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#美联储恢复降息节奏 I know a senior from Magic City who has been in this circle for twelve years. I have followed him over the years and witnessed him turn a starting capital of around 300,000 into over 90 million.
This guy is almost fifty this year, yet his lifestyle is no different from an ordinary citizen—living in an old rented house, riding an electric bike wandering around, and even haggling with the aunties at the market when buying vegetables. He told me he loves this feeling of ordinary life, it makes him feel at ease.
Being able to multiply the principal so many times is definitely not relying on any news or luck. It's all based on a few principles he has been adhering to for many years. Let me outline them for everyone:
**First Rule**, when the price rises sharply and falls slowly, don't make any rash moves. After the main force pushes the price up, they won't immediately crash the market; it is often a slow pullback to collect chips. When encountering this kind of trend, don't be scared away by minor fluctuations.
**Article 2**, be vigilant of weak rebounds after a crash. When the price suddenly drops and fails to bounce back, it is highly likely that funds are retreating. At such times, trying to catch the bottom? That essentially means handing over your position to someone else.
**Article 3**, a large volume at the top does not necessarily mean it's the peak. A massive volume at a high level often indicates that chips are changing hands, while the real danger lies in a decline with shrinking volume, which is the signal that the market has ended.
**Article 4**, the bottom must repeatedly show increased volume to be reliable. A single increase in volume is likely a trap for inducing buying; it requires several consecutive increases in volume to confirm that capital is truly entering the market and that market consensus is forming.
**Article 5**, do not place too much faith in complex indicators. The market is ultimately a game of human nature, and trading volume is the most intuitive expression of emotion. Understanding changes in volume is much more practical than studying a bunch of technical charts.
**Article 6**, "being in a flat position" is the hardest practice. Not being attached, not being greedy, not panicking. Only those who can hold back from operating and patiently wait for opportunities are qualified to enjoy the real big gains.
In this market, the biggest opponent is never the so-called big players or market fluctuations, but your own greed and the urge to act. Opportunities are always there; the key is whether you can stabilize your mindset, control your hands, and protect your positions. Those who can do these things will ultimately not fare too poorly.