on its fundamentals, and secondly, structural changes. It's just relative trading, what we study more deeply is the changes in the mindset and structure of the market makers.

When we delve into a stock, we often analyze its daily trend carefully. It is not difficult to see from past trends the trading techniques of market makers towards a stock.

For example, how many waves can be pulled up in a day, what is the volume of each wave, how much is the amplitude of each wave, whether the amplitude gradually increases or decreases, whether to pull quickly or slowly, whether to continue to pull after adjusting to the same level after completing the 5-minute pull, or to stop after completing the 1-minute pull, whether there is a second high point after the pull is over, or to immediately turn around, and how can the volume change after the pull is completed, etc.

How would the same adjustments be made? I believe many retail investors have not thought about these issues. Only by becoming familiar with these tricks of the market makers can we help us keep up with their pace and form counter routine operations.

Below is a brief interpretation of the timing for buying and selling stocks!

When it comes to buying stocks, everyone should first pay attention to the changes in structure. Generally, the principle is that the lower level should obey the higher level. If the higher level is adjusted properly, the lower level can buy whatever they want. But it is very difficult to find good buying points, which requires careful analysis of structural changes.

Generally, the small level buying points that have been adjusted well in the large level often reach their lowest point when the small level quickly moves down to stop the decline. At this point, there will be a huge main buying order at the low level to pull back the stock, and buying stocks is to compete with the market speed.

But there is a problem, that is, after one minute of killing, a strong rebound can determine that it is the lowest point. If it is not strong, there will be another killing action. So, we often judge by the volume price structure and patiently wait for the formation of the second lowest point of the next kill. The amplitude of each wave of simultaneous decline gradually decreases, and this second lowest point is the best buying point.

This is for situations of rapid decline, and another scenario is for 5-minute structural adjustment.

Often, we need to search for a 5-minute sub low point, which is different from a 1-minute rapid drop sub low point. The 1-minute mark is the most accurate and lowest priced buying point, and the 5-minute mark is the most stable and safest buying point. The changes in quantity and price are worth analyzing carefully.

Another type is the 5-minute platform that forms a breakthrough in volume, and the most suitable buying point is the one that cannot be broken by shrinking volume!

The grasp of selling points, in addition to the areas worth pondering mentioned above. There are actually many areas that are easily overlooked. How to grasp the selling point in one minute is often determined by the adjustment situation after the completion of the rally.

Generally, when a rally is completed and there is a huge amount of stagnation within 1 minute, it is a time of divergence between long and short positions. At this time, it is time to reduce positions, or when the main seller has more than 3 consecutive large sell orders and also reduces positions, or when waiting for the completion of a 1-minute rally and fall to reach the second highest point of the second rally!

Every banker has their own way of playing. Some players keep playing slowly, but suddenly they start playing fast every day. Don't worry, it may be their intention to play like this. One minute of fast play can exhaust the amount of five minutes of slow play, and then they continue to maintain a slow pace.

So his slow pull doesn't need to reach a secondary high point, just flash after the lift is completed.

If you really want to change the previous way, the adjustment after the quick rise is usually a small decrease in volume or no decrease at all. If you continue to perform stronger afterwards, you need to learn to judge!

A 5-minute uptrend is often easy to judge. This slow paced uptrend can be reduced by adjusting the second highest point after 1 minute of uptrend, or by reducing the position based on the first 5-minute second highest point after uptrend, or by waiting for another 5-minute uptrend after this 5-minute downtrend is completed to decide whether to stay or leave!

Write another way to do t:

In principle, it is not recommended to do T when the trend is declining. What should be done is to trade on the left side, with less in and more out, first out and last in, reducing expectations, and being aware of T failures. Trend up attack and do t, which means trading on the right side, buying more and selling less, buying first and then selling! Due to our focus on long-term thinking, we have these tips to support us while also analyzing individual stock volume and price trends and fundamentals. Therefore, our operations often adopt the principle of adding and reducing positions in batches, so as not to let us miss the high points of individual stocks, nor to let us miss the buying points of individual stocks at low levels.