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深圳慧盈姐a

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Searching for structure amid the consolidation, domestic computing power welcomes a 'new narrative' — Expectation for sentiment recovery, focus on two main lines before the holiday The market is oscillating at high levels with faster sector rotation, mainly affected by disappointing earnings, short-term profit-taking in high-tech stocks, and pre-holiday effects. On Friday, the Shanghai Composite Index rebounded after testing the 60-day moving average, showing strong support below, indicating that sentiment is not in panic. Overall, the index is still operating within a box range, which is a normal consolidation phase. As long as critical support is not broken, structural opportunities still exist. 1. Overseas Reflection: Tech earnings ignite sentiment, but beware of continued capital expenditure On Friday, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq closed at historic highs, mainly catalyzed by: Easing geopolitical concerns (rising expectations for US-Iran negotiations); Intel's earnings exceeded expectations, skyrocketing 23.6% to a new all-time high, driving an explosion in the AI hardware chain; The US Department of Justice concluded its investigation related to Powell, strengthening interest rate cut expectations. Nvidia rose nearly 5%, stabilizing above a $500 billion market cap, while Amazon and Microsoft also performed well, with only Apple slightly down. Popular Chinese stocks surged, with the Golden Dragon China Index rising. But be cautious: On Thursday morning Beijing time, tech giants Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, and Google will release earnings reports. Their capital expenditure trends are particularly critical — this year the four companies plan capital expenditures exceeding $600 billion. If the earnings reports reveal that AI monetization is below expectations or indicate a reduction in spending, the global computing power supply chain (including optical modules, storage, servers, etc.) will face pressure. Currently, the overseas computing power chain has already seen significant gains and is in a high-level consolidation phase. 2. Core Main Line: Domestic computing power welcomes a 'new narrative', focus on low-level recovery opportunities Over the weekend, market enthusiasm focused on the release of the DeepSeek-V4 preview version. We believe two major highlights will lead the next phase of investment logic: Adaptation to domestic chips like Huawei's Ascend, marking a key breakthrough in the domestic AI ecosystem, as China begins to define its own AI technology path; Model prices have dropped below the industry 'cost line', paving the way for the large-scale application of AI, which is a long-term benefit for the upstream and downstream of the industry chain. Catalyzed by this, on Friday, domestic computing power (chips, servers, large models) rallied against the trend, with Haiguang and Huqiang leading the way. The sector now has three advantages: relatively low valuations, better chip structure, and new narrative space. The focus going forward should be on domestic computing power/chips with recovery potential, as well as diffusion opportunities in semiconductor equipment, packaging and testing, and foundry segments. 3. Structural Analysis: How to position before the holiday? Focus on two major directions Next week, there are only 4 trading days before entering the May Day holiday. Historically, trading tends to thin before holidays, but after two days of adjustment, there are opportunities for sentiment recovery and individual stocks. Two main lines are worth focusing on: 1. Domestic substitution (semiconductors/computing power chain) Catalysts overlap: Intel's earnings reflection + the US House of Representatives passing the MATCH Act to strengthen export controls + DeepSeek's localization adaptation; Policy support: Recent high-level emphasis on 'strengthening original leading technological breakthroughs,' reinforcing the logic of domestic substitution; Directions include: AI chips (like Huawei's Ascend), servers, semiconductor equipment, materials, and packaging/testing. 2. Sustainable trend sectors Lithium batteries: Strong performance on Friday; observe if the upward trend can continue; Commercial aerospace: Short-term adjustments due to delayed launch nodes, but there are still catalysts ahead, tracking opportunities post-consolidation. 4. Liquidity Observation: Precise control, clear structural market characteristics The central bank today conducted a 400 billion RMB MLF operation, but 600 billion RMB will mature this month, resulting in a net withdrawal of 200 billion RMB. This indicates that current market liquidity is abundant, with the central bank conducting fine-tuning adjustments. A-shares remain in a 'structural bull' environment, with liquidity leaning towards high-growth sectors like technology. 5. Operational Thoughts Overall, the market is in a transition period between old and new main lines: previously high-tech stocks are entering consolidation, while new themes are still brewing. If trading volume shrinks before the holiday, the next focus may be postponed until after the holiday, but domestic substitution and earnings recovery directions have already shown resilience. Suggestions: Control positions, avoid chasing highs, and use the consolidation to position in domestic computing power, semiconductor equipment, and other low-level areas; Closely track the earnings reports of US tech giants for indications of capital expenditure, assessing the mid-term outlook for the global computing power chain; Maintain a mindset of 'structuring within the box,' capturing the intersection of earnings certainty and narrative space. The market never lacks opportunities; what it lacks is the vision to discover the main lines and the patience to wait for the right timing. I'm Huihui, connecting professionally with the market, and driving decisions with logic. May we capture certainty in the fluctuations and welcome potential surprises before the holiday.
Searching for structure amid the consolidation, domestic computing power welcomes a 'new narrative' — Expectation for sentiment recovery, focus on two main lines before the holiday
The market is oscillating at high levels with faster sector rotation, mainly affected by disappointing earnings, short-term profit-taking in high-tech stocks, and pre-holiday effects. On Friday, the Shanghai Composite Index rebounded after testing the 60-day moving average, showing strong support below, indicating that sentiment is not in panic. Overall, the index is still operating within a box range, which is a normal consolidation phase. As long as critical support is not broken, structural opportunities still exist.
1. Overseas Reflection: Tech earnings ignite sentiment, but beware of continued capital expenditure
On Friday, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq closed at historic highs, mainly catalyzed by:
Easing geopolitical concerns (rising expectations for US-Iran negotiations);
Intel's earnings exceeded expectations, skyrocketing 23.6% to a new all-time high, driving an explosion in the AI hardware chain;
The US Department of Justice concluded its investigation related to Powell, strengthening interest rate cut expectations.
Nvidia rose nearly 5%, stabilizing above a $500 billion market cap, while Amazon and Microsoft also performed well, with only Apple slightly down. Popular Chinese stocks surged, with the Golden Dragon China Index rising.
But be cautious: On Thursday morning Beijing time, tech giants Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, and Google will release earnings reports. Their capital expenditure trends are particularly critical — this year the four companies plan capital expenditures exceeding $600 billion. If the earnings reports reveal that AI monetization is below expectations or indicate a reduction in spending, the global computing power supply chain (including optical modules, storage, servers, etc.) will face pressure. Currently, the overseas computing power chain has already seen significant gains and is in a high-level consolidation phase.
2. Core Main Line: Domestic computing power welcomes a 'new narrative', focus on low-level recovery opportunities
Over the weekend, market enthusiasm focused on the release of the DeepSeek-V4 preview version. We believe two major highlights will lead the next phase of investment logic:
Adaptation to domestic chips like Huawei's Ascend, marking a key breakthrough in the domestic AI ecosystem, as China begins to define its own AI technology path;
Model prices have dropped below the industry 'cost line', paving the way for the large-scale application of AI, which is a long-term benefit for the upstream and downstream of the industry chain.
