What causes anti-orders? This is different from effective stop-loss orders. When the actual market breaks through your effective stop-loss order, the loss should be clear and within your acceptable range. After that, whether you act with caution or add to your position, it means you still have many chips available for further choices.

Anti-orders, on the other hand, are quite different; they are essentially a last-ditch gamble. Once the actual market goes against your judgment, you may not even have more opportunities to respond.

The beginning and process of anti-orders: Everything makes your heart race, all signs seem to prove your judgment is incredibly close to being correct, then you place a heavy bet, and then the market goes against your judgment — your mindset starts to change — anxiety and FOMO emotions arise and expand — a gambler's mentality emerges, selectively recognizing the worst possible outcome, expanding your stop-loss or even putting in your last chips after assessing the worst-case scenario — a high probability of shattering illusions, going back to square one overnight, a low probability of success, extremely flashy, without considering that your premature bet has already sacrificed a significant portion of profit, yet your confidence remains high. When you fail to achieve your profit target, you eagerly engage in another round of irrational gambling, and then there’s no turning back.