• VNW CapitalVNW Capital
      ·33 minutes ago
      Clearly memory chips are the stocks on play!
      9Comment
      Report
    • LanceljxLanceljx
      ·20:01
      Q1: Moderately durable but fragile. The ceasefire supports risk-on short term, yet remains headline-driven. If talks hold, rally continues with volatility. If they fail, risk-off repricing will be sharp. Q2: – strongest fundamentals, AI demand visibility – HBM upside but cyclical – storage beta play – most speculative Q3: Add selectively, not chase. Start partial now, add on dips or post-earnings confirmation.
      2Comment
      Report
    • highhandhighhand
      ·11:02
      yes cease fire will eventually hold.. but high volatility. nowadays news spread fast and algorithms are programmed to sell or buy on news.  hold for semis. not much cash to buy.. unless cease fire don't hold and large drop them I will buy.
      137Comment
      Report
    • L.LimL.Lim
      ·07:37
      Isn't that wonderful, any rally could be cut in half by another disruption, but the rally came in so hard and so quickly that investors might just want that to scrape out good value. I felt that the war had minimal impact, the stock market was waiting on any "good news" from the man in the white house, so it could start climbing. By the time the ceasefire was agreed, it felt like nothing too significant happened since everyone already was recovering. I wonder if the ceasefire does not hold, and the reaction of the market, would there even be a big slide The Hormuz chokehold will indeed not be going away any time soon, so what are we really rebounding so quickly for...
      1791
      Report
    • AN88AN88
      ·04:48
      ceasefire
      29Comment
      Report
    • snoophumansnoophuman
      ·00:13
      Oh well that's that 
      83Comment
      Report
    • ChrishustChrishust
      ·00:10
      1 the ceasefire is more negative on USA than Iran. Iran has options 2. They’re all interesting including seagate and sand disk 3. A better investment play is to invest directly in Asian tech
      94Comment
      Report
    • Jasmine1205Jasmine1205
      ·04-08 23:46
      ceasefile is only a temporary breather. they are still fighting
      51Comment
      Report
    • Cadi PoonCadi Poon
      ·04-08 23:33
      $CSOP Samsung Electronics Daily (2x) Leveraged Product(07747)$ just delivered a 1Q26 preview far above expectations. Goldman noted that even with inventories at extremely low levels, the average selling prices (ASP) of DRAM and NAND surged 103% and 87% QoQ, respectively. The more important insight is this: this is not just a cyclical fluctuation — Samsung is now locking in elevated profits through long-term agreements (LTAs), and this kind of pricing power is unprecedented.
      59Comment
      Report
    • TimothyXTimothyX
      ·04-08 23:29
      On one side, Wall Street giants such as Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are collectively calling out: “A value opportunity in tech has emerged.” On the other, Bridgewater founder Ray Dalio dropped a bombshell in his latest post: “We are in a world war that will not end anytime soon.”
      96Comment
      Report
    • 1PC1PC
      ·04-08 22:48
      It's a welcome 😁 breather, stock markets & the whole 🌎 needs it [Chuckle]. The concrete evidence 🧾 will surfaces 14 days later, I hope 🙏😊. In the meantime, captured this opportunity 😜🙏 @Barcode @JC888 @Shernice軒嬣 2000 @Aqa @DiAngel @koolgal @Shyon
      160Comment
      Report
    • ShyonShyon
      ·04-08 22:12
      I see this ceasefire more as a pause than a real resolution. I agree with Ray Dalio that geopolitical risks haven’t gone away, especially around energy routes. At the same time, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are right that a lot of fear is already priced in. So I think the rally can continue short term, but it’ll stay volatile. I’m most interested in $Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing(TSM)$ and $Seagate Technology PLC(STX)$ . TSMC is the clearest AI infrastructure play with strong visibility, while Seagate benefits from the growing need for low-cost data storage. Compared to that,
      279Comment
      Report
    • Tiger_commentsTiger_comments
      ·04-08 22:04

      Ceasefire or World War III? Tech Re-rating: Institutions Still Bullish on Memory Rally?

