$MU is still being treated like one of the top AI memory names. 🚨📊
On the 15-minute chart, Micron moved from about 1,038 and rallied up to 1,089.
Now the price is sitting around 1,079, which shows buyers are still around, but the stock is in a high-level consolidation zone.
This isn't a weak chart.
It's a strong one that needs support confirmation.
The first level I'm watching is 1,069–1,070.
If $MU pulls back and holds there, the short-term bullish setup stays solid.
Key support is 1,057–1,058.
As long as $MU stays above that, the trend is still good.
If $MU can take back 1,089–1,090, we might see a push toward the next round number 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 need HBM
$AMD — AI accelerators
$AVGO — custom AI chips + networking
$MRVL — AI networking + 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
My take is simple:
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 matters.
I want support confirmation, not emotional chasing. 📊🔥
Not financial advice.
$ASML is testing a high-level pullback, not a broken chart. 🚨📊
The 15-minute chart shows a strong climb from 1,588 up to 1,742.7.
That was a solid run in semiconductor equipment momentum.
But after hitting the high, $ASML dropped to around 1,726, so buyers are being tested now.
The first level I'm watching is 1,722–1,723.
If $ASML holds there, the short-term setup still looks decent.
The real support zone is 1,710–1,711.
As long as it stays above that, the broader short-term bullish trend stays intact.
If it can reclaim 1,732–1,735, momentum starts picking up again.
But it's not just about ASML.
When $ASML moves, the whole semiconductor equipment and AI chip supply chain gets attention:
$AMAT — semiconductor equipment
$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 — semiconductor ETFs
Here's my take:
AI isn't just about GPUs.
AI demand flows into advanced nodes, EUV tools, fabs, wafers, inspection, memory, networking, and the whole semiconductor capex cycle.
That's why $ASML is important.
It's one of the biggest choke points in advanced chip making.
The chart is still promising.
The pullback is testing support.
The semiconductor equipment story is still alive.
But after a big move, entry price matters.
I'm looking for confirmation, not emotional chasing. 📊🔥
Not financial advice.
$AMAT is still one of the strongest players in the semiconductor equipment game. 🚨📊
The 15-minute chart tells a pretty clear story.
Applied Materials moved from around 462, broke through 480, reclaimed 491, pushed past 500, and hit a short-term high near 508.31.
That was the momentum.
Now it's pulled back to about 499–500, and the market is testing if buyers can hold that breakout area.
This isn't a bearish breakdown yet.
It's a high-level retest after a strong run.
The first level I'm watching is 500.
If $AMAT can get back above and hold 500, the short-term setup stays healthy.
Key support is at 495.
As long as it stays above 495, the bullish structure is still solid.
But if it loses 495, I'd get more cautious because the pullback could extend to 491–492.
The bigger picture isn't just $AMAT.
When Applied Materials moves, the whole semiconductor 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 — semiconductor ETFs
My take is simple:
AI demand doesn't stop at GPUs.
It spreads into fabs, wafers, tools, advanced processes, memory, networking, and the whole semiconductor 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.
$WDC isn't just a storage play anymore. 🚨📊
On the 15-minute chart, Western Digital made a big push from the 520 zone all the way up to 602.
That was a solid momentum move.
Now it's pulled back to around 590, so it's not in a straight vertical breakout anymore.
It's in a retest and recovery phase.
The first area I'm watching is 588–592.
If $WDC holds that and gets back above 592, the short-term recovery looks okay.
Key support sits at 584–585.
If price breaks below that, I'd get more cautious since the pullback could stretch to 579–580.
But there's more to this than one chart.
When $WDC moves, the market tends to eye the AI storage and data center chain:
$MU — AI memory and HBM
$STX — data storage demand
$NVDA — AI GPUs driving massive data needs
$AMD — AI accelerators and data center chips
$DELL — AI servers
$SMCI — AI server infrastructure
$AVGO — custom AI chips + networking
$MRVL — AI networking + data movement
$AMAT $LRCX $KLAC — semiconductor gear
$SMH $SOXX — semiconductor ETFs
My take is simple:
AI isn't just GPUs.
