The Beijing Commercial Daily review article points out that recently, some A-share stocks have shown a “one-size-fits-all” trend where they first soar and then plummet. Taken together, most of these individual stocks are speculative, and conceptual hype is obvious. There was a lack of performance support after a short-term surge, so the stock price quickly fell after the hype ended. Investing in “A-word” stocks is very risky. If you step on the wrong pace, you will face huge losses, and investors should stay away from it. In the process of “A-character killing,” the elements of conceptual hype cannot be ignored. In order to pursue high short-term returns, some investors often blindly follow the trend and speculate on popular concept stocks. They ignored the fundamental analysis of stocks and made investment decisions based only on market hype hot spots and capital flows. This speculative behavior not only increased market volatility, but also led to the emergence of “A-character killing” stocks. The “A word kills” stocks is actually easy to avoid. Investors can completely avoid the potential investment risk of “killing” stocks with “A character kills” stocks by not buying them, and not buying them, and not going to the bottom of the stock market.

Zhitongcaijing · 01/07 10:49
The Beijing Commercial Daily review article points out that recently, some A-share stocks have shown a “one-size-fits-all” trend where they first soar and then plummet. Taken together, most of these individual stocks are speculative, and conceptual hype is obvious. There was a lack of performance support after a short-term surge, so the stock price quickly fell after the hype ended. Investing in “A-word” stocks is very risky. If you step on the wrong pace, you will face huge losses, and investors should stay away from it. In the process of “A-character killing,” the elements of conceptual hype cannot be ignored. In order to pursue high short-term returns, some investors often blindly follow the trend and speculate on popular concept stocks. They ignored the fundamental analysis of stocks and made investment decisions based only on market hype hot spots and capital flows. This speculative behavior not only increased market volatility, but also led to the emergence of “A-character killing” stocks. The “A word kills” stocks is actually easy to avoid. Investors can completely avoid the potential investment risk of “killing” stocks with “A character kills” stocks by not buying them, and not buying them, and not going to the bottom of the stock market.