      As news of a ceasefire in the U.S.-Iran conflict broke, major stocks rebounded across the board at today’s open, with the memory sector surging in particular. $SanDisk Corp.(SNDK)$ $Roundhill Memory ETF(DRAM)$ But the market is now standing at an extreme crossroads. On one side, Wall Street giants such as Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are collectively calling out: “A value opportunity in tech has emerged.” On the other, Bridgewater founder Ray Dalio dropped a bombshell in his latest post: “We are in a world war that will not end anytime soon.” Who’s right — value opportunity or global turmoil? ⚠️ Goldman’s view: Because the U.S.-Iran conflict briefly priced in higher inflation and higher-for-longer rat
      15.93K28
      Report
      Ceasefire or World War III? Tech Re-rating: Institutions Still Bullish on Memory Rally?
    • LanceljxLanceljx
      ·04-08 18:00
      Probably yes for 2026, but with an important nuance: HBM is not simply “killing” traditional DRAM. It is absorbing wafer starts, engineering effort, and packaging capacity, which tightens conventional DRAM supply and lifts pricing there too. Micron said this year’s DRAM bit supply is constrained by cleanroom limits, long fab lead times, a higher HBM mix, and slower bits-per-wafer gains. TrendForce likewise says suppliers are reallocating capacity toward HBM and server products in 2Q26.  That is why the market is starting to price a better quality upcycle, not merely a short squeeze in memory prices. Samsung’s blowout Q1 outlook and the sharp move in SK hynix reflect investor belief that AI memory demand is broad enough to support stronger pricing for longer, especially as hyperscalers
      180Comment
      Report
    • LanlanCCLanlanCC
      ·04-08 12:35
      Samsung just pre-announced about KRW 133 trillion of Q1 revenue and KRW 57.2 trillion of operating profit, far above market expectations for roughly KRW 40.5 trillion to KRW 40.6 trillion of operating profit.  – For U.S. stocks, the cleanest read-through is Micron, because Samsung's beat points to strong AI memory demand and tight pricing in DRAM and HBM.  – The rally can also spill into Sandisk, Western Digital, and Seagate, though those names sit in different parts of the storage stack and should not be treated as the exact same trade. 
      @Mrzorro
      Why Samsung's Big Q1 Surprise Matters for Storage Stocks Key Takeaways – Samsung just pre-announced about KRW 133 trillion of Q1 revenue and KRW 57.2 trillion of operating profit, far above market expectations for roughly KRW 40.5 trillion to KRW 40.6 trillion of operating profit. – For U.S. stocks, the cleanest read-through is Micron, because Samsung's beat points to strong AI memory demand and tight pricing in DRAM and HBM. – The rally can also spill into Sandisk, Western Digital, and Seagate, though those names sit in different parts of the storage stack and should not be treated as the exact same trade. – The big risk is simple: storage is still a cyclical industry, so strong pricing today can turn into demand damage or oversupply later if AI spending slows or custome
      Why Samsung's Big Q1 Surprise Matters for Storage Stocks Key Takeaways – Samsung just pre-announced about KRW 133 trillion of Q1 revenue and KRW 57.2 trillion of operating profit, far above market expectations for roughly KRW 40.5 trillion to KRW 40.6 trillion of operating profit. – For U.S. stocks, the cleanest read-through is Micron, because Samsung's beat points to strong AI memory demand and tight pricing in DRAM and HBM. – The rally can also spill into Sandisk, Western Digital, and Seagate, though those names sit in different parts of the storage stack and should not be treated as the exact same trade. – The big risk is simple: storage is still a cyclical industry, so strong pricing today can turn into demand damage or oversupply later if AI spending slows or custome
      853Comment
      Report
    • MrzorroMrzorro
      ·04-07 16:47
      Micron Jumps, $11M Options Trade Says This Move Isn't Over  Against a backdrop of ongoing Middle East tensions and elevated oil price volatility, the broader market remains in a “high uncertainty + high volatility” regime, with risk appetite yet to fully recover. Within this environment, however, structural opportunities are beginning to emerge in the tech sector—particularly in storage. Following the demand shock triggered by $Alphabet(GOOG)$   $Alphabet(GOOGL)$  's TurboQuant, which raised concerns about reduced memory needs, the sector has rebounded for several consecutive sessions, entering a typical "expectation repair
      3971
      Report
    • MrzorroMrzorro
      ·04-07 16:29
      Why Samsung's Big Q1 Surprise Matters for Storage Stocks Key Takeaways – Samsung just pre-announced about KRW 133 trillion of Q1 revenue and KRW 57.2 trillion of operating profit, far above market expectations for roughly KRW 40.5 trillion to KRW 40.6 trillion of operating profit.  – For U.S. stocks, the cleanest read-through is Micron, because Samsung's beat points to strong AI memory demand and tight pricing in DRAM and HBM.  – The rally can also spill into Sandisk, Western Digital, and Seagate, though those names sit in different parts of the storage stack and should not be treated as the exact same trade.  – The big risk is simple: storage is still a cyclical industry, so strong pricing today can turn into demand damage or oversupply later if AI spending slows or custome
      1.25K2
      Report
    • Option_MoversOption_Movers
      ·04-07 14:14

