Why can you see the general direction right, but make a bad point in the transaction, and lose money instead?
How to distinguish between shocks and trends?
A Huiyou told me: Look at the weekly chart more. I went to see it and found it still a bit vague, so I beg you to explain it to me in detail! Or is there any other way to judge? I no longer want to hear the analysts in the group say: Now follow the trend and make orders! It is now in a range shock, do more on dips! Novices are really distressed, I hope all Hui friends will not laugh at me and talk about me.
Can retail investors make money by imitating the single-handling methods of large institutions?
I found that our retail investors like to fight against big institutions when doing transactions. Why is this? Since it is a large institution, it is generally profitable, so can we still make money by imitating their single-handling methods?Recently, I heard about an institutional order area strategy. As long as you have the ability to identify and discover the order area of an institution, by identifying the trading methods of banks and large institutions, you can follow their footsteps to make money. It sounds reasonable, do you think it is reliable?
What cognitive biases do we have to overcome?
I have been unable to set the stop loss in the transaction, how can I do a good stop loss?