Bobby

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Bobby

Bobby

@bbpla1201

Fell in love with trading. Lifts weights in spare time. Borderline anarchist. Anti-stupid. Embrace all the uncertainties of life. Out the gutter, On the go.

South Korea Se unió Mayıs 2025
147 Siguiendo18 Seguidores
Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@BigWaveChartist Already wiring my brain to hit the sell button, following my sell rules, of course.
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Big Wave Chartist
Big Wave Chartist@BigWaveChartist·
Feels like this market might just be on the cusp of a pullback. Obviously I am long, but feels very close now.
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Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@Mayhem4Markets You're telling me I've been lied to this whole time??? Damn........
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Markets & Mayhem
Markets & Mayhem@Mayhem4Markets·
Just remember CPI is another heavily massaged incredibly inaccurate government statistic. It's based on survey data. Basically it's vibes and feels. Complete with 1960s-level data collection and analysis "technology." The weightings also make little sense. Enjoy the print.
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Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@stamatoudism Well said. Trying to predict every single move has got me in trouble once too many times. I'm trying to internalize and wire my brain to stick to my rules, like a robot, and I guess I still need reps until they become second nature.
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Marios Stamatoudis
Marios Stamatoudis@stamatoudism·
Am I the only one who honestly doesn’t care if we’re in an AI bubble or at the start of an epic run? No matter what it is, it doesn’t change the required usual actions: follow price, keep risk management and portfolio dynamics in check, and keep routines sharp. Even if things go the opposite way, the 20MA will get you out in time. Every big correction starts as a small one. Overhyping or demoralizing ourselves and others based on macro views never ends well . Staying focused , versatile and not anchored is an edge.
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Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@TheShortBear In the words of Nassim Taleb, it's not survival of the fittest, rather, it's the ones that survive that are the fittest.
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THE SHORT BEAR
THE SHORT BEAR@TheShortBear·
Luck has surface area. The more you try, speak, build, share, prep, review, think, work... the larger the surface luck has to collide with. Most people don’t succeed because they bat 100%. They succeed because they take thousands of swings instead of dozens. Then add the dedication to show up each day and work on prep and review... showing up every day long enough to improve the batting average/odds. Luck isn’t static. It compounds around action, repetition, and grit. The so called market wizards almost all, 95%+ blew up, with multiple years of trial and error before they got lucky. In that sense, compounding is the universe’s way of scaling luck. Liftoff takes the most, enormous energy. Escaping gravity takes continuous focused energy. But once trajectory and escape velocity are achieved, compounding does much of the heavy lifting with risk systems in place. The hardest part is surviving long enough to reach that phase. The light at the end of the tunnel, small and dim but there yet.
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Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@NirAoo7 Literally me hovering my mouse over the sell button. 🤣
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Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@DenizTheTrader Can't say for sure but just take all the traders featured in the Market Wizards series, see which countries they're from, and see which country has the most representatives. Not saying that's the answer but thought it'd be interesting.
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Deniz The Trader
Deniz The Trader@DenizTheTrader·
If trading was an Olympic sport, Which nation would take the gold?
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Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@andrewchen NGL, AI might make better politicians than most of these CA politicians, and this is from someone who's lived in SoCal.
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andrew chen
andrew chen@andrewchen·
LA is seeing the world’s first political election determined by AI-created viral meme videos Historically a very very large % of the dollars raised in any election goes to trad media - making commercials, buying air time, etc We’re seeing AI + social disruption live… a preview of the future!
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Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@FranVezz It's semis, Mag7, and a few select sectors/themes making huge moves so could see a pullback in those but overall, I agree, it looks more like a digestion before the next leg up.
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Francesco
Francesco@FranVezz·
Two charts that have me scratching my head in a big way. $NCFD, $MMTW. Absolutely no signs of parabolic action or FOMO in either of these. NOT what I’d expect to see here with $QQQ So either, there’s a lot more runway here, or we are seeing stuff start to digest already under the hood. My read is that participation is thinning somewhat here outside semis, memory, software type names. Do the leaders start to pull in, or do other stocks catch up? I don’t know.
Francesco tweet mediaFrancesco tweet media
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Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@CFlanders7 24%, all in the last 3-4 weeks, and most of it from 2 positions, SNXX and MUU, 2x ETFs of SNDK and MU.
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Markets & Mayhem
Markets & Mayhem@Mayhem4Markets·
I hear they're hiring right now. 😅
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Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@timothysykes Hands down, no one on fintwit is living it up like you, and every bit of it hard-earned. Cheers!!!
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Timothy Sykes
Timothy Sykes@timothysykes·
Goooooooooood morning, it's SO gooood to be back in 🇮🇹 for Mother’s Day as it's my mom's favorite place -- morning pilates with a view! Definitely show your mom some extra-love today for everything she's given you, Happpppy Mothers Day to all the moms out there! #happymothersday
Timothy Sykes tweet mediaTimothy Sykes tweet media
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Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@nntaleb It is amazing how people make up whatever they want to hear.
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Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@n_bancroft2 My thoughts exactly, but I am mentally preparing myself to hit that sell button in case it starts to crack. Made the mistake of holding onto a huge winner last year with HOOD and PLTR, and don't want to make that mistake again.
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Nathan Bancroft
Nathan Bancroft@n_bancroft2·
$SNDK Insane still. And just a great example of what is extended can become more so. It’s doing nothing wrong so I see no reason to do anything with it until it changes character, which in this case would be a hard break of 5ema or a big extension from it. These are the outliers that move the needle on your account and why it’s so important to trail at least a portion of your position for a bigger move.
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Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@CFlanders7 So true. Yes, risk management is the big one that everyone stresses about, and rightly so, but the selling is something that always creates doubt.
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Christian Flanders
Christian Flanders@CFlanders7·
In my opinion, it's the hardest part of trading. Holding onto winners.
Christian Flanders@CFlanders7