Catalyzed by this, on Friday, domestic computing power (chips, servers, large models) rallied against the trend, with Haiguang and Huqiang leading the way. The sector now has three advantages: relatively low valuations, better chip structure, and new narrative space. The focus going forward should be on domestic computing power/chips with recovery potential, as well as diffusion opportunities in semiconductor equipment, packaging and testing, and foundry segments.
3. Structural Analysis: How to position before the holiday? Focus on two major directions
Next week, there are only 4 trading days before entering the May Day holiday. Historically, trading tends to thin before holidays, but after two days of adjustment, there are opportunities for sentiment recovery and individual stocks. Two main lines are worth focusing on:
1. Domestic substitution (semiconductors/computing power chain)
Catalysts overlap: Intel's earnings reflection + the US House of Representatives passing the MATCH Act to strengthen export controls + DeepSeek's localization adaptation;
Policy support: Recent high-level emphasis on 'strengthening original leading technological breakthroughs,' reinforcing the logic of domestic substitution;
Directions include: AI chips (like Huawei's Ascend), servers, semiconductor equipment, materials, and packaging/testing.
2. Sustainable trend sectors
Lithium batteries: Strong performance on Friday; observe if the upward trend can continue;
Commercial aerospace: Short-term adjustments due to delayed launch nodes, but there are still catalysts ahead, tracking opportunities post-consolidation.
4. Liquidity Observation: Precise control, clear structural market characteristics
The central bank today conducted a 400 billion RMB MLF operation, but 600 billion RMB will mature this month, resulting in a net withdrawal of 200 billion RMB. This indicates that current market liquidity is abundant, with the central bank conducting fine-tuning adjustments. A-shares remain in a 'structural bull' environment, with liquidity leaning towards high-growth sectors like technology.
5. Operational Thoughts
Overall, the market is in a transition period between old and new main lines: previously high-tech stocks are entering consolidation, while new themes are still brewing. If trading volume shrinks before the holiday, the next focus may be postponed until after the holiday, but domestic substitution and earnings recovery directions have already shown resilience.
Suggestions:
Control positions, avoid chasing highs, and use the consolidation to position in domestic computing power, semiconductor equipment, and other low-level areas;
Closely track the earnings reports of US tech giants for indications of capital expenditure, assessing the mid-term outlook for the global computing power chain;
Maintain a mindset of 'structuring within the box,' capturing the intersection of earnings certainty and narrative space.
The market never lacks opportunities; what it lacks is the vision to discover the main lines and the patience to wait for the right timing. I'm Huihui, connecting professionally with the market, and driving decisions with logic. May we capture certainty in the fluctuations and welcome potential surprises before the holiday.
To make bank in crypto trading, you gotta do two things: secure your own wins and help others score too. Real successful traders rely on their ability to stack crypto over time. Those who have faced losses understand this truth better. Successful traders rise from their setbacks; they analyze why they got wrecked and how to dodge those pitfalls. Managing losses isn't just wishful thinking; it requires action. To secure your own success, you must keep learning and reflecting; helping others succeed also reinforces your own experience. Trading crypto is like a journey of self-mastery; nail these two things, and you'll navigate the crypto seas like a pro.
To make bank in crypto trading, you gotta do two things: secure your own wins and help others score too.
Real successful traders rely on their ability to stack crypto over time.
Those who have faced losses understand this truth better. Successful traders rise from their setbacks; they analyze why they got wrecked and how to dodge those pitfalls. Managing losses isn't just wishful thinking; it requires action. To secure your own success, you must keep learning and reflecting; helping others succeed also reinforces your own experience. Trading crypto is like a journey of self-mastery; nail these two things, and you'll navigate the crypto seas like a pro.
The market's about to open again, and since we can't predict, let's just share my personal view! Everyone loves security, but what does that really mean? It's that solid feeling that keeps you calm and unflustered, facing the market with confidence! In trading, security isn't just self-imposed; it's a specific price level that gives you the confidence to hold your position! In bullish patterns, whether it's indices, individual coins, or ETFs, they all seem to follow a key buy level as they climb. Conversely, if that buy level gets breached, we might see a pullback coming! That's why a lot of capital will keep an eye on that particular level; as long as it holds, they'll stay optimistic, and even outside funds might jump in, pushing prices higher! But if it breaks down? That could trigger panic selling, making outside investors hesitant to enter, which could lead to a price drop!
The market's about to open again, and since we can't predict, let's just share my personal view! Everyone loves security, but what does that really mean? It's that solid feeling that keeps you calm and unflustered, facing the market with confidence! In trading, security isn't just self-imposed; it's a specific price level that gives you the confidence to hold your position! In bullish patterns, whether it's indices, individual coins, or ETFs, they all seem to follow a key buy level as they climb. Conversely, if that buy level gets breached, we might see a pullback coming! That's why a lot of capital will keep an eye on that particular level; as long as it holds, they'll stay optimistic, and even outside funds might jump in, pushing prices higher! But if it breaks down? That could trigger panic selling, making outside investors hesitant to enter, which could lead to a price drop!
Weekend news presents a mixed bag: the NASDAQ has hit a new yearly high, while US-Iran negotiations have been put on hold. Coupled with the fact that the big guy has dodged another unexpected event, the overall bearish sentiment is prevailing. Expect a significant chance of a lower open for the A-shares on Monday; if a sharp drop occurs, it might be a good opportunity to 'buy the dip'. With only four trading days left before the holiday, historical patterns show that funds tend to accelerate outflow during the first two trading days before the break, likely putting pressure on the market. However, if the indices see a considerable drop in the latter half of this week, we could see some bottom-fishing capital entering early to speculate on post-holiday movements, significantly increasing the chances of a rebound. In terms of news, the pause in US-Iran negotiations has directly pushed international oil prices up and caused a sharp decline in gold prices, which is putting pressure on global market sentiment. On Monday, keep an eye on the performance of the Japanese and Korean markets at open: if they drop significantly, A-shares are likely to adjust as well; conversely, stability could follow if they hold steady. I’ve repeatedly emphasized the strong performance of ChiNext versus the weak Shanghai index, a trend that is likely to persist. The new high in the NASDAQ is a direct boon for the ChiNext index; in sectors, communication equipment has likely peaked in the short term, so consider positioning in ultra-hard materials, photolithography machines, new energy, and leading domestic GPU companies. Additionally, the continuous rise in international oil prices is tightening the global supply of petroleum products, driving up prices for sulfuric acid, fertilizers, lithium ore, non-ferrous metals, and chemicals in the short term. Overall, if the indices experience a significant pullback before the holiday, it could present a great opportunity to accumulate quality assets.
