I’ll be spending Christmas at home with family, keeping things simple and meaningful. It’s a chance to slow down, enjoy a good meal together, catch up properly, and take a break from the usual rush. For me, that quiet time and connection matter more than big plans or travel, especially at the end of the year.
2025 reminded me that not every opportunity is worth taking. Avoiding unnecessary risk protected my capital and my mindset. My 2026 keyword is Selective. It means choosing quality over quantity and acting only when the odds are truly in my favor. @deal2deal
In 2025, I was reminded that high returns always come with high risk. Some high-risk ideas looked tempting—until reality set in. This made me more aware of hidden risks and more cautious with speculative moves. @onlyYou
Yes, I do. Long-term investing keeps me grounded and prevents me from making emotional decisions based on short-term market noise. @AhGong @nickname168
Personally, I’d lean toward Diwali; the warmth, lights, and sense of togetherness have a timeless charm. There’s something special about the glow of diyas, the sweetness of traditional treats, and the feeling of renewal it brings. That said, Halloween has its own fun energy; creativity, costumes, and a good dose of mischief. If I had to pick: ✨ Diwali for the heart, 🎃 Halloween for the thrill. @deal2deal
Chang’e, with her view from the moon, knows every trend before it hits Earth. She quietly bought $Apple(AAPL)$ centuries ago inspired by her own fruit of immortality. 🍎🌙 Now she watches from above as humans queue for new iPhones every year.
I once thought I was being clever by buying a stock right before earnings, convinced it would “definitely beat expectations.” The company did beat expectations… but then the CEO got on the earnings call and casually mentioned “unexpected supply chain headwinds.” The stock tanked 15% overnight. So technically, I was right… but my portfolio didn’t get the memo. The funny part? I remember sitting there with my coffee the next morning staring at the red numbers thinking: “Ah yes… the market is a comedian, and I just paid the ticket price for the show.”