Every single time I think about holding onto my winners I come back to this passage. "His name was Partridge, but they nicknamed him Turkey behind his back, because he was so thick-chested and had a habit of strutting about the various rooms, with the point of his chin resting on his breast. The customers, who were all eager to be shoved and forced into doing things so as to lay the blame for failure on others, used to go to old Partridge and tell him what some friend of a friend of an insider had advised them to do in a certain stock. They would tell him what they had not done with the tip so he would tell them what they ought to do. But whether the tip they had was to buy or to sell, the old chap's answer was always the same. The customer would finish the tale of his perplexity and then ask: "What do you think I ought to do?" Old Turkey would cock his head to one side, contemplate his fellow customer with a fatherly smile, and finally he would say very impressively, "You know, it's a bull market!" Time and again I heard him say, "Well, this is a bull market, you know!" as though he were giving to you a priceless talisman wrapped up in a million-dollar accident-insurance policy. And of course I did not get his meaning. One day a fellow named Elmer Harwood rushed into the office, wrote out an order and gave it to the clerk. Then he rushed over to where Mr. Partridge was listening politely to John Fanning's story of the time he overheard Keene give an order to one of his brokers and all that John made was a measly three points on a hundred shares and of course the stock had to go up twenty-four points in three days right after John sold out. It was at least the fourth time that John had told him that tale of woe, but old Turkey was smiling as sympathetically as if it was the first time he heard it. Well, Elmer made for the old man and, without a word of apology to John Fanning, told Turkey, "Mr. Partridge, I have just sold my Climax Motors. My people say the market is entitled to a reaction and that I'll be able to buy it back cheaper. So you'd better do likewise. That is, if you've still got yours." Elmer looked suspiciously at the man to whom he had given the original tip to buy. The amateur, or gratuitous, tipster always thinks he owns the receiver of his tip body and soul, even before he knows how the tip is going to turn out. "Yes, Mr. Harwood, I still have it. Of course!" said Turkey gratefully. It was nice of Elmer to think of the old chap. "Well, now is the time to take your profit and get in again on the next dip," said Elmer, as if he had just made out the deposit slip for the old man. Failing to perceive enthusiastic gratitude in the beneficiary's face Elmer went on: "I have just sold every share I owned!" From his voice and manner you would have conservatively estimated it at ten thousand shares. But Mr. Partridge shook his head regretfully and whined, "No! No! I can't do that!" "What?" yelled Elmer. "I simply can't!" said Mr. Partridge. He was in great trouble. "Didn't I give you the tip to buy it?" "You did, Mr. Harwood, and I am very grateful to you. Indeed, I am, sir. But --" "Hold on! Let me talk! And didn't that stock go up seven points in ten days? Didn't it?" "It did, and I am much obliged to you, my dear boy. But I couldn't think of selling that stock." "You couldn't?" asked Elmer, beginning to look doubtful himself. It is a habit with most tip givers to be tip takers. "No, I couldn't." "Why not?" And Elmer drew nearer. "Why, this is a bull market!" The old fellow said it as though he had given a long and detailed explanation. "That's all right," said Elmer, looking angry because of his disappointment. "I know this is a bull market as well as you do. But you'd better slip them that stock of yours and buy it back on the reaction. You might as well reduce the cost to yourself." My dear boy," said old Partridge, in great distress "my dear boy, if I sold that stock now I'd lose my position; and then where would I be?" Elmer Harwood threw up his hands, shook his head and walked over to me to get sympathy: "Can you beat it?" he asked me in a stage whisper. "I ask you!" I didn't say anything. So he went on: "I give him a tip on Climax Motors. He buys five hundred shares. He's got seven points' profit and I advise him to get out and buy 'em back on the reaction that's overdue even now. And what does he say when I tell him? He says that if he sells he'll lose his job. What do you know about that?" "I beg your pardon, Mr. Harwood; I didn't say I'd lose my job," cut in old Turkey. "I said I'd lose my position. And when you are as old as I am and you've been through as many booms and panics as I have, you'll know that to lose your position is something nobody can afford; not even John D. Rockefeller. I hope the stock reacts and that you will be able to repurchase your line at a substantial concession, sir. But I myself can only trade in accordance with the experience of many years. I paid a high price for it and I don't feel like throwing away a second tuition fee. But I am as much obliged to you as if I had the money in the bank. It's a bull market, you know." And he strutted away, leaving Elmer dazed. What old Mr. Partridge said did not mean much to me until I began to think about my own numerous failures to make as much money as I ought to when I was so right on the general market. The more I studied the more I realized how wise that old chap was. He had evidently suffered from the same defect in his young days and knew his own human weaknesses. He would not lay himself open to a temptation that experience had taught him was hard to resist and had always proved expensive to him, as it was to me. I think it was a long step forward in my trading education when I realized at last that when old Mr. Partridge kept on telling the other customers, "Well, you know this is a bull market!" he really meant to tell them that the big money was not in the individual fluctuations but in the main movements that is, not in reading the tape but in sizing up the entire market and its trend." - Reminiscences of a Stock Operator

