NVDA, you’ve got to hold up here. I still believe in you

I bought in around $172 in early April, watched it grind all the way up to $236, and now it can’t even hold $200. Are you guys still trimming or already out of your positions?

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u/Logical-Setting940 — 6 days ago

MU's earnings report is finally out, and the stock surged 13% in after-hours trading what’s your take?

MU’s earnings today were absolutely explosive: Q3 revenue hit $41.46 billion, far exceeding the market expectation of $35.4 billion a beat of over $6 billion. They also issued Q4 guidance of $50 billion, whereas analysts had been projecting only $43.5 billion. The stock jumped 13% in after-hours trading

To be honest, I’ve held MU for a long time and weathered days where it plunged 13%; today, I’ve finally made up for those previous losses. Are you planning to keep holding when the market opens tomorrow, or will you lock in some profits?

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u/Logical-Setting940 — 7 days ago

I am originally from India and have been working in the U.S. for about six months now. I’m looking to open a local brokerage account here do you have any recommendations?

I am 45 years old and work at a hospital in Florida. I moved here from India late last year and have been living in the U.S. for roughly six months. Since I am currently considering gradually transferring some of my investments from my Indian accounts to local U.S. accounts—and because I may be settling here for the long term I want to seriously open a dedicated U.S. brokerage account

I previously used IndMoney to trade U.S. stocks, and the experience was decent. However, since arriving in the U.S., I feel that having a local account would be much more convenient; the currency exchange rates involved with international platforms are simply too costly. I’ve done some research on IBKR (Interactive Brokers) and Robinhood; while IBKR seems professional, it also appears quite complex. Given my situation, I’d like to ask: would I be eligible to open an account with Fidelity or Robinhood? If not, is IBKR my best option? Are there any other brokerage firms you would recommend that aren't overly complicated?

My investment strategy primarily involves buying broad-market ETFs and leading tech stocks. I focus mainly on long-term holding, though I occasionally engage in short-term swing trading. My net worth is approximately $1.1 million. I would greatly appreciate sincere advice from experienced investors especially those who, like me, moved here from India and are working stably in the U.S. but whose residency status hasn't yet been fully finalized. How did you handle your stock accounts? Did you continue using an international broker, or did you switch to a local U.S. brokerage firm? Which provider offers the most convenient tax reporting documentation?

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u/Logical-Setting940 — 1 month ago

I am originally from India and have been working in the U.S. for about six months now. I’m looking to open a local brokerage account here do you have any recommendations?

I am 45 years old and work at a hospital in Florida. I moved here from India late last year and have been living in the U.S. for roughly six months. Since I am currently considering gradually transferring some of my investments from my Indian accounts to local U.S. accounts and because I may be settling here for the long term I want to seriously open a dedicated U.S. brokerage account

I previously used IndMoney to trade U.S. stocks, and the experience was decent. However, since arriving in the U.S., I feel that having a local account would be much more convenient; the currency exchange rates involved with international platforms are simply too costly. I’ve done some research on IBKR (Interactive Brokers) and Robinhood; while IBKR seems professional, it also appears quite complex. Given my situation, I’d like to ask: would I be eligible to open an account with Fidelity or Robinhood? If not, is IBKR my best option? Are there any other brokerage firms you would recommend that aren't overly complicated?

My investment strategy primarily involves buying broad-market ETFs and leading tech stocks. I focus mainly on long-term holding, though I occasionally engage in short-term swing trading. My net worth is approximately $1.1 million. I would greatly appreciate sincere advice from experienced investors especially those who, like me, moved here from India and are working stably in the U.S. but whose residency status hasn't yet been fully finalized. How did you handle your stock accounts? Did you continue using an international broker, or did you switch to a local U.S. brokerage firm? Which provider offers the most convenient tax reporting documentation?

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u/Logical-Setting940 — 1 month ago

Add more MU, or take a shot on NVDA?

After watching MU run all the way to 818 before, seeing it around 700 honestly feels pretty attractive. I already added twice last week around 760 and 730. My lowest entry was around 500.

Now I’m debating whether it still makes sense to keep adding to MU here, or save some cash to buy NVDA instead. Historically, NVDA tends to get hit after earnings pretty often, so there’s a decent chance tomorrow could be another dip and maybe a good opportunity to pick up more shares.

What would you guys do in this situation? Keep scaling into MU while the memory/AI story is still strong, or wait for a possible NVDA earnings pullback instead? Curious to hear different opinions

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u/Logical-Setting940 — 1 month ago