Although everyone is familiar with stocks, most people may have bought and sold stocks, and many people have made money from stocks. However, on the whole, there are still few individual investors who make money. This is a question of probability. Even if you flip a coin, you have a 50% chance of winning. But the more times, the closer the probability of winning or losing is to half, but there is a handling fee for the transaction, such as a 2% rate for a transaction and a 50% winning probability. After dozens of operations, the principal is exhausted and the transaction is essentially a probability game. The gambling king once said that he is not afraid of your cleverness, but he is afraid that you will not enter the market, as long as you enter the market to trade.
Individual investors are limited by their professional limitations and execution, so it is difficult to make money in the market, and the advantages of institutional investors will gradually emerge. You can look at the mature financial market systems in Europe and America. The proportion of individual investors is quite small, and more than 80% of the funds in the market are in the hands of institutions. For example, Warren Buffett, a well-known stock god, owns Berkshire Hathaway, Daglio's Bridgewater and various hedge funds. On the contrary, individual investors in the domestic market.
More and more individual investors are aware of their personal limitations and begin to consider professional matters, and hand over funds to institutions through funds, insurance and trusts. The proportion of individual investors has also begun to decline, and it is also the general trend for the market to go retail.
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