
Rate Of ReturnXizhi Technology is so hard to sell.

Today's overall market was mostly garbage time, not worth paying much attention to. There was a 5-minute period that really got my full focus, starting at 16:15.
The $XIZHI TECH-P(01879.HK) that everyone was watching had its grey market trading this afternoon. It opened up 200% and then kept climbing. As I'm writing this, it's up 333%. That's insane.
I was watching it closely after it opened, and it kept climbing, but I got tricked off by the first pullback and sold poorly. Honestly, though, I can't think of a better way to sell. How to ease this anxiety? The only way is to delete it from your watchlist after selling.
Some brokerages have conditional orders. If you use one of those, I suggest making full use of the tool. Some brokerages don't have the function for stop-loss sell orders, so selling is a matter of luck, and you can only manually execute your predetermined selling strategy. In the recent IPO frenzy in Hong Kong stocks, missing out on rallies is common. Don't beat yourself up over it.
This afternoon, $SUNMI TECH-W(06810.HK) announced its lottery results. This one is a bit easier to get. The grey market trading is tomorrow afternoon. In the current IPO sentiment, it feels like even a small gain would be a bit embarrassing.
Today's A-shares were steady. The median gain slightly exceeded my expectations, actually reaching 0.57%. 3,284 stocks rose, while only 2,105 were waiting to rise. Recent trading volume has been hovering around the 2.60 trillion yuan level, so trading enthusiasm is still there.
Over the weekend, I built a feature for my own use, which is to display the annual investment return. I was surprised to find that as of the last day of March, I'm still at an unrealized loss for the year. Looking closer, the main unrealized losses are still in my US stock account.
In reality, both the Nasdaq 100 and the S&P 500 hit new all-time highs last Friday. The reason I underperformed is that I participated in some individual stocks in certain sectors, including the SAAS sector, which led to two stocks with relatively large pullbacks.
The lesson from playing around is: don't always think about excess returns. Following the market index is a good result. The simplest way is often the best.
Of course, with the reversal in US stocks in April, it's expected that by the end of this month when I tally the annual return, it should turn from red to green.
$NVIDIA(NVDA.US) is about to hit a new high again. The latest price is 208.27, just a hair's breadth away from the previous high of 212.167. Japan and South Korea have also been doing well recently, with the KOSPI and Nikkei 225 both hitting new highs recently.
I used to be a bit obsessed with buying on the left side (catching the bottom). Looking back now, the experience wasn't great, and the returns weren't either. Of course, I'm not saying to abandon the left side now. For left-side opportunities, you can set up a regular investment plan, allocate a small amount, buy and forget, and wait for the reversal to earn an average return.
For assets that have confirmed a right-side (uptrend) trend, you can't be too afraid of heights. Being afraid of heights is indeed a curse for investors. Overall, it's still about position control. Don't let any single strategy become a heavy position. That way, you'll sleep more soundly.
Content Creator: Dolphin Index Valuation
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