Previously, for long positions around the 2175 and 2185 levels, the following actions are recommended:



Close 50%: Lock in partial profits and take the gains;

The remaining 50% position: Move the stop-loss up to 2300 to continue betting on subsequent market movements.

This approach can achieve:

Half of the profits are already secured;

Even if the remaining position is stopped out, the overall profit remains largely intact;

At the same time, it avoids completely missing out on potential future upward moves due to full liquidation.

2. Key Technical Signal Monitoring (Long-Short Reversal Conditions)

Currently maintaining a bullish outlook, but closely monitor the following two levels of reversal signals:

Two-hour level
If the price falls below EMA30 (around 2260), and MACD forms a death cross, it indicates signs of a trend reversal from bullish to bearish.

15-minute level
If a continuous downtrend forms, with the price breaking below the lower Bollinger Band (2350) and accompanied by increased volume on the decline, it suggests that short-term bullish momentum has been exhausted.

Before these signals appear, keep the current trading approach; once confirmed, promptly shift to a bearish mindset or exit and observe.

3. Trading Psychology and Execution Principles

Since you have already entered the market, there's no need to worry about “profit retracement” versus “missing out on higher gains.” Instead of gambling on full liquidation or stubbornly holding through short-term volatility, adopt a strategy of moving stop-losses and partial take profits, keeping the initiative in your hands:

Full liquidation: No regrets about missing out, but you may lose potential higher profits;

Stubborn holding: Risks significant profit retracement, and your mindset can be easily disturbed by short-term fluctuations.

In the current market environment, it’s more suitable to use existing profits to bet on future space rather than making extreme decisions driven by emotions.
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