Cutting leeks is a metaphor for institutions, funds, and large investors selling stocks, causing the stock market to plummet, ushering in new opportunities to open positions, and then re-opening positions at low levels. This cycle of band operations makes profits.
Leeks refer to the grassroots people in the financial circle. Usually, these people will be tricked by other so-called experts into buying stocks, financial management and other financial products, and eventually end up losing money.
This behavior of cheating on leeks is called "cutting leeks".
Cutting leeks generally describes institutions, funds, and large investors: selling stocks causes the stock market to plummet, ushering in new opportunities to build positions, and then building positions at low levels again. Such cyclic band operations are implemented over and over again.
Just call it cutting leeks.
Cutting leeks generally describes retail investors: buying stocks, buying a set, cutting the shares, buying after cutting, over and over again, resulting in heavy losses.
It is also called cutting leeks.
When institutions cut profits, they harvest the chips of retail investors. To put it bluntly, some people make money and others lose money. Those who lose money are like farmers harvesting leeks. After a batch of money is harvested, it can be harvested again after a period of time.
So it’s called cutting leeks. Look at your account. If you lose money, you are a leek. If you make money, you are a farmer.
Cutting leeks means that the dealer is preparing to sell the chips in his hand and then suppress the stock price.
After retail investors bought it, they were trapped.
So it's a bit like a leek being cut off.
The collective name for retail investors is leeks. Of course, some are not. Cutting leeks means that the money you invested in stocks has been transferred away by others. For example, when the stock is at a high level or in a downward trend, you keep covering your positions and losing money. This is cutting leeks.
You have to stop losses in time and look for stocks that have just made a move. If you hold on to them, you won't be cut off.