58-year-old Northeast Wang Jie, with a principal of 100,000 U, has turned it into a capital curve of 38 million in 9 years. At that moment, I realized that true experts never rely on shouting, only on results.

Later, as our conversation deepened, I learned that Wang Jie entered the market in 2015, never touching contracts, never going all in on low-quality stocks, and never chasing insider news. While others focus on speed, she focuses on patience.

I shamelessly wanted to get some tips from her, and she directly threw me 6 sentences of "local wisdom," all derived from K-line analysis. I suggest you stick it on the edge of your screen and read it once before observing the market; it could save half of your life:

1. Rapid rise and slow fall = main force accumulating chips

After a large bullish candle, if it falls slowly without high volume collapse, it means the main force is secretly accumulating chips. Don't rush to run away; just give them a lift.

2. Rapid fall and weak rebound = hurry to leave

If a rebound after a large bearish candle can't even touch the previous half, and it can't regain the 20-day line in three days? Don't hesitate, get off immediately. The market won't reward those who help others "carry luggage."

3. High volume doesn't necessarily mean a peak; low volume is deadly

Retail investors shout "peak" when there’s a high volume at high prices, but the main force often still wants to push up for a while. The real peak is marked by low volume, silence, and no one paying attention; that’s when you should gradually exit.

4. A bottom needs to be “voted” three times to count

The first rebound is a false move, the second bottom test is a trial, and the third consecutive three weeks with increasing volume without making new lows + breaking the neck line is a true sign of takeoff.

5. Patterns reflect emotions; volume reflects heartbeat

Low volume downtrend = weakening heartbeat

High volume rapid fall = heartbeat stopping

Moderate volume increase = recovery of health

The 60-day average volume line is a “blood pressure monitor”; once it breaks, operations must be cautious.

6. The highest realm is — being in cash

Being in cash without feeling itchy, watching others get rich without envy. Wang Jie takes a walk every day, collects rent, takes 20% from the market monthly for investments, trading two to three times a month.

When someone asked her about her win rate, she replied with a spicy remark: “I don’t look at the win rate, I only see if the rent has been received.”

The market has trends every year, but those who rush to make money lose money every year.

The faster the pace, the sooner you die; the steadier the pace, the thicker the profit.

The hardest part is not knowing when to buy and sell, but knowing when to wait.

Bull markets rely on entering, but surviving to the end relies on patience.

Are you ready to be that “person who can wait”?

#加密市场反弹