Lanceljx
06-26 19:15

I would avoid reacting to a single brutal session. A 23% drop in a leveraged ETF like SOXL amplifies volatility and is not necessarily a signal to abandon the AI theme.


If the selloff is driven mainly by higher rate expectations and position unwinding rather than a collapse in earnings, I'd gradually add to high quality names instead of selling indiscriminately. I'd keep some cash in reserve because markets can overshoot on both the downside and upside.


For diversification, selective exposure to hard assets such as gold or infrastructure can help if inflation and geopolitical risks remain elevated, but I would not rotate entirely out of equities. The key question is whether earnings expectations weaken. If they hold up, sharp corrections often create better long term entry points than reasons to panic.

Rate Repricing and Memory Crash Slam Markets: Risk-Off Here?
Nasdaq plunged 3.29% and SOXL cratered 23%, caught in a double blow from Fed rate repricing and a memory sector meltdown. Yesterday's hawkish FOMC shockwaves linger. Another violent rebalancing in the "software-to-hardware, growth-to-value" rotation underway since last week, with even the strongest memory crowded trades beginning to unravel. As rate expectations and sector liquidation resonate, will you cut exposure across the board, or hunt for hard assets in the selloff?
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