Watching from the sidelines; this drop makes me uneasy, but the 'no need to sell' line keeps me curious about buying dips.
With rates still sticky and data center demand slowing, how sustainable is this revenue bump for INTC versus MSFT and AVGO?
Still watching, feels like a decent entry point.
Feels like every quarter Intel drops a new chip and the market shrugs. I’m tired of the hype train rolling over anyone still holding. If they can’t beat AMD and NVDA, what’s the point?
Is the $QQQ breakout still intact?
Everyone’s cheering the $QQQ pop, but I’m uneasy. When the S&P lags and the mid-cap line weakens, rallies often fade. I’d rather wait for a pullback toward the 200-day.
200-day above 50-day favors $QQQ.
Feels like the momentum is building: R2 buzz, strong follow-through on tape, and buyers stepping in on every pullback. If volume keeps expanding, I’m leaning into the trend, but I’m watching for a fade into strength.
For long-term holders, how does R2 fit into the roadmap versus $NVDA, and what’s the outlook on enterprise adoption and pricing power?
Everyone cheering R2—feels like another marketing flash.
Anyone else feeling this pop is just froth? If it keeps going, what’s the realistic ceiling before it cools off?
Feels like a hype pop more than a durable trend. I’m not in yet because these pairs haven’t shown consistent follow-through beyond a few hours. What’s the real liquidity, order-book depth, and how quickly do they unwind if BTC wobbles?
Watching for a pullback to nibble.
Seen this before; fade the rIPPin’ pop, folks.
Rates still sticky and inflation lingers; this rIPPin’ feels fragile. If the Fed stays hawkish, $SPY could retrace fast.
Feels like a clean breakout; I’m leaning long $SPY until it stalls. Momentum’s tight, but the tape looks bullish.

