Planning to increase financing and add positions next Tuesday and Wednesday, with an expected 35% increase in holdings. Among them, 15% will be allocated to the Sci-Tech Innovation 100 Index as the core asset in the technology sector.
The remaining 20% plan to take a different approach, shifting towards some fundamentally sound stocks that are undervalued by the market—rather than struggling with individual stock selection, it’s more practical to allocate to broad-based ETFs. This way, you can participate in the rebound while also diversifying risk.
The prerequisite is crucial: the technical chart must hold above the 55-day moving average next Monday. If this support level is broken, the financing plan will need to be reassessed. Confirming the technical signals before taking action is a fundamental skill to avoid pitfalls.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
9 Likes
Reward
9
7
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
GoldDiggerDuck
· 10h ago
The 55-day moving average is crucial. Once it breaks, you really need to pull back. As for increasing leverage or adding positions, you should wait for confirmation signals before taking action.
View OriginalReply0
SignatureDenied
· 11h ago
The 55-day moving average must be held, otherwise financing is a self-destructive move.
---
The ChiNext 100 allocation at 15% is okay, but as for undervalued stocks... can we really find a bargain?
---
It's another round of financing and increasing positions, plus technical analysis. Feels like we're stuck in this routine every week.
---
Broad-based ETFs are indeed worry-free, saving the hassle of choosing individual stocks every day, my mind is exhausted from the choices.
---
If it breaks support next Monday, this plan is directly scrapped, not worth risking.
---
Adding 35% more... a bit aggressive, and still financing, quite bold.
---
If only I wait for technical confirmation before acting, otherwise I’d be just giving money to the market for nothing.
View OriginalReply0
WhaleWatcher
· 12-26 14:47
Can't even hold the 55-day moving average, and you're still willing to add positions? I think it's risky.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropHarvester
· 12-26 14:43
Raising funds and increasing positions again? Bro, this move is really quite aggressive.
View OriginalReply0
TheShibaWhisperer
· 12-26 14:30
If the 55-day moving average breaks, I dare to go all in; if it doesn't break, I will continue to observe. I love this logic.
---
Raising funds and increasing positions also depends on whether the technicals give face; I feel like I might be set up again next Monday.
---
Allocating 15% to the Sci-Tech Innovation 100 Index seems quite safe; just worried that the rebound might end and lead to a reverse crash.
---
Instead of picking individual stocks, it's better to focus on buying ETFs. Really, less thinking, more earning.
---
Why is the 55-day moving average such a mysterious hurdle? What if it really breaks?
---
A 35% increase in position size is not small; are we betting on a rebound or is there something else at play?
---
I've already given up on individual stocks; broad-based ETFs are more attractive—diversifying risk is the trick.
---
If it stabilizes next Monday, then I’ll take action. The prerequisite is well stated, but I’m afraid of last-minute changes.
---
Raising funds and increasing positions, only confirmed technical signals are truly reliable.
---
Picking up bargains with 20%? That depends on how long the fundamentals can hold up.
View OriginalReply0
ChainComedian
· 12-26 14:23
Breaking the 55-day moving average means you have to admit defeat; discipline is the most crucial here. Otherwise, it's just a gambler's mindset.
Planning to increase financing and add positions next Tuesday and Wednesday, with an expected 35% increase in holdings. Among them, 15% will be allocated to the Sci-Tech Innovation 100 Index as the core asset in the technology sector.
The remaining 20% plan to take a different approach, shifting towards some fundamentally sound stocks that are undervalued by the market—rather than struggling with individual stock selection, it’s more practical to allocate to broad-based ETFs. This way, you can participate in the rebound while also diversifying risk.
The prerequisite is crucial: the technical chart must hold above the 55-day moving average next Monday. If this support level is broken, the financing plan will need to be reassessed. Confirming the technical signals before taking action is a fundamental skill to avoid pitfalls.