三七观

三七观

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20230505_Transaction Workflow

Before Buying#

Market Observation#

  1. Do not engage in a one-sided market decline.
  2. Do not engage at the top of a volatile range.
  3. Do not engage after a clear acceleration.
  1. After clear panic in a one-sided decline.
  2. At the bottom of a volatile range.
  3. Anytime during an upward trend.

Questions to Ask After Observation#

  1. Is the current market in a strong or weak background?
  2. Is it a suitable trading environment, or not? Or is it somewhere in between?
  3. Should the position be more aggressive or conservative?
  4. Should the buying point be a more aggressive breakout or a conservative continuation point?
  5. Is the current market background suitable for holding stocks (right-side profit-taking) or for high selling (left-side profit-taking)?

Direction Selection (Weekly Picks)#

Top-Down Approach (Sector Priority)#

Apply the Doctor's Sector RPS (currently using a 20-day cycle, .401 ranking).

Bottom-Up Approach (Stock Priority)#

  • Hong Kong capital increase and new highs (Rule One)
  • RPS20 first-line red (Rule Two)
  • All RPS red (Rule Three)
  • Short-term traps (Rule Four)
  • Long-term traps (Rule Five)

Selected Targets#

Logical Selection#

  • Policies
  • Good tracks (large imagination space, economic moat, slow iteration, replicable, disruptive technology)
  • Performance explosion (new capacity, new products, price increase expectations, Davis double kill, turning point)
  • Capital (northbound, fund holdings, retail investors)

Fundamental Selection#

Keywords: High prosperity; high growth; exceeding expectations; capacity release (new product launch); product price increase; turning point; performance revision; turnaround; Davis double hit; favorable policies; catalysts.

Risk Keywords:

  1. High Debt: Choose companies with relatively low debt ratios, generally less than 50%, with no high long-term loans or high financial expenses.
  2. High Pledge: The lower the pledge, the better.
  3. High Goodwill: The smaller the goodwill, the better; if goodwill is large, assess whether the acquired company's promised profits can be achieved.
  4. High Receivables: High receivables indicate a poor business, especially dynamically judging the trend of receivables over several quarters; if the trend worsens, it indicates deteriorating operations.
  5. High Inventory: High inventory is a double-edged sword; careful analysis is needed, as high inventory usually comes with high risks.
  6. Capital Operation Investigation (Double-Edged Sword): Check for short-term actions such as issuing new shares at a discount, placing shares, issuing bonds, cash acquisitions, and merger loans; some capital operations can change individual stock trends.
  7. Lock-up Release, Major Shareholder Reduction: Ensure there are no lock-up releases or major shareholder reductions in the short term.
  8. Historical Violations: Check for any black history or past penalties.

Under equal conditions, try to avoid stocks with the above risk points.

Pattern Selection#

  • Upward trend / continuation point
  • Compact structure, no abnormal volume-price behavior
  • Pocket pivot / VCP

Sector Effects#

  • Sector RPS strength
  • Patterns of other stocks in the same sector and their RPS strength
  • Performance of other stocks in the same sector

Write Down the Plan#

A good memory is not as good as a bad pen; write down the plan conceived the day before.

Buying#

  • Continuation buying point
  • Pocket pivot
  • VCP

Risk Management#

Position Management#

First, letting signals guide positions means deciding when to enter and exit based on market-generated buy and sell signals.

Second, letting win rates guide positions is also objective; win rates are the best thermometer to sense market temperature.

Third, in addition to the above-mentioned signal guidance and probability positions, position management must adhere to one principle: the principle of moderate diversification.

Thus, under the principle of moderate diversification, we insist on letting signals and win rates guide positions, achieving basic position control.

Stop-Loss Pre-Settings#

  • Percentage stop-loss (currently primarily percentage-based)
  • Pattern stop-loss
  • Abnormal response (20-day maximum decline)

Take-Profit Pre-Settings#

  • Percentage take-profit
  • Left side
  • Right side

Holding#

Patiently wait for buying points

Patiently hold and wait for selling points

  • No triggering of take-profit or stop-loss — hold
  • In an upward trend, with no clear acceleration — hold
  • Not in a downward trend — hold
  • Stock price running near key points — hold
  • No abnormal volume-price behavior — hold
  • Good supply-demand operation — hold

Selling (Programmatic Execution)#

Use robots to automatically execute plans, avoiding the reluctance to take profits and fear of losses. As for the stability of the robots, use tools from different platforms to execute a set plan.

Stop-Loss Pre-Settings#

  • Percentage stop-loss (currently primarily percentage-based)
  • Pattern stop-loss
  • Abnormal response (20-day maximum decline)

Take-Profit Pre-Settings#

  • Percentage take-profit
  • Left side
  • Right side
  • Buying point
  • Early stage of the second phase of the stock
    • First level: Fixed profit-loss ratio selling (loss 5, profit 15)
    • Second level: Take profit if daily increase exceeds 5-7%, then buy back when it adheres to moving averages.
    • Third level: Sell to take profit at the 20-day maximum daily decline, stop-loss.
  • Later stage of the second phase of the stock
    • First level: Fixed profit-loss ratio (loss 3, profit greater than 9, retreat 2 sell)
    • Second level: Take profit if daily increase exceeds 5-7%, then buy back when it adheres to moving averages.
    • Third level: Sell to take profit at the 20-day maximum daily decline, stop-loss.

After Selling#

Psychological Recovery#

Strictly execute the trading plan, strictly stop-loss! Take profit! Do not fantasize!

After trading, whether winning or losing, adjust your mindset and continue to the next trade!

Trading Analysis#

By analyzing trades, the following two questions will yield clear answers:

  1. Why did you lose money? Was it due to market environmental factors, an imperfect system, or because you did not achieve unity of knowledge and action?
  2. Why did you make money? Was it money earned within the system or luck? Is this kind of profit replicable?

These two questions are essentially about finding flaws and advantages; once clarified, and if you can correct flaws and enhance strengths, it will be hard not to grow in the long term. Below, I will explain how to analyze your trades.

If done regularly, this work is actually very simple. We can create a table to dynamically record each of our trades, and then conduct a comprehensive statistical analysis every so often, such as once a month, a quarter, or a year. This way, we can identify periodic issues.

Below is a sample table I use for analysis, including two parts: one is the raw record table, and the other is the statistical table.

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References & Acknowledgments#

Jian Fang, Dr. Tao

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