Weekend news presents a mixed bag: the NASDAQ has hit a new yearly high, while US-Iran negotiations have been put on hold. Coupled with the fact that the big guy has dodged another unexpected event, the overall bearish sentiment is prevailing. Expect a significant chance of a lower open for the A-shares on Monday; if a sharp drop occurs, it might be a good opportunity to 'buy the dip'.
With only four trading days left before the holiday, historical patterns show that funds tend to accelerate outflow during the first two trading days before the break, likely putting pressure on the market. However, if the indices see a considerable drop in the latter half of this week, we could see some bottom-fishing capital entering early to speculate on post-holiday movements, significantly increasing the chances of a rebound.
In terms of news, the pause in US-Iran negotiations has directly pushed international oil prices up and caused a sharp decline in gold prices, which is putting pressure on global market sentiment. On Monday, keep an eye on the performance of the Japanese and Korean markets at open: if they drop significantly, A-shares are likely to adjust as well; conversely, stability could follow if they hold steady.
I’ve repeatedly emphasized the strong performance of ChiNext versus the weak Shanghai index, a trend that is likely to persist. The new high in the NASDAQ is a direct boon for the ChiNext index; in sectors, communication equipment has likely peaked in the short term, so consider positioning in ultra-hard materials, photolithography machines, new energy, and leading domestic GPU companies.
Additionally, the continuous rise in international oil prices is tightening the global supply of petroleum products, driving up prices for sulfuric acid, fertilizers, lithium ore, non-ferrous metals, and chemicals in the short term. Overall, if the indices experience a significant pullback before the holiday, it could present a great opportunity to accumulate quality assets.
Ukraine's drones hit Yekaterinburg for the first time, and the flames of war have finally reached deep into Russia! This is a historic moment, as Ukrainian drones flew 1800 kilometers, striking a high-rise in the city center of Yekaterinburg. Russia's rear is no longer safe; previously, it was just the border areas of Belgorod, Bryansk, and Kursk that faced drone strikes. But now, deep urban areas in Russia have also become targets. The most challenging part for Russia now is that the Ukrainian military has gained the capability to strike significant parts of Russian territory. The war is no longer confined to Ukraine; explosions are now echoing within Russia! In one night, Russian forces intercepted 147 Ukrainian long-range attack drones. Ukraine's goal is clear: to bring the war to Russian territory, forcing alerts in inland cities and sending people to air raid shelters. They aim to let the Russian populace feel the panic of war and shake the foundation of support. However, Russia's furious counterattacks are set to begin. In one night, Russian forces launched 47 ballistic and cruise missiles, along with over 600 drones, executing a saturation strike on numerous targets in Dnipro, Kharkiv, Odesa, and beyond. The Russian approach is very straightforward: absolute firepower suppression.
Ukraine's drones hit Yekaterinburg for the first time, and the flames of war have finally reached deep into Russia! This is a historic moment, as Ukrainian drones flew 1800 kilometers, striking a high-rise in the city center of Yekaterinburg.
Russia's rear is no longer safe; previously, it was just the border areas of Belgorod, Bryansk, and Kursk that faced drone strikes. But now, deep urban areas in Russia have also become targets.
The most challenging part for Russia now is that the Ukrainian military has gained the capability to strike significant parts of Russian territory. The war is no longer confined to Ukraine; explosions are now echoing within Russia!
In one night, Russian forces intercepted 147 Ukrainian long-range attack drones. Ukraine's goal is clear: to bring the war to Russian territory, forcing alerts in inland cities and sending people to air raid shelters. They aim to let the Russian populace feel the panic of war and shake the foundation of support.
However, Russia's furious counterattacks are set to begin. In one night, Russian forces launched 47 ballistic and cruise missiles, along with over 600 drones, executing a saturation strike on numerous targets in Dnipro, Kharkiv, Odesa, and beyond. The Russian approach is very straightforward: absolute firepower suppression.
A colleague returning from Germany mentioned that the Western world, especially Europeans, are really unhappy, even angry with us because they can't understand or accept it. They don't get why, once the Chinese achieve a technical breakthrough, we turn something that could be sold for a high price and make a ton of money into a bargain. By April 2026, Europe's latest moves aren't just focused on Chinese vehicle exports anymore. The EU has just launched a joint procurement platform for critical minerals, covering rare earths, batteries, and defense-related materials in the first batch. The message is crystal clear: they aren't just worried about a specific Chinese car selling cheaply, but about the pricing power, supply rights, and scheduling rights of the new energy industry chain being redistributed. Many people interpret this round of friction as "European carmakers fearing a price war," but that's only half the story. In October 2024, the EU imposed a final anti-subsidy tax on Chinese-made electric cars; by January 2026, the European Commission issued "price commitment" guidelines, allowing companies to substitute part of the tariffs with minimum price schemes. Ultimately, what Brussels wants to control isn't just the scale of imports but who gets to write the market rules. Looking at the demand side, the situation isn't that simple either. In 2025, the EU's new electric vehicle registrations reached 1.88 million, with a market share of 17.4%, significantly rebounding from the previous year; however, hybrid vehicles still held a 34.5% share, remaining the mainstream choice for consumers. The issue isn't that Europeans don't want electric vehicles; rather, European carmakers are trying to catch up with electrification while also maintaining profits, unions, production lines, and local jobs, making their turnaround slow and burdensome. What really tightens the screws on Europe is how Chinese companies have turned "cheap" into a systematic capability. The International Energy Agency's data is striking: in 2024, global battery demand will surpass 1 terawatt-hour for the first time, with the average price of power battery packs dropping below $100 per kilowatt-hour; by 2025, the global lithium battery market size will exceed $150 billion. Prices are falling not by shouting slogans but through manufacturing scale, material organization, engineering iteration, and cost-cutting across the entire chain. So when Europe talks about "competition" in the past two years, they often bring up "security". The EU's Critical Raw Materials Act has set hard targets for 2030: 10% domestic mining, 40% processing, and 25% recycling, while requiring that reliance on any single third country does not exceed 65%. The 2025 automotive action plan and the Automotive Package and Battery Booster launched in December of the same year are essentially building a protective moat for local batteries and automotive supply chains. There's a deeper change behind this: in the European policy context, cars are no longer just consumer goods but increasingly resemble infrastructure. Vehicles are connected to data, software, and charging networks, batteries tie into energy storage and the grid, and raw materials are linked to industrial resilience and defense supply. The European Commission clearly states in the automotive action plan that expanding European key component production capacity is aimed at reducing security vulnerabilities and economic security risks. For China, the real threat isn't just a slightly higher or lower tax but the gradual rewriting of trade frictions into institutional barriers. Future pressures will likely stem more from raw materials, recycling, compliance, localization, and supply chain scrutiny. Europe won’t easily give up the Chinese market and can't do without Chinese industrial capabilities, but it will try to turn this dependency into "controlled dependency". I believe that when looking at Europe today, we shouldn't view it as too strong nor overly emotional. Its most prominent contradiction now is that while the direction of transformation is clear, old profits are hard to let go of, and new capabilities are slow to fill the gap, leading to the gradual shift of issues originally belonging to industrial competition toward security, rules, and geopolitics. For China, the most stable response isn't to follow the other's emotions but to continue deepening technology, stabilizing the supply chain, and preparing international compliance and local operational capabilities in advance. We should collaborate where we can, contend where we must, but always maintain one judgment: trade issues shouldn't be militarized, industrial competition shouldn't be ideologized, and the real determinant of victory will be who can turn advanced manufacturing into long-term, stable, and replicable real capabilities.
