When I first started trading, I used too many indicators and ended up confusing myself. Over time, I realised the simplest thing works best for me: support and resistance. I usually start by zooming out and marking obvious levels where price reacted multiple times before. These are areas where buyers or sellers previously stepped in — and most of the time, they still matter. If price is approaching resistance, I don’t chase longs. I wait to see if it gets rejected or breaks cleanly. If price pulls back into support during an uptrend, that’s where I look for opportunities — but only if price action confirms. One thing I learned the hard way: 👉 support and resistance are zones, not exact lines. Price can poke through briefly and still respect the level overall. I don’t try to predict tops or
CoreWeave’s drop really caught my eye. The company actually beat on earnings, but the lowered full-year guidance clearly scared the market. The stock basically fell off a cliff straight into the high-80s. Here’s how I see it: The revised guidance isn’t ideal, but it doesn’t change the bigger picture — CoreWeave is still one of the fastest-growing names in the AI infrastructure space. Demand for compute isn’t slowing, and CoreWeave still sits in a sweet spot with cloud GPU capacity, especially with how crazy AI workloads are getting. What worries me a bit is the volatility. When expectations are sky-high, even a slight guidance cut can send the stock into a freefall like this. So the question is: is this a real warning sign, or just the market overreacting (again)? Personally, dips like thi
$Tiger Brokers(TIGR)$ I used to think Moving Averages were buy/sell signals. After a lot of losing trades, I realised they’re not. Now I use MA for direction and discipline, not prediction. If price is above the 20MA and 50MA, and both are sloping up, I only look for long setups. I don’t fight the trend. If price is below them and MA is sloping down, I stay cautious or avoid longs completely. The biggest mistake I see is trading when MA is flat and tangled together. That’s usually a choppy market — and most of my losses came from there. Another thing I find useful is treating MA like dynamic support and resistance. In a strong trend, price often pulls back to the 20MA, pauses, then continues. When price starts closing below MA and can’t reclaim it