He was stumped by me. Obviously, he never thought about it.
As a friend, I went on to say: it doesn't matter how many times you earn in the futures market, nor how much money you earn. Don't make a small fight, and don't make up more at once. On the contrary, we should win big profits with small risks, and each profit should be enough to make up for many losses, and we must be able to see profits several times the risk every time before entering the market.
Friends don't think so.
A few days later, a wave of market reversed his position. I wonder if he understood when he left.
There is another meaning I didn't say: his making this list also shows that he has no firm confidence in winning Italy in the general trend. There must be a lucky rebound against the market in the profit, which is of course beneficial to the situation that sesame seeds are not exhausted and watermelon has been lost.
Doing so will naturally form the concept of sneak attack, thus giving up strategic macro-thinking and overall thinking.
In fact, it is easy for you to make profit orders more than loss orders in the market, because even if it is a contrarian order, there is often a chance to make a profit in the shock (if profit orders are more than loss orders).
Even if you make profits several times in a row, it is no more difficult than sitting in the village and playing mahjong.
But one thing we should not ignore is that the profit-loss ratio of mahjong games is roughly 1: 1. Therefore, the final profit and loss is closely related to the number of "and" cards, and the number of "and" cards is the decisive factor in the final profit and loss.
Originally, the futures market provided us with a place with a higher winning rate than the mahjong table.
As long as you control the profit-loss ratio according to your own wishes, you can still make money when the profit is less than the loss.
It's a pity that many of us, like the protagonist in Black Humor Story, control this ratio backwards, so that when the profit is far greater than the loss, the whole army is wiped out. In this case, if you finally leave all the lists to a farmer friend who knows nothing about futures, maybe he will say, "How can you be so stingy when you make money and so generous when you lose money?" Of course, I can often find out the list of making small money in my hand, but this is by no means subjective and intentional, but because my understanding of the market has changed or I left in a hurry because of the general trend. In fact, whether we like it or not, each of us will often make small money. When I say "don't make small money", I mean never make overall arrangements and market operations for the purpose of making small money.