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The true meaning of review: rebuild your market map every day
What many people do after the market closes,
actually isn't called review.
They just look at their holdings again:
Why didn't it rise today?
Did I sell too early?
Will it come back tomorrow?
This kind of "review" is essentially just circling around themselves.
The real review,
is not staring at a single stock,
but first re-examining the entire market.
Because the stocks you hold,
are never isolated.
They are influenced by index styles,
driven by sector strength or weakness,
swayed by market sentiment,
and abandoned by capital.
So the most important part of review is not asking:
"What's wrong with this stock?"
but first asking:
Where did the money in the market flow today?
Is the sentiment warming up,
or receding?
What kind of assets are truly being rewarded by the market today?
When you first look at the entire market,
then review your own stocks,
many questions will suddenly become clear:
It's not that you chose the wrong stock,
but that today’s environment simply isn't suitable for stocks like yours.
It's not that your logic is flawed,
but that the sector has already receded.
It's not that your execution has issues,
but the overall environment has shifted from offense to defense.
So, in the end, review will gradually make you understand:
Review isn't about finding a regret remedy,
but about drawing your market map again after each day's close.
When the map is clear,
you'll know where to go tomorrow;
if the map isn't clear,
you can only continue trading based on emotions.