This morning's market performance exceeded expectations, and its strong showing was impressive. The most noteworthy aspect is that trading volume did not shrink but continued to expand—this is precisely the necessary condition for further upward movement.



However, with the continuous increase in volume, volatility is also expanding, and risks are gradually accumulating. In this situation, trading execution requires more rational judgment and less emotional-driven decisions. For targets that are clearly accelerating upwards, taking profits and reducing positions should still be executed decisively; but for directions with solid fundamental logic, the previous gains have already been substantial, and the small adjustments in the past two days might actually present a good opportunity for low-cost re-entry.

Ultimately, it still comes down to adopting a swing rotation approach. Tracking the rotation of strong sectors, seeking low-cost entry points during corrections, and knowing when to reduce positions during acceleration—this is the core strategy for balancing risk and reward amid market fluctuations.
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MevWhisperervip
· 01-10 07:41
The fact that the volume has not shrunk is indeed key, but I'm worried that the next move might be a virtual collapse. Taking profit is easy to say but hard to do; everyone wants to catch the last bullish candle. Is correction just a low-entry point? I feel like now might be a trap. Wave rotation sounds great, but in practice, it's just a constant face slap. Very few people can truly control their emotions. An increase in trading volume is usually a warning signal, not a good sign. If there's a pullback this time, I'll reverse and short; I don't believe it can keep rising forever. What sounds good is often hindsight; no one knows what the next step will be. People who buy low often end up as bagholders; I'd rather miss the opportunity than get trapped.
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ShamedApeSellervip
· 01-09 23:08
The volume continues to grow without shrinking, this is the real deal. --- The volatility is increasing again, gotta take some profits, can't be greedy. --- Is the buying opportunity here? I'm thinking about how far this correction can fall. --- Sounds nice, but when it really matters, isn't it just emotions taking over? Haha. --- The theory of sector rotation has been heard many times, but the key is that very few people can actually do it. --- Talking about reducing positions and taking profits is always easy after the fact; who dares to act in the moment? --- Talking about risk accumulation is something said in every market cycle—annoying, isn't it?
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BankruptWorkervip
· 01-09 04:55
High volume is a good signal; this wave is quite interesting. If you sell too early, you'll definitely regret it. It's better to take profits when the time is right. The best time to buy is during adjustments; I'm just waiting for that. Swing trading sounds easy to say but hard to do, and it's still easy to get caught. This time, you really need to control your emotions, or you'll end up taking a loss again.
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CommunityLurkervip
· 01-09 04:53
Increasing volume without shrinking is a good sign, but these fluctuations are really exciting, huh --- That's right, it's easiest to get caught when trying to make quick money. Saying "take profits when you see gains" is easy, but actually doing it is hard --- Is this a good opportunity to buy the dip? I feel like every time there's a correction, it's a trap --- Swing trading sounds simple, but in practice, who isn't thrown around back and forth --- Really? I'm just afraid of taking profits too early and then watching it continue to soar --- That's the truth. Most people get caught up in emotional trading --- Trading volume increases, but so do the risks. You need to keep a close eye --- Why is reducing positions so hard? I always want to wait a bit longer to earn more
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BearMarketMonkvip
· 01-09 04:48
High volume without a decline is truly impressive, but this wave of gains has been a bit rapid Take profits when the situation looks good, greedy people are the ones who end up trapped The opportunity for a low buy-in has indeed arrived, it all depends on whether you can withstand the psychological pressure Take profits and run, don’t wait to get caught Wave rotation is correct, but most people simply can't do it This kind of market is the easiest to lose money in, stay calm Below the daily limit-up are all retail investors, I advise you to be cautious Volume-driven rise ≠ necessarily continued rise, I’ve skipped this trap Another round of chopping the leeks, everyone be careful Taking profits is really difficult, watching it still rise makes you want to wait a bit longer
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SchrodingerGasvip
· 01-09 04:33
Volume not shrinking, this is indeed a sign of game-theoretic equilibrium, and rational expectations of market participants are at play. But I have to say something about your "risk accumulation"—most people see this and start emotionally stop-loss, turning themselves into the ones getting cut. Have you looked at on-chain data? True buying opportunities often appear during panic sell-offs. --- Talking about swing rotation is easy, but how about execution? Those who are still watching the market in the middle of the night know that reducing positions is always a thousand times harder than buying the dip. --- Solid fundamentals are a load of crap. The nice way to put it is "adjustments provide buying opportunities," but the harsh truth is it's just a decline. I just want to know if this wave of acceleration will be like last time, where a gas war disrupts all plans. --- Volume expanding = continuing to push higher? Has this theory been validated in a bear market, or are we just going to repeat last year's "textbook rebound" plot? --- "Rational judgment with less emotion-driven trading," everyone says this in every market cycle, and then we see a rotation of chasing highs and cutting losses.
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GovernancePretendervip
· 01-09 04:31
Increasing volume without shrinking is a good sign, but do you really dare to buy the dip? --- It's easy to say, but when it comes to execution, it still depends on your mindset... --- Swing trading sounds simple, but in practice, who isn't just messing around? --- This wave of gains is indeed fierce, and it's better to prepare early for profit-taking. --- There's nothing wrong with saying risk accumulation is important, but I'm just worried about greed. --- It's good that trading volume has increased, but it also feels like the pullback is coming quickly... --- Is there a chance to buy the dip? I fear I might be the high-position chaser. --- The key is to see when you can exit; this is the hardest part. --- Continuous volume increase often signals an impending escape, be careful.
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