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What do you mean, open high and walk high?
It seems that you are a novice: 1 common stock market terms

1. Opening price: the transaction price of the first transaction of the day.

2. Closing price: the closing price of the last transaction of the day.

3. Maximum purchase price: the highest transaction price of the day.

4. Minimum purchase price: the lowest transaction price of the day.

5. Bulls: People who are optimistic about the stock market for a while.

6. Bearer: A person who bears the stock market for a period of time.

7. High opening: Today's opening price is higher than yesterday's closing price.

8. Kaiping: Today's opening price is the same as yesterday's closing price.

9. Open lower: Today's opening price is lower than yesterday's closing price.

10. Lock-in: After buying a stock, the stock price falls and cannot be thrown.

1 1. line: the points displayed on the chart of similar data tables in various materials of the stock market as the basis for market judgment.

Collection of. Such as k-line, moving average, etc.

12. Trend: Trend refers to the stock price moving in the same direction for a period of time.

13. rise: the stock price has been going to a new high for a period of time.

14. decline: the stock price has been going to a new low for a period of time.

15. consolidation: the stock price fluctuates within a limited range.

16. pressure point, pressure line: in the process of rising and falling, the stock price stops rising after hitting a certain high point (or line), or

Fall back, this point (or line) is called pressure point (or line)

17. Support point: During the decline, the stock price stops falling after hitting a certain low point (or line).

Pick up, this point (or line) is called the support point (or line).

18. Checkpoint: the price that is enough to make the stock price rise and stop falling, and the stock price must break through this "knot" to continue.

19. Breakthrough: The stock price crosses the obstacle or the uptrend line.

20. Below: The stock price falls below the pressure level or the upward trend line.

2 1. reversal: the stock price moves in the opposite direction to the original trend, which is divided into upward reversal and downward reversal.

22. retracement: that is, the stock price falls.

23. bottoming out: the process of finding the lowest point of the stock price. After bottoming out, the stock price began to rise from the lowest point.

24. Bottom: the lowest part of the long-term trend line of stock prices.

25. Head: the highest part of the long-term trend line of stock prices.

26. High-priced area: At the end of the bull market, it is the best selling point for short-and medium-term investment.

27. Low-priced area: At the beginning of the bull market, it is the best buying point for short-term and medium-term investment.

28. Forced buying: The buyer's strong desire in stock market trading leads to the stock price rising.

29. Great selling pressure: In stock market transactions, shareholders rushed to sell their shares, which led to a decline in share prices.

30. Deception: The main players or large households use market psychology to cheat on the trend line, making retail investors make wrong decisions.

3 1. overbought: the stock price continues to rise to a certain height, the buyer's power is basically exhausted, and the stock price is about to fall.

32. Overfall: The stock price continues to fall to a certain low point, the seller's strength is basically exhausted, and the stock price is about to rise.

Common stock market terms:

1. Lido: Various factors and news that are beneficial to bulls and can stimulate the stock price to rise, such as the reduction of bank interest rates and the improvement of the company's operating conditions.

2. Bad news: factors and information such as tight money supply, rising interest rates, economic recession, and deterioration of the company's operating conditions that are conducive to short positions and can lead to a decline in stock prices.

3. Bull market: The stock market is optimistic and the stock price continues to rise.

4. Bear market: The outlook is bleak, and stocks generally continue to fall.

5. Long position: investors buy a certain number of stocks at the current price in anticipation of future price increases, and then sell them at a high price to earn the difference profit, which is characterized by buying first and then selling.

6. Short position: in the case of expected future market decline, sell the stocks at the current price and buy them after the market declines to obtain the profit difference. It is characterized by the trading behavior of selling first and then buying.

7. Rebound: the phenomenon of price adjustment in which the stock price rebounds due to falling too fast in the downward trend. The rebound is generally less than the decline.

8. Consolidation: usually refers to a market where the price changes little and is relatively stable, and the difference between the highest price and the lowest price does not exceed 2%.

9. Dead bear: investors who always think that the stock market is not good, they can't buy stocks, and their stocks will plummet.

10. Dead bulls: investors who are always optimistic about the stock market and always hold stocks are full of trust in the stock market even if they are trapped.

1 1. Short more: The bulls are convinced that the stock price has reached its peak, so they sell a lot of their stocks and become short.

12. Multi-turn: The bears are convinced that the stock price has fallen to the bottom, so they buy a lot of stocks and become bulls.

13. shorting: short-term and long-term trading, which lasts for two or three days and as short as one or two days, based on the expected short-term stock price.

14. lightening positions (cutting meat): after buying stocks, the stock price falls, and investors sell stocks at a low price (at a loss) to avoid expanding losses.

15. Lock-in: buying stocks when the stock price is expected to rise, but the stock price falls because of it, unwilling to sell stocks and passively waiting for profit opportunities.