There are no eternal bulls in the market, nor are there eternal bears. Opportunities are always present, but once an account is depleted, it completely loses the qualification to wait for the next wave of the market.
Many novice traders have this misconception: they buy immediately when they are bullish, and sell or short immediately when they are bearish. But the reality is—accurate direction judgment still results in losses. They go long at short-term highs and get caught in a trap. They short at stage lows, only to see a rebound immediately afterward. In the end, they can only helplessly lament, “The market is always against me.”
But is it really the market against you? It’s just that you confuse two completely different things: Opinion (bullish/bearish) ≠ Operation (buy/sell)
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There are no eternal bulls in the market, nor are there eternal bears. Opportunities are always present, but once an account is depleted, it completely loses the qualification to wait for the next wave of the market.
Many novice traders have this misconception: they buy immediately when they are bullish, and sell or short immediately when they are bearish.
But the reality is—accurate direction judgment still results in losses.
They go long at short-term highs and get caught in a trap.
They short at stage lows, only to see a rebound immediately afterward.
In the end, they can only helplessly lament, “The market is always against me.”
But is it really the market against you? It’s just that you confuse two completely different things:
Opinion (bullish/bearish) ≠ Operation (buy/sell)