A 7-Line Anti-FOMO Checklist for Markets Near Highs

PLAYBOOKS · SIGNAL & FLOW · GROWTH × LIQUIDITY

A 7-Line Anti-FOMO Checklist for Markets Near Highs

Near market highs, the biggest risk is often not bad analysis but accelerated behavior. A better investor writes the rule before acting.

Conclusion

When markets are strong, behavior often speeds up before analysis improves. The feeling that one must buy now usually becomes strongest after price has already moved.

Core signal

FOMO rises when indexes approach highs, others talk about gains and news plus price repeat the same message. Investors then try to reduce the feeling of missing out before checking evidence.

Growth × Liquidity reading

The seven lines are reason to buy, growth evidence, liquidity support, first-entry size, add condition, invalidation condition and the alternative action if not buying today.

Practical checklist

If growth and liquidity are both supportive, a small first entry may be reasonable. If only growth is strong while liquidity is unclear, watch or wait status is better.

What to watch

The checklist is not a ban on buying; it is a speed-control device. Separating first entry, add, wait and review reduces the chance of being wrong all at once.

How to use this today

This article is not written to forecast the next tick. It is written to fix the order of judgment. First write down what the current price may already discount. Next write the growth evidence that is still unconfirmed. Finally write the liquidity conditions required for that growth story to hold. Once those three lines are separated, the same news can become a chase signal, a watch signal, or a wait signal.

The stronger the market feels, the more important it is to separate existing holdings from new candidates. A holding is a question of rebalancing and review lines. A new candidate is a question of entry price and first position size. Mixing the two creates the common mistake of buying a good company at a stretched price with too much size.

Three questions

  • Growth: Where is the growth evidence confirmed: earnings, demand, productivity, cost curve, or only price?
  • Liquidity: Which condition can support or break the current price: rates, dollar, credit, policy, or transaction volume?
  • Behavior: What is the alternative action if you do not act today, and where is the review line if the thesis is wrong?

Kill Switch and Soft Warning

A Kill Switch is the condition that would make the thesis wrong. Examples include price rising without earnings confirmation, valuation expanding while liquidity indicators weaken, or cash flow failing to follow the story. A Soft Warning does not immediately reverse the conclusion, but it is a yellow light before increasing position size.

The practical use is simple. Pick one theme, write one sentence for growth evidence and one sentence for liquidity conditions. Then split action into first entry, add, wait and review. If those four boxes cannot be filled, the idea is still an observation, not an investment plan.

Public sources checked

These are public references for direction. Check official materials and latest prices before any investment decision.

Korean version

This is a Growth × Liquidity interpretation and checklist, not a recommendation to buy or sell any security.