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2021 is another year of violent volatility in the stocks markets globally just like 2020. All of us should therefore brace ourselves for a lot more in 2022 if this trend persists. China-theme Stocks are still relatively weak but I expect them to perform better in 2022 alongside US Stocks I wanted to provide some helpful technical charts, but the best chart by far(at least to me) is a chart of psychology, persuasion and perspective combined into one here:
Happy New Year 2022!
$Alibaba (BABA.US)$ $Futu Holdings Ltd (FUTU.US)$ $Futu Holdings Ltd (FUTU.US)$ $UP Fintech (TIGR.US)$ $Apple (AAPL.US)$ $NIO Inc (NIO.US)$ $Qualcomm (QCOM.US)$ $United Microelectronics (UMC.US)$ $Sea (SE.US)$ $Lucid Group (LCID.US)$ $Sono Group (SEV.US)$ $Rivian Automotive (RIVN.US)$ $JPMorgan (JPM.US)$ $Applied Materials (AMAT.US)$ $NVIDIA (NVDA.US)$ $Axon Enterprise (AXON.US)$ $Unity Software (U.US)$ $Grab Holdings (GRAB.US)$ $WeWork (WE.US)$ $Phunware (PHUN.US)$ $Digital World Acquisition Corp (DWAC.US)$ $Tuya Inc (TUYA.US)$ $Hippo Holdings (HIPO.US)$ $GOLDMAN SACHS FUTURE TECH LEADERS EQUITY ETF (GTEK.US)$ $Airbnb (ABNB.US)$ $DocuSign (DOCU.US)$ $MongoDB (MDB.US)$ $Pfizer (PFE.US)$ $Lam Research (LRCX.US)$ $Tencent (TCEHY.US)$ $Bilibili (BILI.US)$ $Snowflake (SNOW.US)$ $Micron Technology (MU.US)$ $Baidu (BIDU.US)$ $Stellantis NV (STLA.US)$ $General Motors (GM.US)$ $Ford Motor (F.US)$ $Robinhood (HOOD.US)$ $Advanced Micro Devices (AMD.US)$ $iShares Silver Trust (SLV.US)$ $ASML Holding (ASML.US)$ $Twitter (Delisted) (TWTR.US)$ $The Wendy's Co (WEN.US)$ $Bank of America (BAC.US)$ $Novavax (NVAX.US)$ $Virgin Galactic (SPCE.US)$ $BlackBerry (BB.US)$ $IBM Corp (IBM.US)$ $GE Aerospace (GE.US)$ $Nokia Oyj (NOK.US)$ $UiPath (PATH.US)$ $Roblox (RBLX.US)$ $XPeng (XPEV.US)$ $DiDi Global (Delisted) (DIDI.US)$ $Kratos Defense & Security Solutions (KTOS.US)$ $Activision Blizzard (ATVI.US)$ $ContextLogic (WISH.US)$ $SoFi Technologies (SOFI.US)$ $Etsy Inc (ETSY.US)$ $Snap Inc (SNAP.US)$ $Block (SQ.US)$ $Shopify (SHOP.US)$ $Cloudflare (NET.US)$ $Palantir (PLTR.US)$ $Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM.US)$ $PDD Holdings (PDD.US)$ $JD.com (JD.US)$ $Coinbase (COIN.US)$ $AMC Entertainment (AMC.US)$ $Disney (DIS.US)$ $Boeing (BA.US)$ $Netflix (NFLX.US)$ $Roku Inc (ROKU.US)$ $Uber Technologies (UBER.US)$ $Alphabet-A (GOOGL.US)$ $Meta Platforms (FB.US)$
So, you tell me what is the right way?!
Happy New Year 2022!
