What is bottom-up growth?

What is bottom-up growth? How to treat this concept? Increased holdings are often favored by investors.

The falling A-share market has shattered investors' confidence again and again, and even many originally determined investors have left with regret. In fact, it is not just ordinary investors who are injured in this round of decline. Many executives of listed companies who increased their shares with real money in the early stage are now caught in a deep trap. It is in this special background that since the regulatory authorities provided policy convenience for increasing holdings, the cases of increasing holdings of A-share listed companies have emerged continuously, in which employees are encouraged to increase their holdings of shares issued by the company by way of commitment, that is, the losses caused by shares will be fully compensated; The income belongs to the employees themselves.

Bottom-up shareholding is rare in global stock markets. From the time node, it often happens at the bottom of the stage after the stock price falls sharply. The last A-share market appeared intensively in 2065438+July-September 2005. At that time, the major shareholders of listed companies such as Storm Group, Tenbon International, Zhongli Group, Jingui Bank, Kelu Electronics, Huangshi Group, etc. encouraged employees to buy their own shares by means of commitment. After the well-known plunge, in September of that year, A shares ushered in an intermediate rebound of about 4 months. It is worth noting that Kemeite Gas and Fenda Technology also appeared in the list of listed companies that increased their holdings last time.

As the market goes out of a wave of intermediate market, none of the above listed companies needs the support of major shareholders, and their employees are in a profitable state during the commitment period.

To sum up, we know what a bottom-up rise is.