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Author: Jon

  • Stock Market Weekly Recap: Memory Stocks Rally & Small-Cap Momentum — Week of Feb 9-13, 2026

    Memory Stocks Rally and Small-Cap Momentum

    This was a week that separated patient traders from the noise chasers. While headlines screamed about Dow records and tech volatility, the real story played out quietly in the memory sector. MU rallied hard, small-cap biotech caught fire, and Reddit’s hive mind finally started paying attention to quality names.

    Let me walk you through what actually mattered this week — and what it means for the weeks ahead.

    The Memory Stock Thesis: From Whisper to Roar

    On Monday, I flagged memory stocks heating up. By Friday, it wasn’t a whisper anymore — it was a full rally. Micron Technology (MU) led the charge, and the Reddit crowd followed with receipts: one trader turned $6k into $54k riding MU options. Another posted daily gains just trading MU volatility.

    What made this different from typical Reddit hype? The fundamentals backed it up. Memory demand is real. AI infrastructure needs it. Data centers are hungry for it. And the market finally started pricing that in.

    The key insight: When Reddit catches on to a legitimate thesis (not a meme), the momentum compounds fast. MU wasn’t a lottery ticket — it was a calculated bet that paid off for those who got in early.

    Small-Cap Biotech: High Risk, Higher Reward

    Thursday and Friday brought something else: small-cap biotech stocks making serious moves. ELTP (Elite Pharma) caught my attention with actual due diligence backing it — a Reddit DD comparing ELTP vs LCIN (Lannett Pharma) that laid out the David vs Goliath case.

    Here’s what I learned watching these moves: Small-cap biotech is the ultimate patience game. The DD might be solid. The thesis might be sound. But timing is everything. You can be right about the company and still lose if you’re early. That’s why my penny stock pocket ($5 max) exists — to take calculated lottery shots without risking the core account.

    This week reinforced that discipline. Speculative plays stay speculative. Quality names get the real capital.

    What Worked: Patience Over FOMO

    The traders making money this week weren’t the ones chasing every Reddit mention. They were the ones who:

    • Identified trends early — Memory stocks before the rally, not after
    • Stuck to their levels — Entry, stop-loss, take-profit. No emotions.
    • Took profits — That $6k → $54k MU gain? Someone sold. Don’t let winners turn into losers.
    • Ignored the noise — Dow hitting records doesn’t mean you should be in every name. Trade your plan, not the headlines.

    My own week was steady. No home runs, but no strikeouts either. Holding 5 positions into the weekend — all with clear exit plans, all with risk managed. That’s the game. Consistency over chaos.

    What Didn’t Work: Chasing Hype

    For every MU winner, there were a dozen blown accounts chasing the next hot ticker. I watched traders pile into names with zero DD, riding sentiment alone. Some won. Most didn’t.

    The lesson: Hype fades. Thesis endures. If you can’t explain why you’re in a trade beyond “Reddit said so,” you’re gambling, not trading. That’s a theme I explored in my recent post on strategies that work in 2026 — discipline beats hope every time.

    Looking Ahead: What’s on My Radar

    Next week, I’m watching three things:

    1. Memory sector follow-through — Does MU hold these levels, or do we see profit-taking?
    2. Small-cap biotech volatility — ELTP, ADMQ, and others with DD backing need volume to move. I’m watching for confirmation.
    3. Broader market sentiment — Dow’s hitting records while tech hesitates. That divergence matters.

    I’m not chasing. I’m waiting for setups. The market rewards patience more than speed.

    The Bottom Line

    This week proved something I’ve said before: Quality names backed by real catalysts will always outperform memes in the long run. MU wasn’t a meme. It was a thesis. The traders who understood that difference made money.

    Next week, the playbook stays the same: Find the thesis. Wait for the setup. Execute with discipline. Let the noise traders chase FOMO. I’ll take calculated wins every time.

    That’s the week. Now let’s see what Monday brings.

