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What are the advantages and disadvantages of left-handed trading and right-handed trading?
Left-handed trading, also known as "reverse trading", buys low and sells high, and sells high and buys low.

Right-hand trading is also called "homeopathic trading", that is, buying high and selling high, selling low and buying low.

No matter whether it is stocks or futures, no matter from what cycle, the trend is fluctuating, that is, there are ups and downs and fluctuations back and forth.

The logic of trading on the left is that a wave of ups will always fall back, and a wave of downs will always rebound. Left-handed trading is suitable for volatile markets. In the trend market, it is more dangerous to trade left-handed, so you need to go out at the right time and don't hold positions for too long.

The logic of right-handed trading is that once a trend is formed, it will last for a long time. Right-hand trading is suitable for the trend market, and it can hold positions for a long time and make a big profit at one time.

But the market in the next moment is unpredictable, and it is impossible to accurately estimate how long the trend will last, when it will reverse and when it will enter a shock.

Disadvantages:

Trading on the right side often leads to chasing high and killing down because of homeopathic thinking (thinking mode is more like a straight line). When I encounter a callback, I think it is a reversal. I will cut the meat quickly and lose money back and forth.

Left-handed trading is more in line with the volatility of the market (the thinking mode is more like a swing curve), and left-handed trading is generally more conducive to profit, but "reverse trading" generally has floating losses, which will lead to untimely stop loss and large losses.