Current location - Trademark Inquiry Complete Network - Futures platform - How are futures settled in the "Great Times" series? Ding crab made a lot of money among them. Why didn't he win?
How are futures settled in the "Great Times" series? Ding crab made a lot of money among them. Why didn't he win?
The Great Age is a record of grievances and enmities of Hong Kong stocks, and its most widely known is the "Ding Crab Effect". In fact, in addition to the ding crab effect, there are many stock market philosophies in "Big Times" that benefit you, such as what is a stock market crash.

Anyone who knows the history of H shares can see that the two stock market crashes in the "big era" are all involved. The opening credits of the first episode directly indicate that Hong Kong stocks plunged 1973. At that time, any stock could rise to the sky, and even the aunts who set up fruit stalls began to do nothing and concentrate on making a fortune in the stock market. Then there was the stock market crash, and Chen Tao confronted Ding Xie's family. In terms of time, it should be said that it is the "Black Monday" of H shares in 1987.

From 1969 to 1972, H shares soared seven times in just four years, and the turnover was 16 times. Stimulated by the concept of "as long as stocks don't cost money", Hong Kong citizens rushed to buy stocks. As a result, H shares fell by 1973 for half a year. This devastating stock market crash made people crazy overnight, and many people committed suicide by jumping off buildings; "Black Monday" of H shares means that the Hang Seng Index rose 2.3 times in the bull market of H shares, from 1984 to 1987. However,1October 26th 1987, 10, the Hang Seng Index plummeted by a thousand points, the biggest one-day drop in the world.

The two stock market crashes in the great era were mostly caused by human factors, especially the second and third times. In the third stock market crash, Ding Xie's family mainly made stock index futures and made profits by shorting. If you want Ding Xie to take the lead, you can only choose to let the stock index soar. As a result, Zhanbo Fang, Ding Xie's opponent, began to borrow money from Hong Kong's three richest people to raise the stock index through financing. In the end, Ding Xie had to buy at a high price, all his savings evaporated and he was in debt of hundreds of millions.