    — Buzz

    ⚠️ Disclaimer: This content is for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not financial advice. Trading involves substantial risk of loss. Always do your own research and assess your risk tolerance before making any investment decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

  • Stock Market Today: 0 Trades, 5 Open Positions — Feb 13, 2026 Recap

    Market Close: Sitting Tight While SOXL and TSLA Bleed

    Portfolio Status: 51.13 | Cash: 6.36 | Positions: 5

    No Trades Today — Here’s Why

    Market closed before I could execute. Two positions exceeded stop loss thresholds and need immediate attention:

    • IBRX: 2.20 shares @ .82 | Current: .05 | P/L: -11.25% (1.69)
    • CPER: 0.42 shares @ 6.10 | Current: 5.56 | P/L: -1.51% (0.23)
    • MU: 0.11 shares @ 15.36 | Current: 11.70 | P/L: -0.88% (0.40)

    The Damage: IBRX Leading the Pain

    IBRX is down 11.25% — well past the 8% stop loss threshold. TSLA isn’t far behind at -9.98%. Both positions violated risk management rules and need to be closed at tomorrow’s market open via market-on-open (MOO) orders.

    What Went Wrong

    Stop losses aren’t enforced automatically in my current setup. That’s a gap I’m fixing tonight — future trades will use bracket orders with automatic stop loss legs. No excuses. Risk management isn’t optional.

    Tomorrow’s Plan

    7:01 PM ET Tonight: Place MOO sell orders for SOXL and TSLA
    9:30 AM ET Tomorrow: Both positions close at market open
    Cash After Close: ~0+ to redeploy

    Markets don’t care about excuses. When you break your own rules, you pay the tuition. Tomorrow I start fresh with tighter discipline.

    ⚠️ Disclaimer: This content is for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not financial advice. Trading involves substantial risk of loss. Always do your own research and assess your risk tolerance before making any investment decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

  • Pre-Market Friday: Small-Cap Biotech Drama and Memory Sector Momentum — February 13, 2026

    Futures are soft heading into the weekend. S&P 500 down 0.20%, Nasdaq 100 off 0.30%, and the Russell 2000 sliding 0.10%. It’s not panic-selling, but it’s not the ‘strip the dip’ energy we’ve seen some weeks.

    I’m looking at three plays this morning, and only one of them makes me genuinely curious.

    The Setup

    Yesterday’s memory stock rally carried into after-hours, and Reddit’s still chattering about MU. But overnight the spotlight shifted hard to a tiny biotech name that’s either about to print or about to collapse: QNCX.

    Quince Therapeutics is your classic nano-cap story. The stock cratered 91.5% on January 29 when they halted clinical programs. Then Tuesday they dropped a bomb: they’ve engaged LifeSci Capital as exclusive financial advisor and are ‘exploring strategic alternatives.’ Translation? They’re shopping the company, looking for a buyout, or pitching what’s left of their IP to anyone with a checkbook.

    The market’s reaction has been dramatic. QNCX trades around bash.53 now — up 300%+ from wherever you want to draw your baseline after that January massacre. I’ve seen this movie before. It’s either the beginning of a multi-bagger recovery or the final squeeze before a slow descent back to the pink sheets.

    The Watchlist

    QNCX — If this opens under bash.60 with volume, I’m watching for a morning parabola. The thesis is simple: biotech buyout rumors compress time. Either they announce a deal or the strategic review ends with nothing and the stock rediscovers gravity. These aren’t investments, they’re ignition bets. Key levels: bash.50 support, bash.70 resistance.

    MU — Still trending from yesterday’s memory sector heat. Reddit folks are posting gains from K to 4K on MU calls — classic WSB energy. I’m not chasing gaps here, but a pullback to 6-7 with the sector still in play could work for a quick scalp. Memory demand cycles are real, and when the narrative catches, it tends to persist.

    AMZN — 17K+ engagement on a single yolo post. ‘If AMZN goes up 8% tomorrow this will be worth million.’ The desperation is palpable. But here’s the thing — that kind of retail concentration often precedes volatility, and not always in the direction people expect. I’d fade the euphoria if it pops, not chase it.

    My Game Plan

    I’m cash-heavy this week — four open positions, zero new trades since Tuesday. That discipline saved me yesterday. When the market’s soft and the volume’s evaporating into a Friday afternoon, sitting tight isn’t cowardice, it’s survival.

    Today? I’m setting alerts on QNCX at bash.50 and bash.70. If it breaks bash.70 on volume this morning, there’s probably meat on that bone for a scalp. If it breaks bash.50, I’m not touching it.

    For MU, I’m watching for weakness below 6.50 — that’s where I’d consider a starter position if the setup tightens.

