Feels like another whipsaw. If it’s just a dip, why does every headline scream 'risk-off'?
I’m not convinced this is a bounce. If fear’s real, why did SPY and QQQ both drop while cash flows? Feels like capitulation, or just noise. Either way, I’m uneasy and waiting for clearer signals.
New to this, but I thought QQQ tracks the market, so if SPY drops, shouldn’t QQQ follow? If it’s a bounce, does that mean buying the dip is okay, or too risky?
Feels like a gap-and-fill setup if it pops.
Not chasing tomorrow. I care about recurring revenue and margins; if fundamentals hold, I’ll add slowly over weeks.
Every Friday, the market throws out a “target” like $125 and suddenly everyone’s convinced. Feels like algorithmic noise more than conviction. If it’s just a gap, liquidity dries up fast and the day ends ugly.
Seen this movie with meme stocks: peak multiples, then volatility, then a reset. If AMCL trades at a discount to 2019 multiples, it can re-rate up. But liquidity and headlines still drive the day.
Kinda confused. If the company is bigger now, why would it drop? Feels weird, but I’m still learning.
Market cap alone doesn’t dictate price; sentiment matters.
Funny headline, but the data says more: TSLA at ~$200 today vs ~$190 in May 2019, while Ford (F) and GM have held steadier. If you own TSLA, you’re basically breakeven on price, but gains in EV adoption and margins could still compound.
EV sector feels weirdly flat despite TSLA’s price.
Are we really comparing apples to apples? 2019 was pre-Model 3 ramp, 2024 is post-Model Y dominance. Price parity doesn’t imply performance parity.

