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Don't remind me again today

In this wave of market, for any friend thinking about buying the dip, isn't the reasoning pretty much the same?



Either thinking "it has dropped enough and should rebound now," or watching others panic and wanting to take a gamble, while some are calculating that the bulls are running out of steam and it’s time to harvest the bears. Sounds reasonable?

The problem is that these are all feelings, not signals.

As I mentioned before, subjective judgment on this matter is unreliable. What happened? They said that over 80,000 was the bottom, and then it broke; they said that just over 80,000 was stable, do they still dare to think that way? There hasn't even been any sign of increased volume on the weekly chart, so what basis is there to judge that it has bottomed out?

The market won't turn just because you think "it's dropped enough"; when the technicals don't align, buying the dip is just another form of gambling.
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GasSavingMastervip
· 3h ago
I feel like this statement hit me too many times. I used to just go with my gut when bottom fishing, but I ended up getting slapped in the face. Ultimately, I still haven't waited for a real technical confirmation. Looking only at candlestick patterns is simply not enough. Going all-in without breaking the weekly line is just ridiculous.
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GasGuruvip
· 3h ago
I tell you, you need to clearly distinguish between signals and this. Almost every time, it's the same excuse, then getting proven wrong. Waiting for a weekly signal to bottom out and buy in, it's purely a gambler's mindset. How can some people still think the market must rebound after a fall? The market doesn't listen that obediently. What happened to the last wave that was supposed to be the bottom? Don't even ask. It really feels like it harms people—how many have been caught off guard by the phrase "It's about to rebound"?
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MEVictimvip
· 3h ago
Feeling vs signal, this question is really well done... Honestly, I've fallen into this trap before too, thinking that after enough of a fall, it’s time to enter a position, and in the end, I lost my pants. To put it bluntly, it’s just a gambler’s mentality. Without any signs of higher trade volumes, still stubbornly trying to buy the dip, it’s no wonder they get played for suckers.
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SchrodingersFOMOvip
· 4h ago
That hits hard... I'm the kind of "waiting to see if it drops enough to reverse" retail investor, still trapped inside. Really, it doesn't feel like a signal, now I finally understand. It reminds me of those who swore they'd break 80,000 and hit the bottom, but what’s the situation now? Without technical support, it's just gambling, I admit. Just watching others cut losses and wanting to buy the dip—pure stupid operation. Even weekly charts haven't shown volume, yet they’re still hyping themselves up. Isn't that just self-deception? The market doesn't care about your feelings; if it’s supposed to fall, it will continue to fall. I've given up trying to buy the dip; I’ll wait for a clear signal before acting.
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