It turns out it’s still you guys. During noon, you didn’t short the position at all. Those who are bearish, even at the downward rebound resistance level, can hold back from shorting. That’s impressive.


It turns out it’s still you guys. You went long up to the resistance level without taking profits and exiting. Everyone knows the trend is bearish, yet you didn’t take profits at the rebound resistance level. That’s impressive.
The two problems above, you secretly solved them while I was sleeping. Now that I’m awake, let’s talk about the next issue: yesterday’s resistance level was broken. Can you roll your positions or add to your longs? After breaking the resistance level, it retested in the afternoon without falling below. That’s a classic breakout retest without breaking, a small trick for going long. I just want to ask if you can go long.
Don’t tell me last night you didn’t go long at 1900 and went long at 2010 instead. Don’t tell me you still have long positions. The girl is asking if, after the 1980 breakout retest without falling below, you can go long. You keep talking about 1900. Why not talk about last year’s 1300? Ask what you want, answer what you want. Hurry up and answer me. If I miss the move, I want to add to my position if possible. Please don’t tell me to look at whether it can break during the breakout or whether it can fall below during the retest. This morning, I was busy analyzing whether it counts as a breakout, and in the afternoon, I was analyzing whether it counts as a retest without breaking below!
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