A colleague returning from Germany mentioned that the Western world, especially Europeans, are really unhappy, even angry with us because they can't understand or accept it. They don't get why, once the Chinese achieve a technical breakthrough, we turn something that could be sold for a high price and make a ton of money into a bargain.
By April 2026, Europe's latest moves aren't just focused on Chinese vehicle exports anymore. The EU has just launched a joint procurement platform for critical minerals, covering rare earths, batteries, and defense-related materials in the first batch. The message is crystal clear: they aren't just worried about a specific Chinese car selling cheaply, but about the pricing power, supply rights, and scheduling rights of the new energy industry chain being redistributed.
Many people interpret this round of friction as "European carmakers fearing a price war," but that's only half the story. In October 2024, the EU imposed a final anti-subsidy tax on Chinese-made electric cars; by January 2026, the European Commission issued "price commitment" guidelines, allowing companies to substitute part of the tariffs with minimum price schemes. Ultimately, what Brussels wants to control isn't just the scale of imports but who gets to write the market rules.
Looking at the demand side, the situation isn't that simple either. In 2025, the EU's new electric vehicle registrations reached 1.88 million, with a market share of 17.4%, significantly rebounding from the previous year; however, hybrid vehicles still held a 34.5% share, remaining the mainstream choice for consumers. The issue isn't that Europeans don't want electric vehicles; rather, European carmakers are trying to catch up with electrification while also maintaining profits, unions, production lines, and local jobs, making their turnaround slow and burdensome.
What really tightens the screws on Europe is how Chinese companies have turned "cheap" into a systematic capability. The International Energy Agency's data is striking: in 2024, global battery demand will surpass 1 terawatt-hour for the first time, with the average price of power battery packs dropping below $100 per kilowatt-hour; by 2025, the global lithium battery market size will exceed $150 billion. Prices are falling not by shouting slogans but through manufacturing scale, material organization, engineering iteration, and cost-cutting across the entire chain.
So when Europe talks about "competition" in the past two years, they often bring up "security". The EU's Critical Raw Materials Act has set hard targets for 2030: 10% domestic mining, 40% processing, and 25% recycling, while requiring that reliance on any single third country does not exceed 65%. The 2025 automotive action plan and the Automotive Package and Battery Booster launched in December of the same year are essentially building a protective moat for local batteries and automotive supply chains.
There's a deeper change behind this: in the European policy context, cars are no longer just consumer goods but increasingly resemble infrastructure. Vehicles are connected to data, software, and charging networks, batteries tie into energy storage and the grid, and raw materials are linked to industrial resilience and defense supply. The European Commission clearly states in the automotive action plan that expanding European key component production capacity is aimed at reducing security vulnerabilities and economic security risks.
For China, the real threat isn't just a slightly higher or lower tax but the gradual rewriting of trade frictions into institutional barriers. Future pressures will likely stem more from raw materials, recycling, compliance, localization, and supply chain scrutiny. Europe won’t easily give up the Chinese market and can't do without Chinese industrial capabilities, but it will try to turn this dependency into "controlled dependency".
I believe that when looking at Europe today, we shouldn't view it as too strong nor overly emotional. Its most prominent contradiction now is that while the direction of transformation is clear, old profits are hard to let go of, and new capabilities are slow to fill the gap, leading to the gradual shift of issues originally belonging to industrial competition toward security, rules, and geopolitics.
For China, the most stable response isn't to follow the other's emotions but to continue deepening technology, stabilizing the supply chain, and preparing international compliance and local operational capabilities in advance. We should collaborate where we can, contend where we must, but always maintain one judgment: trade issues shouldn't be militarized, industrial competition shouldn't be ideologized, and the real determinant of victory will be who can turn advanced manufacturing into long-term, stable, and replicable real capabilities.
#CollegeBoysFeelingThePressureDowningPesticideFor10DaysBeforeSeekingHelp# A few weeks back, chugging pesticide was still a lifesaver, talk about luck. Shoutout to the docs for their work! [赞][赞][赞][赞][赞]!
#CollegeBoysFeelingThePressureDowningPesticideFor10DaysBeforeSeekingHelp#
A few weeks back, chugging pesticide was still a lifesaver, talk about luck. Shoutout to the docs for their work! [赞][赞][赞][赞][赞]!
Tomorrow's price action is gonna be crucial since we've been ranging here for 4 days, possibly entering a window for directional choice. From a technical standpoint, if we break upwards, the existing bullish structure could continue! But if we dip down, short-term selling pressure could ramp up! With a few days until the holiday, trading tends to be pretty thin before a break, and it's just the usual quant bots pulling liquidity around! Given all this uncertainty, I think we should tread carefully here, but of course, that's just my personal take; how the market ultimately moves is up to the crowd!
Tomorrow's price action is gonna be crucial since we've been ranging here for 4 days, possibly entering a window for directional choice.
From a technical standpoint, if we break upwards, the existing bullish structure could continue! But if we dip down, short-term selling pressure could ramp up!
With a few days until the holiday, trading tends to be pretty thin before a break, and it's just the usual quant bots pulling liquidity around!
Given all this uncertainty, I think we should tread carefully here, but of course, that's just my personal take; how the market ultimately moves is up to the crowd!
