“Buy the dip! Buy the dip! Buy the dip again!” This provocative slogan is like the most tempting poisoned apple in the capital market, making countless investors pulse with excitement, losing their rationality in a frenzy of emotions. They are swept away by fantasies of sudden wealth, completely ignoring the hidden dangers lurking in the market, like moths to a flame, plunging headlong into the whirlpool of buying the dip, unaware that they are gradually climbing up the perilous "trading tree." Just look at this bloody lesson — the fleeting joys and grievances of buying the dip vanish in an instant; when the market takes a sharp turn downward, the once self-proclaimed "buying army" can only hang high on the "treetop," gazing at their shrinking accounts, wanting to cry but having no tears. The capital market has never been a charity; beneath the seemingly low-hanging fruits of wealth often lies the sharpest sickle.