How to profit from stock fluctuations? Short term and long term trading alone do not guarantee profits. No matter what time scale you choose to trade, you will either make or lose money. The ideal short-term trading is to buy at the bottom of each wave, sell at the top of each range of 2% to 10% or more, and then buy at the next bottom and sell at the next top, repeatedly buying high and buying low, regardless of bull or bear markets.
However, in real transactions, due to human limitations, we are unable to achieve this, which is why we have the operational techniques of following trends, which is actually an unavoidable compromise. Compromise to a point where human nature can control it. Short term trading cannot escape this compromise.
The key to making profits from short-term trading lies in first judging the basic trend of the stock and determining the buying time. If an established trend starts to rise and the time period is also in the bottom zone, then our short-term trading begins. At this point, we can temporarily leave the charts above the daily line and investigate the market clues revealed by short-term charts.
Different theories have different interpretations, and short-term trading has been repeatedly confused in practical applications. The short-term trading understood by the Mo Shan theory refers to the trading behavior of taking positions for less than or equal to 20 trading days. According to this standard, short-term trading can be further divided into two-week trading, weekly trading, and two-day trading.
The thinking mode of short-term trading - the thinking of professional traders:
The mindset of a professional trader is not aimed at retail investors, let alone following the mindset of market makers. Too many people believe that following a banker in the market can make them profit and assume a banker in advance, then assume how this banker will operate, and replace themselves with the banker, engaging in so-called reverse thinking. Little did they know that this kind of thinking itself is a typical retail mindset - the mindset of amateur traders. This thinking pattern is abused by stock analysts and self proclaimed professional copycats, essentially a form of 'cheating thinking'.
In fact, there are no riddles or ready-made answers in stock trading that make you plagiarize. Even a so-called mouse warehouse cannot guarantee that you will ultimately make a profit. In a rigorous market manipulation, there are too many variables that even decision-makers cannot predict. Therefore, when a person confidently tells you that they know the cost of the banker, their credibility and operability are deeply questionable.
A true professional trader will not consider the influence of the banker. Because he firmly believes that the power of the market will always be stronger than that of a certain group, and at the same time, he firmly believes that through his technology, he can follow the market and profit from understanding his position before the key turning point in the market arrives. This has been fully validated in his previous transactions.