Top 20 stocks with the highest gains over the past 10 days! 1. Boyun New Material. Gain of 103.10% (military equipment, commercial aerospace, Q1 report pre-increase, large aircraft, state-owned enterprise reform) 2. Pinggao Co., Ltd. Gain of 94.27% (chip concept, computing power and leasing, blockchain, Xinchuang, smart governance) 3. Xiechuang Data. Gain of 77.89% (computing power and leasing, CPO, Q1 report pre-increase, clean water concept, storage chips) 4. Jinfutech. Gain of 77.61% (liquid-cooled servers, packaging products in the beverage and food sector) 5. Huate Gas. Gain of 75.92% (photoresist for lithography machines, geopolitical conflicts, fluorochemical, chips, hydrogen energy, nuclear power) 6. Zhuhua Group. Gain of 69.39% (indium metal, Q1 report growth, zinc-copper-lead metals, minor metals, gold concept, state-owned enterprise reform) 7. Hongjing Technology. Gain of 67.9% (computing power and leasing, security, AI applications) 8. Ulitide. Gain of 67.62% (chip concept, nuclear pollution prevention, AI agents, photovoltaics) 9. Changguang Huaxin. Gain of 61.13% (CPO, fiber optics, chips, commercial aerospace, data centers) 10. Taijin New Energy. Gain of 60.42% (Sci-tech innovation new stocks, PCB, CPO, PET copper foil, blockchain, lithium batteries, hydrogen energy) 11. Shengshi Technology. Gain of 59.15% (chips, robots, smart ports, blockchain, Xinchuang, artificial intelligence) 12. Baolidy. Gain of 59.15% (dyes, photoresist, football concept, specialized and innovative, 3D printing) 13. Taijing Technology. Gain of 55.63% (chips, CPO, lithography machines, blockchain, consumer electronics) 14. Huashengchang. Gain of 55.23% (CPO, optical modules, optical chips, nuclear pollution prevention, AI applications, energy storage) 15. Huayuan Holdings. Gain of 55.15% (annual report pre-increase, liquid-cooled servers, lithium batteries, chips, packaging products, cross-strait) 16. Weiteou. Gain of 52.75% (advanced packaging, chips, new energy vehicles, specialized and innovative, blockchain, photovoltaics, low-altitude economy) 17. Jingtou Development. Gain of 52.33% (planned divestment of real estate, state-owned enterprise reform, Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei integration) 18. Annuoqi. Gain of 51.94% (computing power and leasing, dyes, chips, AI applications) 19. Youxun Co., Ltd. Gain of 51.66% (sci-tech innovation new stocks, CPO, chips, 5G, data centers, cross-strait) 20. Litong Electronics. Gain of 50.55% (liquid-cooled servers, computing power and leasing, chips, OLED, annual report pre-increase, consumer electronics)
Top 20 stocks with the highest gains over the past 10 days!
1. Boyun New Material. Gain of 103.10% (military equipment, commercial aerospace, Q1 report pre-increase, large aircraft, state-owned enterprise reform)
2. Pinggao Co., Ltd. Gain of 94.27% (chip concept, computing power and leasing, blockchain, Xinchuang, smart governance)
3. Xiechuang Data. Gain of 77.89% (computing power and leasing, CPO, Q1 report pre-increase, clean water concept, storage chips)
4. Jinfutech. Gain of 77.61% (liquid-cooled servers, packaging products in the beverage and food sector)
5. Huate Gas. Gain of 75.92% (photoresist for lithography machines, geopolitical conflicts, fluorochemical, chips, hydrogen energy, nuclear power)
6. Zhuhua Group. Gain of 69.39% (indium metal, Q1 report growth, zinc-copper-lead metals, minor metals, gold concept, state-owned enterprise reform)
7. Hongjing Technology. Gain of 67.9% (computing power and leasing, security, AI applications)
8. Ulitide. Gain of 67.62% (chip concept, nuclear pollution prevention, AI agents, photovoltaics)
9. Changguang Huaxin. Gain of 61.13% (CPO, fiber optics, chips, commercial aerospace, data centers)
10. Taijin New Energy. Gain of 60.42% (Sci-tech innovation new stocks, PCB, CPO, PET copper foil, blockchain, lithium batteries, hydrogen energy)
11. Shengshi Technology. Gain of 59.15% (chips, robots, smart ports, blockchain, Xinchuang, artificial intelligence)
12. Baolidy. Gain of 59.15% (dyes, photoresist, football concept, specialized and innovative, 3D printing)
13. Taijing Technology. Gain of 55.63% (chips, CPO, lithography machines, blockchain, consumer electronics)
14. Huashengchang. Gain of 55.23% (CPO, optical modules, optical chips, nuclear pollution prevention, AI applications, energy storage)
15. Huayuan Holdings. Gain of 55.15% (annual report pre-increase, liquid-cooled servers, lithium batteries, chips, packaging products, cross-strait)
16. Weiteou. Gain of 52.75% (advanced packaging, chips, new energy vehicles, specialized and innovative, blockchain, photovoltaics, low-altitude economy)
17. Jingtou Development. Gain of 52.33% (planned divestment of real estate, state-owned enterprise reform, Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei integration)
18. Annuoqi. Gain of 51.94% (computing power and leasing, dyes, chips, AI applications)
19. Youxun Co., Ltd. Gain of 51.66% (sci-tech innovation new stocks, CPO, chips, 5G, data centers, cross-strait)
20. Litong Electronics. Gain of 50.55% (liquid-cooled servers, computing power and leasing, chips, OLED, annual report pre-increase, consumer electronics)
A lot of the time, before big opportunities in the market arise, you've got to dig a pit first! Let me share my viewpoint: personally, I believe that in this market, aside from the high win rate and favorable risk-reward ratio at the bottom reversal, there’s another method that’s quite practical. That’s the monthly candles; when the MACD crosses below the zero line and the second green bar appears, it basically indicates a stop in the downtrend, and often the third green bar starts the rebound. When this pattern appears on the monthly candles, the daily candles have usually broken below all the moving averages, then the daily candles form a double bottom. After forming the double bottom, there’s a cleanup phase, and if it doesn’t break the previous lows, it can surge at any moment, while the height of the daily candles' rise can reach the yearly line, which typically coincides with the previous accumulation zone. So, this is why many people often say they cut at the lowest point, because before a big surge, there’s a high probability of continuous declines, breaking previous lows, digging a pit, and many people's defense is based on those previous lows. The big players aim to smash through those previous lows, creating another lower point before they initiate the rally. This method mainly focuses on catching oversold rebounds, especially at the monthly candle level, which has significant room for movement, but it doesn't have as much space as the bottom reversal. However, it's all about key positions, using minimal defense, which means operating on a controllable risk basis to aim for excess profits.
A lot of the time, before big opportunities in the market arise, you've got to dig a pit first!
Let me share my viewpoint: personally, I believe that in this market, aside from the high win rate and favorable risk-reward ratio at the bottom reversal, there’s another method that’s quite practical.
That’s the monthly candles; when the MACD crosses below the zero line and the second green bar appears, it basically indicates a stop in the downtrend, and often the third green bar starts the rebound.
When this pattern appears on the monthly candles, the daily candles have usually broken below all the moving averages, then the daily candles form a double bottom. After forming the double bottom, there’s a cleanup phase, and if it doesn’t break the previous lows, it can surge at any moment, while the height of the daily candles' rise can reach the yearly line, which typically coincides with the previous accumulation zone.
