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Seen this movie with EVs: early days, discounts are everywhere, and ATR can look great while margins bleed. If NIO can hold pricing without sacrificing volume, it's a different story. I'm cautiously optimistic but not convinced yet.
Is this ATR rise mainly from ES8/ES6 or a mix of XCE and higher discounts? How sustainable is this pricing trend?
Rising ATR could mask weak unit economics if discounts persist.
Is this really contagion or just a Korean market glitch? If it’s noise, why did correlations spike across US indices?
Trimming equities, keeping TLT small exposure.
As a sector guy, I’m not convinced this is systemic. Korean exporters like POS or HYMX can handle a one-off jolt, but if sentiment bleeds into semis, we’d see broader weakness. Feels like headline risk, not structural.
Anyone got LULU’s inventory turnover and debt-to-EBITDA?
Rates still sticky and consumer confidence wobbly, so I’m cautious about assuming another retail bounce anytime soon.
Everyone’s cheering the rebound, but I’m seeing a classic LULU squeeze: margin pressure, inventory drag, and that debt load still looming.
For those sizing AMD, how are you weighting this relative to NVDA and MSFT? Are you adding on the 465 support, trimming into strength, or keeping it a satellite in a broader tech sleeve?
Feels like a classic bounce, not convinced yet.
Is this just another textbook RSI bounce, or are we ignoring the 470s rejection and thin liquidity again?
I'm new here—if AMD and ARM got sympathy, why isn't NVDA moving? Does Broadcom's guidance just drag the whole sector down, or is this a temporary glitch? How do people actually trade sympathy moves?
Volatility like this usually sets up quick entries; watching $SPY for a fade, then rotating into NVDA if panic spikes.
Rates still high, so tech shakeouts feel inevitable.
Not convinced this is a catalyst. If it’s just rotation, why trim ARM and not TSM? Position sizing feels reactive, not strategic.
Feels like noise; fundamentals haven’t changed.

