In the third case, the stock is just in the downtrend, and just after you sell it, it is a stock. There was a technical back-draw or rebound. And when you first sold it, you would say, oops, why does it go up as soon as I sell it? In fact, you don't have to worry about this kind of stock.
We need to know that stocks in the falling market rebounded, which is actually the best selling point. You sell but rise is actually a psychological effect, thinking that the main force is staring at us.
In fact, whether you buy or not, or sell or not, what should go up will still go up, and what should go down will still go down, so there is no need to entangle it. The best way is to continue to do summary and reflection, so that the number of mistakes in the air becomes less and less. In fact, this is also the performance of being unfamiliar with individual stocks, and unfamiliar with the operating rules of stock prices. At the same time, it's not about the state of mind.
A sense of maturity.