High-probability limit-up stocks in China’s A-shares for the next trading day and verification of stocks selected on the previous trading day (Figure 1: Stock verification; Figure 2: High-probability limit-up stocks for the next trading day).
Warning: My stock picks are speculative. The market often hunts stop-losses, and most lack the skills for speculative trading. Avoid these stocks unless you accept full responsibility for potential losses.
Daily Diagnosis Stock: For stocks in any market, please share your purchase price and whether you're willing to take a loss. I will randomly select a comment and given my trading strategy.

High-probability limit-up stocks in China’s A-shares for the next trading day and verification of stocks selected on the previous trading day (Figure 1: Stock verification; Figure 2: High-probability limit-up stocks for the next trading day).
Warning: My stock picks are speculative. The market often hunts stop-losses, and most lack the skills for speculative trading. Avoid these stocks unless you accept full responsibility for potential losses.
Daily Diagnosis Stock: For stocks in any market, please share your purchase price and whether you're willing to take a loss. I will randomly select a comment and given my trading strategy.

Perhaps those who first encountered the table of contents of Nietzsche's Ecce Homo might have considered him arrogant and conceited. However, history is always fair, and Nietzsche was indeed intelligent. Even today, his works are studied and revered as classics by countless individuals. This is history's recognition of Nietzsche's brilliance.
A person with top-tier wisdom always strives for the most just and objective self-evaluation, neither arrogantly praising themselves nor wantonly belittling themselves. I am the same, simply aiming for enough objectivity to prevent my decisions from being biased. 
A marriage that begins with deception often ends in divorce—that is the norm. You see him as successful, with a house, a car, and a promising career, but you don’t know he’s carrying a massive amount of debt and that his financial situation is on the verge of collapse. You see her as beautiful and understanding, but you don’t know her looks come from cosmetic surgery and that she’s only interested in draining her suitors. The cunning nature of humanity is on full display. So before marriage, are you truly sure you know your partner well enough?
The above view reflects only my personal observations of certain prominent phenomena in mainland China and does not include other countries or regions, as I don’t have enough in-depth understanding or exposure to their cultural norms and practices.
High-probability limit-up stocks in China’s A-shares for the next trading day and verification of stocks selected on the previous trading day (Figure 1: Stock verification; Figure 2: High-probability limit-up stocks for the next trading day).
Warning: My stock picks are speculative. The market often hunts stop-losses, and most lack the skills for speculative trading. Avoid these stocks unless you accept full responsibility for potential losses.
Daily Diagnosis Stock: For stocks in any market, please share your purchase price and whether you're willing to take a loss. I will randomly select a comment and given my trading strategy.

High-probability limit-up stocks in China’s A-shares for the next trading day and verification of stocks selected on the previous trading day (Figure 1: Stock verification; Figure 2: High-probability limit-up stocks for the next trading day).
Warning: My stock picks are speculative. The market often hunts stop-losses, and most lack the skills for speculative trading. Avoid these stocks unless you accept full responsibility for potential losses.
Daily Diagnosis Stock: For stocks in any market, please share your purchase price and whether you're willing to take a loss. I will randomly select a comment and given my trading strategy.

High-probability limit-up stocks in China’s A-shares for the next trading day and verification of stocks selected on the previous trading day (Figure 1: Stock verification; Figure 2: High-probability limit-up stocks for the next trading day).
Warning: My stock picks are speculative. The market often hunts stop-losses, and most lack the skills for speculative trading. Avoid these stocks unless you accept full responsibility for potential losses.
Daily Diagnosis Stock: For stocks in any market, please share your purchase price and whether you're willing to take a loss. I will randomly select a comment and given my trading strategy.

High-probability limit-up stocks in China’s A-shares for the next trading day and verification of stocks selected on the previous trading day (Figure 1: Stock verification; Figure 2: High-probability limit-up stocks for the next trading day).
Warning: My stock picks are speculative. The market often hunts stop-losses, and most lack the skills for speculative trading. Avoid these stocks unless you accept full responsibility for potential losses.
Daily Diagnosis Stock: For stocks in any market, please share your purchase price and whether you're willing to take a loss. I will randomly select a comment and given my trading strategy.

