A one-sided decline is never considered a difficult market. If it were one-sided, wouldn't everyone just short?

So, what is a 'repayment market'? It's one that continuously gives you hope to go long while constantly hitting your stop-loss or trapping you. Just when you finally turn around and stop going long to go short, there's a big surge, and when you chase the rise, oh no, there's another wave of decline waiting.

The levels keep switching back and forth, without rhythm or reason.

When most people have been stopped out and lost their spirit, and another large group has been trapped, with most of that group cutting their losses, only then does the difficult market come close to its end.

It is still impossible to confirm the size of this adjustment level because the large and small levels are inherently nested back and forth. Even when the main capital has a preset script, they still have to ride the donkey while reading the script. They follow the market response and choose the most cost-effective way to operate.