The psychological warfare of the main force, three phrases to see through:
First phrase: "Pull 30% → 50% → 100%, retail investors are still mumbling ‘inducing more.’"
Second phrase: "Then pull 200% → 400%, retail investors' mentality collapses instantly: ‘Missing out hurts more! All in!’"
Third phrase: "The main force lightly ‘crashes the market’, the rest of the show is all emotional performance."
Don't just focus on long-short ratios
If FOMO has not reached its peak, the main force will not use full power—it's waiting for you to go from 'a bit doubtful' to 'if I don't act now, I'll lose big.'
When retail investors go all in, trading volume, social media heat, and liquidation rankings will all peak together—that's the true starting point of the final outcome.
How to respond to the cheat sheet
Get in in batches, don’t chase high positions: If the market is really strong, you still have a window for a second entry; if the market is just showboating, at least you protect your base position.
Look at turnover instead of price increase: price up with volume down = high-level performance; price up with volume up = real funds entering the market.
Set hard stop losses, don’t use prayers as a remedy: No one can predict the main force’s ‘crash key’, but loss limits can be set in advance.
In one sentence: The faster the rise, the more you should remain calm—what the main force plays is crowd psychology, not K-line magic.