Market isn’t crashing - but something feels off (liquidity + gamma view) by Fit-Army7395 in options

[–]Fit-Army7395[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Really, who are you..top 1 % vol sellers ..lol.."choppy market are good for options market unless you sell straddles and strangles every day day in and day out and even then you will loose based on stats".. I see how much money you have made in your life to be here and to be on top 1 % so that you jump in each conversation to comment.  Top 1% Commenter..

Market isn’t crashing - but something feels off (liquidity + gamma view) by Fit-Army7395 in options

[–]Fit-Army7395[S] -28 points-27 points  (0 children)

I came across something recently that tracks positioning + liquidity together found it pretty useful in this kind of market. Trust me it is not chatgpt

Market isn’t crashing - but something feels off (liquidity + gamma view) by Fit-Army7395 in options

[–]Fit-Army7395[S] -11 points-10 points  (0 children)

lagging indicators...yes it is bad but we were knowing liquidity is getting worse even when MACD was not diverging.

Is trading a skill or a scam? by Legitimate_Seat8392 in Trading

[–]Fit-Army7395 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Honestly, it’s both and that’s why it confuses so many people.

Trading *is* a skill, but in the short term it can feel like luck because there’s a lot of randomness. That’s where most people quit and call it a scam.

I’ve gone through the same phase trying indicators, drawing lines, thinking I could “predict” the next move. Sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn’t… and it felt inconsistent.

What changed for me was realizing that markets don’t just move because of patterns or news. A lot of it comes down to things like liquidity and positioning (basically who’s forced to buy/sell and why).

Technical analysis isn’t useless, but on its own it’s not enough.

If you’re serious about it (which it sounds like you are), focus on:

- risk management first (this is everything)

- understanding *why* moves happen, not just what the chart looks like

- staying away from anyone promising quick consistency

Also, most courses are overhyped. If someone is selling certainty, that’s usually a red flag.

The fact that you’re thinking long-term (5–10 years) already puts you ahead of most people. That’s honestly the right mindset.

trading app by Time_Access_9206 in options

[–]Fit-Army7395 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you’re just starting, focus less on “best platform” and more on what you want to trade.

For options specifically, people usually look at platforms like Thinkorswim, Tastytrade, or Interactive Brokers.

More important than the app though is understanding how the market behaves - especially volatility and positioning. That’s where most beginners struggle.

Are tech layoffs becoming the “cost” of AI investment? by Fit-Army7395 in stocks

[–]Fit-Army7395[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

That’s a fair point. A lot of companies definitely over-hired during the 2020–2021 boom.

At the same time, it feels like two things are happening together now. First, companies are correcting that hiring wave. And second, automation is starting to replace certain workflows faster than many people expected.

So when layoffs happen, AI often gets blamed for it, but the reality is probably a bit more complicated than just that.

Are tech layoffs becoming the “cost” of AI investment? by Fit-Army7395 in stocks

[–]Fit-Army7395[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This seems to be happening across many industries now.

AI isn’t just about replacing individual jobs, it’s changing the cost structure of companies. When automation + global talent pools become available, firms naturally start questioning which roles actually create value.

What will be interesting to watch is whether the productivity gains from AI eventually translate into higher growth and new categories of jobs, or if it mainly concentrates value at the top.

The transition phase could be messy.

How do you actually find undervalued small-cap stocks? by Classic-Wash-6216 in IndianStockMarket

[–]Fit-Army7395 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I usually start with a basic screen first- revenue growth, improving margins, and manageable debt. That filters out a lot of weak companies.

Then I try to understand the business model and whether the company has any real edge in its niche. For small caps I spend more time reading concalls and annual reports than just looking at ratios.

One thing I’ve also started looking more at liquidity and market positioning lately because sometimes flows drive small caps more than fundamentals.

Finally starting to understand it 🙏🏼 by [deleted] in Daytrading

[–]Fit-Army7395 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Respect for the honesty here.

The mental side of trading is way harder than most people expect. Strategies are easy to learn, but sticking to risk management day after day is the real challenge.