      Option Movers|Micron Sees 69% Call Options; Virgin Galactic's $7 Call Soars 433%

      U.S. stocks advanced on Monday(Apr 6) as investors looked for signs of progress toward a U.S.-Iran ceasefire deal and evaluated President Donald Trump's progressively heated threats of escalation should Iran fail to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Regarding the options market, a total volume of 44,426,493 contracts was traded on Monday. Top 10 Option Volumes Source: Tiger Trade App $Micron Technology(MU)$ stock rose 3% after a KeyBanc analyst reiterated his price target and rating, citing continued demand for memory. A total number of 437.25K options related to $Micron Technology(MU)$ were traded on Monday, of which call options accounted for 69%. Particularly high volume was seen for the $400 strike call o
      389Comment
      Report
      Option Movers|Micron Sees 69% Call Options; Virgin Galactic's $7 Call Soars 433%
    • zlancezlance
      ·04-06
      Markets are trading the headlines, not the reality. Without a clear outcome acknowledged by both sides, this conflict is likely to drag — meaning relief rallies may fade quickly as growth and inflation concerns resurface. Geopolitics has a short memory cycle. The next headline will reset the trade. Buy selectively on dips, but keep dry powder — escalation risk (especially from Iran) is not fully priced. Separately, I remain long AI exposure via names such as $Microsoft(MSFT)$ , $Tesla Motors(TSLA)$  , $Micron Technology(MU)$   ,  $SanDisk Corp.(S
      898Comment
      Report
    • Michael EstherMichael Esther
      ·04-05

      19 stocks I like most into April weakness

      19 stocks I like most into April weakness. 99% chance $SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust(SPY)$ bottomed BEFORE US-IRAN war ends. So these are undervalued: 1. $Coinbase Global, Inc.(COIN)$ $429.54 → ~$160 (-63%) Buy: $140–170 Crypto beta + institutional adoption rising 2. $Robinhood(HOOD)$ $153.86 → ~$75 (-51%) Buy: $65–85 Retail trading + crypto cycle leverage 3. $SoFi Technologies Inc.(SOFI)$ $32.73 → ~$14.93 (-55%) Buy: $13-$15 Fintech scale + profitability inflection 4. $SanDisk Corp.(SNDK)$ $777 → ~$650 (-16%) Buy: $600–650 AI storage demand + pricing power 5.
      6.68K6
      Report
      19 stocks I like most into April weakness
    • Tiger_commentsTiger_comments
      ·04-08 22:04

      Ceasefire or World War III? Tech Re-rating: Institutions Still Bullish on Memory Rally?