So, this is why many people often say they cut at the lowest point, because before a big surge, there’s a high probability of continuous declines, breaking previous lows, digging a pit, and many people's defense is based on those previous lows. The big players aim to smash through those previous lows, creating another lower point before they initiate the rally.
This method mainly focuses on catching oversold rebounds, especially at the monthly candle level, which has significant room for movement, but it doesn't have as much space as the bottom reversal. However, it's all about key positions, using minimal defense, which means operating on a controllable risk basis to aim for excess profits.
Why are young folks these days all about rocking new threads without cutting the tags? Is this some kind of new trend? Got anything to say, vendors?
Why are young folks these days all about rocking new threads without cutting the tags? Is this some kind of new trend?
Got anything to say, vendors?
Strongly recommend a thorough crackdown on all import and export companies to decisively prevent incidents like the one involving Pona. Pona smuggled 1243.55 tons of natural flake graphite, a special raw material strictly prohibited for export in our country, which can be used in high-end weapons manufacturing. The individuals involved in Pona acted solely for personal gain, disregarding national interests, showing no sense of national spirit, and shamelessly prioritizing profit over integrity. Such treasonous behavior stirs outrage among the people and cannot be tolerated! What about other similar actions that haven't been uncovered? That's a serious issue; otherwise, while we are battling ahead, there are those behind providing weapons and materials to the enemy. How can we bear that! A thorough investigation is necessary, it must be strict!
Strongly recommend a thorough crackdown on all import and export companies to decisively prevent incidents like the one involving Pona. Pona smuggled 1243.55 tons of natural flake graphite, a special raw material strictly prohibited for export in our country, which can be used in high-end weapons manufacturing. The individuals involved in Pona acted solely for personal gain, disregarding national interests, showing no sense of national spirit, and shamelessly prioritizing profit over integrity. Such treasonous behavior stirs outrage among the people and cannot be tolerated!
What about other similar actions that haven't been uncovered? That's a serious issue; otherwise, while we are battling ahead, there are those behind providing weapons and materials to the enemy. How can we bear that!
A thorough investigation is necessary, it must be strict!
Recently, a car owner publicly requested a response and displayed the first part on a banner hanging at the back of their vehicle. First part: Shenzhen isn't afraid of slanted shadows. A netizen responded with the second part: Ningbo's phone is switched off.
Recently, a car owner publicly requested a response and displayed the first part on a banner hanging at the back of their vehicle.
First part: Shenzhen isn't afraid of slanted shadows.
A netizen responded with the second part: Ningbo's phone is switched off.
The EU is really going hard, not only sanctioning Russia but also adding third-country entities and finance! As long as a third country has financial and trade ties with Russia, they’ll get hit with sanctions too – they’re reaching too far! The EU is rolling out its largest economic sanctions yet, the 20th round, and all member states unanimously approved a €90 billion loan to Ukraine! (Hungary, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic agreed but won’t participate) The EU is aiming to completely cripple Russia's economy. This wave of sanctions is the biggest we've seen in the last two years. They've added 120 individuals and entities to the list, with 46 ships included, covering multiple sectors like energy, finance, and trade! In the energy sector, starting January 2027, they’ll ban Russian entities from providing liquefied natural gas terminal services and have put Russia's “shadow fleet” on the sanctions list. In finance, over 20 Russian banks are facing trading bans, there are restrictions on digital ruble transactions, and they’ve sanctioned four cryptocurrency trading platforms from third countries that provide financial services to Russia. In trade and the military sector, 58 Russian defense firms and 16 entities from third countries are being sanctioned, marking the first time third countries are included to hit Russia where it hurts, preventing them from dodging sanctions! To put it plainly, the EU wants to throw Russia’s economy into crisis and stagnation, effectively stripping away their military's economic support and operational capability! This EU “long arm” of sanctions will only intensify.
The EU is really going hard, not only sanctioning Russia but also adding third-country entities and finance!
As long as a third country has financial and trade ties with Russia, they’ll get hit with sanctions too – they’re reaching too far!
The EU is rolling out its largest economic sanctions yet, the 20th round, and all member states unanimously approved a €90 billion loan to Ukraine! (Hungary, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic agreed but won’t participate)
The EU is aiming to completely cripple Russia's economy.
This wave of sanctions is the biggest we've seen in the last two years. They've added 120 individuals and entities to the list, with 46 ships included, covering multiple sectors like energy, finance, and trade!
In the energy sector, starting January 2027, they’ll ban Russian entities from providing liquefied natural gas terminal services and have put Russia's “shadow fleet” on the sanctions list.
In finance, over 20 Russian banks are facing trading bans, there are restrictions on digital ruble transactions, and they’ve sanctioned four cryptocurrency trading platforms from third countries that provide financial services to Russia.
In trade and the military sector, 58 Russian defense firms and 16 entities from third countries are being sanctioned, marking the first time third countries are included to hit Russia where it hurts, preventing them from dodging sanctions!
To put it plainly, the EU wants to throw Russia’s economy into crisis and stagnation, effectively stripping away their military's economic support and operational capability!
This EU “long arm” of sanctions will only intensify.
Staying up late to catch the match between Ding Junhui and Zhao Xintong I realized that the biggest risk for Ding right now is not the lack of offensive power everyone sees, but that he has lost control of the match in the second phase. Many fans only focus on surface issues after the match, complaining about Ding's long shots being off, and how his scoring runs easily break down, simply attributing his deficit to a drop in offensive form. But those of us who really took the time to watch the entire second phase can see that the rhythm of this derby match was firmly in Zhao Xintong's hands from start to finish, with Ding always playing catch-up. Throughout the second phase, it was clear when to go for long shots and aggressive plays, and when to settle into safety and defense; the control over the pace of the match was never in Ding's hands. When Zhao sped up to grab points, Ding was forced to speed up his shot tempo as well, and when his opponent slowed down to grind it out, even if he was mentally drained, he could only stubbornly keep up. Plus, at 39 years old, the physical limitations are evident; his stamina and focus can't compete with the peak performance of young Zhao Xintong. Being stuck in a passive rhythm for too long, as the match progressed, Ding's mindset started to crumble, leading to those uncharacteristic simple mistakes. It was especially clear in the late stages of the second phase, where Ding's fatigue was visibly apparent. Even though the score of 9 to 7 looks like just a two-frame difference, the paper gap isn’t significant, but the core control of the match had completely shifted. Even if Ding still has top-notch defensive skills and big match experience, a player who has lost control of the rhythm finds it incredibly difficult to force a turnaround in the final stages of the match. Do you think Ding has a chance to reclaim his rhythm in tomorrow's final match?