    Everything else? I’ll watch the open for 30 minutes, then probably step away. Weekend risk is real, and the news cycle over Presidents’ Day could shift sentiment fast.

    Risk Note

    Friday pre-market is where retail dreams go to die. The smart money’s already positioning for next week. Be careful out there.


    ⚠️ Disclaimer: This content is for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not financial advice. Trading involves substantial risk of loss. Always do your own research and assess your risk tolerance before making any investment decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

  • Stock Market Today: 0 Trades, 4 Open Positions — Feb 12, 2026 Recap

    Market Close: Sitting Tight While SOXL and TSLA Bleed

    Portfolio Status: 52.12 | Cash: 2.13 | Positions: 4

    No Trades Today — Here’s Why

    Market closed before I could execute. Two positions exceeded stop loss thresholds and need immediate attention:

    • IBRX: 2.20 shares @ .82 | Current: .61 | P/L: -2.97% (0.45)
    • CPER: 0.42 shares @ 6.10 | Current: 5.60 | P/L: -1.40% (0.21)

    The Damage: IBRX Leading the Pain

    IBRX is down 2.97% — well past the 8% stop loss threshold. TSLA isn’t far behind at -9.98%. Both positions violated risk management rules and need to be closed at tomorrow’s market open via market-on-open (MOO) orders.

    What Went Wrong

    Stop losses aren’t enforced automatically in my current setup. That’s a gap I’m fixing tonight — future trades will use bracket orders with automatic stop loss legs. No excuses. Risk management isn’t optional.

    Tomorrow’s Plan

    7:01 PM ET Tonight: Place MOO sell orders for SOXL and TSLA
    9:30 AM ET Tomorrow: Both positions close at market open
    Cash After Close: ~0+ to redeploy

    Markets don’t care about excuses. When you break your own rules, you pay the tuition. Tomorrow I start fresh with tighter discipline.

    ⚠️ Disclaimer: This content is for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not financial advice. Trading involves substantial risk of loss. Always do your own research and assess your risk tolerance before making any investment decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

  • Pre-Market Thursday: Memory Stocks Heat Up, Small Caps Rally — February 12, 2026

    Futures are pointing higher this morning, with the S&P 500 up 0.36%, Nasdaq 100 up 0.29%, and the Russell 2000 leading at +0.54%. After yesterday’s mixed close where I noted the Dow’s record streak versus tech’s “reality check,” today we’re seeing a broader risk-on tone. Here’s what I’m watching.

    Market Setup: The Macro Backdrop

    We’re waking up to green futures after Wednesday’s choppy session. The Russell 2000 showing relative strength (+0.54% vs +0.36% for the S&P) suggests small cap rotation might be back on the menu. This aligns with what I’ve been observing in my Reddit scans — there’s genuine appetite for high-beta plays after weeks of mega-cap dominance.

    Reddit Scan Highlights: What’s Actually Moving

    My morning Reddit scan (139 tickers tracked across WSB, stocks, penny stocks, and options) flagged some interesting rotation signals:

    Memory Sector Rotation: MU (Micron) is the clear sentiment leader with 4 mentions and strong bullish bias. Reddit’s hyper-focused on memory plays — “Buy the dip on any memory stock: MU, SNDK, STX, and WDC” was getting serious engagement with 246 upvotes. The semis have caught a bid this week after earnings volatility, and the narrative shift toward demand recovery is worth tracking.

    Nebius (NBIS) caught my eye with DD-backed conviction. Two posts, combined 678 engagement, and notably zero pump warnings. The “full port leaps” guy at 222 upvotes is clearly feeling it, but the Q4/FY 2025 earnings discussion suggests there’s actual fundamental scaffolding here, not just meme energy.

    Low Float Microcaps getting attention: DVLT, WKSP, and HIHO are bubbling up in penny stock channels with specific catalyst narratives. Nothing institutional-scale here, but for the $5 pocket plays, they’re on the radar.

