"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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ZenZKPlayer
· 7h ago
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
· 12h ago
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
· 12h ago
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
· 12h ago
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
· 12h ago
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
· 12h ago
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
· 13h ago
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.