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"Left-side Trading" vs "Right-side Trading" — Two Major Buying and Selling Strategies Every Beginner Investor Must Know
Many trading beginners often hear about the two concepts of “left-side trading” and “right-side trading,” but can never quite figure out the difference between them. In fact, these two approaches represent completely different trading philosophies and risk tolerance styles.
Left-Side Trading: The Courage to Think Opposite
Left-side trading is a contrarian execution strategy. The core idea is: “When others are fearful, I stay greedy; when others are greedy, I know how to be fearful.” Simply put, when the market price drops sharply and investors rush to sell, you dare to set up buy positions in the bottom area. This strategy requires extremely strong psychological resilience and a deep understanding of market cycles.
The advantage of left-side trading is that the buying cost is low, but the risk lies in the idea that “there can still be another bottom”—the price may continue to fall. So you need ample capital reserves and a well-thought-out stop-loss plan.
Right-Side Trading: A More Prudent Approach
By contrast, right-side trading is a trend-following strategy. When the market begins to show a clear uptrend early on, traders follow through by buying; when bearish signals appear, they exit promptly. This method relies more on technical analysis and trend confirmation, so the risk is relatively more controllable.
Right-side trading is suitable for most investors because it follows the principle that “trend is your friend,” reducing the uncertainty of operating against the market.
How to Choose the Strategy That Fits You?
Both methods have their pros and cons. Left-side trading tests your courage and professionalism, making it suitable for experienced investors; right-side trading is more steady and is better for those who are risk-averse. The key is to choose the strategy that best matches your own financial strength, risk tolerance, and ability to judge the market.