Accept market adjustments. Every December during Christmas is a period of adjustment, and I've been thinking about how to avoid it. Initially, I wanted to lower interest rates and then seize a quick stretch, but last night Powell came out and talked for a while, causing panic in the market and leading to adjustments, which are indeed necessary. After all, from breaking the previous high of 73,000 to reaching 88,000 on November 11, and then hitting a maximum of 108,350 on December 17, we had a market run lasting 35 days. In the short term, it’s not advisable to bottom fish, and for those who bought early, a maximum drawdown of 10% should trigger a stop-loss. Reduce positions by half, and then take a good rest for a few days. Corrections are not scary; what’s scary is a prolonged decline. After a prolonged decline, there must be a spike. Hold onto your chips; do not buy unless there’s a spike. At least wait for three or more four-hour spikes to consider bottom fishing, limited to cash purchases. For those in contracts, just hold off this month; there’s no rush to bottom fish, or switching to short positions is also fine.