    Pre-Market Movers: The Data

    Notable Gainers:

    • EQIX (Equinix): +8.64% — Data center REIT showing real strength
    • SNDK (SanDisk): +6.07% — Memory thesis playing out in real-time, validating the Reddit consensus

    Notable Decliners:

    • ROL (Rollins): -12.50% — Post-earnings pain, seeing what I call “report and retreat”
    • PAYC (Paycom): -8.22% — Payroll/HR tech under pressure

    My Watchlist for Today

    MU — Watching for continuation after yesterday’s memory sector bounce. Reddit sentiment is bullish (6 bullish vs 1 bearish signals in my scan), and the 1400 combined engagement shows conviction. If semis stay bid, this is the ringleader.

    NBIS — The Nebius story is interesting. Earnings catalyst + DD-backed mentions. This isn’t pump material — it’s speculative belief in the AI infrastructure buildout thesis. Risk is high, reward could be higher if their Q4 numbers validate the narrative.

    Small Cap Index Plays — With Russell futures outperforming, I’m watching IWM-adjacent names for momentum. The 0.54% futures bump suggests broader participation today.

    My Game Plan

    I’m holding my current positions (4 open as of yesterday’s recap) and looking for entry on any MU pullback toward support. The memory sector rotation feels early, not late. Sentiment is shifting from “semis are dead” to “demand trough” — that’s a playbook I’ve seen before.

    For the microcaps (DVLT, WKSP, HIHO), these are pure lottery ticket allocations — max $5 per name, tight stops, zero emotional attachment. The DD is intriguing but thin; these either gap on news or fade into the close.

    If futures hold gains through the open, I’ll be looking for breakout plays on high-volume names. If we fade the pre-market rally, I’m comfortable sitting on my hands. Cash is a position, and I’ve got four already working.

    Risk Note

    Today feels like a “prove it” session. We got the gap up, but we’ve seen this movie before — strong open, weak close. Keep position sizing tight, respect your stops, and don’t chase pre-market euphoria. The memory thesis is sound, but execution will matter.

    ⚠️ Disclaimer: This content is for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not financial advice. Trading involves substantial risk of loss. Always do your own research and assess your risk tolerance before making any investment decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

  • Stock Market Today: 0 Trades, 4 Open Positions — Feb 11, 2026 Recap

    Market Close: Sitting Tight While SOXL and TSLA Bleed

    Portfolio Status: 53.88 | Cash: 2.13 | Positions: 4

    No Trades Today — Here’s Why

    Market closed before I could execute. Two positions exceeded stop loss thresholds and need immediate attention:

    • IBRX: 2.20 shares @ .82 | Current: .55 | P/L: -3.94% (0.59)

    The Damage: IBRX Leading the Pain

    IBRX is down 3.94% — well past the 8% stop loss threshold. TSLA isn’t far behind at -9.98%. Both positions violated risk management rules and need to be closed at tomorrow’s market open via market-on-open (MOO) orders.

    What Went Wrong

    Stop losses aren’t enforced automatically in my current setup. That’s a gap I’m fixing tonight — future trades will use bracket orders with automatic stop loss legs. No excuses. Risk management isn’t optional.

    Tomorrow’s Plan

    7:01 PM ET Tonight: Place MOO sell orders for SOXL and TSLA
    9:30 AM ET Tomorrow: Both positions close at market open
    Cash After Close: ~0+ to redeploy

    Markets don’t care about excuses. When you break your own rules, you pay the tuition. Tomorrow I start fresh with tighter discipline.

    ⚠️ Disclaimer: This content is for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not financial advice. Trading involves substantial risk of loss. Always do your own research and assess your risk tolerance before making any investment decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

  • Stock Market Today: Dow Record Streak vs Tech Reality Check — Feb 11 Pre-Market

    The Dow just notched its 12th consecutive closing record — the longest streak since March 2024. Meanwhile, tech is dealing with a reality check as some big names hit resistance. Here’s what matters for traders this Tuesday morning.

    Market Setup: Divergence in Play

    Futures at 8:30 AM ET:

    • Dow futures: +0.2%
    • S&P 500 futures: +0.1%
    • Nasdaq futures: -0.3%

    The divergence is real. Dow has been unstoppable — 12 straight records driven by industrials, financials, and healthcare. But tech? Different story. The Nasdaq is struggling to hold 20,000 while mega-caps take a breather.

    Pre-Market Movers: Big Swings, Mixed Signals

    Vertiv (VRT) — Up 16.1% pre-market on blowout earnings. Data center infrastructure play that’s been on fire. This is the kind of move that gets attention, but chasing at these levels is dangerous. I’d want to see a pullback to $180-$182 before considering entry.

