The bull market officially entered after November 6th, and the logic of corrections is no longer the same as the previous alternating bear and bull markets or the corrections in a small bull market. It won't rise significantly only to drop back at a 1:1 ratio.

In the short term, there is an initial surge, followed by a decline, and then exhaustion. In a bull market, short-term corrections will not last continuously for more than 72 hours, and there is no one-sided downward trend. Bitcoin didn't even drop below 90,000 yesterday; many people are expecting a correction to 80,000 or 76,000. This range is too large and the analysis is unprofessional. For those looking to hold long positions, this can be very misleading. There are multiple levels of support within each 10,000 points, and before there is a signal indicating a deeper correction on the daily chart, blindly determining that there will be a deep correction can lead to missing short-term low buy opportunities.

Even if it can reach that low after a long period, there will be countless instances of unrealized profits being given back, or even turning into losses, and numerous small fluctuations will be missed in between. Considering this, it is much more practical to engage in short-term small fluctuations for quick gains every day.