Alice1910
voted
$NVIDIA(NVDA.US$ $Tesla(TSLA.US$ $Apple(AAPL.US$ $Broadcom(AVGO.US$ $ @根据这几年的交易经验来看这是美股大涨之前的大洗盘 is to launder all retail investors out of capital and then slowly suck in to open positions. I believe some good news will be released one after another in the future
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Alice1910
commented on
$ZIM Integrated Shipping(ZIM.US$ I bought it on the 24th and can jump in the sea until today
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Alice1910
reacted to
$Sea(SE.US$ breaking 60 soon. cheers
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Alice1910
reacted to
$Sea(SE.US$ 100 by end of June, 140 by end of year
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Alice1910
liked
$Sea(SE.US$ waaaa so funny
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Alice1910
voted
Shares are down 50%, is it cheap?
Since I first came into contact with stocks, investors around me have bought stocks with the idea that the more the stock price falls, the cheaper it is, saying that when the stock price falls sharply, it's actually a big promotion! It's time to clean the goods...
But this isn't for every stock, and it's even a dangerous operation for most people.
Because the magnitude of the decline is actually not directly proportional to the increase, a 50% drop requires a 100% increase to pay off. The stock bought in RM1 falls to RM 0.5 and the drop is only 50%, but the rise of RM 0.5 to RM 1 requires a 100% increase. If you buy the wrong stock, the price of the stock keeps falling, and if you keep buying it, your net worth is also shrinking.
Look at today's $Sea(SE.US$ - The parent company of Shopee, which is familiar to Malaysians, dropped 28% on today's performance day, down 89% from the peak. This also means that to rise from this price level to the highest point, an increase of about 900% is needed.
However, what many investors think is that 50% is cheap, 50% can drop another 50%, and then there is a possibility of a further 100% drop — I attached my slides chart as a reference. From point A to point B, it also falls 50%, point B to point C also falls 50%, and point C to point D falls 56%.
Even after the stock price has dropped 80%, it can still drop 100% from that point; it's not just 20% left...
...
Since I first came into contact with stocks, investors around me have bought stocks with the idea that the more the stock price falls, the cheaper it is, saying that when the stock price falls sharply, it's actually a big promotion! It's time to clean the goods...
But this isn't for every stock, and it's even a dangerous operation for most people.
Because the magnitude of the decline is actually not directly proportional to the increase, a 50% drop requires a 100% increase to pay off. The stock bought in RM1 falls to RM 0.5 and the drop is only 50%, but the rise of RM 0.5 to RM 1 requires a 100% increase. If you buy the wrong stock, the price of the stock keeps falling, and if you keep buying it, your net worth is also shrinking.
Look at today's $Sea(SE.US$ - The parent company of Shopee, which is familiar to Malaysians, dropped 28% on today's performance day, down 89% from the peak. This also means that to rise from this price level to the highest point, an increase of about 900% is needed.
However, what many investors think is that 50% is cheap, 50% can drop another 50%, and then there is a possibility of a further 100% drop — I attached my slides chart as a reference. From point A to point B, it also falls 50%, point B to point C also falls 50%, and point C to point D falls 56%.
Even after the stock price has dropped 80%, it can still drop 100% from that point; it's not just 20% left...
...
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