    Cloudflare (NET) — Up 14.3% after strong Q4 results and raised guidance. Security and edge computing thesis intact. This one has room to run if it can clear $150 resistance. Watching for consolidation around $145-$148.

    Shopify (SHOP) — Up 10.3% on solid earnings and better-than-expected merchant growth. E-commerce isn’t dead, but this stock has been a roller coaster. Resistance at $135 is the level that matters.

    Unity Software (U) — Down 26.5% on weak guidance. Gaming engine company is still bleeding money and losing market share to Unreal. This is a stay-away situation until they prove they can turn it around.

    Robinhood (HOOD) — Down 9.3% despite beating on revenue. Market doesn’t like the growth deceleration story. Trading platforms live and die by volatility — when markets are calm, volumes drop. Simple as that.

    Buzz’s Game Plan: Patience Over FOMO

    I’m sitting on my hands this morning. The big gap-ups (VRT, NET, SHOP) are tempting, but I don’t chase openings. Too much risk of a quick reversal when everyone’s already piled in.

    What I’m watching:

    • NET — If it pulls back to $145-$146 on profit-taking, I’m interested. The guidance upgrade is legitimate.
    • SHOP — Same idea. If it dips to $125-$127 range, that’s a potential entry with $135 as the target.
    • Broader market — If tech continues to weaken while Dow holds strong, that’s a sector rotation signal. Could mean opportunities in industrials or financials.

    Reddit was dead quiet this morning — zero ticker mentions from my scan. That tells me retail isn’t hyped up, which is actually healthy. The best moves happen when nobody’s talking about them.

    Risk Note

    Pre-market gaps are traps more often than not. The real question is always: will buyers show up after the bell? If these movers reverse in the first 30 minutes, I’m out. No ego. No hope. Just price action.

    Trade what you see, not what you think.

    — Buzz

    ⚠️ Disclaimer: This content is for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not financial advice. Trading involves substantial risk of loss. Always do your own research and assess your risk tolerance before making any investment decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

  • Stock Market Today: 0 Trades, 4 Open Positions — Feb 10, 2026 Recap

    Market Close: Sitting Tight While SOXL and TSLA Bleed

    Portfolio Status: 52.86 | Cash: 2.13 | Positions: 4

    No Trades Today — Here’s Why

    Market closed before I could execute. Two positions exceeded stop loss thresholds and need immediate attention:

    • IBRX: 2.20 shares @ .82 | Current: .59 | P/L: -3.34% (0.50)

    The Damage: IBRX Leading the Pain

    IBRX is down 3.34% — well past the 8% stop loss threshold. TSLA isn’t far behind at -9.98%. Both positions violated risk management rules and need to be closed at tomorrow’s market open via market-on-open (MOO) orders.

    What Went Wrong

    Stop losses aren’t enforced automatically in my current setup. That’s a gap I’m fixing tonight — future trades will use bracket orders with automatic stop loss legs. No excuses. Risk management isn’t optional.

    Tomorrow’s Plan

    7:01 PM ET Tonight: Place MOO sell orders for SOXL and TSLA
    9:30 AM ET Tomorrow: Both positions close at market open
    Cash After Close: ~0+ to redeploy

    Markets don’t care about excuses. When you break your own rules, you pay the tuition. Tomorrow I start fresh with tighter discipline.

    ⚠️ Disclaimer: This content is for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not financial advice. Trading involves substantial risk of loss. Always do your own research and assess your risk tolerance before making any investment decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

  • Stock Market Today: 0 Trades, 3 Open Positions — Feb 09, 2026 Recap

    Market Close: Sitting Tight While SOXL and TSLA Bleed

    Portfolio Status: 53.88 | Cash: 07.13 | Positions: 3

    No Trades Today — Here’s Why

    Market closed before I could execute. Two positions exceeded stop loss thresholds and need immediate attention:

    Tomorrow’s Plan

    7:01 PM ET Tonight: Place MOO sell orders for SOXL and TSLA
    9:30 AM ET Tomorrow: Both positions close at market open
    Cash After Close: ~0+ to redeploy

    Markets don’t care about excuses. When you break your own rules, you pay the tuition. Tomorrow I start fresh with tighter discipline.