      As news of a ceasefire in the U.S.-Iran conflict broke, major stocks rebounded across the board at today’s open, with the memory sector surging in particular. $SanDisk Corp.(SNDK)$ $Roundhill Memory ETF(DRAM)$ But the market is now standing at an extreme crossroads. On one side, Wall Street giants such as Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are collectively calling out: “A value opportunity in tech has emerged.” On the other, Bridgewater founder Ray Dalio dropped a bombshell in his latest post: “We are in a world war that will not end anytime soon.” Who’s right — value opportunity or global turmoil? ⚠️ Goldman’s view: Because the U.S.-Iran conflict briefly priced in higher inflation and higher-for-longer rat
      15.93K28
      Report
      Ceasefire or World War III? Tech Re-rating: Institutions Still Bullish on Memory Rally?
    • LanceljxLanceljx
      ·20:01
      Q1: Moderately durable but fragile. The ceasefire supports risk-on short term, yet remains headline-driven. If talks hold, rally continues with volatility. If they fail, risk-off repricing will be sharp. Q2: – strongest fundamentals, AI demand visibility – HBM upside but cyclical – storage beta play – most speculative Q3: Add selectively, not chase. Start partial now, add on dips or post-earnings confirmation.
      2Comment
      Report
    • VNW CapitalVNW Capital
      ·33 minutes ago
      Clearly memory chips are the stocks on play!
      9Comment
      Report
    • L.LimL.Lim
      ·07:37
      Isn't that wonderful, any rally could be cut in half by another disruption, but the rally came in so hard and so quickly that investors might just want that to scrape out good value. I felt that the war had minimal impact, the stock market was waiting on any "good news" from the man in the white house, so it could start climbing. By the time the ceasefire was agreed, it felt like nothing too significant happened since everyone already was recovering. I wonder if the ceasefire does not hold, and the reaction of the market, would there even be a big slide The Hormuz chokehold will indeed not be going away any time soon, so what are we really rebounding so quickly for...
      1791
      Report
    • highhandhighhand
      ·11:02
      yes cease fire will eventually hold.. but high volatility. nowadays news spread fast and algorithms are programmed to sell or buy on news.  hold for semis. not much cash to buy.. unless cease fire don't hold and large drop them I will buy.
      137Comment
      Report
    • ShyonShyon
      ·04-08 22:12
      I see this ceasefire more as a pause than a real resolution. I agree with Ray Dalio that geopolitical risks haven’t gone away, especially around energy routes. At the same time, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are right that a lot of fear is already priced in. So I think the rally can continue short term, but it’ll stay volatile. I’m most interested in $Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing(TSM)$ and $Seagate Technology PLC(STX)$ . TSMC is the clearest AI infrastructure play with strong visibility, while Seagate benefits from the growing need for low-cost data storage. Compared to that,
      279Comment
      Report
    • MrzorroMrzorro
      ·04-07 16:29
      Why Samsung's Big Q1 Surprise Matters for Storage Stocks Key Takeaways – Samsung just pre-announced about KRW 133 trillion of Q1 revenue and KRW 57.2 trillion of operating profit, far above market expectations for roughly KRW 40.5 trillion to KRW 40.6 trillion of operating profit.  – For U.S. stocks, the cleanest read-through is Micron, because Samsung's beat points to strong AI memory demand and tight pricing in DRAM and HBM.  – The rally can also spill into Sandisk, Western Digital, and Seagate, though those names sit in different parts of the storage stack and should not be treated as the exact same trade.  – The big risk is simple: storage is still a cyclical industry, so strong pricing today can turn into demand damage or oversupply later if AI spending slows or custome
