According to the new trading rules, institutional seats refer to the special channels and seats for institutional investors to buy and sell securities, such as fund seats, brokerage seats, social security seats, brokerage seats, insurance institutions seats, insurance institutions seats and QFII seats.
Institutional investors mainly refer to some financial institutions, including banks, insurance companies, investment trust companies, credit cooperatives and state-established retirement funds or organizations. Institutional investors and individual investors are different in essence, and they are very different from individual investors in investment sources, investment objectives and investment directions.
The increase in the number of stock institutions means that more institutional investors buy stocks. The more institutional investors, the more stable the stock, and the higher the probability of pulling up. When choosing stocks, investors should try to choose stocks with fewer retail investors and more institutions.