懂币猫|Jun 24, 2026 02:34
SK Hynix drops 12%, and suddenly everyone’s yelling 'bubble burst!'
When it was up 200%, you didn’t say bubble. Now it’s down 12%, and you’re suddenly an expert on risk?
Seriously, stop scaring yourselves every time the market dips.
The scariest thing about a bubble isn’t the drop—it’s that you’re too scared to buy when it’s going up, even more scared to buy when it’s going down, and in the end, all you do is watch others make money while you sit in the comments section yelling 'top’s in.'
This dip in Korea isn’t because AI demand disappeared. It’s because the previous rally went too far—too much leverage, too much hype. When it’s going up, everyone’s a semiconductor expert. One day of losses, and suddenly everyone’s a risk management guru.
What you should really fear isn’t the bubble—it’s having no plan. Down 5%, you’re cursing. Down 10%, you’re panic selling. Down 20%, you’re waiting for zero. Then when it rebounds 30%, you’re asking if it’s too late to chase.
As long as the AI narrative hasn’t been disproven, sectors like storage, computing power, and semiconductors—every big swing is just the market shaking people out. Shaking out those who chase highs, those over-leveraged, and those without patience. Your job isn’t to predict whether today is the bottom—most people don’t have that ability.
What you should do is buy small on small dips, buy big on big dips, and if the logic breaks, admit you’re wrong and get out.
But remember: never go all-in, never lose your head, and never gamble recklessly. For ordinary people, making money in trading isn’t as hard as you think.
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