I know the truth hurts, but I still want to tell you a fact I have observed. In fact, the knowledge of many disciplines can be applied across fields, but most people cannot even flexibly apply that knowledge, including most college students from prestigious universities. Many people learn based on rote memorization, one question for one answer. If they change to another field, the principles are the same, but they just can't flexibly transfer what they have learned in other fields to other fields.
In fact, correct logic and thinking are much more important than hard skills such as data analysis. Take the logical relationship between famous schools and excellent people that I explained two weeks ago as an example. The main reason why they are talented is not because of the education of famous schools, but because they are born excellent. If data analysts do not have correct logic and thinking, according to data analysis, the formation of talents is mainly due to the education of famous schools. This will form self-bias. This will cause a series of decision-making deviations in the future.
When I compare my values to those of most Chinese people, I realize that my worldview is actually quite different from the majority of Chinese—in fact, it's even more radical than many Europeans and Americans. In my view, working hard to earn money isn't the most important thing, especially when it comes to repetitive jobs, which I see as a waste of time. For me, drinking coffee, sipping milk tea, taking walks, daydreaming, basking in the sun, accomplishing challenges others can't achieve, and experiencing things I've never tried before (even things like joining a gang or going to prison) are what truly honor life. Of course, this doesn’t include work that could lead to great achievements.
Let me share something that happened to me recently—hopefully someone can learn something from it.
First, a bit of background to help set the stage:
Because work is hard and making money is difficult, many men in China today have developed a certain mindset—they hope to find a wealthy woman to support them, so they don’t have to work so hard. Chinese women are generally aware of this mindset among men.
Now for the story:
I often go to a particular coffee shop, and I’ve become quite familiar with one of the ladies who works there. She often asks me, “Not working today?”
I usually reply playfully with a line from the Hong Kong movie King of Comedy: “I did go to work—if I didn’t, would you support me?”
One day, we ended up having a deeper conversation, and she told me she had thought I might be subtly testing her with that line under the guise of a joke. That really made me laugh.
Someone like me—so proud and determined—how could I possibly live off someone else?
That’s the end of the story.
So, what can we take away from it?
When we look at people, we must learn to distinguish between subjectivity and objectivity. If we want to be objective, we need evidence to support our judgments. We shouldn’t ignore individual differences just because something seems common.
If we judge others too subjectively, then if your heart is filled with darkness, everything you see will appear dark as well.
Today, I’d like to offer my evaluation of the commonly used analytical frameworks in the consulting industry. In fact, these existing frameworks are overly idealized and cannot fully capture actual market behavior—they have significant limitations. Take Porter’s Five Forces as an example: in the real world, there are non-market forces such as kinship, friendship, trust, and shared-interest communities. There are also various forms of bias caused by different factors (such as racial discrimination, dissatisfaction with the company or founder behind a product, or even simply disliking the packaging). Other factors like geographical location also play a role—the list goes on, and I won’t enumerate them all.
Very often, due to these various reasons, price and quality become less important. If one simply applies the Five Forces model to conduct analysis, a significant portion is missed from the very beginning. Can decisions based on an incomplete analytical framework be considered reliable? I wonder whether academic theorists are even aware of this issue.
Of course, it’s possible that some experienced consultants may make up for these gaps using their own judgment, but how much they can compensate for depends entirely on the individual consultant’s capabilities. There’s also another situation where multiple frameworks are used simultaneously. But in those cases, I wonder if they’ve ever considered whether doing so violates the MECE (Mutually Exclusive, Collectively Exhaustive) principle.
High-probability limit-up stocks in China’s A-shares for the next trading day and verification of stocks selected on the previous trading day (Figure 1: Stock verification; Figure 2: High-probability limit-up stocks for the next trading day).
Warning: My stock picks are speculative. The market often hunts stop-losses, and most lack the skills for speculative trading. Avoid these stocks unless you accept full responsibility for potential losses.
Daily Diagnosis Stock: For stocks in any market, please share your purchase price and whether you're willing to take a loss. I will randomly select a comment and given my trading strategy.

