Why do Americans like to crash the market in the early morning?
Brothers, remember, there is an unwritten signal that indicates that the declines you see are usually just a trap to force you to sell, while the declines you don't see are generally real declines. What does this mean?
Have you noticed that if at the bottom of a candlestick, the place where a rebound is most likely to occur, if the big players drop during the day or at night, the visible declines usually stop before 2 AM? Just like the decline yesterday during the day, it stopped at 2 AM today. This is actually a trap to force you to sell, deliberately allowing retail investors to see the severity of the drop during the day, making them fearful and prompting them to quickly cut their losses and exit, allowing the big players to take advantage and consume the retail investors' shares.
Now, the declines that you don't see are basically real declines, and they are particularly prone to sharp drops. Sometimes there will even be a false rally first. For example, a surge between 11 PM and 12 AM makes you think it's an opportunity, so you quickly jump in, only to find out in the morning that your position has been liquidated. This is a typical tactic used by Americans; they start crashing the market between 3 AM and 5 AM while you are asleep, and they do it so quickly that you don't even have a chance to react. Their goal is to quickly liquidate those who are using high leverage to prevent them from escaping. Therefore, you will find that Americans particularly like to crash the market in the early morning, taking advantage of our sleep to cut us off. This is why most major sharp drops and liquidations happen between 3 AM and 5 AM because they are targeting us Asians.