Shun Ge's Real Account: 500,000 Challenge for 1,000x in Five Years, Day 16

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Challenge Date: 2026.01.21 [Taogu Ba]

Current Date: 2026.03.13

Brother Shun’s Brief: Focus on the trend, aim to find the core for promotion. Divide positions into thirds, each third for one stock, up to three stocks at most, occasionally go all-in for a push. The article shares practical insights and trading strategies. Personal track record: completed a hundredfold return over the past two years without updates. Started a new challenge with fifty thousand in January.

Brother Shun’s Main Text: Haha, today’s trades are a bit interesting.

On one side is Baichuan Shares, which was immediately sold off at the opening auction with a quick button press. On the other side is Farsen, which I added to without hesitation during the auction! Many friends might ask, Baichuan, why sell at the opening? Farsen, why add during the auction?

First, let’s talk about Baichuan Shares.

This stock was added to my watchlist yesterday, originally to confirm its leadership status and enjoy the premium from consecutive limit-ups. But things didn’t go as planned; it broke the limit at the close and didn’t recover by the end of the day. This seriously deviates from my initial intention of entering. In my trading system, a break without recovery indicates waning buying interest, failure of capital consensus, and likely pressure the next day.
But there’s a detail: if the next day opens sharply lower and drops, I wouldn’t sell; I might even hold a broader view and wait for intra-day rebound funds to do a counter-attack. Because after panic selling, there’s often a self-rescue action. Today, Baichuan opened well during the auction, and the last few trades even showed clear signs of buying rush, pushing the price higher. This “weak but not weak” pattern looks strong but actually harbors risks. It drained the willingness of off-market funds to continue, removing the cost advantage for low buyers and giving holders a false sense of luck. I won’t get involved in this muddy water; I simply pressed the sell button and walked away. Leave the uncertainty to the market, keep the certainty in my hands.

Next, let’s discuss Farsen.

This trade is the exact opposite of Baichuan. After a few days of turnover, Farsen’s market position and recognition have been established; it represents high popularity in a specific niche. For such proven core stocks, my tolerance is much higher. Today, the auction opened modestly, neither spiking due to strong momentum the previous day nor being heavily pressed down by emotional swings. A flat or slightly lower open is actually the best entry opportunity for those who missed out or are optimistic. For popular core stocks, auction divergences are often buy signals, not sell signals. So, of course, I added to my position.

Trading is like this.

It’s not a mechanical formula but an art that requires dynamic probability assessment. You must quickly judge during the trading day which stocks are “strong but appear weak” and which are “weak but appear strong.” Today’s two trades are the most intuitive examples of this strategic thinking.

Trading is one thing; review is another. I usually record detailed thoughts on stock selection and trend timing during my daily trading. After each close, I review the key points and buy-sell logic, and I also share them in my trading journal. Later, I will organize more content that truly helps in practical trading. Interested friends can take a look as a reference.

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