The core of stable short-term and pleasant trading lies in taking profits and covering positions in batches.
Sometimes you look at the market very strong, and it seems that it is still very strong near the pressure point, and it seems that it will continue to attack the next high point, and it seems that it cannot step back to the ideal point for covering positions, but it may step back after a while. Generally, after pulling up, it will be horizontal first, with slight fluctuations up and down, and then choose a small level of 15 or 30 minutes to step back. This is the roundabout strategy of the banker.
If it is pulled up quickly and then smashed quickly, it is a pig-killing plate. What you have to do is to set the point in advance. If it really can't reach it, it's still in time to cover positions at the actual price. In every 24 hours, there is an upper limit threshold for the rise, and it will not rise endlessly. This determines that it must have a certain amount of retracement space within a single day, which can be large or small, depending on the market stage.
In tactics, one is called "don't chase the poor enemy", and there must be a profit-taking action near the resistance point; the other is to lure the enemy hard to catch, if you want to chase a higher point, you must wait for a proper retracement before attacking again