
Traded ValueThe importance of reviewing and studying market trends

To achieve long-term stable profits, reviewing past trades is an essential practice and a crucial way to learn.
During the trading process, it's necessary not only to analyze short-term trends but also to analyze long-term trends, to make one's skills more comprehensive.
I need to spend a lot of time analyzing and understanding, finding the real reasons for a decline from the peak to a stable level, as well as the causes of such price movements and their driving forces. For example, $Microsoft(MSFT.US)
As the saying goes: history always repeats itself. Through such analysis and review, we can understand the mindset of Wall Street.
Stocks are like "The Romance of the Three Kingdoms" in historical tales, where enemies and allies constantly switch roles in the face of interests, forming relationships of both rivalry and friendship. Just like you, me, and others in the stock market, only by understanding the short-term interest demands of these three parties can one remain invincible.
Review is not about looking at charts, but about finding reasons and summarizing them. This is the core. Then, one must see how the volume and price indicators on the chart reflect these reasons. Perhaps then one can truly transform and achieve enlightenment. Learning is a painful process, and even more so a gradual accumulation over time.
I once read a report that Xu Xiang spent twelve hours a day working and studying, researching all the A-share stocks. I think he used this method. Of course, it's not just that. I need to use mind maps to dissect his research points and make myself more comprehensive through learning.
Many people want to make money, but few are willing to learn for it. This is even more true for stocks. Those who can help you achieve enlightenment and provide valuable knowledge are almost zero. All of this is no different from searching for a needle in a haystack through self-study. It really depends on one's own aptitude for self-learning.
All learned and accumulated knowledge must be systematized, not fragmented, and must move beyond mere experience. This is the true enlightenment in the US stock market.

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