TigerHulk

Veteran Investor with more than 23 years of Investment Experiences

    • TigerHulkTigerHulk
      ·06-12
      $Alibaba(BABA)$ Bought 10 shares of BABA at US$111.48 as a calculated small position. I see the current risk reward as attractive for a longer term recovery play, especially with Alibaba’s e-commerce, cloud and AI exposure. Position size is controlled, and I’m not overcommitting. I will monitor earnings, China market sentiment and key support levels closely. This is a disciplined add, not a blind average down
      1.56K3
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    • TigerHulkTigerHulk
      ·06-10
      $Alibaba(BABA)$ Bought 100 shares of Alibaba at US$118.50. Entered near support after recent weakness. This is a calculated rebound trade, not a blind chase. Watching US$120 to US$122 as the first recovery zone, with risk controlled if price breaks below US$116.
      4.16K3
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    • TigerHulkTigerHulk
      ·04-22
      Tigerhulk Team is BACK. I am the Captain for Tigerhulk in 2023/2024/2025 https://tigr.link/s/30FWc0I Join my Team. Slots are limited, Act Fast.
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    • TigerHulkTigerHulk
      ·04-22
      $Exxon Mobil(XOM)$ I decided to sell my 30 shares of Exxon Mobil at 148.480 to lock in profits and stay disciplined with my trading plan. The stock had already moved to a level I was comfortable taking profit at, and I did not want to get greedy and risk giving back gains if the market turned. For me, consistent profit taking is more important than trying to catch every last cent. I would rather secure the win first and reassess for a better re entry later if the opportunity comes.
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    • TigerHulkTigerHulk
      ·04-17
      $Exxon Mobil(XOM)$ Locked in a fresh buy on XOM at 142.80 with 30 shares. This trade reflects my view that Exxon Mobil still offers solid value, backed by strong energy demand, resilient cash flow, and the ability to perform even in a mixed market environment. I see this entry as a calculated move rather than a random chase, with the aim of capturing both price appreciation and stability from a heavyweight name in the oil sector. Risk is always part of the game, but this position fits my strategy and conviction. Now it is about patience, monitoring momentum, and letting the setup play out properly over time. @TigerBrokers  @TigerCo
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    • TigerHulkTigerHulk
      ·04-17
      Locked in a fresh buy on $Exxon Mobil(XOM)$   at 142.80 with 30 shares. This trade reflects my view that Exxon Mobil still offers solid value, backed by strong energy demand, resilient cash flow, and the ability to perform even in a mixed market environment. I see this entry as a calculated move rather than a random chase, with the aim of capturing both price appreciation and stability from a heavyweight name in the oil sector. Risk is always part of the game, but this position fits my strategy and conviction. Now it is about patience, monitoring momentum, and letting the setup play out properly over time.
      1.36K1
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    • TigerHulkTigerHulk
      ·04-06
      $iShares Bitcoin Trust(IBIT)$ Locked in a clean profit on IBIT at 39.80. Took the gain while the market gave it. In this environment, small consistent wins matter more than chasing the last dollar
      6.35K1
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    • TigerHulkTigerHulk
      ·04-04
      Why the Market Still Feels Heavy Despite a Strong Jobs Report At first glance, the latest U.S. jobs report looked like the kind of data that should calm investors. March nonfarm payrolls rose by 178,000, far above expectations of around 60,000, while the unemployment rate edged down to 4.3% from 4.4%. After a weak February, that rebound should normally be taken as a reassuring sign that the world’s largest economy still has life in it. On paper, stronger employment means household incomes remain supported, corporate demand has not fallen apart, and recession fears do not need to spiral immediately. Yet despite that seemingly positive report, the market still feels heavy, cautious, and uncomfortable. That tells us something important. Investors are no longer reacting to one headline in isol
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    • TigerHulkTigerHulk
      ·04-02
      Today’s Market Message: Hope Is Gone, Fear Is Back Just one day can change everything in the market. After a brief wave of optimism earlier this week, global markets have turned defensive again. The reason is simple. Investors were hoping that the Iran conflict was moving toward de escalation, but the latest developments have crushed that narrative. Oil prices have surged sharply, equities are under pressure again, and markets are now preparing for a longer period of uncertainty rather than a quick return to calm.  This is now becoming the key market story. It is no longer just about geopolitics. It is about what higher oil prices could do to inflation, business costs, consumer sentiment and central bank policy. That is why today’s market environment feels so dangerous. When oil rises bec
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    • TigerHulkTigerHulk
      ·04-01
      Title: Why Smart Money Is Watching Corporate Deals, Not Just Stock Charts When markets turn volatile, most retail investors focus on one thing only: price action. Is the market up? Is the dip over? Is now the time to buy? But smart money often watches something deeper, something less emotional and sometimes more revealing than daily candles on a chart. It watches what companies themselves are doing with their money. Right now, that signal is becoming very interesting. Even with war fears, oil volatility, inflation worries, and shifting rate expectations, global dealmaking has not frozen. In fact, Reuters reported on April 1 that first quarter global mergers and acquisitions exceeded $1.2 trillion, setting a record pace, driven in part by Big Tech activity and AI related equity stakes. That
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