Buggy Robot
2K posts

Tweet fixado

@Brownmoose I am not a trader, just saying what you post is wrong. Farming engagement.
English

@buggy_robot looking at your line the breakout would have happened at 109$ and it dumped to 98$ the day after you would have result in a -10.30% drawdown and trigger a stoploss or just have 10% less $NOW in your folio.
English

There is a misunderstanding on FinX on how someone can sell an asset and wait for lower price to buy back.
It seems that people think I’m bearish longterm on $NOW because I’m waiting for a trend confirmation.
Im trading and just not looking something go -40% without reacting

Moose@Brownmoose
$NOW $100 LEVEL BROKEN Watch next level to be hit bellow $98 $84 STILL NOT A BUY Ill update in the Subs section
English

@tembelvitesi There could also be some M&A activity. $FOUR is the perfect candidate.
English

$FOUR Algorithmic Pump & Dump Cycles:
• Apr 9: $40.27 ➔ Apr 22: $51.65 (+28%) ➔ Dumped to $40
• May 5: $40.83 ➔ May 7: $46.92 (+15%) ➔ Dumped to $39
• May 12-20: ~$39.60 ➔ May 28: $44.94 (+13%) ➔ Dumped to $34
• Jun 10: $34.75 ➔ Jun 12: $41.18 (+18%)
Is the bottom in?
We are exactly 35 trading days away from Q2 earnings. With no immediate catalyst, this recent rally is purely algo-driven volatility in one of the market's most heavily shorted stocks.
Until management posts a definitive beat, raises guidance, and proves leverage is dropping to ~3.7x, we might still see some ping-pong.
English


@antibearthesis Well the chance is not 0 so I am betting the same
English

Me refusing to sell my 1 SpaceX IPO share because it might be a Mars boarding pass someday
Kalshi Finance@Kalshi_Finance
BREAKING: Thousands of retail investors received just 1 SpaceX share at IPO
English
Buggy Robot retweetou

In the experience economy, there are no second chances. Shift4 is built for the moments that matter – when failure isn't an option and it's critical to deliver effortless commerce.
We don’t just process payments. We remove every moment of friction between a guest and their memory. When payments disappear, experiences shine.
English

@InvestorVideos @myequityempire Agree however $200 for $ADBE...
English

Launched @myequityempire last year with 3 stocks on the “Avoid List”
$ADBE
$UBER
$SMCI
In a roaring bull market avoiding the trash is as important as investing in the winners.



English

These 4 FinTech names can create millionaires by 2030.
1. $AFRM - BNPL leader, +33% revenue growth, Amazon + Shopify exposure, no late fees, rising Affirm Card adoption
2. $NU - 135M+ customers, largest customer base of the group, highly profitable LatAm digital banking
3. $SOFI - full-stack fintech bank, +41% adjusted revenue growth, 14.7M members, CEO Anthony Noto buying the dip
4. $UPST - purest AI-lending disruption play, +44% revenue growth, +61% originations, 100+ bank/credit union partners
Name your favorite in the comments.




English

Upřímně netuším, co by muselo Adobe $ADBE doručit, aby šlo nahoru:
- double beat
- lepší výhled
- 2% buyback celého floatu
- výnosy z AI produktů snad 300 % YoY
Well, odchází jim CFO, ale jinak je tohle hrozně prokletá akcie. Jsem rád, že jsem se do tohohle nikdy nedostal.
Akcie jako $TTD, $DUOL, $NVO, $NKE apod. jsou takový pelíškovský vyděržaj, pioněr. Jenže místo 12V držíte 230V (credit za humor jde Pelimu). 🌞

Čeština

@nobrainflip They are comparing SPX/WM2NS (M2 Money Supply).
The outcome is certaily possible but would require many things to happend. Not just crash stocks like the post would make you believe.
English

Stock market crash 1995 vs 2026
Same pattern:
1995: Huge overvalued Palm IPO -> Dot-Com Bubble crash
2026: Huge overvalued SpaceX IPO -> AI Bubble crash coming
Remember that I was first to warn you
Kalshi@Kalshi
JUST IN: SpaceX valuation nearly equals the combined value of every major US IPO since 2000
English

@realroseceline My opinion is that there are many challenges. But at $200 the price is too good to be ignored.
English

Thoughts on $ADBE
$ADBE is one of the most fascinating stocks in the market today because it highlights one of the most important lessons in investing. It continues to execute at a high level. Revenue continues to grow, margins remain exceptional, free cash flow is enormous, and millions of customers still rely on $ADBE products every day. Yet despite all of that, the stock has struggled for years hitting all time lows.
This confuses many investors, especially newer investors. They look at the financial statements and see a business that appears healthy. Then they look at the stock price and assume the market must be making a mistake. After all, if the business is improving and the stock is falling, shouldn’t that create an even better opportunity?
Sometimes the answer is yes. Some of the greatest investments in history occurred because the market became too pessimistic about a business whose future remained bright. But it is important to remember that the market is not trying to value what a company earned previously or even currently. The market is trying to value what that company might earn in the future.
This is where the story becomes interesting. $ADBE looked cheaper at $500 than it did at $600. It looked cheaper at $400 than it did at $500. It looked cheaper at $300 than it did at $400. Many investors looked at the declining valuation and concluded that the opportunity was becoming more attractive. Yet the stock continued to fall because investors were not debating the current business. They were debating what the business might look like in the future.
For decades, $ADBE built one of the strongest moats in software. Photoshop, Illustrator, etc became the standard tools used by creative professionals around the world. Entire careers were built around learning Adobe’s products. Millions of designers, marketers, photographers, and video editors integrated $ADBE into their daily workflow, creating an ecosystem that appeared almost impossible to disrupt.
Then artificial intelligence arrived and changed the conversation. For the first time, images could be generated with a prompt. Videos could be created automatically. Design work that once required years of expertise could suddenly be performed by almost anyone. The question investors began asking was not whether $ADBE remained a great company today. The question was whether $ADBE moat would be as strong five or ten years from now as it was five or ten years ago.
That distinction is incredibly important because stocks are ultimately claims on future cash flows, not current cash flows. Imagine owning a toll bridge that earns $100 million per year. If someone announces that a second bridge will be built beside yours five years from now, the value of your bridge immediately changes even though today’s profits remain exactly the same. Nothing changed in the present, but something changed in the future.
This is why investing can be so difficult. The numbers investors see today often tell a very different story than the future investors are attempting to price. A business can appear healthy while its long term competitive position weakens. At the same time, a business can appear expensive while its future becomes far more valuable than most people realize (ie $PLTR). The market spends surprisingly little time pricing the present and an enormous amount of time attempting to price a future that has not yet happened.
This is also why one of the most dangerous phrases in investing is, “The stock is down but the fundamentals are improving.” Investors have said that about newspapers as the internet emerged, department stores as ecommerce gained share, and cable television as streaming began taking over. In many cases the current business remained healthy long after the future business had already started to deteriorate.
1/2 👇
English








