Ken 88888888
liked and commented on
👋 Hi mooors
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The Moomoo Alpha Creator Program is officially open! We are looking for the 20 most insightful creators. If your content meets the criteria, the rewards are stacked! With high-quality content and engagement, a single user can win up to ...
Do you use moomoo daily for market tracking, trading, or analysis? Do you have unique insights on how to use our tools?
Instead of keeping it to yourself, share it and get rewarded!
The Moomoo Alpha Creator Program is officially open! We are looking for the 20 most insightful creators. If your content meets the criteria, the rewards are stacked! With high-quality content and engagement, a single user can win up to ...
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Ken 88888888
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As the fires of conflict in the Middle East escalate, the gold and silver markets have been taken on a sheer roller-coaster ride.
As the fires of conflict in the Middle East escalate, the gold and silver markets are being subjected to a violent whiplash. After gap-opening higher on March 2, both precious metals quickly surrendered their gains, setting the stage for a brutal sell-off. The volatility reached a crescendo in the foll...
As the fires of conflict in the Middle East escalate, the gold and silver markets are being subjected to a violent whiplash. After gap-opening higher on March 2, both precious metals quickly surrendered their gains, setting the stage for a brutal sell-off. The volatility reached a crescendo in the foll...
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Ken 88888888
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Global markets are reeling following news of US airstrikes on Iran over the weekend. The SPX dropped 1% on Tuesday as geopolitical tensions spiked.
While the headlines are scary, history suggests these geopolitical shocks may create potential opportunities. A look at conflict data over the last 30 years reveals a pattern:
– 9/11 Attacks (2001): Market plunged 4.92% on day one → Rebounded 3.69% a month later.
– Israel Strikes Iran (2025): D...
While the headlines are scary, history suggests these geopolitical shocks may create potential opportunities. A look at conflict data over the last 30 years reveals a pattern:
– 9/11 Attacks (2001): Market plunged 4.92% on day one → Rebounded 3.69% a month later.
– Israel Strikes Iran (2025): D...
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Ken 88888888
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Hello, moo friends!
Over the weekend, I saw this picture in my social feed, which instantly reminded me of the plotline involving Ding Xie in the drama 'The Greed of Man.'
The market panic triggered by the current situation in Iran may be repeating a classic scenario from 30 years ago.
“It’s impossible for the market to rise; how can it rise during a war?” This kind of “intuitive” panic is actually one of the easiest traps to fall into in investing. History has repeatedly shown that the low point of sentiment often marks the turning point of the market trend (has anyone ever sold at the bottom?).
)。
In response to yesterday's poll results↓, today I will share my views and breakdown of this issue.
1. What exactly is the market “afraid” of? Three layers of concern progressively building on each other
The current situation in the Middle East isn’t simply “firing = falling.” Rather, progressive layers of concern are further eroding stock valuations.
Concern 1: Blockade of the Strait of Hormuz → Rising oil prices → Soaring production costs squeezing corporate profits
This is the most direct micro-level impact. Particularly for the manufacturing sector (especially Japan's vast automobile and machinery industries), fuel and electricity costs are rigid.
Rising energy costs can easily erode quarterly earnings reports of listed companies, leading to a devaluation of stock prices.
Viewpoint 1: The impact appears to be limited at this stage. Various signs indicate that all parties are making efforts to stabilize energy prices. One factor is Trump's tweet about escorting shipping channels.
The second factor is the timely announcement by OPEC members of an increase in crude oil production. Past spikes in oil prices caused by Middle East issues were often related to whether oil-producing countries were willing to stabilize oil prices (historically, there have been more instances of voluntary production cuts, embargoes, and观望).
Over the weekend, I saw this picture in my social feed, which instantly reminded me of the plotline involving Ding Xie in the drama 'The Greed of Man.'
The market panic triggered by the current situation in Iran may be repeating a classic scenario from 30 years ago.
“It’s impossible for the market to rise; how can it rise during a war?” This kind of “intuitive” panic is actually one of the easiest traps to fall into in investing. History has repeatedly shown that the low point of sentiment often marks the turning point of the market trend (has anyone ever sold at the bottom?).
In response to yesterday's poll results↓, today I will share my views and breakdown of this issue.
1. What exactly is the market “afraid” of? Three layers of concern progressively building on each other
The current situation in the Middle East isn’t simply “firing = falling.” Rather, progressive layers of concern are further eroding stock valuations.