High-probability limit-up stocks in China’s A-shares for the next trading day and verification of stocks selected on the previous trading day (Figure 1: Stock verification; Figure 2: High-probability limit-up stocks for the next trading day).
Warning: My stock picks are speculative. The market often hunts stop-losses, and most lack the skills for speculative trading. Avoid these stocks unless you accept full responsibility for potential losses.
Daily Diagnosis Stock: For stocks in any market, please share your purchase price and whether you're willing to take a loss. I will randomly select a comment and given my trading strategy.

High-probability limit-up stocks in China’s A-shares for the next trading day and verification of stocks selected on the previous trading day (Figure 1: Stock verification; Figure 2: High-probability limit-up stocks for the next trading day).
Warning: My stock picks are speculative. The market often hunts stop-losses, and most lack the skills for speculative trading. Avoid these stocks unless you accept full responsibility for potential losses.
Daily Diagnosis Stock: For stocks in any market, please share your purchase price and whether you're willing to take a loss. I will randomly select a comment and given my trading strategy.

Regarding my criticisms of Buffett's theories last week, I'd like to add a few more words. If an answer is based on truth, then logically speaking, it can almost be said that there is no angle from which to attack it. For example: if you ask me to attack Einstein's theory of relativity, Gauss's normal distribution, Newton's law of universal gravitation... and so on, I have no way to logically dismantle those theories. Therefore, one of the criteria for judging whether something is truth is actually whether it can be logically attacked and defeated.
Here’s my understanding of the consulting industry: truly effective consulting must be based on the client’s unique conditions, a deep grasp of various methodologies, a clear awareness of external factors, and finally, a synthesis of future trends to arrive with a tailored solution. Take the question of whether to attend college as an example. Everyone’s circumstances differ (e.g., financial situation, upbringing, even IQ, personality, emotional intelligence, etc.); each methodology has its pros and cons (e.g., traditional applications, transferring from community college, special admissions, etc.); external conditions vary (admission requirements, school location, faculty quality, even campus dining, etc.); and future trends must be considered (ongoing democratization of knowledge, devaluation of degrees, the moat effect of elite institutions, etc.). See? Even a seemingly simple question like "Should I go to college?" involves a vast array of considerations.
A great consultant isn’t just about technical skills—it’s the fusion of judgment and insight. That’s why truly top-tier consultants will always be rare. Yet, what I observe now is that 99% of the industry’s practitioners rely on formulaic, non-contextual approaches. To use a marketing analogy: when the budget only allows for choosing between celebrity endorsements or viral marketing, those formulaic producers don’t even understand the strengths and weaknesses of each method—what kinds of products or situations suit celebrity endorsements, and which call for viral marketing. They lack deep comprehension of methodologies, treating them as interchangeable and applying them haphazardly. Of course, this is just a casual example; real-world marketing strategies are far more diverse. Identifying the most suitable approach requires profound insight into each method—not a vague "close enough" mentality.
Becoming a doctor isn’t hard, but becoming an exceptional one requires recognizing individual differences and prescribing accordingly. This is what 99% of current practitioners fail to achieve.
High-probability limit-up stocks in China’s A-shares for the next trading day and verification of stocks selected on the previous trading day (Figure 1: Stock verification; Figure 2: High-probability limit-up stocks for the next trading day).
Warning: My stock picks are speculative. The market often hunts stop-losses, and most lack the skills for speculative trading. Avoid these stocks unless you accept full responsibility for potential losses.
Daily Diagnosis Stock: For stocks in any market, please share your purchase price and whether you're willing to take a loss. I will randomly select a comment and given my trading strategy.

High-probability limit-up stocks in China’s A-shares for the next trading day and verification of stocks selected on the previous trading day (Figure 1: Stock verification; Figure 2: High-probability limit-up stocks for the next trading day).
Warning: My stock picks are speculative. The market often hunts stop-losses, and most lack the skills for speculative trading. Avoid these stocks unless you accept full responsibility for potential losses.
Daily Diagnosis Stock: For stocks in any market, please share your purchase price and whether you're willing to take a loss. I will randomly select a comment and given my trading strategy.