      1.25K2
      Report
    • MrzorroMrzorro
      ·04-07 16:47
      Micron Jumps, $11M Options Trade Says This Move Isn't Over  Against a backdrop of ongoing Middle East tensions and elevated oil price volatility, the broader market remains in a “high uncertainty + high volatility” regime, with risk appetite yet to fully recover. Within this environment, however, structural opportunities are beginning to emerge in the tech sector—particularly in storage. Following the demand shock triggered by $Alphabet(GOOG)$   $Alphabet(GOOGL)$  's TurboQuant, which raised concerns about reduced memory needs, the sector has rebounded for several consecutive sessions, entering a typical "expectation repair
      3971
      Report
    • LanceljxLanceljx
      ·04-08 18:00
      Probably yes for 2026, but with an important nuance: HBM is not simply “killing” traditional DRAM. It is absorbing wafer starts, engineering effort, and packaging capacity, which tightens conventional DRAM supply and lifts pricing there too. Micron said this year’s DRAM bit supply is constrained by cleanroom limits, long fab lead times, a higher HBM mix, and slower bits-per-wafer gains. TrendForce likewise says suppliers are reallocating capacity toward HBM and server products in 2Q26.  That is why the market is starting to price a better quality upcycle, not merely a short squeeze in memory prices. Samsung’s blowout Q1 outlook and the sharp move in SK hynix reflect investor belief that AI memory demand is broad enough to support stronger pricing for longer, especially as hyperscalers
      180Comment
      Report
    • Cadi PoonCadi Poon
      ·04-08 23:33
      $CSOP Samsung Electronics Daily (2x) Leveraged Product(07747)$ just delivered a 1Q26 preview far above expectations. Goldman noted that even with inventories at extremely low levels, the average selling prices (ASP) of DRAM and NAND surged 103% and 87% QoQ, respectively. The more important insight is this: this is not just a cyclical fluctuation — Samsung is now locking in elevated profits through long-term agreements (LTAs), and this kind of pricing power is unprecedented.
      59Comment
      Report
    • AN88AN88
      ·04:48
      ceasefire
      29Comment
      Report
    • TimothyXTimothyX
      ·04-08 23:29
      On one side, Wall Street giants such as Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are collectively calling out: “A value opportunity in tech has emerged.” On the other, Bridgewater founder Ray Dalio dropped a bombshell in his latest post: “We are in a world war that will not end anytime soon.”
      96Comment
      Report
    • ChrishustChrishust
      ·00:10
      1 the ceasefire is more negative on USA than Iran. Iran has options 2. They’re all interesting including seagate and sand disk 3. A better investment play is to invest directly in Asian tech
      94Comment
      Report
    • 1PC1PC
      ·04-08 22:48
      It's a welcome 😁 breather, stock markets & the whole 🌎 needs it [Chuckle]. The concrete evidence 🧾 will surfaces 14 days later, I hope 🙏😊. In the meantime, captured this opportunity 😜🙏 @Barcode @JC888 @Shernice軒嬣 2000 @Aqa @DiAngel @koolgal @Shyon
      160Comment
      Report
    • Jasmine1205Jasmine1205
      ·04-08 23:46
      ceasefile is only a temporary breather. they are still fighting
      51Comment
      Report
    • snoophumansnoophuman
      ·00:13
      Oh well that's that 
      83Comment
      Report
    • Option_MoversOption_Movers
      ·04-07 14:14

