How to estimate the weight of a banker's position and practical skills

The rise of a stock is to some extent determined by the amount of funds involved, and the larger the amount of funds used by the market maker, the more significant the future rise. So, how to estimate the weight of the banker's position? There are several methods below:

1. Judging based on the length of the delivery period. For stocks with obvious buying periods, a simple algorithm is to multiply the daily trading volume during the buying period by the buying period to roughly estimate the position of the market maker. The market maker's position=buying period x daily trading volume (ignoring individual investors' buying volume). The longer the lead time, the larger the position held by the market maker; The larger the daily trading volume, the more money the market maker attracts. Therefore, if investors see stocks that have been consolidating horizontally for a long time after going public, they are usually dark horses silently grazing. Some new stocks cannot sustain their market without sufficient lead time.

2. Judging based on turnover rate. Stocks that are actively traded at low levels, have high turnover rates, and have little price increase are usually bought by market makers. The higher the turnover rate here, the more fully the main force attracts funds. "Quantity" and "price" seem to be a pair of little brothers who are unwilling to be outdone. As long as "quantity" takes the lead, "price" will closely follow the pace of "quantity". Investors can focus on stocks where "price" temporarily lags behind "quantity".

3. Analyze based on the performance of the stock during the consolidation period of the overall market. Some stocks have unclear lead times for buying, either due to the resurgence of traditional Chinese stocks, market makers pulling and buying at the same time, or continuous buying during the decline, making it difficult to clearly define the lead time for buying. The holdings of these individual stock market makers can be judged by their performance during the consolidation period.

4. Judging based on the volume increase during the rising process. Generally speaking, as the stock price rises, the trading volume will increase synchronously. Some individual stocks controlled by market makers may experience a decrease in trading volume as the stock price rises, and the stock price can often rise again and again. For these individual stocks, they may prioritize momentum over price; The banker holds a large number of chips and can hold them all the way before releasing a large amount.