Two sides of the same coin, profit and loss share the same source. Without volatility, there is no return; without significant volatility, there won't be significant returns. It's indeed a bit trying in the short term, but reason tells me to hold on. 1. The fundamentals are still intact; 2. Supply remains tight; 3. Demand is still rising. Let's do it.

Longbridge - 冷罗和他的朋友们
冷罗和他的朋友们

$Roundhill Memory ETF(DRAM.US)$Invesco QQQ Trust(QQQ.US)

All sorts of weirdos have shown up in the comments section these past two days.

Although I'm long, I still hope that if you're serious about investing, you must understand the perspective of the short side.

A 20% rise and a 20% drop are essentially the same thing.

Moreover, the volatility hasn't changed at all over these two days, basically flat compared to last month. With volatility unchanged, some people actually think a pullback is a stock market crash, and some bloggers can't figure out why. I block all of these people because it shows their level really isn't up to par, and reading them is a waste of time.

You can't, under the premise of unchanged volatility, think a rising market is good and a pullback market is bad.

You have to understand that in a high-volatility environment, you're bearing this pullback risk in exchange for the rapid uptrend.

In short, I still hope everyone thinks more.

If you can't think it through, you shouldn't trade stocks. Stock trading is a high-intellect activity. In the first few years of trading, you need to learn more each year than you did in three years of high school.

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