Investment Insights from 30,000 to 10 Million

1. Recognize Reality: Do you think you're the chosen one? Wake up, the market is here to treat all your delusions. The little money beginners make is just the market's "bait"; once you're hooked, it will take back both the principal and the interest. All bullish signals are meant to get you to buy high, and all bearish signals are meant to get you to sell low. Your technical analysis is like wielding a stick against a machine gun in front of quantitative AI.

2. The Grave of Technicians: 90% of those who claim to be technical analysts are losing money. After learning a bunch of KDJ and MACD, they end up losing everything, including their underpants. Because this market is not a technical market, but a policy market, a capital market, a market of human nature. Striving in the wrong direction will only lead to a quicker demise.

3. The Truth of Technology: The only value of technical analysis is to help you lose less money, not to make more. It can help you cut losses in time and see through the tricks of the main players. But if you really want to make money? It relies on your sensitivity to policy, your awareness of capital, and your anti-human execution. Technology is just a seatbelt; the engine is your understanding and courage.

4. The Essence of Short-Term Trading: Top short-term players no longer look at technical indicators. They only care about capital flow and market sentiment. Short-term trading is a game of mutual stabbing; buy on divergence, sell on consensus. Being a step ahead makes you a martyr, while being a step behind makes you a bag holder.

5. Profit and Loss Originate from the Same Source: The strategy that makes you a legend in a bull market often takes your life in a bear market. What you really need to cultivate is not technique, but position management, trading discipline, and patience to stay out of the market. Retail investors study technology all day, while experts study themselves every day.

6. Dimensionality Reduction Attack: Retail investors understand candlestick charts, institutions understand capital flow, but those who understand human nature are the winners. Look less at technical indicators, read more "The Art of War," and review your trades every day. When you think you've found enlightenment, it's often the beginning of a trap.