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4W7smhOHmW Private ID: 70815269
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    The US stock market experienced volatile trading this week. Among them, the S&P 500 index and Nasdaq index surged for three consecutive days, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average stopped for four consecutive days. Boeing's stock price rose and then fell after announcing the earnings report, and eventually closed down nearly 3% due to Moody's downgrade. Meanwhile, Tesla rose sharply by 12% after the earnings report was announced, the biggest increase in two years.
    Meta's stock price plummeted 18% after the after-market earnings report was announced due to rapid revenue growth in the first quarter but poor future prospects and the expected sharp increase in AI spending. This also dragged down the NASDAQ 100 index by more than 1% in after-market trading. Google, on the other hand, continued its upward trend, rising to a record high for the third day in a row. In contrast, Nvidia dropped 3.3% after rising 2% at the beginning of the session and dived nearly 6% from the daily high.
    In other sectors, US orders for core durable goods rose 0.2% month-on-month in March, indicating that commercial equipment orders only increased slightly, indicating that companies were cautious about demand prospects and curtailed investment. In the US Treasury bond market, demand for 5-year US bonds is poor, while 10-year US bond yields rose for the first time this week. On the money market side, the yen fell below 155 US dollars, hitting a new low since 1990 for three consecutive days, while the US dollar index rebounded after hitting a new low of nearly two weeks.
    Crude oil prices turned upward in the short term after the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) released crude oil inventory data. Gold, on the other hand, fell for three consecutive days, and futures closed at a new low of nearly three weeks. In the metals market, London copper stopped falling two times in a row,...
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    US Stock Market Review 15 - 19 Apr 2024
    DJI -0.08%, SP500 -3.05%, NASDAQ -5.52%. Market experienced selloff from mainly tech stocks, with NVDA fell more than 10% on last Friday, expect to see more volatility ahead on big tech earnings
    Four of the Magnificent Seven group of tech giants will report this week: TSLA, META, MSFT GOOGL
    Event to watch: 23 Apr S&P PMI & New Home Sales, 24 Apr Durable Goods Orders, 25 Apr GDP QoQ & initial jobless Claims, 26 Apr Core PCE Pri...
    Weekly Sharing #Apr. 22 2024
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    In the ever-changing financial market, accurately identifying stocks worth attention and investment is key for investors to achieve their investment goals. Moomoo, as a leading stock trading platform in the industry, offers investors an efficient and convenient way to select stocks within the platform. Recognizing that some users have questions about the reference indicators for stock selection and the specific operations involved, we will...
    A Guide to Efficient Stock Selection with Moomoo Features
    A Guide to Efficient Stock Selection with Moomoo Features
    A Guide to Efficient Stock Selection with Moomoo Features
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    Many novice market speculators believe that the larger the position size, the greater the profit
    In fact, the opposite is true
    Smaller position sizes can handle market fluctuations more effectively, which is likely to result in greater profits, while larger positions can cause heavy stock fluctuations
    This is especially true when traders want to keep increasing their purchases as profits grow. Through the pyramid method, the average entry price becomes easier to be removed from the transaction.
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    Dealing with volatile market positions 👇
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    1) I don't see the word $Xilinx(XLNX.US)$anywhere. Nor do I see an acknowledgement of the reality that server CPUs, unless they're highly differentiated, are under growing pressure from the in-house CPUs at the hyperscalers like Graviton 2 at AWS. There are more and more of those. (I'm not sure the other Arm-based CPUs in server will get but so much traction, even if they're superior, because the hyperscaler gets better margins on the in-house-developed parts.)
    2) To me it very much remains to be seen whether the foundry services business becomes significant and successful. Likewise with the autonomous driving segment -- will they be also-rans?
    3) "Intel has hinted that Granite Rapids (scheduled for 2023 after the aforementioned delay) will contain 2x as many cores as Sapphire Rapids, which means that Intel could leapfrog $Advanced Micro Devices(AMD.US)$(which will have a 96-core CPU then) with a 112-core CPU." in an age of efficiency cores, and one with 3D VCache on the AMD side there are limits to what core count really tells you.
    I think Intel will fight hard, I just don't think I'd pin my hopes on them returning to CPU dominance in the markets that have the best margins, and I don't think I'd expect them to establish dominance in the other spaces they're trying to play in. They will probably not be irrelevant in the next 10-20 years but they're now just a large dog instead of being The Big Dog.
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    $Tesla(TSLA.US)$ Sometimes the early bird catches the worm; sometimes the second mouse gets the cheese. We can give Tesla the credit for clearing the minefield.
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    I am very long Intel. I have made great money with $Advanced Micro Devices(AMD.US)$. But right now it makes more sense to own $Xilinx(XLNX.US)$to play AMD, if you believe the merger goes through.
    Either way, I am very excited about Pat at the helm of $Intel(INTC.US)$. He is an original. Very well respected and knows both hardware and software. This will be a huge advantage for Intel in foundry business.
    People act like AMD shot to $100 per after Lisa was announced CEO. It took time. Pats’s been there what, 9 months? He has already made strides.
    Completely changed course from what Swan was talking about (outsourcing to TSM for most new products) and moving away from manufacturing. Pat immediately reversed course and tripled down on Intel’s manufacturing scale.
    Then he introduced an aggressive new product roadmap, which so far (very early) seems to be on track.
    Immediately stopped share buybacks to invest heavily in R&D.
    Facts are, AMD is a great company and at it’s current valuation, can’t have any missteps. Priced for near perfection. Intel is in “prove it mode”.
    Will continue to add aggressively to Intel, shares and ITM leaps, and continue to nibble Xilinx shares along the way.
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    The EV hyper-bubble is going to blow.
    $Tesla(TSLA.US)$ has 50% of the industry market cap.
    If $Lucid Group(LCID.US)$ surpasses Tesla...
    Tesla + Lucid = > 100%
    The math doesn't foot!
    That is, it doesn't foot unless Tesla's market share collapses.
    Of course, we're forgetting...
    EVERY OTHER CAR MANUFACTURER ON THE PLANET!
    30 companies, all rolling out EV.
    Oh...Also, $Apple(AAPL.US)$, $Alphabet-C(GOOG.US)$, $Amazon(AMZN.US)$!!
    Tesla will never have > 5% global market share, but it's priced at 50%.
    90% downside
    Only the timing is uncertain.
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    4W7smhOHmW liked and commented on
    No service network. No charging network. A single $170,000 product with zero track record. $Tesla(TSLA.US)$ was struggling to survive when the $80,000 Model S was their only offering because it was so expensive that only a small % of buyers could consider it. Musk was sleeping on the factory floor as the Model 3 was entering into production and the company barely survived the launch of the $35,000 car (now $40,000+). The Lucid product is more than double that price.
    Will $Lucid Group(LCID.US)$ survive in a much more crowded market segment with competition like Porsche, Audi, Volvo along with Tesla on the high end and $Ford Motor(F.US)$ , Kia, $HYUNDAI MOTOR CO GDR EACH REP 1/2 PFD N/VTG(REG'S')(CIT)(HYMTF.US)$ and $General Motors(GM.US)$ on the lower end of the market? Maybe, I suppose anything is possible.
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