Recently, the trading volume of A-shares has dropped to 1.55 trillion, and just looking at this number feels uncomfortable. You know, during the rebound not long ago, the single-day volume at the end of August could reach 3.12 trillion, but now it has been cut in half. This kind of shrinking, slow downward trend is honestly the most exhausting—it can't go up or down.
Want a real trend reversal? You have to wait for a high-volume plunge that shakes out all the panic sellers, so the market can find a new direction. Otherwise, in the current state, it's most likely to just keep grinding within the range: the index may look okay, but individual stocks are suffering badly.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
Recently, the trading volume of A-shares has dropped to 1.55 trillion, and just looking at this number feels uncomfortable. You know, during the rebound not long ago, the single-day volume at the end of August could reach 3.12 trillion, but now it has been cut in half. This kind of shrinking, slow downward trend is honestly the most exhausting—it can't go up or down.
Want a real trend reversal? You have to wait for a high-volume plunge that shakes out all the panic sellers, so the market can find a new direction. Otherwise, in the current state, it's most likely to just keep grinding within the range: the index may look okay, but individual stocks are suffering badly.