Shyon
02-05 00:50
Replying to @Shyon:Come and join yo my friend @nomadic_m @1PC @koolgal @rL @icycrystal @Barcode @SPACE ROCKET @GoodLife99 //@Shyon:From my perspective, this isn’t “software is dead” — it’s the market aggressively repricing which software actually has a moat. The narrative flipped fast, and crowded positioning made the selloff look brutal. This feels more like fear-driven de-rating than fundamentals suddenly breaking.

$Wal-Mart(WMT)$ hitting $1 trillion makes sense because AI is amplifying businesses with physical scale and operational complexity. AI turns Walmart’s logistics and supply chain into real profit leverage, while many software companies now have to prove they’re essential, not optional.

So I lean toward B: this is an overreaction, not the end of software. But the $JPMorgan Chase(JPM)$ JPMorgan credit warning matters — if stress spreads into BDCs, volatility isn’t done. The opportunity is selective: only software with mission-critical roles and pricing power deserves to bounce.

@Tiger_comments @TigerStars @TigerClub

Market Crash! $830B Wiped Out: Would Panic Selling Last?
The S&P 500 Software & Services Index has fallen for six straight sessions, erasing roughly $830B in market value since Jan 28 and sliding 26% from its October peak. After Anthropic unveiled new automation tools aimed at legal workflows, U.S. software stocks suffered their worst selloff since April. A Goldman-tracked software index plunged 6%, while the Nasdaq 100 slid 1.6%, wiping out roughly $285B in market value across software, fintech, and asset managers. Will software continue to dip? Buy-the-dip opportunity or not? How do you view the panic selling?
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