Nasdaq 10-Day Winning Streak; SPX New High Coming? Take Profits or Chase High?
On Tuesday, $S&P 500(.SPX)$ rose another 1.18%, and the Nasdaq surged 1.95%. $NASDAQ(.IXIC)$ has now logged 10 consecutive gains, marking its longest winning streak since November 2021!
A Historic Rally — Is This Time Really Different?
As of Tuesday’s close, the S&P 500 stood at 6,967.38, less than 0.2% away from its record closing high of 6,978 on January 27. The Nasdaq has risen for 10 straight sessions, matching its longest streak since November 2021.
Looking only at the index may underestimate the quality of this rally — what matters more is the breadth of the advance:
NYSE advancers vs decliners reached 2.62:1, with 363 stocks hitting 52-week highs
Both tech and financial sectors rose over 1.7% on Monday, while software ETFs surged 5.4% in a single day
Clear sector rotation: capital is not passively covering shorts, but actively chasing high-beta opportunities
This is not just a few mega-cap stocks pulling the index — this is risk appetite expanding systemically.
Chase the high or take profit now?
1) “80% of gains happen in 20% of the time. If you miss the strongest phases, your returns shrink significantly. You cannot avoid every downturn.”
This logic isn’t about reckless risk-taking — it reflects a harsh historical truth:
Most people endure the full drawdown, cut losses at the bottom, and then miss the rebound. Avoiding crashes is good, but missing the rally can be even more costly — because gains are non-linear and concentrated.
2) “Markets rise on expectations — good news is priced in ahead of time. By the time you feel it’s safe, the gains are already gone.”
This is a double-edged sword. Because the market has already priced in “risk easing,” any disappointment — such as troop escalation or renewed uncertainty in ceasefire talks — could trigger a sharp pullback.
The S&P 500 is less than 0.2% from its all-time high — further upside requires new catalysts.
April this year looks somewhat similar to April last year — after a strong rally, the market went through a consolidation phase. History doesn’t repeat exactly, but it often rhymes.
Discussion
Is your current positioning based on conviction in value, or simply following momentum?
After a 10-day Nasdaq rally, what’s your move?
What do you think is the biggest risk in this rally?
If you could only pick one direction: High-beta tech/software or Defensive value stocks
👉 Which side are you on? Leave your comments to win tiger coins!
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总结: 现在的举措不应是“满仓追涨”,而应是“在高位震荡中优化持仓结构,利用反弹腾挪现金空间”。
This logic isn’t about reckless risk-taking — it reflects a harsh historical truth:
Most people endure the full drawdown, cut losses at the bottom, and then miss the rebound. Avoiding crashes is good, but missing the rally can be even more costly — because gains are non-linear and concentrated.
That said, I respect the timing risk. With the index near all-time highs and geopolitical noise rising, a short-term pullback is likely. But I see it more as a positioning reset than a trend reversal — a shakeout before the next leg higher.
If I had to choose, I’m still on high-beta tech/software. That’s where capital is flowing and upside compounds fastest. I’d rather manage risk through sizing than rotate defensive too early — missing the strongest part of the move is usually the bigger cost.
@TigerStars @Tiger_comments @TigerClub