Classic Market Terms and Codes: Liuliuliu


111(1111):
Means "Yes Yes Yes." If placed on the sell order, it indicates that the stock may decline further, with lower selling points ahead. If placed on active buy orders, it suggests the stock may soon rise. Note that if it appears at a historical high, the upward wave may be ending.
222:
Represents "Let Let Let," a signal from a certain institution indicating unilateral action.
333:
Stands for "Profit Profit Profit," indicating an upcoming rise, whether on buy or sell orders; it also means "Shine Shine Shine." If the stock is at a high level or if this number appears repeatedly on sell orders, it may be a sign that institutions are about to offload.
444:
Represents "Die Die Die," known in the market as a malicious manipulator, either aggressively buying large orders or selling heavily. Especially when 4444 appears on the order book, it indicates that the institution has strong power, willing to buy or sell at any cost.
555:
Stands for "Hold Hold Hold," signaling an imminent rise. If this number appears on buy orders, it means someone is trying to take over; if on sell orders, it indicates that institutions are still accumulating, asking other institutions to hold, and not to be swayed by short-term fluctuations.
666:
Represents "Liuliu Liu" and "Liuliu Liu," if it appears on a sell order, it suggests the main force is trying to offload; if on a buy order, it indicates that major institutions are trying to hold onto the stock.
777(7777:
Means "Eat Eat Eat," indicating the main force is accumulating, especially when their chips are insufficient. It is also a signal that multiple institutions are buying the stock together.
888:
Represents "Fa Fa Fa," usually meaning "prosperity" or "wealth." When this code appears, it indicates the stock is entering a rally phase. However, as this code has become well-known recently, most 888 signals now mean the main force is distributing shares, i.e., they are selling off.
999(9999):
Stands for "Save Save Save," generally indicating that a certain institution has run out of cash or chips and is signaling another partner institution to take over.
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