1. After three years in the market, I found that I have four outstanding advantages compared to ordinary investors: hardworking, serious, research-oriented, and seeking the unusual. I believe I have the ability to cross the threshold of winning.

2. In my operations, I constantly need to discover myself, change myself, challenge myself, and overcome myself. Correcting myself is always more important than studying the market!

3. After five years of trading stocks, I realized that the guiding light for making money in stock trading—Heaven's way rewards diligence—was confirmed ten years later. I repeat doing one simple yet monotonously complex thing daily, which is dull and tasteless, lonely and boring! As long as I can persist, endure, and when I can no longer endure, have the willpower to keep going, continuously observing and recording without omission, and then through constant summarization and filtering, accumulating sediment, I will definitely find unexpected surprises!

4. After ten years of trading stocks, I finally conceived my overall trading principle: pursue stability, longevity, and continuous profit.

5. I know quite a bit about stock trading knowledge; I constantly ask myself: how much of it can I really do? How much can I do well? Finally, I ask you, who stands out? Ten years later, I confidently say yes! It may be unique; I firmly believe! I persist!

6. My tool for making money in stocks—my operating system.

7. Signals first, iron discipline. Do not be influenced by personal emotions. It is about transitioning from overcoming the market to adapting to the market, from active trading to passive trading, with operations primarily considering 'adaptation' rather than 'prediction.'

8. Waiting by the tree for a hare. To ordinary people, this seems foolish and primitive, but the skill that truly allows me to trade stocks stably, long-term, and continuously profit is indeed 'sitting skill.' The key to waiting by the tree is choosing which tree to wait patiently under; this choice may be the crystallization of years of effort, the same principles but different techniques.

9. Do not listen to flattery; seeing is believing. I want the copper in my hands, not the gold on the other side of the mountain.

10. Experts' words are always two-sided; they always say if...then it will be..., and once they are right, they boast about how accurate their predictions are! Once they are wrong, they say, I mentioned if...then..., now if the conditions of if are not met, it is right that the expected market trend did not occur. I say, if you listen to experts when trading stocks, thinking you can become a winner is simply a dream.

11. When I look at charts, I open the chart and look to the left, first checking the monthly chart and then the weekly chart, compressing the chart to observe the trend, focusing on direction rather than price.

12. In a strong market, do not look at resistance; in a weak market, do not look at support.

13. Adding positions with the trend means holding stocks! Cutting losses against the trend means exiting!

14. I accidentally discovered a rule when I make money: to make money, "you must dare to invest heavily." I generally invest heavily when I am optimistic about a stock at the bottom; if not, I gradually increase my holdings as I go with the trend. This way, making a 20%–40% profit in a market wave is easy. However, in the past, I would only dare to buy big after seeing the index rise clearly, and if it rose a bit, I would sell. If the index continued to rise, I would bounce around frequently buying and selling in hot sectors to make some price differences, or I would hold a few diversified stocks, which usually resulted in making the index but not making money. It should be about spotting opportunities in the bottom area, investing heavily, and daring to invest heavily is the key issue to changing one's returns. This requires having the ambition to make big money when the timing is right and having the decisiveness to cut losses promptly when timing is wrong.

15. Since I developed the 'skill' of selecting stocks, I resolutely and decisively put all my eggs in one basket. If I do not dare to do so?! It shows that I still do not have the ability to find a solid iron basket; it can also be said that I do not yet have the ability to walk the path of a winner. So I just need to take care of this basket of eggs each day. When I win, I win big, and when I see a loss coming, I can escape cleanly in just a few seconds.

16. Things should not happen more than three times. To effectively stand firm or break through should be measured by three trading days to be considered effective.

17. The big players continuously push prices higher at high positions; their purpose is to distribute and save themselves. I must be 'stubborn' about this understanding.

18. Star stocks, regardless of how high the price is, will always have fearless followers. What is boldness? Ignorance is the only boldness!

19. The winner first thinks about risks, while the loser first thinks about making money!

20. Winners often get stuck at low points; once they reverse, they start to earn. Losers often get stuck at high points; once they reverse, they start to lose.

21. One must understand what illness those who sleep on the peaks of stock prices suffer from. I believe most suffer from a fever of chasing hotspots that doesn't subside and die on the mountaintop, while a small portion suffers from greed.

22. During the washout phase, the bottom is gradually raised, while during the selling phase, the bottom is gradually lowered. The former often scares people with large bearish lines, while the latter attracts people with large bullish lines.

23. For stocks that do not fill the rights, I do not listen to any sweet talk about dividends or transfer; I do not listen to anything.

24. I am adept at grasping the big players' test trading methods: multi-point resonance with one bullish line breaking through three lines.

25. The way I grasp the big players' operating trends is: horizontal market—digging pits—no volume—filling—explosive volume—horizontal market—upward trend.

26. If the above two points can achieve a perfect combination of macro and micro—then it can be said to be formless victory over form. In my personal experience, at least 10 years of diligent observation and practice are needed.