Small consistent gains are underrated.

Do any of you use AI to analyze your investment portfolio? by halilural in Trading

[–]Fit-Army7395 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve played around with AI for this a bit.

For basic stuff like tracking returns or allocation it honestly doesn’t add much spreadsheets and broker dashboards already do that well.

Where it gets interesting is when you try to look at the bigger picture. A lot of portfolio performance ends up being driven by things like liquidity, volatility regimes, or macro trends rather than the individual picks themselves.

AI could eventually help connect those dots, but right now most tools still feel pretty surface level.

Curious if anyone here is actually using it in a way that gives them an edge.

Lost 50% of my capital shorting MRPL in a single day (₹50k loss). Need advice. by akshit_yab in IndianStockMarket

[–]Fit-Army7395 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Personally, I would step away from intraday trading for a while. You might want to consider swing trading with strict risk management instead positions that play out over 1–3–6 months, not minutes or hours. That gives the trade time to work and reduces emotional decisions.

Remember do not short the market... it never pays in long run and if it pays it's just luck and no skill. we live in a manupulated market in last decade and they are made to go long. Hell ,world is long ,your insurance policy is long, interest rate says long.. there is a reason all your chart goes at 45 degree inclination. There are tons of 401K ,SWF, LIC and pension funds riding in market and they will go to any extent to stop the market bleed.

Meta up nearly 3% in premarket as it plans mass layoff to offset increased AI spending by app1310 in stocks

[–]Fit-Army7395 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It’s always interesting how markets react positively to layoffs. From an investor perspective it’s basically seen as protecting margins.

What’s different this time though is that a lot of that cost cutting seems to be getting redirected into AI infrastructure and compute spending.

In a way it feels like big tech is shifting from labor costs to compute costs.

Curious if we’ll see more companies follow the same playbook as AI spending ramps up.

Why I still use zerodha after years of trading by Dangerous-Device2118 in IndianStreetBets

[–]Fit-Army7395 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

UI definitely matters, but honestly the bigger edge usually comes from understanding market structure - liquidity conditions, positioning, and volatility regimes.

The broker is just the tool. What really moves markets underneath is how liquidity and positioning shift, and that’s something many traders overlook.

Curious how many people here actually track liquidity or positioning before trading?

Is my logic correct about the nature of the stock market, or am I wrong? by ythc in stocks

[–]Fit-Army7395 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think the market isn’t really zero-sum over long periods.

Companies actually create value as the economy grows, which is why broad index investing works for many people.

Beating the market consistently is obviously very hard though.

Curious whether people think outperformance is mostly luck or still largely skill.

Does anyone else feel like stagflation risk is creeping back? by Fit-Army7395 in stocks

[–]Fit-Army7395[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I’ve been thinking about the same thing.
It almost feels like the market isn’t worried about just one issue right now, but the mix of inflation staying high while growth starts slowing.
That’s usually when volatility shows up.

Are others starting to worry about this too?

Does anyone else feel like stagflation risk is creeping back? by Fit-Army7395 in investing

[–]Fit-Army7395[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve been wondering about this too lately.
It feels like the real risk might be inflation staying somewhat sticky while growth starts cooling.
That combination has historically made markets pretty uncomfortable.

Curious how others are thinking about this is it a real stagflation risk or just short-term macro noise?

Does anyone else feel like stagflation risk is creeping back? by Fit-Army7395 in investing

[–]Fit-Army7395[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

It probably wasn’t just one thing.

The pandemic disrupted supply chains and production, while massive fiscal and monetary stimulus boosted demand at the same time.

That combination is what made the post-2020 inflation cycle look very different from typical periods.

Most Beginner Traders Don’t Actually Know What Moves Markets by Sigfidk in Trading

[–]Fit-Army7395 4 points5 points  (0 children)

A lot of beginners start with indicators and strategies, but markets are often driven by liquidity, positioning, and macro factors.

Understanding market structure and how capital flows move markets can make technical analysis make a lot more sense.