The bull market has reached its most grueling phase. The market is oscillating repeatedly in key zones, flipping between ups and downs, with both bulls and bears getting liquidated. Those lacking patience to follow the trend can't hold on, and speculators who can't withstand volatility are being scared away.
At times like these, most people's reactions are actually the same—either fearing further declines and panicking to cut losses, or believing the bottom is in and going all-in to scoop up. The result is often stepping into traps repeatedly. But the market's logic is actually quite clear: the real big opportunities often lie hidden behind public panic. The main players are using this repeated oscillation to exchange chips from retail traders' hands into their own, preparing for the next rally.
The most taboo thing at this stage is going all-in. The reason is simple—the trend isn't clear yet, and although key support levels are there, they haven't completely formed a base yet, and overhead resistance levels haven't broken through. Going all-in blindly at this point, once the market breaks support, you'll be stuck in a passive position with no room left to add positions. The correct approach is staged layout and maintaining sufficient cash reserves. This way, when the market dips, you actually hold the initiative and can avoid the losses from repeated stop-losses during the oscillation.
As for cutting losses and running, that's even more wrong. The current oscillation is not a signal of the end of the bull market. From a weekly perspective, momentum hasn't reversed yet, but it's already starting to exhaust. The support level has multiple layers of technical and capital support backing it. ETF outflows mainly come from weak retail hands cutting losses, but institutions are precisely accumulating at low prices—this is typical bull market consolidation washing, not the start of a bear market. Cutting losses now is equivalent to handing cheap chips directly to the main players setting up positions. Not only do you lose principal, but you'll also miss the subsequent trend rebound, and when it truly launches, chasing higher at that point traps you into taking chips at peak prices.
What you should be doing now is simple: steady your mindset and control your hands. Don't let short-term oscillation noise drive your decisions, maintain the bottom line of your positions, execute your staged layout plan, then wait patiently. Once support stabilizes and resistance breaks, the real main wave will naturally come. Those who can endure the low-point oscillation and hold onto their chips will have the opportunity to capture the subsequent market returns.
The bull market has reached its most grueling phase. The market is oscillating repeatedly in key zones, flipping between ups and downs, with both bulls and bears getting liquidated. Those lacking patience to follow the trend can't hold on, and speculators who can't withstand volatility are being scared away.
At times like these, most people's reactions are actually the same—either fearing further declines and panicking to cut losses, or believing the bottom is in and going all-in to scoop up. The result is often stepping into traps repeatedly. But the market's logic is actually quite clear: the real big opportunities often lie hidden behind public panic. The main players are using this repeated oscillation to exchange chips from retail traders' hands into their own, preparing for the next rally.
The most taboo thing at this stage is going all-in. The reason is simple—the trend isn't clear yet, and although key support levels are there, they haven't completely formed a base yet, and overhead resistance levels haven't broken through. Going all-in blindly at this point, once the market breaks support, you'll be stuck in a passive position with no room left to add positions. The correct approach is staged layout and maintaining sufficient cash reserves. This way, when the market dips, you actually hold the initiative and can avoid the losses from repeated stop-losses during the oscillation.
As for cutting losses and running, that's even more wrong. The current oscillation is not a signal of the end of the bull market. From a weekly perspective, momentum hasn't reversed yet, but it's already starting to exhaust. The support level has multiple layers of technical and capital support backing it. ETF outflows mainly come from weak retail hands cutting losses, but institutions are precisely accumulating at low prices—this is typical bull market consolidation washing, not the start of a bear market. Cutting losses now is equivalent to handing cheap chips directly to the main players setting up positions. Not only do you lose principal, but you'll also miss the subsequent trend rebound, and when it truly launches, chasing higher at that point traps you into taking chips at peak prices.
What you should be doing now is simple: steady your mindset and control your hands. Don't let short-term oscillation noise drive your decisions, maintain the bottom line of your positions, execute your staged layout plan, then wait patiently. Once support stabilizes and resistance breaks, the real main wave will naturally come. Those who can endure the low-point oscillation and hold onto their chips will have the opportunity to capture the subsequent market returns.