Concern 1: Blockade of the Strait of Hormuz → Rising oil prices → Soaring production costs squeezing corporate profits
This is the most direct micro-level impact. Particularly for the manufacturing sector (especially Japan's vast automobile and machinery industries), fuel and electricity costs are rigid.
Rising energy costs can easily erode quarterly earnings reports of listed companies, leading to a devaluation of stock prices.
Viewpoint 1: The impact appears to be limited at this stage. Various signs indicate that all parties are making efforts to stabilize energy prices. One factor is Trump's tweet about escorting shipping channels.
The second factor is the timely announcement by OPEC members of an increase in crude oil production. Past spikes in oil prices caused by Middle East issues were often related to whether oil-producing countries were willing to stabilize oil prices (historically, there have been more instances of voluntary production cuts, embargoes, and观望).
Translated



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Ken 88888888
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Oil has been one of the standout performers of 2026, quietly — and then suddenly, not so quietly — becoming the trade everyone wished they had on. Year-to-date, energy-related assets have surged: the $Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLE.US)$ is up over 20%, with crude oil tracker $United States Oil Fund LP (USO.US)$ and majors $Exxon Mobil (XOM.US)$ and $Chevron (CVX.US)$ posting similarly impressive gains. The contrast with the rest o...


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Ken 88888888
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Columns US Morning News Call | U.S. Senate to Vote on War Powers Resolution Challenging Trump's Iran Strikes
Key Takeaways:
• U.S. Senate to Vote on War Powers Resolution Challenging Trump's Iran Strikes
• Seoul Trading Halted as KOSPI Drops Over 12% on Middle East War Shock
• US-Iran Military Conflict Escalates with Oil Supply Route Disruption
• Billionaire Tesla Whale Buys 1 Million Nvidia Shares
🔔Before the Bell
Stocks recovered after a report that Iran had indirectly reached out to the US to discuss ...
• U.S. Senate to Vote on War Powers Resolution Challenging Trump's Iran Strikes
• Seoul Trading Halted as KOSPI Drops Over 12% on Middle East War Shock
• US-Iran Military Conflict Escalates with Oil Supply Route Disruption
• Billionaire Tesla Whale Buys 1 Million Nvidia Shares
🔔Before the Bell
Stocks recovered after a report that Iran had indirectly reached out to the US to discuss ...
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Ken 88888888
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The Middle East is on fire, and the oil & gas markets are feeling the heat! 🔥 With Iran threatening to unleash chaos on regional energy infrastructure if attacked, and OPEC+ announcing a major production hike, traders are scrambling to position themselves. 📉📈
Here's the breakdown:
1️⃣ Iran's Nuclear Gambit: Tehran warns that any strike on its energy facilities would trigger retaliation across the entire region's oil infrastructure. This is...
Here's the breakdown:
1️⃣ Iran's Nuclear Gambit: Tehran warns that any strike on its energy facilities would trigger retaliation across the entire region's oil infrastructure. This is...
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Ken 88888888
commented on and voted
Hey mooers!
The verdict is in. Remember our heated debate right before the NVDA earnings? It’s time to see how your expectations matched reality.
When "crushing earnings" meets "price drop," you know you’re witnessing a classic market moment.
In our pre-earnings poll, the community was divided, but heavily skewed:
– 🔴 81% (Team Moat - The Unstoppables): Betting on the AI revolution.
– 🔵 19% (Team Peak - The Realists): Warning abo...
When "crushing earnings" meets "price drop," you know you’re witnessing a classic market moment.
In our pre-earnings poll, the community was divided, but heavily skewed:
– 🔴 81% (Team Moat - The Unstoppables): Betting on the AI revolution.
– 🔵 19% (Team Peak - The Realists): Warning abo...
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Ken 88888888
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Hello Mooers,
U.S. equities finished last week on a softer note, with investors increasingly rotating away from crowded risk and re-pricing both AI winners/losers and the rate path. For the week ending Feb. 27, the S&P 500 fell 0.4%, the Dow lost 1.3%, and the Nasdaq slipped 1.0%, while Friday’s session saw another broad decline as inflation worries and geopol...
U.S. equities finished last week on a softer note, with investors increasingly rotating away from crowded risk and re-pricing both AI winners/losers and the rate path. For the week ending Feb. 27, the S&P 500 fell 0.4%, the Dow lost 1.3%, and the Nasdaq slipped 1.0%, while Friday’s session saw another broad decline as inflation worries and geopol...
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