What to do if you're stuck in a long position? According to Zhang Heng, there's no need to panic excessively. Today's significant drop is indeed somewhat beyond expectations, but there are ways to remedy the situation. Since everyone's positions and points vary, I cannot provide the most reasonable solution for unwinding positions in the article, but you can operate based on the methods I provide.
If you feel the risk level is too high, first lock in your position for hedging, ensuring that the margin risk does not fall below 30 percent, otherwise there is a risk of liquidation. Identify precise profit-taking points, not stop-loss points, and engage in repeated lock-in trading to take profits out to offset losing positions or continue holding, treating it as profit.
When closing positions, be sure to leave some locked positions. For instance, if you are stuck with 5,000 long positions, you should lock in an equal 5,000 short positions. When closing, remember to leave 3,000 short positions, as this is to ensure your risk ratio does not lead to liquidation, allowing you to hold positions for a long time. When there is another decline, find the right short points to lock in the 2,000 locked positions again, take profits, and then exit.
If the decline continues, there's no need to worry about whether the remaining long positions will get deeper into the red. They won't, because you still have 3,000 short positions, and the number of positions you need to close must be a multiple of the long positions reduced, so there’s no need to worry. After all, generally, once the stuck positions are unwound, you can directly exit all with a counter-operation.