Nasdaq Enters Technical Correction: Reduce or Add Positions?

Compared to its all-time high on October 29, 2025, the Nasdaq has now declined by more than 10%, officially entering a technical correction zone. In addition, all of the Magnificent 7 are currently experiencing double-digit drawdowns. Some market participants believe it’s best to move to cash and wait for a deeper pullback. How do you view the Nasdaq entering a technical correction? Would you reduce your positions at this stage?

avatarLanceljx
26 minutes ago
A 10% decline in the Nasdaq is technically a correction, but not necessarily the start of a bear market. Historically, Nasdaq corrections happen quite often during bull markets, especially when valuations are high and interest rate expectations change. The key question is not whether we are in a correction, but whether liquidity and earnings are deteriorating. Corrections driven by positioning and sentiment are very different from corrections driven by recession or earnings collapse. How I view this correction This correction looks more like: High valuations being compressed Interest rates staying higher for longer Geopolitical and oil risks raising inflation expectations Institutions reducing risk and rotating sectors So this feels more like a macro-driven correction, not a tech collapse.
avatarAlubin
11:24
Don’t think the market has turn full bearish. While it is trending downwards, full blown worries aren’t really being factored in and there is still expectation that this current situation is merely temporary
avatarAN88
04:08
yes market turn bearish
avatarShyon
03-28 23:26
From my perspective, the $NASDAQ(.IXIC)$ entering a correction reflects a shift in sentiment rather than broken fundamentals. Rising oil prices and geopolitical uncertainty are bringing inflation fears back, and the market is clearly moving from “buy the dip” to “sell the rally” in the short term. For the Mag 7 like $NVIDIA(NVDA)$ $Tesla Motors(TSLA)$ , I still believe in the long-term story, but technically they don’t look ready yet. I’m not rushing in—I prefer to scale slowly or wait for stabilization instead of catching a falling knife. I don’t think the market is fully bearish, just fragile. I’m keeping some cash while sticking to my strategy, and I’ll l
avatarECLC
03-28 21:59
Certainly risks in the short term but probably safer to wait for better entry points.
avatarHupfumi
03-28 17:57
NQ remains bearish short term due geopolitical tensions   Deep pullback remains sceptical. 
Nasdaq Is In Correction. Let's Talk About What's Happening. Alright guys, let's talk about what's going on with the broader market because this directly affects everything we're trading — MARA, RIOT, COIN, all of it. Nasdaq officially entered correction territory on March 26. We closed at 21,408 — that's more than 10% off the October 2025 peak. Technically confirmed. Not a dip. A correction. And honestly? The chart has been screaming this for weeks. What broke It wasn't one support. It was everything, one by one. 50-day MA — gone weeks ago. 100-day MA — gone in early March. Then the big one. On March 19, the S&P 500, Nasdaq 100, and the Dow all closed below their 200-day moving averages in a single session. All three. Same day. That doesn't happen often. When it does, it means this isn
avatarWeChats
03-28 14:31
The 5% Haircut: Is This a Healthy Shakeout or the Start of a Brutal Reversal? The screens are flashing red, and the most dangerous question echoing across the timeline right now is: “Are we in a technical correction, and should I be reducing my position?” After a relentless, seemingly gravity-defying run to start the year, the market has finally hit an air pocket. Daily charts look ugly, high-flyers are taking a quick 5% to 8% hit, and the natural retail instinct is to panic. But before you liquidate your entire account or blindly catch falling knives, we need to separate macro noise from actual price action. Let’s break down what’s really happening under the hood. 1️⃣ The Anatomy of a Flush: Hype vs. Reality Markets do not go up in straight lines—even in a roaring bull cycle. A technical
avatarLanceljx
03-28 11:38
Nasdaq entering a correction is not unusual after a strong AI-led rally. The key question is whether this is a valuation reset or the start of a macro bear trend. Right now it looks more like a correction than a full bear market, but volatility will likely stay high. For Mag 7 dip buying, I would focus on MSFT, NVDA, GOOGL, AMZN first. These are tied to AI, cloud, and infrastructure with strong earnings. META is mid-tier. AAPL and TSLA are more cyclical and may drop more if the economy slows. I would not go all-in yet. Better approach: Keep some cash Buy in stages Add more if market drops further Avoid chasing rebounds This is probably a buy-the-dip market, but slowly, not aggressively.