$Alibaba (BABA.US)$ $Futu Holdings Ltd (FUTU.US)$ $Futu Holdings Ltd (FUTU.US)$ $UP Fintech (TIGR.US)$ $Apple (AAPL.US)$ $NIO Inc (NIO.US)$ $Qualcomm (QCOM.US)$ $United Microelectronics (UMC.US)$ $Sea (SE.US)$ $Lucid Group (LCID.US)$ $Sono Group (SEV.US)$ $Rivian Automotive (RIVN.US)$ $JPMorgan (JPM.US)$ $Applied Materials (AMAT.US)$ $NVIDIA (NVDA.US)$ $Axon Enterprise (AXON.US)$ $Unity Software (U.US)$ $Grab Holdings (GRAB.US)$ $WeWork (WE.US)$ $Phunware (PHUN.US)$ $Digital World Acquisition Corp (DWAC.US)$ $Tuya Inc (TUYA.US)$ $Hippo Holdings (HIPO.US)$ $GOLDMAN SACHS FUTURE TECH LEADERS EQUITY ETF (GTEK.US)$ $Airbnb (ABNB.US)$ $DocuSign (DOCU.US)$ $MongoDB (MDB.US)$ $Pfizer (PFE.US)$ $Lam Research (LRCX.US)$ $Tencent (TCEHY.US)$ $Bilibili (BILI.US)$ $Snowflake (SNOW.US)$ $Micron Technology (MU.US)$ $Baidu (BIDU.US)$ $Stellantis NV (STLA.US)$ $General Motors (GM.US)$ $Ford Motor (F.US)$ $Robinhood (HOOD.US)$ $Advanced Micro Devices (AMD.US)$ $iShares Silver Trust (SLV.US)$ $ASML Holding (ASML.US)$ $Twitter (Delisted) (TWTR.US)$ $The Wendy's Co (WEN.US)$ $Bank of America (BAC.US)$ $Novavax (NVAX.US)$ $Virgin Galactic (SPCE.US)$ $BlackBerry (BB.US)$ $IBM Corp (IBM.US)$ $GE Aerospace (GE.US)$ $Nokia Oyj (NOK.US)$ $UiPath (PATH.US)$ $Roblox (RBLX.US)$ $XPeng (XPEV.US)$ $DiDi Global (Delisted) (DIDI.US)$ $Kratos Defense & Security Solutions (KTOS.US)$ $Activision Blizzard (ATVI.US)$ $ContextLogic (WISH.US)$ $SoFi Technologies (SOFI.US)$ $Etsy Inc (ETSY.US)$ $Snap Inc (SNAP.US)$ $Block (SQ.US)$ $Shopify (SHOP.US)$ $Cloudflare (NET.US)$ $Palantir (PLTR.US)$ $Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM.US)$ $PDD Holdings (PDD.US)$ $JD.com (JD.US)$ $Coinbase (COIN.US)$ $AMC Entertainment (AMC.US)$ $Disney (DIS.US)$ $Boeing (BA.US)$ $Netflix (NFLX.US)$ $Roku Inc (ROKU.US)$ $Uber Technologies (UBER.US)$ $Alphabet-A (GOOGL.US)$ $Meta Platforms (FB.US)$
So, you tell me what is the right way?!
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argirl
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If the consensus is correct, the last time inflation was this high was in the early years of the Reagan administration – as the U.S. found itself amid a steep and persistent recession. The Labor Department on Friday morning will release November’s consumer price index, a gauge that measures the cost of dozens of items. The index covers common goods including gasoline and ground beef, but extends into more detailed purchases such as frozen vegetables, indoor plants and flowers and pet supplies.
Wall Street expects the the index to reflect a 0.7% gain for the month, which would translate into a 6.7% increase from a year ago, according to Dow Jones estimates. Excluding food and energy, so-called core CPI is projected to rise 0.5% on a monthly basis and 4.9% on an annual basis. If those estimates are correct, it would be the highest year-over-year reading for headline CPI since June 1982, when the index surpassed 7% after topping out at over 14% in both March and April 1980, a record that still stands. On core, the level would be the highest since June 1991.
The Fed already is reacting to inflation and is soon to do more. At its meeting next week, the central bank is expected to speed up the pace at which it is withdrawing economic support. In practice, that means likely doubling the taper in bond purchases to $30 billion a month. That would bring a program that had seen $120 billion a month in purchases to an end by around March 2022. After that, the Fed could start raising interest rates if inflation is still a problem.
-Wall Street expects the the consumer price index on Friday to reflect a 0.7% gain for November, which would translate into a 6.7% increase from a year ago.
-If that is accurate, it will mark the highest year over year level since 1982.
-Though markets expect a high reading, investors worry that the Fed might react aggressively to one that is even above concencus
If you wish to leverage on this consider using DLCs,
$Hang Seng Index (800000.HK)$
5x short $HSI 5xShortSG230420 (CXQW.SG)$
5x long $HSI 5xLongSG230420 (CWAW.SG)$
Wall Street expects the the index to reflect a 0.7% gain for the month, which would translate into a 6.7% increase from a year ago, according to Dow Jones estimates. Excluding food and energy, so-called core CPI is projected to rise 0.5% on a monthly basis and 4.9% on an annual basis. If those estimates are correct, it would be the highest year-over-year reading for headline CPI since June 1982, when the index surpassed 7% after topping out at over 14% in both March and April 1980, a record that still stands. On core, the level would be the highest since June 1991.
The Fed already is reacting to inflation and is soon to do more. At its meeting next week, the central bank is expected to speed up the pace at which it is withdrawing economic support. In practice, that means likely doubling the taper in bond purchases to $30 billion a month. That would bring a program that had seen $120 billion a month in purchases to an end by around March 2022. After that, the Fed could start raising interest rates if inflation is still a problem.
-Wall Street expects the the consumer price index on Friday to reflect a 0.7% gain for November, which would translate into a 6.7% increase from a year ago.
-If that is accurate, it will mark the highest year over year level since 1982.
-Though markets expect a high reading, investors worry that the Fed might react aggressively to one that is even above concencus
If you wish to leverage on this consider using DLCs,
$Hang Seng Index (800000.HK)$
5x short $HSI 5xShortSG230420 (CXQW.SG)$
5x long $HSI 5xLongSG230420 (CWAW.SG)$
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