"The stock market is a tool that transfers money from impatient people to patient ones."
As the high valuation cycle comes to an end, I decide to switch to a defensive mode. But that doesn't mean doing nothing — I have prepared a counterattack plan for extreme market conditions. This layered pyramid strategy for bottom-fishing is designed based on a capital of 1 million.
**Capital allocation:** 60% is placed in stable yield spot holdings, earning interest while maintaining high liquidity, enough to cover the first three layers of purchases. The remaining 40% I haven't touched at all — kept in bank credit lines, no interest, only used in the event of a systemic collapse.
**How to execute?**
Using the S&P 500 ≈ 7000 and NASDAQ 100 ≈ 26000 as benchmarks. The core principle is simple: the more absurd the decline, the more aggressively I invest.
A 10% drop (SPX to 6300, NDX to 23400), I first invest 100,000 to test the market and establish a base position. A 20% decline (SPX to 5600, NDX to 20800), I add another 200,000 to confirm a technical bear market. If it drops 30% (SPX to 4900, NDX to 18200), I commit all my own funds, deploying 300,000.
In the most extreme scenario — a 40% drop (SPX to 4200, NDX to 15600) — I only then activate loans, deploying 400,000 at once. This bottom line is only triggered during extreme panic.
Long-termism is not about lying flat, but about making the right decisions at the right moments.
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GasFeeAssassin
· 01-17 20:07
Uh... this pyramid layering sounds good, but when it really drops 40%, how many people can truly stick to discipline? I bet five dollars that most people will start panicking when it drops 15%.
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0xTherapist
· 01-17 19:27
The disciplined stratification of this pyramid is real, just worry that when the market drops 30%, the mentality might collapse and whether one can still hold steady.
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SybilAttackVictim
· 01-16 10:24
Basically, it's a game for the wealthy. We retail investors should just stick to regular investing... This pyramid scheme of catching the bottom sounds impressive, but in reality, it's just gambling on the bottom.
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ZenZKPlayer
· 01-15 02:00
Pyramid bottom-fishing sounds good, but to be honest, starting leverage after a 40% drop feels a bit like gambling. Hopefully, you won't become that "impatient person."
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LayerHopper
· 01-14 20:53
This pyramid bottom-fishing sounds good, but when it really drops 40%, would you dare to go all-in? I mean it.
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ImpermanentTherapist
· 01-14 20:53
This guy's pyramid bottom-fishing plan is indeed somewhat clever, but I think the 40% loan part is a bit aggressive... Will the mindset stay stable in extreme market conditions?
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tx_or_didn't_happen
· 01-14 20:41
Sounds good, but wait until it really drops 40% to see who still dares to go all-in.
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gm_or_ngmi
· 01-14 20:40
Wow, only going all-in after a 40% drop? This guy really isn't afraid of getting stuck. I just want to ask, what if it drops 50%? Do I need to sell my house?
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WhaleStalker
· 01-14 20:40
Wow, this pyramid scheme gets more aggressive the further down it goes. A 40% loan with a single shot—really daring.
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GasGuzzler
· 01-14 20:35
This pyramid bottom-fishing method sounds pretty good, but that 40% loan really only allows for one gamble. What if it crashes halfway up?
"The stock market is a tool that transfers money from impatient people to patient ones."
As the high valuation cycle comes to an end, I decide to switch to a defensive mode. But that doesn't mean doing nothing — I have prepared a counterattack plan for extreme market conditions. This layered pyramid strategy for bottom-fishing is designed based on a capital of 1 million.
**Capital allocation:**
60% is placed in stable yield spot holdings, earning interest while maintaining high liquidity, enough to cover the first three layers of purchases. The remaining 40% I haven't touched at all — kept in bank credit lines, no interest, only used in the event of a systemic collapse.
**How to execute?**
Using the S&P 500 ≈ 7000 and NASDAQ 100 ≈ 26000 as benchmarks. The core principle is simple: the more absurd the decline, the more aggressively I invest.
A 10% drop (SPX to 6300, NDX to 23400), I first invest 100,000 to test the market and establish a base position. A 20% decline (SPX to 5600, NDX to 20800), I add another 200,000 to confirm a technical bear market. If it drops 30% (SPX to 4900, NDX to 18200), I commit all my own funds, deploying 300,000.
In the most extreme scenario — a 40% drop (SPX to 4200, NDX to 15600) — I only then activate loans, deploying 400,000 at once. This bottom line is only triggered during extreme panic.
Long-termism is not about lying flat, but about making the right decisions at the right moments.