@meloncurls21 Feels like the momentum got front-run hard. Retail probably piled in late and got caught on the way down. Classic shakeout pattern or just smart money exiting before earnings noise.
🚨 $MSFT is now entering a very important technical zone.
Over the past two trading days, Microsoft made a sharp move from around $412 to nearly $466.
That was a strong rally.
But after such a fast move, the stock quickly pulled back and is now trading near $427. 📉
This tells us one thing:
The stock is still strong long term, but short-term profit-taking is clearly happening.
The key support zone I’m watching now is $419–$423. 🎯
This is the area where buyers need to show up.
If $MSFT holds this zone, the bullish structure remains alive and another rebound attempt could follow.
But if this support breaks, the market may start pricing in deeper downside risk, especially with the broader market already under pressure.
Right now, this is not only about Microsoft.
The entire U.S. market is cooling down.
$SPX is under pressure.
$NDX is pulling back.
$QQQ is losing momentum.
Mega-cap tech is no longer moving in a straight line.
The reason is simple:
After a strong rally in AI and big tech names, the market needs to digest valuation, earnings expectations and risk appetite.
For $MSFT, the long-term story is still very strong.
Azure cloud growth.
Enterprise AI.
Copilot.
Office ecosystem.
Windows.
LinkedIn.
Enterprise software.
These are not short-term hype stories. These are real business pillars supporting Microsoft’s long-term growth. 🚀
But even great companies pull back.
That is why I would not chase $MSFT blindly here.
My plan is simple:
Watch $419–$423.
Watch $SPX, $NDX and $QQQ.
Watch whether buyers defend support.
Watch whether volume returns.
If support holds, this could become a strong pullback opportunity.
If support breaks, short-term risk increases.
Long term, I remain bullish on $MSFT.
Short term, patience is more important than emotion.
⚠️ This is market analysis only, not financial advice. Please do your own research.
@LisaSongSutton It's been grinding like that for a while. Feels like everyone's waiting for something to break one way or another, not sure this move means much yet.
$MU is still being traded like one of the strongest names in AI memory. 🚨📊
On the 15-minute chart, Micron moved up from around 1,038 and climbed all the way to 1,089.
Now the price is hanging near 1,079, which tells me buyers are still in the game, but the stock is already in a high-level consolidation zone.
This isn't a weak chart.
It's a strong one that just needs support confirmation.
The level I'm watching first is 1,069–1,070.
If $MU pulls back and holds that area, the short-term bullish setup stays solid.
Key support is at 1,057–1,058.
As long as $MU stays above that, the trend is still healthy.
If $MU can take back 1,089–1,090, the market might start eyeing the next psychological level around 1,100.
But this is bigger than just Micron.
When $MU moves, the whole AI memory and data center supply chain gets attention:
$NVDA — AI GPUs depend on HBM
$AMD — AI accelerators
$AVGO — custom AI chips and networking
$MRVL — AI networking and data movement
$TSM — advanced chip manufacturing
$WDC — NAND and storage
$STX — data storage demand
$DELL — AI servers
$SMCI — AI server infrastructure
$AMAT $LRCX $KLAC — semiconductor equipment
$SMH $SOXX — semiconductor ETFs
Here's my take:
AI isn't just about GPUs anymore.
AI needs memory.
AI needs HBM.
AI needs storage.
AI needs servers.
AI needs full data center infrastructure.
That's why $MU matters.
Strong chart.
Strong AI memory story.
Strong semiconductor read-through.
But after a big move, entry price still counts.
I want support confirmation, not emotional chasing. 📊🔥
Not financial advice.
@omgitsbunnie Bounces off 524 look decent, but hovering at 542 makes me wonder if it's just a trap before another dip. Buyers might be sticking around, but this close to resistance, I'd wait for a clear breakout before jumping in.
$AMD seems like it's turning into a momentum recovery play again. 🚨📊
On the 15-minute chart, it bounced hard from around 524 and climbed all the way to 546.
That shows buyers are still hanging around.
But right now it's trading near 542, close to the recent top, so I'm not going to rush in here.
First level I'm watching is 538.
If it pulls back and holds 538, the short-term bullish setup still looks solid.
Key support is 532–533.
As long as it stays above that, bulls are in charge.
If it can push past 546–547, momentum might keep going.
But this isn't just about AMD.
When AMD moves, the whole AI chip and data center space gets attention:
$NVDA — AI GPU king
$TSM — advanced chip manufacturing
$MU — AI memory and HBM
$AVGO — custom AI chips + networking
$MRVL — AI networking + custom silicon
$ARM — chip architecture
$DELL — AI servers
$SMCI — AI server infrastructure
$ASML $AMAT $LRCX $KLAC — semiconductor equipment
$SMH $SOXX — semiconductor ETFs
Here's how I see it:
AI demand isn't going to be just one company's game.
$NVDA is still the top dog, but hyperscalers need more supply, more competition, and better data center options.
That's where $AMD fits in.
EPYC CPUs.
Instinct AI GPUs.
Data center acceleration.
AI infrastructure needs.
The chart looks good.
Buyers are active.
The AI chip story is still going strong.
But after a quick run, entry price still matters.
I'd rather wait for support confirmation than chase near the high. ���🔥
Not financial advice.
$AMAT is still one of the strongest plays in semicon equipment. 🚨📊
The 15-min chart tells a clear story.
Applied Materials went from 462, broke 480, reclaimed 491, pushed above 500, and hit a short-term high near 508.31.
That was the momentum.
Now it's pulled back to around 499–500, testing if buyers can hold the breakout zone.
This isn't a bearish breakdown yet.
It's a high-level retest after a strong move.
First level I'm watching is 500.
If $AMAT can reclaim and hold above 500, the short-term setup stays healthy.
Key support is 495.
As long as it stays above 495, the bullish structure holds.
But if it loses 495, I'd get cautious—pullback could extend to 491–492.
The bigger picture isn't just $AMAT.
When Applied Materials moves, the whole semicon equipment and AI chip supply chain gets attention:
$ASML — EUV lithography
$LRCX — etch and deposition tools
$KLAC — inspection and process control
$TSM — advanced chip manufacturing
$INTC — foundry expansion
$NVDA — AI GPU demand
$AMD — AI accelerators
$AVGO — custom AI chips and networking
$MRVL — AI networking and custom silicon
$MU — AI memory and HBM
$SMH $SOXX — semicon ETFs
My take is simple:
AI demand doesn't stop at GPUs.
It flows into fabs, wafers, tools, advanced processes, memory, networking, and the whole semicon infrastructure.
That's why $AMAT matters.
Strong chart.
Strong sector signal.
Strong AI supply-chain read-through.
But after a fast move, entry price still matters.
I want support confirmation, not emotional chasing. 📊🔥
Not financial advice.