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Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@unusual_whales I've seen some really stupid things that make no sense at all and thought I'd seen it all, but sheeeesh...... and this is an elected official????
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unusual_whales
unusual_whales@unusual_whales·
AOC: You can't earn a billion dollars.
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Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@NickSchmidt Yeah, seriously. And that's the hard part.
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Nick Schmidt
Nick Schmidt@NickSchmidt·
@bbpla1201 Learn from it and remember how much it SUCKS to dig out of a whole so it doesn’t happen again
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Nick Schmidt
Nick Schmidt@NickSchmidt·
I know this market is crazier than normal but these windows where progress is easy always makes me mad at myself for trying to grind through choppy periods and stacking paper cuts
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Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@NirAoo7 Top of my watchlist as well. Been just chilling then held the earnings gap so will watch for it to get above the MAs and get tight.
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Nir
Nir@NirAoo7·
$BE - first pullback to 21ema, after new highs setup brewing. top focus next week.
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Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@CFlanders7 Yeah, it's funny how I try to internalize this and stick to my rules, but the moment the candles start ticking, it's like I turn into a different person.
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Christian Flanders
Christian Flanders@CFlanders7·
The longer I trade the more true everything I’ve read in the classic trading literature turn out to be. There is nothing new in Wall Street, humans don’t change. The tickers change but the emotions are the same.
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Bobby
Bobby@bbpla1201·
@ZaStocks 100% agree. And it may just be starting. Cerebras IPO this week kickstarts a host of unprecedented, monster IPOs, from Anthropic, OpenAI, SpaceX to name a few. That being said, respect risk. 🫡
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Za
Za@ZaStocks·
“The things being said today are what people said in 1998.” Ok and the stock market more than doubled in the final two years leading up to the dot com crash. If you spend all of your time worrying about a crash that *might* come, you’re going to miss out. Wouldn’t you rather take the chance and participate in the second greatest bull market in history (potentially the first by the time it’s over) vs. sit on the sidelines and wonder what if? As long as you don’t fully lever yourself and risk everything, the risk of being sidelined has far outweighed the risk of participating. Live for something. Take a risk. The worst thing that can happen is something you can and would recover from. This doesn’t mean go trade weekly options or gamble, but the fear of taking any risk at all is stunning.
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