Defeats forge experience, experience turns into wealth, and profits form a self-sustaining cycle.

First praise, then watch—earning ninety million a year! (New followers can learn XI on the homepage; pinned post and live replay)[Taoguba]

It might be because the growth in followers means I don’t have enough time, but I still want to plan to spend at least three hours every day concentrating and communicating with everyone through replies and comments, helping fans discover and solve problems. So I will reply starting from the first floor, in the order of everyone’s comment time, to clear up questions for you. If you have any questions, please send them as early as possible; of course, I will do my utmost to answer every question.
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Also, I will prioritize answering questions from the Golden Fans Tuan. Please, team leader Yuanye888 and XI commissioner Gangzi Xuebuxing, and other hard-earned, accomplished iron fans—when you have time and energy, help complete the questions from the general public. Let’s learn XI together, grow together, and make progress together**
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If, by any chance, I missed answering a question from the day before, you can post it again in the new thread**

Most of my last 90% effort has gone into exchanging the dual-break and the focus points. There’s been relatively less communication around axis-centered consecutive-limit-up. Yesterday, Shengsheng KJ got halted at the board point and then slammed into a failed board; today’s opening auction is fairly balanced (positive), and it still opened quite well, but in the early session it was suddenly hit to 6 points below the waterline. It has again once more proven that yesterday wasn’t 9010, and the new high isn’t 9010 either—so it’s definitely wrong. But the angles from people cutting the position happened too quickly. At point B, a time-share A-kill appeared. This kind of time-share “4-cycle” situation doesn’t成立 (isn’t valid). The declines all have high slopes. This kind is usually a pull-up caused by the sector effect. So, in the next approach toward the moving average (the pressure level is where people cut positions)

Shengsheng KJ belongs to the column at point B (the board-point area). Suddenly I realized that the attention risk at point B is really not small. In fact, the most main reason is that it’s been a long time since I last did point B. I made the old mistake from before. Think back to 2022 and 2023—the tough years. Even axis-centered consecutive-limit-ups could survive. The most main reason was that at that time I was fully focused, and my thoughts about axis-centered moves were tightly connected, link by link. Yesterday I was careless for a moment

But judging only by outcomes shows that axis-centered consecutive-limit-ups make people more likely to make mistakes. These mistakes will erode the fruits of the dual-breaks. So I decisively moved into position management. I believe that for all B-point strategies—including first boards, axis-centered consecutive-limit-ups, and axis-centered dragon-head strategies—position management can only be half of what the dual-break C-point low absorption would use. For example, if it’s half-position dual-break low absorption, then the position size for board trading can only be one quarter

Dual-break heavy C low absorption training XI; for board trading it’s high risk and high return—one quarter for C training XI

The Way of Trading: Fail without discouragement. Turn lessons into experience. Turn experience into wealth

In the world of trading, losses and failures have never been a flood beast, and they are never the final verdict that ends your journey. What’s truly terrifying is not failure itself, but the numbness and stubbornness after failure—refusing to reflect and unwilling to self-examine. One trading mistake, or a round of account drawdown, is just the market giving us a required lesson. If we can calm down and sort out right from wrong, and analyze the roots, then failure won’t be meaningless loss anymore—it becomes nutrients that can be converted into valuable experience. And those experiences磨练ed from real practice, after repeated verification and accumulation, will finally become real, tangible profits in the account, becoming trading wealth that accompanies us for life.
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After many people suffer setbacks in trading, their first reaction is not to review the market, reflect on their actions, but to complain that the market is unfair, blame the action as strange, and blame external factors for interference—sometimes even迁怒 (take it out) on others. They are always unwilling to lower their head and look for problems in themselves. They ignore the core logic of trading; they can’t see the true nature of how the market runs, and they don’t understand that mistakes come from their own judgment bias, restless mindset, or lack of discipline. They only end up burning themselves up in negative emotions and wandering in repeated mistakes. Even if they’ve wrestled with the market for many years, they still can’t make progress. They will keep falling into the same pit repeatedly, and ultimately be completely eliminated by the market.**
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We often look up to business big shots and industry legends, listening to them recount the brilliant journey they’ve taken, feeling that it’s full of legend color. Yet we don’t know that in their hearts, behind those seemingly dazzling achievements, every choice, every fall, and every wall they hit is an indispensable passage on the road to growth. No one’s success happens overnight, and all good times come from setbacks prepared in the past. All composure comes from lessons learned from falling into pits before. Any path to the top of an industry is filled with trial and error and setbacks—so is the trading market.**
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On the trading floor there’s a line that pierces the heart yet is true: “The mind dies, and the Dao is born.” Often only when we suffer losses and failures do we drop our restlessness, shed that restlessness, and truly calm down to revere the market and examine ourselves. But once there’s a streak of continuous profits and the account is floating red, human greed and expansion quietly start to grow. The mindset becomes unbalanced, operations become distorted, and ultimately you pay the price for blind confidence. Therefore, losing money is never simply an all-out bad thing—it’s the market’s most straightforward reminder and the whetstone that most effectively磨刀 your trading system.**
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The key isn’t how much money you’ve lost or how many times you’ve failed. The key is whether you can draw lessons from every failure, convert each loss into upgrading experience, and turn every mistake into the confidence to avoid risk. When you learn to break failure into lessons, condense lessons into experience, and convert experience into the ability to keep generating consistent profits, then you truly understand the essence of trading. This road has no shortcuts. Every beating becomes accumulation, every reflection becomes gathering. Only when you can hold up under failure, guard your original intention, and悟透 the essence can you stand in the market long-term—so that every experience you’ve had in the past will ultimately become wealth that increases your account value.**

