Recently, the computing power and storage chips in the US stock market have surged again, with giants like Micron reaching new highs. To be honest, the underlying logic of storage has never been broken; on the contrary, it’s becoming more popular. Even if domestic storage technology still has gaps, it’s not weak to that extent.
I think, perhaps, the problem isn’t entirely on the logic side. Retail trading volume is too large, coupled with frequent cross-trading by quantitative funds, repeatedly buying and selling, which has deliberately distorted the prices. This market noise amplifies fluctuations that shouldn’t have existed in the first place.
We still need to see the trend next week before making a judgment.
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ChainMaskedRider
· 12-23 10:16
Micron has reached a new high again, but is this wave of rise really all based on fundamentals? Why do I feel like quantitative trading is crazily stirring things up behind the scenes?
Aren't retail investors being played for suckers enough? We need to observe the direction next week to make better decisions.
The storage logic hasn't broken, but market noise can really shake people out.
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GasGrillMaster
· 12-23 06:51
Quantitative trading is messing things up here, and retail investors still have to be played for suckers.
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IntrovertMetaverse
· 12-22 22:50
Regarding Micron hitting new highs, I think we still need to observe. Those quantitative guys have really messed up the market.
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StakeTillRetire
· 12-20 10:50
Micron hits a new high and I think about bottom-fishing for storage again. This wave is really not that simple.
Quantitative trading is stirring things up here, retail investors still want to catch the top. Let's see next week.
Don't deceive yourself about domestic storage; the gap is obvious.
When it comes to chips, honestly, it still depends on the long term. There's too much short-term noise.
The storage logic hasn't broken down. Why are we still stumbling around here?
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not_your_keys
· 12-20 10:41
Micron's recent performance is indeed impressive, but it's really frustrating that retail investors and quant traders are making the market chaotic.
The gap in domestic storage technology isn't as big as expected; the key still depends on how things develop moving forward.
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BearMarketGardener
· 12-20 10:41
Micron hits new highs again; storage chips are indeed a strong demand, but there's also quite a bit of hype in this rally.
Quantitative funds are really causing disruptions; retail investors are being played to the bone in the process.
It's hard to predict next week; better to wait and see, don't rush to get on board.
Domestic storage isn't that bad; it's just being suppressed by market sentiment. Sigh.
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GweiWatcher
· 12-20 10:39
Storage chips indeed have confidence; it's not surprising that Micron hits a new high. The key issue is that retail investors are too aggressive, being repeatedly harvested by quantitative funds. This noise is really annoying.
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NftDeepBreather
· 12-20 10:34
Micron hits a new high again; this wave of storage chips really has some substance.
Retail investors have truly been played out by quantification. Let's wait for signals next week.
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BearWhisperGod
· 12-20 10:31
Micron hits a new high again, but is this rally driven by fundamentals or capital speculation? It's hard to tell.
The quantitative wash trading strategy has been around for a while; it's just about triggering volatility.
Next week is the real focus; it's too early to place bets now.
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PanicSeller
· 12-20 10:24
Quantitative funds these bastards are really outrageous, playing with prices through daily spoofing, retail investors are just being cut like leeks.
If it drops again this week, I really can't hold on anymore.
Micron's recent surge is just too crazy, feels like they're about to dump the market again.
Storage logic is fine, it's just that there's too much market noise, I hate this kind of repeated manipulation.
Domestic chips aren't actually that bad, it's just that this kind of price manipulation makes it hard to see the right direction every day.
Let's see next week, anyway I've already gone all-in.
Recently, the computing power and storage chips in the US stock market have surged again, with giants like Micron reaching new highs. To be honest, the underlying logic of storage has never been broken; on the contrary, it’s becoming more popular. Even if domestic storage technology still has gaps, it’s not weak to that extent.
I think, perhaps, the problem isn’t entirely on the logic side. Retail trading volume is too large, coupled with frequent cross-trading by quantitative funds, repeatedly buying and selling, which has deliberately distorted the prices. This market noise amplifies fluctuations that shouldn’t have existed in the first place.
We still need to see the trend next week before making a judgment.