      Option Movers|Micron Sees 69% Call Options; Virgin Galactic's $7 Call Soars 433%

      U.S. stocks advanced on Monday(Apr 6) as investors looked for signs of progress toward a U.S.-Iran ceasefire deal and evaluated President Donald Trump's progressively heated threats of escalation should Iran fail to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Regarding the options market, a total volume of 44,426,493 contracts was traded on Monday. Top 10 Option Volumes Source: Tiger Trade App $Micron Technology(MU)$ stock rose 3% after a KeyBanc analyst reiterated his price target and rating, citing continued demand for memory. A total number of 437.25K options related to $Micron Technology(MU)$ were traded on Monday, of which call options accounted for 69%. Particularly high volume was seen for the $400 strike call o
      389Comment
      Report
      Option Movers|Micron Sees 69% Call Options; Virgin Galactic's $7 Call Soars 433%
    • Michael EstherMichael Esther
      ·04-05

      19 stocks I like most into April weakness

      19 stocks I like most into April weakness. 99% chance $SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust(SPY)$ bottomed BEFORE US-IRAN war ends. So these are undervalued: 1. $Coinbase Global, Inc.(COIN)$ $429.54 → ~$160 (-63%) Buy: $140–170 Crypto beta + institutional adoption rising 2. $Robinhood(HOOD)$ $153.86 → ~$75 (-51%) Buy: $65–85 Retail trading + crypto cycle leverage 3. $SoFi Technologies Inc.(SOFI)$ $32.73 → ~$14.93 (-55%) Buy: $13-$15 Fintech scale + profitability inflection 4. $SanDisk Corp.(SNDK)$ $777 → ~$650 (-16%) Buy: $600–650 AI storage demand + pricing power 5.
      6.68K6
      Report
      19 stocks I like most into April weakness
    • LanlanCCLanlanCC
      ·04-08 12:35
      Samsung just pre-announced about KRW 133 trillion of Q1 revenue and KRW 57.2 trillion of operating profit, far above market expectations for roughly KRW 40.5 trillion to KRW 40.6 trillion of operating profit.  – For U.S. stocks, the cleanest read-through is Micron, because Samsung's beat points to strong AI memory demand and tight pricing in DRAM and HBM.  – The rally can also spill into Sandisk, Western Digital, and Seagate, though those names sit in different parts of the storage stack and should not be treated as the exact same trade. 
      @Mrzorro
      Why Samsung's Big Q1 Surprise Matters for Storage Stocks Key Takeaways – Samsung just pre-announced about KRW 133 trillion of Q1 revenue and KRW 57.2 trillion of operating profit, far above market expectations for roughly KRW 40.5 trillion to KRW 40.6 trillion of operating profit. – For U.S. stocks, the cleanest read-through is Micron, because Samsung's beat points to strong AI memory demand and tight pricing in DRAM and HBM. – The rally can also spill into Sandisk, Western Digital, and Seagate, though those names sit in different parts of the storage stack and should not be treated as the exact same trade. – The big risk is simple: storage is still a cyclical industry, so strong pricing today can turn into demand damage or oversupply later if AI spending slows or custome
      Why Samsung's Big Q1 Surprise Matters for Storage Stocks Key Takeaways – Samsung just pre-announced about KRW 133 trillion of Q1 revenue and KRW 57.2 trillion of operating profit, far above market expectations for roughly KRW 40.5 trillion to KRW 40.6 trillion of operating profit. – For U.S. stocks, the cleanest read-through is Micron, because Samsung's beat points to strong AI memory demand and tight pricing in DRAM and HBM. – The rally can also spill into Sandisk, Western Digital, and Seagate, though those names sit in different parts of the storage stack and should not be treated as the exact same trade. – The big risk is simple: storage is still a cyclical industry, so strong pricing today can turn into demand damage or oversupply later if AI spending slows or custome
      853Comment
      Report
    • Shernice軒嬣 2000Shernice軒嬣 2000
      ·04-04

      TurboQuant Terror: The Ghost That Haunted Memory Stocks

      $Micron Technology(MU)$  $SanDisk Corp.(SNDK)$ $Seagate Technology PLC(STX)$  $Western Digital(WDC)$  $Alphabet(GOOG)$  Imagine a perfectly ordinary Thursday night. You open your tiger broker app, only to see your position in the memory-chip sector glowing bright red—not a mild dip, but a double-digit plunge. Tens or even hundreds of billions of dollars in market value wiped out in just a few hours. Any normal person’s first reaction would be: Did the wafer fabs have an accident? Did geopolitics suddenly flare up? Did the supply chain s
      17.93K16
      Report
      TurboQuant Terror: The Ghost That Haunted Memory Stocks