Actually, I’ve always thought my biggest strength is that whenever any problem appears, it starts from me. I ask myself questions and反省 myself. If I buy a stock and it gets ST or gets delisted, I definitely wouldn’t go sue and make that listed company compensate me. What I need to reflect on is how to trade so that the next time it won’t turn into another stock that becomes ST

Only when, one day, we have eliminated our human weaknesses—or at least controlled them—we have a chance to stand in this market

Now look again at DongFXL. The current three consecutive down days are obvious. The first time the stock went up was indeed an inner arc ACB, no problem. But after it was released, instead of being released over the original two days, it was released over three days. The shorts really increased their力度. At this point, after you pay attention, it’s wrong to require it to reenact a bullish move. Only bullish moves of 1+2 have a chance to reenact bullishness

This is the value of making mistakes. But if, at the time when it was just before the previous high, you unconditionally cut attention (reduce the position) by half, then even by today’s close there shouldn’t be a loss—it’s just that you’ve given back the profit you already had. At least it will verify again the advantage of cutting attention by half when price is near the moving average (or at a high point)

So, what can we get from this mistake? If it’s a 2+1 bullish advance and it passes the previous high, then it will face larger shorts, so you should immediately cut attention after passing the previous high. Conversely, if it can be confirmed by both bulls and bears that it’s a 1+2 advance, then there can be a bullish reenactment expectation. Doesn’t my summary this time have value? Although I’ve mentioned it before, sometimes you have to trip over a few more times to etch it into your bones. At least next time I encounter this kind of 2+1 making a new high, I will decisively cut attention

This is also the B-to-C risk I often talk about—it’s just that now it has reached another direction where you either break through or you fail (not breaking means being remade)

I transform my reflection after profits disappear into experience, and share it with my buddies. Everyone sees it differently—please feel free to put forward valuable suggestions

Personal viewpoint, for reference only

For today’s trading strategy XI, I won’t go into it here. It’s not easy to preach—hope fate helps you and me cherish each other
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30 years of short-term trading practice: 25 years of low absorption; in the last 5 years I started shifting to board trading, including first-limit-ups, consecutive limit-ups, and dragon-head strategies. And all these strategies come from my own original “Emotion Quantified ACB Trading System”**
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On Taoguba, you can freely exchange, learn from each other, and share your心得. I’ll also honestly share my own trading thought process, my views on the intraday board, and my personal position records.**
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But I must remind everyone: the platform strictly bans stock recommendations and guidance on buying/selling. Everything I share is only personal records and idea exchanges, and does not constitute any investment advice.**
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Friends who are fans can参考 and discuss, but you must make independent judgments, take full responsibility for profit and loss, and invest rationally. Don’t follow the crowd, don’t blindly comply—stick to your own trading principles.**
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Next, we’ll move into the “in today’s review” segment. Today has 4 stocks hitting the daily limit**

I was also shocked: the market is up so well, yet there are only 4 consecutive-limit-up stocks. Now we need to look at axis-centered consecutive-limit-ups calmly. Better miss it than make a mistake

There’s a dual-break—belonging to the early-session opening auction, but the coefficient is very low. It’s a 2+1 decline release on the daily chart. This is high difficulty; it’s not “dual frequency,” and there’s no path. It’s only the daily 2+1 decline release. This kind may not have much value for XI. Without any allied troops, we still need to review the volume and historical data for a while. I’ll go review later and see how these dual-breaks without a path are really surviving. You’ll see it in the comments then
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Does this daily 2+1 have any value for XI—what do you think? Share your opinions

Let’s take another look at the broader market

Up is 1+2: funds keep flowing in. Down is 2+1: the shorts are shrinking, and the longest red column across the whole day is greater than the longest green column. Therefore, tomorrow at the early session the broader market might still continue to rise

Personal viewpoint, for reference only
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Thank you everyone for your recognition. In this world, nothing can be wronged except genuine sincerity! My wish is to have peach and plum trees fill the land**

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