For retail investors, today is still more suitable for holding shares to rise. If you bought yesterday, you don't have to worry about it in the short term. As long as you follow the above-mentioned directions of technology, consumption and real estate, at least the policy is supportive, and it is not chasing high in the short term.Now it is the hope of the above that the stock market will rise, and that technology and consumption will rise. This is not difficult to understand. What is difficult is whether you have the patience and confidence to hold these.
Judging from the rise in these directions, I think it is very simple for investors now. Just do the following:(1) First, there was an obvious shrinkage in the opening today. My understanding is that I bought what I should have bought yesterday and sold what I should have sold yesterday. Today, the market has risen, and everyone will not be so impulsive. Therefore, the main funds in the venue are self-directed.(1) First, there was an obvious shrinkage in the opening today. My understanding is that I bought what I should have bought yesterday and sold what I should have sold yesterday. Today, the market has risen, and everyone will not be so impulsive. Therefore, the main funds in the venue are self-directed.
Because for many institutions, it is unlikely to make a big increase every day at the end of the year, and then create a wave of rapid bull market. Many institutions pursue stability and lock in this year's profit results.Today, it is actually very consistent with the characteristics of institutional efforts, because chasing up and down is the characteristic of many retail investors, but institutions generally regard retail investors as their own opponents.Seeing that today's liquor, medicine, food and beverage, real estate, coal, and semiconductors have all risen, these have dividend stocks, policy support directions, and institutional shareholding, which all opened higher yesterday.