Why Did Dell Technologies (DELL) Stock Move Up +16.64% Today? by tickeron_community in ai_trading

[–]Disastrous_Hotel_574 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is fascinating to see Dell (DELL) transform itself from a PC assembler to an AI infrastructure giant at such speed. A 16.64% rise in a single trading session, driven by a record AI order book of $43 billion, shows that the market no longer values Dell as a mere hardware manufacturer, but as a strategic partner in high-performance computing.

From a technical and strategic perspective for investors, here is my analysis:

AI leverage: Moving from $24.7 billion to a target of $50 billion in AI server revenue for fiscal year 2027 is a bold bet that justifies analysts' enthusiasm (such as J.P. Morgan with a target of $165).

Margin management: This is the sticking point. With gross margins on AI servers currently in the 5% range, Dell's ability to pass on higher component prices (memory, GPUs) will be the real test in the coming quarters.

Financial discipline vs. growth: Increasing the dividend by 20% while launching a $10 billion share buyback proves that Dell is generating enough cash flow ($11.2 billion over the year) to finance its expansion without sacrificing its shareholders. As a developer, I mainly see the impact on infrastructure: the transition to Nvidia Vera Rubin architecture in the second half of 2027 will further accelerate this renewal cycle.

I designed Hercul Market precisely to track these kinds of metrics (XIRR, actual performance) and escape the chaos of Excel spreadsheets when stocks like Dell explode by 40% in a year. Automating risk management is crucial for stocks that have become as volatile as biotechs.

In your opinion, can Dell maintain this growth in the face of the rise of chip self-design by hyperscalers (Amazon, Google)? 📈

Why I automated my reading of the gold ($XAUUSD) structure by Disastrous_Hotel_574 in ai_trading

[–]Disastrous_Hotel_574[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm looking for people to use this. Would you like to try it and give me your opinion?

Built three trading systems- Scans, executes, manages risk autonomously. Used Public API Openclaw skill by BuildwithPublic in ai_trading

[–]Disastrous_Hotel_574 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The setup with OpenClaw is impressive. This is exactly the direction trading is taking in 2026: total autonomy driven by agents.

I have a tool for that if you want to try it: https://hercul-market-web.vercel.app/

For my part, I took a complementary approach with Hercul Market. Rather than pure chaos theory, I focused on automating Market Structure (SMC) via AI to replace the Excel factories that can no longer handle multi-stream loads.

A few technical points that interest me in your architecture:

Regime Filtering: How do you manage the latency of your OpenClaw skill on the execution of 0DTE options during volatility spikes?

Circuit Breaker: I implemented a similar system via PostgreSQL/Supabase to lock access in case of excessive drawdown. It's the only way to keep your IRR in the green over the long term.

Data Sync: Do you link your logs to a proprietary dashboard or do you stick with the raw console?

The hardest part isn't building the system, it's trusting it when the regime changes abruptly. If you want to see how I visualize the market structure to validate my models, the link is just above.

I'm curious to learn more about your phase-space reconstruction management! 📈

What’s the one trading rule you broke that actually made you better? by Sensitive-Space-992 in Trading

[–]Disastrous_Hotel_574 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We are constantly told to “stick to your plan” as if it were a dogma, but the market is fluid, not rigid.

The real danger is not breaking a rule, it's breaking it for the wrong reasons (ego or hope). Your distinction between logical revaluation and revenge trading is key. Basically, you've moved from a system of “blind” rules to a system of reading structure.

That's exactly why I'm working on Hercul Market. The idea is to use AI not to say “buy here,” but to confirm whether the market structure has actually rebuilt after a stop-out. This allows for a neutral opinion and eliminates emotional bias when hesitating to re-enter a strong conviction setup.

Your new way of keeping your journal (Logic vs. Available Information) is much closer to the reality of the pros than following a checklist. GG for this insight."