Once upon a time there was a village full of monkeys. One day a merchant came to the village and announced to the villagers that he would buy monkeys for $10 each, and the villagers began to catch monkeys to sell. The merchant bought 1,000 for $10 each. After that, the number of monkeys began to decrease, and the villagers were no longer keen to catch monkeys to sell. Later, the merchant announced that he would buy the monkeys for $20 each, which gave the villagers another incentive to catch the monkeys, so they started looking around for monkeys to catch in exchange for money, but the number of monkeys immediately became small. The merchant also announced that a monkey would be bought for $25, but by this time the monkeys were so rare that it was difficult to see one.
Eventually, the businessman announced that he would buy the monkeys for a whopping $50 each, but at the same time asked his assistant to smuggle the monkeys to a nearby village for $35**, and spread the word that the original village knew that there were monkeys** in the nearby village. The villagers then went to a nearby village to buy a large number of monkeys, ready to go back and sell them at a sky-high price of 50 yuan. As a result, the merchant fled, after selling all the monkeys for $35.
Why not in the capital markets? Monkeys are worthless to merchants and villagers, but they are just carriers of wealth transfer, just like **. Sell at a low price, and sell at a low price at *** merchants. If you are unwilling to be in a high position, he will act for you to show you, be a little more **, and lure you to be fooled. A lot of **in** lose money, in addition to the main cunning, another reason is one word, greed.