Here's a hot take: if you're an American investor dumping stocks at the NYSE open, something's fundamentally off. Think about it—the morning bell rings, volatility spikes, and emotions run high. That's when most retail traders make their worst calls. Selling into opening chaos isn't strategy; it's panic dressed up as decision-making. Real positioning requires patience and a cooler head than 9:30 AM typically allows.
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BankruptcyArtist
· 6h ago
Selling stocks at the opening? That's just asking for death. Isn't being cut once enough?
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GasFeeNightmare
· 12-26 17:51
Haha, it's that kind of statement again... Are all the people who sell off at the opening really just driven by pure emotion? I don't believe it.
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SerumDegen
· 12-26 17:45
nah this is cope for people who panic sold at 9:31 lmao. sometimes the liquidation cascade at open IS the signal, not the noise. watched too many whales dump their bags at market structure breaks to believe this "patience" narrative. but yeah most retail gets absolutely rekt during morning volatility, that part checks out
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FlashLoanLarry
· 12-26 17:34
All the sell-offs within the first 15 minutes of opening are from rookies, I mentioned this earlier.
Here's a hot take: if you're an American investor dumping stocks at the NYSE open, something's fundamentally off. Think about it—the morning bell rings, volatility spikes, and emotions run high. That's when most retail traders make their worst calls. Selling into opening chaos isn't strategy; it's panic dressed up as decision-making. Real positioning requires patience and a cooler head than 9:30 AM typically allows.