One chart to understand the nine classic buy signals
99% of retail investors spend their lives chasing highs on the way up and picking up shares at the peak
While that 1% of winners are watching these 9 signals:
① Bottom volume, seize it and don't let go
After a long decline, a sudden surge in volume without a drop indicates the main force is starting to accumulate shares, and the aggressive buyers jump in directly.
② Main force digs a pit, about to rise
A mysterious sharp drop of 20%-30% quickly followed by a decrease in volume, then a rapid recovery indicates the washout is over, and it's ready to take off.
③ Back horse double guns, trend remains strong
After two days of decline during an uptrend, a large bullish candle on the third day with increased volume swallows it back, indicating the main upward wave continues, so feel free to act.
④ Three lines converge, offensive begins
The 5, 10, and 20-day moving averages stick together at the bottom and then form a golden cross diverging upwards, officially starting a big market trend.
⑤ White dragon goes to sea, rise can be expected
A single large bullish candle directly breaks through all resistance levels, like a white dragon soaring into the sky, with a minimum rise of 30% expected.
⑥ Five bulls on the field, momentum strong
Five consecutive bullish candles with the center of gravity continuously moving up (may include small bearish candles), the bullish momentum is overwhelming, and the main upward wave is just beginning.
⑦ Heavy hammer drops, rebound is promising
On the last day, a huge bearish candle scares everyone, but the next day it immediately closes bullish, triggering a V-shaped reversal, marking the best bottom-buying point.
⑧ Stabilizing needle, valley price rebounds
An extremely long lower shadow (the lower shadow is more than twice the body), with the main force using real money to support the bottom, marking a significant bottom for that day.
⑨ Bollinger breaks below, short-term opens
The stock price falls below the lower Bollinger band but is quickly pulled back, a typical false breakdown, often leading to a sharp rise in the next three days to a week.

