When listening to people talk about trading, you often hear phrases like: 'It drives me crazy, I clearly saw the right direction but made the wrong move and ended up losing money.' Many people mistake seeing the market correctly as being able to trade well, which is a mistake. As long as one is willing to think and learn, after some time of practice, most traders can see the market correctly, but seeing the market correctly is still a long way from being able to trade well. Clearly knowing it will rise, yet unable to capitalize, making mistakes as soon as they act, losing as soon as they enter, and the market continues to move after they exit. A vigorous bull market, after much effort to grab small profits, turns around and results in losses again. Most people trade this way. Optimistically estimating, among 10 traders, 7 can see the market correctly, 3 can trade correctly, 2 can make money, and only 1 can earn most of the money that can be made from the market itself.
The difference between seeing correctly → trading correctly → making money → making big money lies in the different grasp of trading conditions and orders. Most traders do not strictly differentiate between trading conditions and trading orders, directly treating conditions as orders, which is the fundamental reason for seeing correctly but not trading correctly and failing in trading. Trading conditions are broad and imprecise. For example, when a market trend starts, formations, moving average arrangements, K-line patterns, as well as indicators like MACD, RSI, and KDJ will all send clear signals, proving that the market has met the starting conditions on technical charts. However, these vague signals that at least span days are merely trading conditions and cannot be treated as trading orders, nor can one operate based on them. If conditions are treated as orders, operating based on them, the vagueness of the signals, the broad timeframe, the allowance for significant reverse fluctuations, and the delayed response to rapid market turnarounds can all lead traders to be knocked out during market initiation and during ongoing moves, or get trapped during rapid market reversals, especially in high-leverage trading. Entry techniques must be patiently awaited after trading conditions are met, requiring clear, precise, and actionable orders to act. Just like on a battlefield, once troops are deployed, they must wait for that clear, precise, and singular command shot before launching an attack. Trading orders must be precise to the minute and second. The battlefield changes rapidly, and in the critical moments of life and death, only precision to the minute and second can seize the opportunity, gain an advantage, ensure survival, and then qualify and have the possibility to achieve the largest possible profits under the support of trading conditions.