The most mysterious and stable fan I've ever had is a 45-year-old Shanghai socialite—Sister Wang.
In May 2024, she quietly joined the group, not saying a word, and directly threw up a picture:
100,000 U principal, with a 9-year equity curve reaching 38 million.
At that moment, I understood—true experts never rely on tips; they let results speak for themselves.
Later, I learned that Sister Wang entered the market in 2015, never touching contracts, never going all in, and never chasing insider information.
While others compete in speed, she competes in patience; while others gamble for quick riches, she relies on rhythm.
I shamelessly wanted to ask her for her secret, and she only gave me 6 sentences of "earthy wisdom," each of which could save your life.
I suggest you stick this on the edge of your screen and read it before watching the market.
1. Rapid rise and slow fall = major players buying in
After a big bullish candlestick, if it falls slowly but without volume collapse,
that's the major players secretly taking over.
Don't rush to run; just give them a lift.
2. Rapid fall and weak rebound = get out quickly
After a big bearish candlestick, if the rebound can't even reach halfway,
if it can't get back to the 20-day line in three days?
Don't hesitate, just leave.
The market won't reward those who "carry luggage" for others.
3. Huge volume doesn't necessarily mean a top; shrinking volume is deadly
High volume at a peak doesn’t necessarily signal a top;
a true top is when there’s no volume, no interest, and no one asking.
The top is cold, not hot.
That’s when you should withdraw in batches.
4. The bottom needs to be "voted on" three times to count
The first rebound is a false move,
the second bottom test is a trial,
the third consecutive three weeks with volume not making new lows + breaking the neckline,
that's the real takeoff signal.
5. Patterns are emotions; volume is the heartbeat
Shrinking volume with a declining trend = heartbeat weakening
Increased volume with a sharp drop = heartbeat stopping
Moderate volume = recovery of health
The 60-day average volume line is like a "blood pressure monitor,"
once it breaks, you need to reduce risks immediately.
6. The highest realm—being in cash
Being in cash without itching to trade, watching others get rich without envy.
Sister Wang walks her dog every day, collects rent, and takes 20% from the market for investments every month,
only making moves two or three times a month.
Someone asked her about her win rate, and she casually replied:
"I don't look at the win rate; I only check if the rent has been received."
The market has opportunities every year,
but those in a hurry to make money lose every year.
The faster the rhythm, the quicker the demise; the steadier the rhythm, the thicker the profit.
In a bull market, survival depends on entry; those who can last until the end rely on patience.

