
Red Dot Returns
453 posts

Red Dot Returns
@RedDotReturnsX
Husband, Father, Options seller, investor, technical analyzer, mentor, and friend. At the crossroads of TA and 2A.





When I first bought $AMPG, I didn't even understand the business. It was at $3.6. Just a swing trade. Nothing more. I sold the whole thing at $4.5. Took my little profit and moved on. And that could have been the end of the story. But then I did something simple: I actually researched it. I read the filings. I understood what this company really was. The next multi-billion company in the making. The only American 64T64R AI-RAN radio. Deployed at a Tier-1 carrier. Defense. Quantum. Space. So I bought back in at $4.73. Then $4.55. Then I went all in at $5.2. Then trimmed some at $6.8. Then held until $9. Because I finally saw it for what it is: a billion company in the making. The boring physical layer under a megatrend, before the market wakes up. And everyone criticized me. Everyone said it had already run too much. They said it at $6. They said it at $6.5. They said it at $7. Here's what they were all missing. When you buy a business, the entry price is not the thesis. The fundamentals are. A great company "looks expensive" the entire way up, right until everyone realizes it was cheap. That's the whole lesson. And it's why doing your own research is everything. Because if I hadn't done the work, I would have sold at $4.5 and never looked back. I'd have missed all of it, over a chart I didn't understand attached to a business I never bothered to learn. And honestly? That's the part I love. There are so many great companies out there still waiting to be found. My goal is to keep finding them. Because that's my passion. I love the research. I love pulling the thread nobody else bothered to pull. I love understanding a business so well that the price stops scaring me. I've spent days and nights without sleep digging into this company. Reading, cross-checking, connecting dots. And in between, doing the part that actually matters: cheering the community on, hyping up the group, sharing what I find, laughing with people, building something that genuinely feels like family. That feeling, of doing the work and doing it together, is what this is all about for me. And the best part is I'm not doing it alone anymore. We've built a real community around $AMPG. People like @olyth_terminal, @LilyFunds, @EhrmantrautCap_, @rk8215, @barbell_ideas and so many more like @DVLT146025, @PSInvestor, @PepInvestStocks and @calm_svg . Sorry if I'm missing anyone. People who actually do the work, share it openly, and make each other sharper. That's rare, and I'm grateful for it. Thank you, genuinely, for all of it. 🙏 I hold a position in $AMPG. I'll keep following it closely. I will keep updating on relevant news, just don't want to be in the middle of it. I'm not alone anymore. Thank you AMPG gang. 👊 This is a multi-billion company in the making. Higher we go. In Fawad we trust. Edge AI. And in the meantime, I'll do what I love most: keep digging, keep learning, and keep hunting for the next great company hiding in plain sight. Onto the next thread to pull. 📡 Not financial advice. I'm long $AMPG. DYOR.




SpaceX $SPCX update













🚨 "An Agreement has been largely negotiated, subject to finalization between the United States of America, the Islamic Republic of Iran, and the various other Countries, as listed..." - President Donald J. Trump


@aleabitoreddit Do you use TA at all or are you 100% bottle neck research?


Totally disagree with Elizabeth Warren - this is the American dream! Elon just created 4,400 millionaires in a single day. 400 are now worth over $100 million. $TSLA $SPCX Not VCs. Not hedge funds. SpaceX employees - welders, technicians, machinists, even cafeteria staff - because the company paid workers in equity for two decades. A welder who joined at $28/hour in 2015 turned a $10k stock grant into nearly $900k! Another employee passed on a “safe” job at GE, stayed at SpaceX for 12 years, and his shares are now worth $13.5 million!! Software IPOs have made rich engineers for years. This is the first one where the wealth reached the factory and cafeteria floor.








