The usual hype technique used by market makers! Practical Skills

When building a position at a low level, it is generally necessary to control the daily rise and fall range, rather than appearing on the daily rise and fall ranking list, in order to attract market attention. At the same time, information will be tightly sealed to prevent the outside world from knowing the secret of entering the market.
During the uptrend phase, it is common to rank high on the price list in order to attract market followers and demonstrate the strength of the market makers. At this time, there is often a deliberate "leakage" of information.
3. Skilled in using reverse thinking, often squeezing gaps at high positions to attract more, and squeezing more at low positions to attract gaps.
4. If you want to build a warehouse and attract goods, you often use your chips to create selling pressure. Once individual investors sell short in large quantities, they quickly cancel their original selling orders and swallow cheap chips, that is, fake selling and real buying.
5. If you want to increase shipments, you often post large orders to create a false impression of prosperity on the surface. Once retail investors chase after the rise in large numbers, they quickly withdraw their original orders to trap follow-up chips, that is, fake buying and real selling.
6. I like to speculate vaguely, and once the news becomes clear, it is often an opportunity for shipment.
7. Regularly use the existing chips in hand for "T+O" hedging operations.
8. Often create fake breakthroughs in technology or engage in fraudulent activities.
At the end of the distribution period, often deliberately smashing the plate to amplify the panic effect.
When it comes to light storage, it often goes with the flow. For example, if we take advantage of negative factors to ship, the losses will not be significant at this time. When holding heavy positions, they often go against the trend. For example, in the case of delayed response to negative news, due to the heavy position at this time, it is often difficult to sell all at once, so it is common to first rise and then go short with a backhand.
11. Often deliberately raising prices, suppressing benchmark stocks in the market or creating limit up and limit down boards to cover their own shipments or build positions.
12. Collaborate to buy or sell, or join forces to run a business. Often, multiple accounts are opened at different business outlets to transfer funds to each other or carry out warehouse operations.
13. Fictitious buying and selling (reverse or knock). At the same time as buying and selling, have the agreed partners carry out operations in the opposite direction at the agreed price. For example, retail investors may blindly follow up on a certain stock after discovering a large buy in at a certain branch, but the market maker may sell the same amount in another branch without actually changing the market maker's position. This technique is usually used during consolidation.