Don't speculate in the market. Predicting the market can easily lead to the frequency of investor operations. When the market is crazy, what we need most is to give up the prediction of the market. The drastic changes in the market are not the basis of our transaction.
Predicting market decisions when the market fluctuates greatly is tantamount to gambling, relying not on strength but on luck. No one can accurately predict which direction the market will go in the next stage. Even if you judge by luck, you just guess the short-term market, which is of little practical significance to long-term investment, because it will be offset by mistakes later.
From observing the market to observing yourself, it is time to examine yourself when the market changes greatly. If the market plummets, check whether the fund you hold has enough resilience. If the market plummets, see which funds in your hand can lead the market up and eliminate those that are not working well.
At the same time, we should constantly optimize our own criteria for screening funds and examine our own investment strategies to see if all the operations are effective and which ones are useless.
Learn to allocate assets, don't put eggs in one basket, and learn to allocate assets in a diversified way. When the market plummets, the importance of asset allocation is particularly prominent. People with good assets can always make up for the losses of other assets to the greatest extent.
Do a good job in asset allocation, and don't worry about how much you will lose when the market falls.