avatarLanceljx
03-28 11:34
A Nasdaq correction of more than 10% sounds dramatic, but historically, it is actually quite normal, especially after a strong bull run led by a small group of mega-cap stocks. The key question is not whether the Nasdaq is in a correction. The key question is why it is correcting. --- How I view this Nasdaq correction I would frame this correction under three possible scenarios: 1. Healthy correction in a bull market This is the most common scenario. Markets do not move up in straight lines. After strong rallies, a 10 to 15 percent pullback is normal because: Valuations became stretched Positioning became crowded Interest rate expectations changed Some profit taking happens Weak hands get shaken out If this is the case, the correction is a reset, not a collapse. --- 2. Liquidity / rates pr
avatarAI Mastero
03-28 11:34
Nasdaq enters Technical Correction:) Perfect time to have exited or exit now on windfall positions to reap the huge magical gains.  We don't know if the lucky star will still shine or vanish in the near future.  For other value stocks and steady performing stocks, better to hold them for long.  Happy Investing!
avatarconsole.err
03-28 08:45
Feels like everyone’s suddenly panicking over the “technical correction,” but a ~10% pullback isn’t exactly rare, as pointed out by others too. Yes, the big names are all down double digits, but that’s also where most of the excess was. To me this looks more like a reset than the start of something structurally worse (at least for now). Personally I am not rushing to dump positions. If anything, I’m being selective and slowly adding where valuations make more sense. Trying to go all cash and time a deeper drop sounds nice in theory, but it’s easier than done.  So should we be defensive or buying the dip? 😂
avatarkoolgal
03-28 08:44
🌟🌟🌟A Nasdaq correction is not a funeral.  It is a discount season, a valuation detox and a spa day for overheated charts. The market has not really turned bearish.  A true bear market is when hope evaporates.  Right now hope is very much alive, just temporarily hiding behind a pillow. Cash or Buy the Dip? I don't go full cash.  I don't go full YOLO.  I go strategic, stay calm and patient. Corrections are where long term wealth is built, but only if I choose wisely. Which Mag 7 are worth hunting now? $NVIDIA(NVDA)$ : the backbone of AI compute, still the king of 5 layer cake. $Microsoft(MSFT)$ : AI enterprise dominance, cloud stickiness $A
avatarAN88
03-28 07:07
buy dip. wait better entry point.turned bearish.stay in cash
avatarBilly_bob
03-28 06:23
The key is to not panic and stay invested in times of uncertainty as the market will almost certainly recover in the future.
avatarhighhand
03-28 00:17
10% correction occurs over every year on average. so nothing different. would you rather buy when market goes down or up
avatarprincejumong
03-27 23:06
careful to enter, uncertain war ending, closure of straits of hormus, oil price everyone's life will be affected..so retain some cash, think twice and wait to enter.
avatarCadi Poon
03-27 22:58
Although President Trump has been trying to push the narrative that the Iran conflict is nearing an end, the market remains skeptical. On Thursday, Iran issued a strong response, calling the ceasefire proposal a “third deception.” This statement significantly reduced expectations for a near-term peace deal, pushing oil prices higher and reigniting inflation concerns. In the coming weeks, the market may face more pain.
avatarTimothyX
03-27 22:56
Amid rising oil prices, fading hopes for a Middle East ceasefire, and shifting fundamental narratives for tech giants, the three major indices have all moved lower. $NASDAQ(.IXIC)$ , dragged down by tech stocks, has been the weakest and has officially entered a technical correction zone.