AI needs memory, NAND, storage, servers, networking, and huge data infrastructure.
That's where $WDC matters.
The chart had a strong run.
Now I'm looking for confirmation.
Hold 588–592 → recovery is alive.
Lose 584–585 → risk goes up.
I'd rather wait for support confirmation than chase after a vertical move. 🚀📊
Not financial advice.
@MikePinto3 Recovery signals are tricky after a drop that sharp. 785 felt like a rejection zone, so I'd want to see if it holds above 745 before getting excited.
So $CRWD isn't just flashing a simple "breakout" right now.
It's sending a recovery signal after a sharp drop. 🚨📊
CrowdStrike made a strong move from around 670 and shot up to 785.
That was the momentum push.
But after hitting 785, it took a hard fall back to 745, meaning the first big move already got profit-taking.
Here's the key part:
$CRWD has bounced back to about 769 and is trying to regain strength.
First level I'm watching is 766.
If it stays above 766, the short-term recovery is still alive.
Main support is 757–758.
If price slides below that, the recovery setup weakens, and I'd get more cautious.
On the upside, 771 is the first level bulls need to take back.
If it holds above 771, next area to watch is 777–786.
But it's not just about CrowdStrike.
When $CRWD moves, folks start eyeing the whole cybersecurity and AI security space:
$PANW — enterprise cybersecurity
$ZS — zero trust security
$FTNT — network security
$S — endpoint security
$OKTA — identity security
$NET — cloud security and edge network
$DDOG — cloud monitoring and security
$CYBR — privileged access security
$QLYS — vulnerability management
$MSFT — enterprise security and AI security platform
My take is simple:
Cybersecurity isn't just an IT budget line anymore.
It's becoming a critical part of the AI economy.
More AI agents.
More cloud workloads.
More data movement.
More attack surfaces.
That means security demand isn't going away.
$CRWD is still a key name here.
The chart is bouncing back.
The sector story is solid.
But confirmation matters.
I need to see 766 hold and 771 reclaimed before calling this a clean continuation. 📊🔥
Not financial advice.
@BlockheadsMedia Interesting read. I get the caution—bouncing near highs always makes me pause too. Waiting for support to firm up feels smarter than chasing that move.
$ASML isn't just another chip stock. 🚨📊15-min chart shows a solid short-term bounce—from 1,647 back up to 1,704–1,705. Buyers are still in the game. But it's not a low-risk entry anymore, it's near the highs. I'd rather see support hold first before jumping in. Levels I'm wa
$AMD still looks bullish short-term, but momentum is slowing down a bit. 🚨📊
On the 15-minute chart, AMD bounced hard from the 488–490 area and ran up to the 517 zone.
It broke above 500 and stayed higher, which tells me buyers are still in control.
Right now, $AMD is sitting around 510, kind of stuck below the 514–518 resistance.
So the trend isn’t broken, but it’s not a great spot to jump in blindly.
Here’s my game plan:
Buy zone: 506–507
That’s the first dip I’d watch for.
Key support: 499–500
As long as $AMD holds above that zone, the short-term bullish vibe stays.
If it breaks and holds above 518, the next leg could push toward 527.
But if it drops below 499, I’d get more cautious since the setup might start weakening.
Big picture:
$AMD is becoming a major AI chip player besides Nvidia.
AI demand isn’t flowing to just one company anymore.
Hyperscalers want more GPU supply, more competition, and better data center options.
That’s where $AMD steps in.
EPYC CPUs.
Instinct AI GPUs.
Data center acceleration.
AI infrastructure demand.
Trend is still bullish.
Momentum is cooling.
Buyers are still active.
But entry price still matters.
$AMD isn’t weak here, but I’d rather wait for a clean pullback near support than buy during a high-range consolidation. 🚀📊
Not financial advice.