Nice pop, but I’m not convinced this is durable. NVDA margins and cash burn still worry me long term.
Not in NVDA yet. If this green run holds, would you wait for a pullback to 500 or jump in now? How are folks sizing risk with AMD and MSFT still lurking nearby?
Anyone else feel whiplash after that pop?
If institutions are buying, why is RDDT still flat?
Momentum-wise, RDDT keeps retesting recent highs on high volume and failing to hold on weak days. The pattern looks like a tug-of-war: buyers push, sellers yank back. Until volume spikes on a close above resistance, trend feels choppy.
Over the last 20 sessions, RDDT has shown 70% of down days with volume under 15-day average, while up days averaged 2.3x higher volume. No major short interest or wash sales. Feels like a classic accumulation pattern, not panic selling.
If the NBA’s TV ratings and ticket sales are holding up despite this MVP debate, does that mean market sentiment isn’t that fragile? Or is the real risk in how contract incentives and payroll cap rules affect team flexibility next season?
Feels like every trade is a referendum on who the real MVP is, and the market keeps rewarding noise over consistency. Brunson’s minutes and Kay’s scoring swings around like a roulette wheel. Not convinced this helps long-term value.
G-League action matters more than NBA MVP headlines.
I'm trimming $SPY exposure and rotating into cash, then adding on a pullback. Position sizing matters more than timing these headlines.
Honestly, I think the market's just tired and whipsawing. That -50% next week headline screams volatility, but I'm leaning slightly bullish if it holds. Risk management is everything until clarity returns.
Momentum traders hate these 'next week' calls. If $SPY keeps bleeding, shorts get squeezed, then pops. Hard to chase until trend stabilizes.

