
Actually, I only trade two stocks a year, and the rest of the time I can stay in a short position, withdraw money, and go traveling.
From January to March this year, it was all declines, so I didn't look and didn't trade.
Starting on March 30th, I entered the market to bottom-fish NVDA, buying in at 165 with full position, and then reducing the position in three batches at 175/185/195.
After clearing my NVIDIA position this Tuesday, I went all-in on Tesla at 360, exiting the first batch at 405, the second at 445, and the third at 470.
The annual launch sequence is always NVDA - TSLA - BTC, then after the peak, it enters an adjustment period. This year is the same.
The End.
If I get trapped at any node along the way, I just hold on tight. They're basically all regular stocks. I'm not panicked at all, as they will eventually reach their peak anyway.
I'm a bit older now. I used to love getting new things, everything had to be the latest.
Now I'm used to old things and don't like accepting new stuff.
The reasoning is simple. With dozens of stocks in my watchlist, all sorts of chaotic information distracts you. You want this and that, trying to catch a wave on every stock. The community is full of news. Every day, you check the news and K-lines after work, even staying up late.
The easier the method to make money, the better it is. And you shouldn't give up work and enjoying life because of stock trading!
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