On the other hand, the reason why the banker buys in one hand may be that the banker is slowly building a position to attract more, that is, when the banker buys in one hand, if the retail investors follow suit, it means that the retail investors are more willing to be bullish, then the banker may choose to go down and throw out the chips in his hand; If retail investors do not buy, but throw chips, indicating that retail investors are not willing to be bullish, then the dealer may pull up the operation.
In short, investors should analyze their intentions in combination with the banker's instructions when trading individual stocks.
Banker:
Refers to large investors who can influence the financial securities market. It usually accounts for more than 50% of the circulation, and sometimes the control power of dealers may not reach 50%. Depending on the variety, generally 10% to 30% can control the market. Because of the huge volume of transactions and funds, there are few makers in the futures market. Bankers are also shareholders. Bankers usually refer to shareholders who hold a large number of outstanding shares. Bankers who own a stock can influence or even control its share price in the secondary market. Bankers and retail investors are a relative concept.
Retail investors:
Stock market terminology. Investors engaged in sporadic small transactions generally refer to small investors or individual investors, as opposed to large ones. The trader in the stock market is the banker, who makes money and the retail investors lose money. There is also a book of the same name, Retail Investors.
Investment:
Investment refers to the process that countries, enterprises and individuals sign agreements with each other for the specific purpose of promoting social development, realizing mutual benefit and transferring funds. It is also an economic behavior that a specific economic entity invests a sufficient amount of funds or physical currency equivalents in a certain field in a certain period of time in order to obtain income or capital appreciation in the foreseeable future. It can be divided into physical investment, capital investment and securities investment. The former is to use money to invest in enterprises and obtain certain profits through production and business activities, while the latter is to use money to buy stocks and corporate bonds issued by enterprises and indirectly participate in the profit distribution of enterprises.