EdwardKarchi
EdwardKarchi
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The recent move in the S&P 500 feels very technical to me. After triple witching cleared out a lot of options pressure around 6,700–6,800, the market suddenly feels lighter and more willing to push higher. Right now, 6,900 is the level I’m watching closely. It’s not just a round number — it’s where price is pausing and testing commitment. If we can hold above this zone and not immediately get rejected, I think the path toward 7,000 opens up pretty naturally, especially with year-end seasonality on our side. That said, I don’t expect a straight line up. A bit of chop or consolidation around 6,900 wouldn’t be a bad thing at all — it would actually make a breakout healthier. My bias stays bullish as long as price holds above the recent breakout zone. If we lose it, then it’s probably just
avatarEdwardKarchi
12-22 09:02
avatarEdwardKarchi
12-22 09:01
avatarEdwardKarchi
12-22 09:00
When I first started trading, I used too many indicators and ended up confusing myself. Over time, I realised the simplest thing works best for me: support and resistance. I usually start by zooming out and marking obvious levels where price reacted multiple times before. These are areas where buyers or sellers previously stepped in — and most of the time, they still matter. If price is approaching resistance, I don’t chase longs. I wait to see if it gets rejected or breaks cleanly. If price pulls back into support during an uptrend, that’s where I look for opportunities — but only if price action confirms. One thing I learned the hard way: 👉 support and resistance are zones, not exact lines. Price can poke through briefly and still respect the level overall. I don’t try to predict tops or
Markets are finally showing some life again, helped by Micron’s earnings and a general rebound in tech. At the same time, everyone is watching the Bank of Japan closely — a rate hike now feels almost certain, with most expecting a 25bps move. What’s interesting to me is that this BoJ hike is not really a surprise anymore. It’s been talked about for months. If Japan goes ahead with a “normal” hike and nothing dramatic happens, it could be one of those classic “sell the rumour, buy the fact” moments. In that case, the uncertainty clears, and markets can refocus on earnings, liquidity, and positioning — which is usually when year-end rallies start to show up. On the flip side, if the BoJ surprises the market (bigger hike, hawkish tone), we could still see some short-term volatility. But hones
$Tiger Brokers(TIGR)$ I used to think Moving Averages were buy/sell signals. After a lot of losing trades, I realised they’re not. Now I use MA for direction and discipline, not prediction. If price is above the 20MA and 50MA, and both are sloping up, I only look for long setups. I don’t fight the trend. If price is below them and MA is sloping down, I stay cautious or avoid longs completely. The biggest mistake I see is trading when MA is flat and tangled together. That’s usually a choppy market — and most of my losses came from there. Another thing I find useful is treating MA like dynamic support and resistance. In a strong trend, price often pulls back to the 20MA, pauses, then continues. When price starts closing below MA and can’t reclaim it
$Broadcom(AVGO)$  Broadcom is one of those companies that doesn’t get as much hype as Nvidia, but quietly keeps delivering. With Citi and Goldman both expecting another beat, I’m honestly not surprised. The AI tailwinds are still very real for AVGO — especially with Google opening up access to its TPU ecosystem and hyperscalers ramping their infrastructure spending again. What stands out to me is the outlook: analysts are talking about triple-digit AI revenue growth heading into FY2026. That’s not a small number, and it shows how deeply Broadcom is tied into the AI supply chain. They’re basically becoming one of the “must-have” players behind the scenes. The question now is whether the stock already priced this in, or if there’s still room fo
The whole robotics sector suddenly woke up. iRobot shooting up, Richtech and Serve jumping double digits… even Tesla got pulled into the narrative. It’s pretty clear the market is betting on a Trump-era push for automation and robotics. Honestly, this doesn’t surprise me. Robotics has always been “the future theme,” just waiting for a catalyst. And now with government interest + rising labor costs + AI breakthroughs, it feels like all the pieces are lining up at the same time. The question is whether this surge is just a short-term hype reaction — or the beginning of a multi-year uptrend like what we saw with AI chips in 2023/24. For me, I’m not chasing, but I’m definitely watching. If robotics becomes the next big policy-backed sector, these early movers could still have plenty of room to
This year’s Black Friday isn’t just happening in shopping malls and on e-commerce apps. If you look at the market, quite a few good companies are also trading at “Black Friday” prices after months of volatility, rate worries, and sector rotations. So it makes me think: should we be rushing to buy discounted products, or quietly accumulating discounted stocks instead? When we talk about discounts on products, it’s very straightforward. A TV is 30% off, a phone is 40% off – but one year later, both are worth less than what we paid. The value is consumed. With stocks, a real discount is different. A good “Black Friday stock” to me is a company where the business is still solid – earnings are growing or at least stable, the competitive advantage is intact, management is still executing – but t
CoreWeave’s drop really caught my eye. The company actually beat on earnings, but the lowered full-year guidance clearly scared the market. The stock basically fell off a cliff straight into the high-80s. Here’s how I see it: The revised guidance isn’t ideal, but it doesn’t change the bigger picture — CoreWeave is still one of the fastest-growing names in the AI infrastructure space. Demand for compute isn’t slowing, and CoreWeave still sits in a sweet spot with cloud GPU capacity, especially with how crazy AI workloads are getting. What worries me a bit is the volatility. When expectations are sky-high, even a slight guidance cut can send the stock into a freefall like this. So the question is: is this a real warning sign, or just the market overreacting (again)? Personally, dips like thi

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