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#美联储降息 $MERL recent market movements seem to be different this time. Previously, the consolidation phase lasted long enough, and the bottom-level chips were basically cleaned up. Now, funds are truly moving. It's not just a rebound in sentiment, but substantial buying interest is coming in.
Once it starts, it shows continuity, indicating that the consensus is still there. Early investors have already experienced the rhythm, while latecomers still need to see if the pace is fast enough. Against the backdrop of the Fed's rate cut expectations, the performance of assets like $MERL indeed warrants ongoing tracking—fund flows often precede the market sentiment.
The current question is how far it can sustain this upward trend, which depends on the strength of subsequent capital support.
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Tired of hearing the same old story about analyzing chips; the key is whether new retail investors are coming in to buy the dip.
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$MERL is useless once the Federal Reserve shifts policy; capital flow is unreliable.
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Continuity? Ha, I've seen this kind of "consensus" happen several times, and it always ends with getting chopped.
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Sounds nice, but in two weeks when it drops, you'll see what a relay collapse really looks like.
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Wait, what kind of logic is "cleaning up the bottom chips"? Isn't that just asking for a dump?
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The relay of newcomers is usually not great; the risk outweighs the profit.
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Is the capital really coming in, or are the big players just spinning in circles? It's hard to tell.
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I just want to know, why does no one say "this is a healthy correction" when the price drops?
This morning, those who bought the dip made a killing, while we are just here watching the show.
Is capital flow ahead of market sentiment? Of course, trend-following traders are always the last to know.
How far it can go, who the hell knows? The key is the subsequent relay; if no one invests more, it will cool down.
This round of interest rate cuts depends on who can run faster; it's not about value investing.
MERL's current rhythm does have some quality, but don't get too optimistic; a rebound trap is unavoidable.