Staying up late to catch the match between Ding Junhui and Zhao Xintong
I realized that the biggest risk for Ding right now
is not the lack of offensive power everyone sees, but that he has lost control of the match in the second phase.
Many fans only focus on surface issues after the match, complaining about Ding's long shots being off, and how his scoring runs easily break down, simply attributing his deficit to a drop in offensive form.
But those of us who really took the time to watch the entire second phase can see that the rhythm of this derby match was firmly in Zhao Xintong's hands from start to finish, with Ding always playing catch-up.
Throughout the second phase, it was clear when to go for long shots and aggressive plays, and when to settle into safety and defense; the control over the pace of the match was never in Ding's hands.
When Zhao sped up to grab points, Ding was forced to speed up his shot tempo as well, and when his opponent slowed down to grind it out, even if he was mentally drained, he could only stubbornly keep up.
Plus, at 39 years old, the physical limitations are evident; his stamina and focus can't compete with the peak performance of young Zhao Xintong. Being stuck in a passive rhythm for too long, as the match progressed, Ding's mindset started to crumble, leading to those uncharacteristic simple mistakes.
It was especially clear in the late stages of the second phase, where Ding's fatigue was visibly apparent.
Even though the score of 9 to 7 looks like just a two-frame difference, the paper gap isn’t significant, but the core control of the match had completely shifted.
Even if Ding still has top-notch defensive skills and big match experience, a player who has lost control of the rhythm finds it incredibly difficult to force a turnaround in the final stages of the match.
Do you think Ding has a chance to reclaim his rhythm in tomorrow's final match?
How to view the index with two consecutive declines + trading week before the holiday? As we approach the May Day holiday, combined with the concentrated release of annual and quarterly reports, the overall strategy leans towards being conservative. On the news front, the US-Iran negotiations remain a variable, so capital is unlikely to make significant moves before the holiday. After all, no one can predict what surprises might pop up during the holiday. Thus, it's wise to lower expectations regarding the index and anticipate a greater chance of consolidation. From a technical perspective, looking at the weekly chart, the Shanghai Composite Index is above the moving averages, and the 5-week MA is diverging upwards. The 5/10/20-week moving averages are basically in a confluence state, so the weekly MA can serve as a dividing line between strength and weakness; being above the MA indicates strength. On the daily chart, the downtrend has not yet been confirmed, but there have been three rebounds from the 60-day MA, indicating that this line is a crucial support level that capital still respects. This week's key focus remains on the 60-day MA's performance; if it holds, that's still acceptable. From a structural standpoint, this is the process of building a central range, with four trading days left, so the probability of continuing to oscillate around the central range is high. Most individual stocks, before the annual and quarterly reports are released, are hesitant to surge significantly. To put it bluntly, stocks that report later have a higher risk of performance surprises, so everyone should pay attention to the fundamentals of their holdings to avoid stepping on landmines.
How to view the index with two consecutive declines + trading week before the holiday?
As we approach the May Day holiday, combined with the concentrated release of annual and quarterly reports, the overall strategy leans towards being conservative. On the news front, the US-Iran negotiations remain a variable, so capital is unlikely to make significant moves before the holiday. After all, no one can predict what surprises might pop up during the holiday. Thus, it's wise to lower expectations regarding the index and anticipate a greater chance of consolidation.
From a technical perspective, looking at the weekly chart, the Shanghai Composite Index is above the moving averages, and the 5-week MA is diverging upwards. The 5/10/20-week moving averages are basically in a confluence state, so the weekly MA can serve as a dividing line between strength and weakness; being above the MA indicates strength.
On the daily chart, the downtrend has not yet been confirmed, but there have been three rebounds from the 60-day MA, indicating that this line is a crucial support level that capital still respects. This week's key focus remains on the 60-day MA's performance; if it holds, that's still acceptable. From a structural standpoint, this is the process of building a central range, with four trading days left, so the probability of continuing to oscillate around the central range is high.
Most individual stocks, before the annual and quarterly reports are released, are hesitant to surge significantly. To put it bluntly, stocks that report later have a higher risk of performance surprises, so everyone should pay attention to the fundamentals of their holdings to avoid stepping on landmines.
An Israeli quadcopter drone crashed in the Nuseirat refugee camp in Gaza. When residents tried to approach it, they discovered it was loaded with a significant amount of drugs, suggesting it may have been deliberately dropped among civilians. Israel has exhausted all means and methods to obliterate Palestinian lives, killing them, forcing them from their homes, and leaving them to starve. Now, they are employing another malicious tactic: dropping drugs among them, attempting to undermine Gaza's society from within.
An Israeli quadcopter drone crashed in the Nuseirat refugee camp in Gaza. When residents tried to approach it, they discovered it was loaded with a significant amount of drugs, suggesting it may have been deliberately dropped among civilians.
Israel has exhausted all means and methods to obliterate Palestinian lives, killing them, forcing them from their homes, and leaving them to starve. Now, they are employing another malicious tactic: dropping drugs among them, attempting to undermine Gaza's society from within.
A Taiwanese green camp woman said this when asked why she doesn't want to unify with the mainland: "Look, back when Hong Kong just returned, people from the mainland flocked to Hong Kong, going on a shopping spree, buying everything up, emptying the shelves. That kind of behavior really annoyed Hong Kong people, they hated it. Not only did they grab shopping resources, but they also took away Hong Kong's medical resources. Hong Kong's hospitals were already crowded; when they came, Hong Kong people had to wait even longer for treatment, taking away our welfare. I'm really scared that if the two sides unify, the mainland folks will come to Taiwan, snatch our resources, and take our medical services. How are we supposed to live when we can't even get what we need, let alone see a doctor?" Honestly, I can't stop laughing at this! Back when Hong Kong just returned, the mainland's economic level wasn't very high. Some products were hard to find in the mainland, and since the mainland folks were curious about Hong Kong, they traveled there in droves for shopping. That's a fact! But these people spending in Hong Kong meant cash flow for Hong Kong; it boosted their economy! Which mall or pharmacy in Hong Kong wasn’t supported by mainland tourists? Without them, could Hong Kong's economy be that vibrant? The fact that mainland tourists bought up Hong Kong's goods shows they were popular, bringing benefits to Hong Kong, yet you call it 'annoying'? Sounds like a case of blindness and ignorance! Mainland tourists going to Hong Kong are there to travel and shop. Unless someone suddenly gets sick after arriving, who would go to Hong Kong just to see a doctor? The pressure on Hong Kong's medical resources is its own problem and has nothing to do with mainland tourists. This person is just blindly blaming the mainland, a classic case of making excuses and playing the victim, fundamentally anti-China and anti-mainland, trying to stir up conflict through lies. The most ridiculous part is her fear that after unification, mainland people will come to Taiwan to snatch resources and medical services! That’s truly laughable! The current mainland is miles ahead of Taiwan, and she’s stuck with decades-old views of mainland life. Did she even take a moment to look in the mirror before saying that? With Taiwan's limited resources and medical capabilities, does anyone from the mainland even care? The medical resources in just one prefecture-level city in the mainland are ten times stronger than Taiwan's. The mainland’s resources are so abundant that it's beyond your imagination; who would have the time to run to Taiwan to 'snatch' your meager stuff? In short, these folks are brainwashed by the green camp, filled with anti-China rhetoric, and for the sake of opposing unification, they disregard basic common sense, fabricating these ridiculous lies to deceive themselves. Even Taiwanese people can't stand what she said, directly calling her out: 'Those businesses in Hong Kong don't have to sell resources; they can close their doors. As a businessman, would you prefer your shelves to be empty or to have no one buying anything? These businesses may publicly complain that mainlanders are snatching resources, but behind the scenes, they're counting their cash happily; you just can't see it!'
