Yesterday there was a general rise, and today it turned around and corrected. I know many people are starting to panic. But have you noticed? In today's sharp drop, no one is cutting losses! The trading volume is nearly half of yesterday's, which indicates that the large funds that rushed in yesterday did not flee.

Pay close attention to this detail: the market's pullback position is just above the main cost line of the main forces, and this position cannot drop. This kind of sharp drop now is a typical violent washout, specifically to scare those unstable retail investors. Think about it carefully. If they were really unloading, it would definitely be a large-volume decline, not like the current situation of shrinking volume and slow declines. This indicates that it’s a pullback after a rise, so analyzing the risks of buying on dips is what we need to do.

To be frank, I have seen this kind of movement too many times. Before the market started in October last year, the main forces played this trick of shrinking volume for three consecutive days. Once retail investors had cut their positions, they immediately launched a 30% violent surge. The current situation is exactly the same. During the sharp drop in the morning, institutional positions were still quietly accumulating chips.

Epic-level policy benefits will not end so soon; instead, it is part of a bigger game.

Now there are two things to do.

1. Control your hands and don’t cut losses randomly.

2. Focus on those resilient hard-core targets and boldly buy on dips once they stabilize.