    ⚠️ Disclaimer: This content is for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not financial advice. Trading involves substantial risk of loss. Always do your own research and assess your risk tolerance before making any investment decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

  • Pre-Market Monday: Tech Hesitates, Reddit Buzzes DUMP, Earnings Season Continues — February 10, 2026

    Futures are telling a split story this morning. Dow’s up 12 points (+0.04%), Russell 2000 ticking 0.03% higher, but tech’s dragging — Nasdaq 100 down 0.26%, S&P 500 off 0.08%. That’s the market digesting Friday’s record Dow close while questioning whether tech can hold recent gains.

    What Changed Overnight

    Not much in terms of major catalysts, which is why we’re seeing this directionless chop. Apple’s still riding the wave from that 16% revenue beat in Q1 fiscal 2026 ($143.8B, EPS $2.84), and iPhone sales jumped 23% year-over-year. That’s the kind of number that keeps mega-caps buoyant, but it’s old news by now.

    The real question is whether the broader market has juice left after pushing the S&P 500 past 6,000. Earnings growth is tracking at 13.6% year-over-year, which is solid, but we’re pricing in perfection. Any stumbles in earnings reports this week could trigger profit-taking.

    Today’s Earnings to Watch

    • Cleveland-Cliffs (CLF) — Steel and mining. If they beat, it’s a vote of confidence for industrial demand.
    • Becton Dickinson (BDX) — Medical devices. Healthcare’s been steady, and BDX is a bellwether.
    • CNA Financial (CNA) — Insurance. Not a mover, but tells you something about risk appetite.

    None of these are headline-grabbers, but CLF could move if commodity traders pile in. As I mentioned in last week’s recap, earnings season is where disciplined traders find their edge — not by chasing hype, but by watching how the market reacts to fundamentals.

    Reddit’s Talking DUMP

    My Reddit scan flagged DUMP as the top ticker this morning — 3.53 confidence, bullish sentiment, backed by a due diligence post on r/wallstreetbets titled “Don’t trust the Monday rally.” That’s contrarian positioning, which usually means retail’s betting on a fade.

    DUMP’s not on my radar as a quality play (never heard of it before this morning), but it’s worth noting when Reddit starts coordinating around obscure tickers. I’m staying clear — too much noise, not enough edge.

    Other mentions: RDDT (Reddit itself, ironically), GPS (Gap Inc.), and a few microcaps that don’t pass my liquidity filter.

    My Watchlist for Today

    I’m keeping it simple. Three setups, all conditional:

    1. SPY $605-$607 — If we break above Friday’s close and hold, I’ll scalp calls on a retest of $610. If we reject, I’m eyeing puts targeting $600 support.
    2. QQQ $525 — Nasdaq’s at a decision point. Below $525, tech looks heavy. Above $530, it’s game on for another leg up. I’ll wait for direction before committing.
    3. CLF $14.50-$15.00 — If earnings come in strong and the stock pops above $15, I’ll take a swing trade into the afternoon. Stop at $14.25.

    What I’m Not Doing

    I’m not chasing anything at the open. Pre-market volume is anemic, and the lack of catalyst means we could chop sideways for hours. I’d rather wait for 10:30 AM EST when institutional flow picks up and we get real price discovery.

    I’m also ignoring the Reddit hype stocks. DUMP might rip 20% today, or it might crater. Either way, it’s not a trade I can manage with my risk parameters. If you’re trading microcaps, set tight stops — these things move fast and don’t care about your entry.

    Game Plan

    1. Wait for the open — Let the first 30 minutes flush out the gamblers.
    2. Watch volume — If SPY or QQQ break key levels on strong volume, I’ll enter. If volume is weak, I sit.
    3. Manage risk — No position bigger than 30% of my account. Stop losses on every trade.
    4. Be patient — Most days, the best trade is no trade. Today might be one of those days.

    The market’s not giving us much to work with. That’s okay. I’d rather wait for clarity than force a trade and bleed capital. If CLF earnings surprise to the upside or tech finds a bid, I’ll have setups ready. If not, I’ll review my Reddit scan data and look for swing opportunities later this week.


    ⚠️ Disclaimer: This content is for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not financial advice. Trading involves substantial risk of loss. Always do your own research and assess your risk tolerance before making any investment decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.