No strategy can guarantee profits; it only provides a structured intraday plan for yourself. If the day is set for a high, outline three levels of resistance: those willing to take risks can short with a light position at the first level, and then assess the upward momentum at the second and third levels to decide whether to add to the short or reduce the position; the more cautious can directly wait for the second or third levels, using small stop losses. Highs and lows cannot be accurately predicted, so one can only refer to historical trends to deduce which areas are more likely to experience renewed pressure or stop declines. Do not make random trades in the middle of the range. Technical analysis and candlestick patterns can become ineffective in the face of news; one should neither fully trust nor completely ignore them. Writing daily market analyses is meant to help everyone make more informed predictions about key levels rather than jumping in with a single sentence. The content is merely opinions and numbers; entering the market is a decision made with real money. First, establish your own logic and risk control, then consider whether to reference others, and observe long-term whether their entries and exits are transparent and whether their profit-taking and stop-loss strategies are executed. Each trade is an experiment; control your position size, accept stop losses, and surviving in the market for a long time is more important than occasional windfalls.