The essence of left-side trading is contradictory to seeking to enter the market at the lowest point of bottom-fishing.
You want to buy at the lowest point, and you want to buy and then the price will rise. Is there such a good thing?
You should not pay attention to the lowest callback, but at what price and with how many layers of positions you are willing to start building a position, instead of seeking the exact number of the lowest point from the beginning.
This is a disease. If it is not treated, it will develop into cancer in the later stage. Basically, the symptoms of short-term players are more serious.
This market is dynamic, and no one can predict what will happen in the next second.
Seeking to buy at the lowest point and sell at the highest point will put a lot of pressure on our trading system because it has very high requirements.
So I suggest removing the first word of these two sentences, not the highest point and the lowest point, but the low point and the high point, because the low point and the high point are a trading range, not the highest point and the lowest point.
For example, is there a difference between 60,000 and 50,000 for pie? It looks like there is a difference of 10,000 points, but if the 10,000 points are split, there is no difference at all. After building positions in batches of 58,000-54,000-52,000, does it reduce 10,000 points to 3,000 points? Many people prefer to wait until 50,000 before entering, and ignore that if you enter the market in a certain area, it is far less important to buy at a higher or lower price. How many people miss a large number of opportunities in a trend market with a high probability in pursuit of an accurate entry point? A true trading expert never expects to buy at the lowest point and sell at the highest point
Finally, I summarized the characteristics of people who like to pursue precise lowest point numbers:
1. No awareness of position management, like to enter and exit, like to make profits immediately after entering the market, and cannot tolerate price corrections,
2. Think that stop loss is like a disaster, so always make the stop loss very small, unwilling to suffer a little loss,
3. Can't distinguish between short-term and long-term
In my investment career, if the entry point of a long-term coin has several times of space upward, but only 20%-30% decline under extreme conditions, then I will enter directly without hesitation. I tolerate the decline of several tens of percent, but it brings me several times of increase, which is a very good income.