Learn the Momentary Flow Light Technique: "Go with the Trend - Feel the Money-Making Effect"

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  1. Here’s a piece of the most heartfelt advice: loneliness is an essential path to mastery. If you want to gain insight, you must calm your mind and enjoy solitude. You can endure more than others, which already puts you ahead of over ninety percent of people. [Taogu Ba]
  2. Over the weekend, I analyzed large buy and sell orders from the past two years. The summary shows that all profits revolve around the main upward trend. Whether it’s low-position buying, mid-move entries, or hitting the limit-up (from the first to the tenth limit-up), these are just techniques. The Dao encompasses techniques, and techniques are extracted within the overall Dao. In other words, the root of all large moves is in counter-trend actions, and failures often occur outside the core.
  3. As long as you follow the trend, any technique is correct. So, in the end, true masters don’t need techniques, nor do they care about buy points or patterns. The ideal state of enlightenment should be patternless—just sensing the market’s core and holding accordingly, then exiting once the momentum dissipates.
  4. People must have independent thinking ability and should not treat others’ words as divine decrees. Even if a top-tier expert says something, I can only take half of it. Those who cannot think independently and make their own decisions will never achieve great things. Stock trading begins with self-reflection, trial and error, and accumulation. The more you trade, think, and accumulate, the more your market intuition will evolve from quantitative to qualitative change.
  5. In fact, the differences between people are not that big. Enlightenment might be accidental or a matter of chance. Making money or losing money is just a difference in mindset. True skill requires opportunity, but that opportunity is definitely the result of thinking and insight. Stay calm, even through meditation or sitting quietly. Embrace solitude.
  6. I believe all profits are granted by the market. After struggling for so long, I finally understand that fighting against the trend is mostly just to find a feel for the market. No matter how hard you try, breaking even is already a full score. The most important skill is judging the market’s mood and temperature—whether the market is here or has retreated, can I let go of my ambitions?
  7. Asking once said: “Trade when the market is good, don’t trade when it’s bad.” But he didn’t tell us how to sense market changes—that’s the real challenge. The times create heroes; wise words indeed.
  8. During market downturns, patience is key. Avoid arrogance and thinking you’re smart. Be wise as a fool. When the market is booming, treat yourself as a fool, follow the crowd, and go with the flow—an unstoppable torrent. Whether it’s hitting the daily limit, trend trading, or 5cm to 20cm moves, don’t limit yourself—wherever the opportunity is, go there.
  9. Before a clear change in trend occurs, do not try to guess the top or bottom. That’s the essence of speculation—keep it simple and clear.
  10. The more urgent the short-term, the more mistakes you make. When can you let go? When you stop chasing quick profits and pursue compound growth. That’s when I think your mindset is mature.
  11. No matter where you get on a bull stock, it’s correct. The key is not to expect a pullback after buying. Truly good stocks don’t have many pullback opportunities; a proper buy-in during a dip is normal.
  12. A true leader must go through a tribulation. The more uncomfortable the buy point, the more likely it is to be a big profit source. Remember: “Buy on disagreement, sell on consensus.”
  13. When the market sentiment is good, the premium of core leaders will exceed expectations. Learn to enjoy the emotional gift—this is the core source of short-term compound growth.
  14. When trading, you must handle your stocks properly before opening a new position. Step by step, that’s the safest approach.
  15. Whether a stock can continue to rise depends on the depth and cycle of the market. It’s a “bearing point” of market sentiment, feeding on emotional premiums and being supported by the atmosphere.
  16. Recognizing market cycles is crucial. Trade boldly during profitable cycles, control yourself during losing cycles. If you misjudge the cycle, even the best pattern is useless.
  17. When a trend stock begins to accelerate, it’s already attracting emotional capital. That’s a signal of emotional involvement.
  18. Tides don’t recede all at once; after continuous declines, a reversal is inevitable. Forward-looking funds enter counter-trend, guiding public expectations. When the market reaches its peak excitement, they quietly exit.
  19. Three years ago, my idol told me: “I trade stocks with strength, not with divine insight.” Later, I broke through this barrier, and my returns increased significantly. The same K-line pattern can have different meanings depending on timing, which also confirms the saying: “Trading stocks based on charts, the success rate won’t exceed 40%.”
  20. When I am fully invested in hitting the limit-up, three points must be met: the index is rising unilaterally, the sector is synchronized and core, and the stock is the sector’s popularity and capacity leader. When these three resonate—even with a hundred million in turnover—the next day can hit the limit-up again.
  21. The simpler and purer the stock trading, the better. The core is to judge the market’s “water temperature.” During downturns, be patient and avoid arrogance; during booms, treat yourself as a fool and follow the crowd. Don’t try to guess the top or bottom—speculation is that simple.
  22. Understanding strong stocks must be accurate. The turning point of emotional cycles is key to short-term profits—buy at the emotional ignition point, sell at the emotional climax. In good times, be aggressive; in bad times, be conservative. When the market is not in your favor, keep positions light or even empty to protect capital.
  23. People always fantasize about the future amid noise but can’t find opportunities when everyone is pushing against the wall. Following the crowd is a trait of retail investors—that’s the so-called limitation. Break through each layer of limitation to ascend to a higher level.
  24. The leader isn’t the first to hit the limit-up but the last to fall. True leaders can drive the sector and influence index sentiment.
  25. Find logic in trending sectors; look for (inescapable) core in emotional sectors. Generally, trend stocks follow the 5-day moving average; if emotional stocks can’t hold, just exit.
  26. When can you follow the trend? 1. When it’s the most mainstream theme daily. 2. When a new theme is launched, get on first and add later. During divergence among leaders, follow the trend; the laggards and followers are less confident. Your mistake isn’t following the trend but timing.
  27. I no longer want to study new methods; I’ve been battered. Remember to conquer greed. Plan first, then act. Seamless connection is impossible and not worth it. Maximize your skills—that’s the best.
  28. Any trader must not be arrogant. Be aware that your profits are just market gifts, not because of your personal ability. A highly enthusiastic market makes all patterns correct. During downturns, all trades are wrong.
  29. During the rising phase, leaders are confused, and followers are even more so. It’s unlikely for latecomers to surpass. During decline, funds dare not chase high; strength is at low levels, and low levels feed back into high levels. Be cautious when chasing high unless it resonates with the emotional cycle.
  30. I have a trait in stock trading: I like new highs. I dislike stocks that keep falling after falling. Especially trend stocks—breakthroughs matter. Stocks that can reach new highs naturally have their reasons.
  31. The strong are all about self-redemption.
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