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Retail investors in A-shares are about to be squeezed out again this weekend, as seven semiconductor listed companies collectively announce share reductions, aiming to cash out 12.7 billion yuan at high prices.
This is a typical sign of a bubble at its peak—major shareholders collectively reducing their holdings at high prices, trapping retail investors at the top.
However, some self-soothing retail investors might say: "This is the major shareholders pushing the stock price down, giving us a chance to make money."
And some cunning economists who like to trap retail investors might say: "A thousand gold pieces can't buy a bull's turnaround."
I looked at these reductions involving tech stocks; they lack high technological content, and compared to American tech stocks and Korean chip stocks, they are worlds apart—tens of thousands of miles away.
Most of them are riding the wave of concepts like computing power and semiconductors, catching the trend.
This kind of trend only comes once in ten years; the money a company earns over ten years of operation is not as much as the increase in the chairman’s stock price.
If not now, when else?
If you don’t sell now, you won’t have this opportunity to sell at such high prices in the future.
Duan Yongping once said: "A good company ultimately has only one buyer—that is the company itself."
A good company keeps buying back its own shares and then cancels them, like Apple and Tencent.
In A-shares, "good" companies’ chairmen are cashing out at high prices, selling the company to retail investors.
So, the "good" companies in A-shares are truly "good," but they sell all the "money-making opportunities" to retail investors.