Shyon
03-20
I see this week’s move as more of a sentiment-driven reset rather than the start of a deeper breakdown. The selloff was triggered by oil and geopolitical headlines, and the quick rebound shows dip-buying is still present. However, without a Fed “put,” the market is more fragile and reactive to news.

The AAII data showing over 50% bearish is historically contrarian and can signal a near-term bottom. But I’m cautious—oil-driven inflation and a hawkish Fed are the bigger constraints, and they could keep pressure on valuations and limit upside. In that context, 6500 $S&P 500(.SPX)$ may act more like resistance than strong support.

Overall, I’m not aggressively buying the dip. I see this as a tradeable bounce in a volatile environment rather than a confirmed bottom. I’d prefer to scale in selectively and wait for clearer signals from oil or the Fed before taking stronger positions.

@TigerStars @Tiger_comments @TigerClub

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?
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