A Taiwanese green camp woman said this when asked why she doesn't want to unify with the mainland: "Look, back when Hong Kong just returned, people from the mainland flocked to Hong Kong, going on a shopping spree, buying everything up, emptying the shelves. That kind of behavior really annoyed Hong Kong people, they hated it. Not only did they grab shopping resources, but they also took away Hong Kong's medical resources. Hong Kong's hospitals were already crowded; when they came, Hong Kong people had to wait even longer for treatment, taking away our welfare. I'm really scared that if the two sides unify, the mainland folks will come to Taiwan, snatch our resources, and take our medical services. How are we supposed to live when we can't even get what we need, let alone see a doctor?"
Honestly, I can't stop laughing at this!
Back when Hong Kong just returned, the mainland's economic level wasn't very high. Some products were hard to find in the mainland, and since the mainland folks were curious about Hong Kong, they traveled there in droves for shopping. That's a fact! But these people spending in Hong Kong meant cash flow for Hong Kong; it boosted their economy! Which mall or pharmacy in Hong Kong wasn’t supported by mainland tourists? Without them, could Hong Kong's economy be that vibrant? The fact that mainland tourists bought up Hong Kong's goods shows they were popular, bringing benefits to Hong Kong, yet you call it 'annoying'? Sounds like a case of blindness and ignorance!
Mainland tourists going to Hong Kong are there to travel and shop. Unless someone suddenly gets sick after arriving, who would go to Hong Kong just to see a doctor? The pressure on Hong Kong's medical resources is its own problem and has nothing to do with mainland tourists. This person is just blindly blaming the mainland, a classic case of making excuses and playing the victim, fundamentally anti-China and anti-mainland, trying to stir up conflict through lies.
The most ridiculous part is her fear that after unification, mainland people will come to Taiwan to snatch resources and medical services! That’s truly laughable! The current mainland is miles ahead of Taiwan, and she’s stuck with decades-old views of mainland life. Did she even take a moment to look in the mirror before saying that? With Taiwan's limited resources and medical capabilities, does anyone from the mainland even care? The medical resources in just one prefecture-level city in the mainland are ten times stronger than Taiwan's. The mainland’s resources are so abundant that it's beyond your imagination; who would have the time to run to Taiwan to 'snatch' your meager stuff?
In short, these folks are brainwashed by the green camp, filled with anti-China rhetoric, and for the sake of opposing unification, they disregard basic common sense, fabricating these ridiculous lies to deceive themselves.
Even Taiwanese people can't stand what she said, directly calling her out: 'Those businesses in Hong Kong don't have to sell resources; they can close their doors. As a businessman, would you prefer your shelves to be empty or to have no one buying anything? These businesses may publicly complain that mainlanders are snatching resources, but behind the scenes, they're counting their cash happily; you just can't see it!'
At the White House Correspondents' Association dinner, the Asian woman sitting to the left of the 'Don' is Weijia Jiang, a senior White House correspondent for CBS News and the president of the White House Correspondents' Association for 2025-2026. She was born in 1983 in Xiamen, Fujian, China, and immigrated to the U.S. with her parents at the age of 2, growing up in West Virginia. After coming to the U.S., Weijia's parents made a living running a Chinese restaurant. Weijia holds a bachelor's degree in philosophy from the College of William & Mary and a master's degree in broadcast journalism from Syracuse University. She joined CBS News in 2015 and has interviewed the 'Don' multiple times. Last night was supposed to be Weijia's moment in the spotlight, but a few gunshots shattered that moment. After the shots rang out, the 'Don' was escorted away by the Secret Service, while Weijia had to crawl away from the scene.
At the White House Correspondents' Association dinner, the Asian woman sitting to the left of the 'Don' is Weijia Jiang, a senior White House correspondent for CBS News and the president of the White House Correspondents' Association for 2025-2026. She was born in 1983 in Xiamen, Fujian, China, and immigrated to the U.S. with her parents at the age of 2, growing up in West Virginia. After coming to the U.S., Weijia's parents made a living running a Chinese restaurant.
Weijia holds a bachelor's degree in philosophy from the College of William & Mary and a master's degree in broadcast journalism from Syracuse University. She joined CBS News in 2015 and has interviewed the 'Don' multiple times.
Last night was supposed to be Weijia's moment in the spotlight, but a few gunshots shattered that moment. After the shots rang out, the 'Don' was escorted away by the Secret Service, while Weijia had to crawl away from the scene.
Duofuduo, since the previous high of 41.99, there’s been a steady flow of funds exiting. Recently, as many of the veteran stocks have started to recover, some traders have been flipping this one as well. On Friday, it hit the limit up with increased volume; there was also a significant volume spike on Tuesday. The 33.04 level seems to be a psychological barrier for some. Whether it can break through and continue climbing remains to be seen, but there's a hint that the overall trend is shifting from weak to strong. Shengyang Co., a star blue-chip stock, has seen two limit downs followed by two small bullish candlesticks. It looks stable on the surface, but it’s hard to say for sure. If this is a secondary high from which to offload, it’s not out of the question. We can't rule out a brief shakeout period with some volatility.
Duofuduo, since the previous high of 41.99, there’s been a steady flow of funds exiting. Recently, as many of the veteran stocks have started to recover, some traders have been flipping this one as well. On Friday, it hit the limit up with increased volume; there was also a significant volume spike on Tuesday. The 33.04 level seems to be a psychological barrier for some. Whether it can break through and continue climbing remains to be seen, but there's a hint that the overall trend is shifting from weak to strong.
Shengyang Co., a star blue-chip stock, has seen two limit downs followed by two small bullish candlesticks. It looks stable on the surface, but it’s hard to say for sure. If this is a secondary high from which to offload, it’s not out of the question. We can't rule out a brief shakeout period with some volatility.
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