Tiger Friday

Weekend is coming! Have fun at Tiger Friday events & have a great weekend ahead!

avatarFrisbee
04-15 19:05
My first superpower would be the ability to see the exact price of any stock exactly three minutes into the future. On the surface, that sounds incredible. Imagine being able to know whether a stock will go up or down within minutes. I could stare at the screen and confidently say, “Yes, this stock will be 0.5% higher in three minutes.” Unfortunately, trading rarely works that conveniently. By the time I place an order, adjust the price, and wait for it to be filled, the three minutes would already be over. Sometimes the price would move in the exact opposite direction immediately afterward. So while I technically know the future, it would only help me feel slightly smarter while still losing money in the long run.
avatarkoolgal
04-13
🌟🌟🌟I would like the ability to "buy low and sell high" as a superpower.  While it is sounds deceptively simple, it is considered  a super power because consistently achieving it requires overcoming market volatility, human emotion and timing. However this "superpower ' is sometimes perceived as useless as lows and highs are usually only obvious in hindsight, making it difficult to act on them in real time. Attempting to time the market such as buying low can sometimes lead to missing out on even higher highs. So instead of trying to buy low and sell high, I believe it is much better to buy and hold.   This way I can profit from the magic of compounding, creating a snowball effect that accelerates wealth growth over time. Warren Buffett has famously said "My life has be
avatarShyon
04-13
If I had to pick a funny but mostly useless stock-trading superpower, I’d choose the ability to know exactly when I’m about to buy the top. Not to stop myself—just to be fully aware of it in real time. Imagine clicking “buy” & a voice in my head goes, “Congrats, you’ve just nailed the local peak.” Painful, but at least I’d have zero illusions about my timing. A close second would be understanding what CEOs really mean during earnings calls. Like when they say “we’re seeing strong long-term opportunities,” my superpower translates it instantly to “next quarter might be rough.” It wouldn’t make me rich, but it would definitely save me from overinterpreting all the polished corporate optimism. At the end of the day, I’d still go with the “buying the top detector” because it perfectly sum
avatarAqa
04-12
🔪🔪🔪🩸🩸 Catching falling knifes to lose money and let my friends laughed at me time and again is one stock-trading superpower I have. A falling knife is a rapid, steep decline in share price within a few trading days. Grabbing a falling knife is highly risky and should be avoided. Why are we still doing it? We do it because we want to secure a “bargain“ price. We use technical analysis to identify support levels to catch the stock. Catching a falling knife can be profitable when the market overreacts to bad news, causing a temporary dip for a fundamentally sound company. The emotional satisfaction that accompanies the monetary gains is highly addictive. It makes one feel like shooting all the way to the moon! 🚀🚀🚀 But sadly it is a bit useless to me because I failed most of the time. Thanks
avatarECLC
04-12
Funny but useless stock-trading "superpower" reminds of selling profitable stock to "fund" buying of long-term undervalued stock.
avatarMrzorro
04-11
I think I already have my "funny but useless stock trading superpower" which is Unbreakable "Diamond Hands": The ability to hold a worthless stock forever, convinced it will break even [LOL] [Cry]This superpower may extend to another superpower which is "Buying the DIP" [Spurting]

[Events] If You Could Have One Funny but Useless Stock-Trading Superpower, What Would It Be?

What if one day, you suddenly got a superpower…But not the kind that makes you rich overnight. Not the kind that guarantees every trade goes up. And definitely not the kind that turns you into Warren Buffett. Instead, it’s a mostly useless but funny stock-trading superpower. Maybe it’s: Knowing when you’re about to buy the top Understanding what CEOs really mean on earnings calls Getting a warning before every FOMO trade Or seeing whether a rally is real… or just a trap Sounds useless? Maybe. So here’s today’s question: If you could choose one funny but mostly useless superpower for trading stocks, what would it be? How to participate Comment below and share your dream “stock-trading superpower.” Rewards We’ll pick a few fun replies and send out 100 Tiger Coins. Events Duration From 10 Apr
[Events] If You Could Have One Funny but Useless Stock-Trading Superpower, What Would It Be?
My biggest trading weakness is never cut loss. I do not want to sell at loss. I will hold on the shares with hope that it will recover back 1 day. However, out of 10 shares that I hold on, only 1 will come back alive and the rest is delisted or remain lowest price without any sign of turning round. I still want to learn how to cut loss.
My one thing I want to achieve is to buy more stock especially OCBC or Sheng Siong
My biggest trading mistake is when stock price is high I never sell. I will keep holding and cos I trading for long term 😅 @TigerEvents
avatarAqa
03-23
❤️Love is my biggest trading weakness❤️I tend to form emotional attachment and forget to cut my loser stocks while they “will not love me back". We Should Not "Love" Our Stocks For 4 reasons. Emotional Decision Making: Falling in love causes us to hold on to loser stocks for too long and incur significant losses. Neglecting Fundamentals: Emotional attachment to a company's "story" or CEO can prevent us from recognizing that the stock's price has exceeded its intrinsic value. Ignoring Portfolio Diversification: Investors who love a particular stock often fall into the trap of overconcentrating their portfolio in that single, beloved company. Refusal to Sell Losers: Emotional investors often refuse to sell losing stocks, treating them like "pet" stocks rather than realizing that an inves
avatarAlfano
03-22
weakest weakness is fall in love and all in into one stock, and what make it worst it is a US stock that doesn't give dividend and need to maintain by paying adr fee. it will just getting worse in bear market and dca is the stupidest mistake I ever made. Now cut loss and change strategy. will only buy stocks that going to hold for life and giving dividends. will definitely get my loss back, even if it takes long or longer time.
avatarECLC
03-22
Biggest trading weakness? Tends to keep buying and take quick profit but do not cut loss. No idea to fix as funds run low.
I am relatively new to trading hoping it to supplement my income. My biggest weakness is not able to identify opportunities timely, going in at a right time and selling it at a right time to gain profit.
avatarAlubin
03-22
Biggest trading weakness is still trying to aim for the best price or the lowest price. Will try to be more objective and focus on just profit, be it big or small.
Not able to decide when a sinking ship has sunk.
I have two weaknesses actually. 1. Not knowing when to take profit. I continue to hold until the stock dips. 2. Continue holding losing stocks in hopes of recovery until it is 50% or more down. Should sell earlier than that. Both comes down to mindset. In first case greed waiting for more profits. In case two it is not wanting to book losses.
avatarMrzorro
03-22
My biggest trading weakness is dont know how to cut loss and keep chasing and buying the dip, hope for the stock to rebound or recover. After a significant loss, I believe I need to know when to cut loss or stop buying the dip. If not the loss will keep increase and in the end nothing left but debt. Is is good to set a line or selling price to cut loss. [Blush]
cut loss and don't bag hold
avatarWayneqq
03-22
I think most traders will face this problem.. when the stock falls below your "cut loss" price.. do you sell and cut loss immediately or hope that this is just a fake engineered by the big guys who is trying to run the stops to force you to sell early only for the price to spike up later.. how long to wait.. and when to realise the drop is real and to really cut loss.... I guess retail investors like us will never be able to tell... That is my weakness.. To hold for too long... Even when it is obvious the train has left...