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How did the futures main force quit?
There are many ways to adapt to local conditions.

1 public enthusiasm is ignited and gradually distributed on the way up. After the completion of the issuance, it even rose for a while under the impetus of retail investors, but it soon collapsed and fell without the support of buying. As can be seen from the volume, a huge amount was released before the high point, some of which belong to this type.

False breakthrough distribution, continuous strong rise and breakthrough trend make the public afraid to buy in the sideways stage, but after the breakthrough, they can't catch up with the list, resulting in the illusion of strong rise and high turnover.

There are many stocks with continuous daily limit. Once the daily limit, the public chasing orders, the rally is over. On the day of the daily limit, it ended with a giant hand.

3 High-level consolidation issuance, which needs news support, the market is false prosperity (at the end of the bull market), and the public is still addicted to the fun brought by floating profits. Consolidated stock futures are regarded as cheap commodities with strong support, and will be missed if they are not picked up. Most of these varieties will form a plateau on the right.

4 top consolidation, common in skyrocketing varieties, high short-term fluctuations are intensive, and the triangle is easy to expand and contract, causing the illusion that the dishwashing ability will rise again in the short term, attracting others to enter the market to take orders.

The most common method is to pull up the shipment step by step. At the end of the boom, the market was full of all kinds of good news. People who don't catch up with the market think that falling goods are cheap. They entered the market after another false rebound, and the main force slowly leveled the big orders in their hands in batches.

Basically, these categories.

Many others are rare and difficult to explain. I suggest you buy a memoir of stock handwriting, written by the biggest bear on Wall Street. In the second half of this book, he introduced some of the most common methods of bulk shipment.