Today's trend, with the roller coaster market closing, is really surprising and happy. Surprisingly, A shares went low after opening higher. It seems that the market in recent years is going low every time it opens higher. The big yinxian line similar to October 8 is still fresh in my mind, and today history repeats itself.The second message is that the market rose to 3494.87 points today, a step away from 3500 points.The first message, today, the morning market in call auction opened 2.58% higher, which is more common in the historical market. A-shares have opened more than 230 times since 1990, and the increase of 2%-3% has dropped to 55%. If it is more than 4% higher than that on November 8, the winning rate is less than 50%.
If today's rising market will bring the trend of stepping back to 3230 points for the later trend, then the high point of the market today and the high point of 3509 points in November are expected to form a double-top shape, which is the signal that the current round of rising at 3227 points is over.There are two evolution processes in my forecast of the market outlook:The first message, today, the morning market in call auction opened 2.58% higher, which is more common in the historical market. A-shares have opened more than 230 times since 1990, and the increase of 2%-3% has dropped to 55%. If it is more than 4% higher than that on November 8, the winning rate is less than 50%.
The high opening and low going of the index are nothing more than the T+1 trading mechanism, quantitative funds, poor short-term market trends and other reasons, resulting in a high probability of the stock market opening after news stimulation and low going due to emotional influence.During the late decline of the market, individual stocks are still rising more and falling less. As long as there is no bad news in the evening, tomorrow's emotional side is expected to be more favorable to the market after it opens higher and goes lower today.What does it mean to accelerate the decline in late trading?
Strategy guide
Strategy guide
12-13
Strategy guide
12-13