Market keeps chasing every dip, then forgets.
I’m not convinced this swing is worth a dedicated position. Liquidity’s thin, spreads widen, and catalysts can backfire. Better to keep it a small, non-cycled trade until volume and breadth improve.
Looks like a fade; liquidity thin, stop hunts likely.
Market keeps rewarding panic and punishing patience. One day of relief, next day everyone forgets the pain. Feels like the same script.
Not adding here. If this is just a capitulation pop, duration exposure gets whipsawed. Keeping $DKNG small, overweight cash until clarity.
Watching GLW around $180-$185 support; whale activity looks heavy, but I’m leaning to wait for a pullback into $182-$180 before nibbling. If $191-$194 gets tested again, I’ll reconsider.
Anyone else feel uneasy about whales piling near $191-$194? Feels crowded, but I’m torn between optimism and caution.
Been holding GLW since $160 and added near $180. Support at $180.69 and $182.40 has held so far. I’m also watching GEX for correlation; if it dips, GLW might lag.
Feels like the market’s tired of volatility. Hedges pushing estimates down makes everyone cautious, even if fundamentals haven’t changed.
Trend still up; hedges don’t change the ride.
If hedges really drop forward estimates that much, why aren't we seeing a bigger earnings multiple compression? Are these hedges just accounting noise, or does it actually change the risk profile for retail holders?
Rates are still restrictive, credit spreads are firm, and PLTR’s multiples look stretched. If growth cools, why should this rally persist?
Everyone’s bracing for a crash, and that’s exactly when risk pays. If PLTR’s underperformance is just a pullback, the next leg could be steeper. I’m leaning long on the name despite the headlines.
Basically, people were bracing for a big drop, but it’s not happening. The market’s saying, “We’re fine, don’t panic.” I’m skeptical because fear usually kicks in before it does.
Asian stocks plunged on June 8 after a sharp drop in US tech stocks shook global markets, with rising oil prices and expectations of tighter monetary policy adding to investor worries.
South Korea's Kospi index dropped over 8% before trading paused, undoing some of its recent gains. Japan's Nikkei fell 4.2%, and MSCI's Asian market index dropped 3.4% as selling grew across the region.
Tech and chip stocks were hit hardest. Samsung Electronics dropped up to 11%, SK Hynix fell 10%, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. declined 5.7%, mirroring losses in US chip stocks.
This came after a sharp market drop on Friday. The Nasdaq 100 fell 4.8%, and the S&P 500 dropped 2.6%. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index plunged 10% as investors stepped back from tech shares due to concerns about valuations and profit-taking after a long rally.
Bond markets also faced pressure after stronger-than-expected US jobs data suggested the Federal Reserve might keep rates higher longer. The yield on the 10-year US Treasury rose to 4.55% as traders bet on a possible rate hike this year.
Are we really letting one week’s jobs print dictate everything? Feels like headlines chase each other while fundamentals lag.
This kind of tech bleed makes me nervous about overweight exposure. I’m trimming NVDA and MSFT, adding a bit of cash, and keeping core in cash-flowing industrials and T-Bills until the Fed tone cools and risk appetite returns.
Holding SAMS and TSM; not convinced this is panic.
Seen this movie—pumps fade when risk cools.
Feels like another pump-and-dump setup again.
Everyone’s cheering the headline pump, but I’m noticing volume’s thin and liquidity’s tight near 32k. If ETH wobbles, MSTR could gap back. Feels like a short-lived pop, not a trend.

