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How to calculate the cost price after lightening the position?
After a stock is reduced, it depends on whether the stock price is higher or lower than the user's fee when it is sold. If it is low, the cost will rise after it is sold. On the contrary, if it is high, the cost will be reduced. The above is how to calculate the cost price after lightening the position.

What do you mean by lightening your position?

Lightening positions is a viewpoint in stock trading. Lightening your position means selling the shares you hold, not necessarily all of them. For example, if a user buys 1 0,000 shares, he feels that the current situation is not good, and he doesn't want to clear all the positions, but he wants to avoid some possible risks, so he sells 500 shares, which is called lightening the position. Buying and selling stocks is called opening positions, and chasing up and down is called buying. Selling some temporarily first is called lightening the position, and then buying back is called adding the position. Long-term rebound is conducive to investors to reduce their positions. Anti-jumping and lightening positions should integrate personal anti-risk ability. The lightening of positions must be carried out under the conditions that the stock fundamentals of stock funds have changed, the historical sales performance of stock funds has always been poor, and the losses of stock funds exceed the investor's ability to resist risks. This article is mainly about how to calculate the cost price after lightening the position, and the content is for reference only.