27. I like stocks that I can slowly stew, not dark horses, because I can't ride them. I prefer stocks that I can invest heavily in from the bottom, where the stock trend is: invest two, retreat one; invest three, retreat two; invest five, retreat three; sometimes even invest five, retreat eight. Although this is like an old cow pulling a cart—squeaking stocks, I completely stop caring about economic data and political events because fundamentals are of no use to me. I also never talk about trading with others because I know no one can explain it clearly. Every day, I also do not need to worry about the index fluctuating within 200 points; that is just the noise of the stock market. Besides challenging and tormenting my nerves and affecting my emotions, it has no positive effect on my operations. The result of my persistence is leisurely; my funds are snowballing. Once a wave of market trends comes, the annual profit task is easily completed.

28. What is the most difficult thing about trading stocks? I believe it's how to 'persevere' after choosing the right direction! The human nature's weakness is to erroneously seek opportunities to expand rather than to continue expanding profits.

29. What truly allows me to make money is being able to grasp the trend while ignoring small fluctuations, being enthusiastic about minor skirmishes to gain tiny profits cannot guarantee overall victory.

30. The reason I cannot make money or suffer losses is still psychological factors: stubbornness, greed, and luck. Failure is favored by arrogant, stubborn, and undisciplined people, causing me to repeat the low-level mistakes of the past.

31. Some people who lose money would rather lose money than admit they were wrong. They are stubborn and lose money for the sake of their pride!

32. It is undoubtedly essential to read. No one tells me which books to read and which not to read; it's inevitable to take detours in reading. Different people will get different effects from the same book.

33. I believe that the actions of most people in the stock market are often wrong.

34. What everyone fears is not necessarily scary, and what everyone loves is not necessarily lovely.

35. If you want to make money, you must go against the crowd, repeatedly turning yourself into a partner dancing with the big players. Don't care about others' opinions; just study your own rights and wrongs, striving to become one of the few. If you think wrong, how far can it go wrong?

36. My ten 'nos' and two 'negations.' I do not look for dark horses, do not chase hotspots, do not look for reorganizations, do not trade stocks that do not fill their rights, do not trade ST stocks, do not listen to stock commentary, do not predict market trends, do not look at fundamentals, do not read securities newspapers and magazines, deny wave theory, deny trading software (the two negations refer to what does not suit me; their existence is reasonable). At my stage, the stock trading atmosphere does not require pursuing more stock trading knowledge; rather, it should be about shedding unnecessary things. Once I remove what I consider useless, I feel the path to trading stocks becomes clearer, my skills more refined, and my returns more stable.

37. My three 'ones'. In my life, I may only use this method of 'seizing the market timing, waiting for the hare by the tree' to trade stocks; in my life, I may not listen to anyone but my operating system; in my life, I must stubbornly implement my set stop-loss points, even if sometimes I am wrong, I will not change this operational philosophy next time.

38. I agree that you should not trade stocks with your eyes and ears but with your brain. That means not looking or listening (referring to stock commentators and consulting agencies' opinions) and thinking independently with your brain.

39. Wherever the stock market is the busiest and most crowded, you will not find my shadow.

40. In crowded places, I summarize there are five types of people: many boast, many stock commentators, many fraudsters, many losers, and many newcomers.

41. I stay in a corner forgotten by the big players and everyone else. I believe that this corner is the best place to keep solitude. Detached from restlessness and noise, I remain calm, avoiding hasty decisions.

42. When I can feel that loneliness is happiness, I think this is a kind of celestial energy that I have cultivated. That confirms that my spirit must be strong; with a strong spirit, I am not afraid of not making money!

43. I trade stocks not by taking the main road but by taking the small paths, climbing hills and crossing streams. Be an unusual person and walk an unusual path. Walking the path everyone else has walked often yields nothing good; always following others means you cannot breathe fresh air.

44. The stock market is never short of opportunities. Missing one time means losing one opportunity; being stuck once can mean losing many opportunities.

45. Being able to see opportunities and grasp them well are two different matters. Ignorance cannot talk about seizing opportunities; superficial understanding cannot effectively grasp opportunities; only true knowledge can integrate and firmly hold onto opportunities.

46. Those who can buy are apprentices, those who can sell are masters, and those who can patiently wait for opportunities after selling are the wise. Waiting is not about doing nothing, not about hesitation, not about worrying too much; waiting for opportunities requires the courage and decisiveness to strike with a sword, retreating safely if the shot misses. Waiting reflects a person's comprehensive qualities; learn to wait and be good at waiting.

47. Behavior determines habits, habits determine character, character determines destiny. Avoid going into the crowd of 'five more,' as close association with them leads to bad influences. Gradually overcome your greed, arrogance, desire for recognition, unwillingness to admit mistakes, and unreliable speech, and good things will follow naturally.

48. The distribution of wealth in the world is always 80/20; an 80/20 split is only temporary. The 80/20 rule market is open for those who are lonely and patient!

49. The essence of the secret to trading stocks is to keep it secret. Can Tongrentang publish the formula for its Niuhuang Qingxin Pill? Coca-Cola's formula is the same. True stock trading experts silently stay at home and make big money by tapping on their keyboards.

50. I believe that the conclusions of predicting index trends will not match in detail or provide specific guiding significance in speculation. Only three types of people can accurately predict index trends: wise men, madmen, and fraudsters. Since stock trading software is also created by people, its buy and sell points are not credible.



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