Based on public data estimates, the actual market value of top speculative funds' holdings after the New Year is in the range of 3 to 5 billion. They have focused on 7 to 8 individual stocks, all pointing towards the two major sectors of commercial aerospace and AI applications. This allocation somewhat reflects the market's top trend detectors' sense of direction. However, a turning point occurred last Wednesday when the market began to warm up and adjust. The related stocks have since declined for four consecutive trading days, with some individual stocks experiencing a maximum drop of over 40%. The localized damage has approached the level of the "530" crash years ago. Interestingly, during this wave of market activity, the operations of speculative funds have generally not been very smooth. The elevator-like fluctuations left many with minimal gains and also subjected them to public criticism. The transition from holdings to actual returns is clearly not that simple.
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LiquidationHunter
· 5h ago
The hot money really crashed this time. A 40% drop would make anyone vomit blood, and they'd still get criticized? Haha, this cracks me up.
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GamefiHarvester
· 5h ago
Speculative funds of 3-5 billion can't withstand this round of sell-off. It seems that aerospace and AI can't save this market either.
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NFTBlackHole
· 5h ago
The hot money also got burned this time. Everyone says smart money has a keen sense, but it still ended up falling in the elevator, haha.
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fren.eth
· 5h ago
The hot money also crashed, with 3 to 5 billion still being manipulated. The dreams of aerospace and AI are shattering a bit too quickly.
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LazyDevMiner
· 6h ago
A 40% decline, even the hot money has to take a hit. The aerospace and AI sectors are really that fragile.
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LiquidityWhisperer
· 6h ago
Alright, here we go again with the story of "keen senses" turning into being trapped, how did the two tracks of commercial spaceflight and AI become diving boards?
The elevator-style fluctuations are spot on; this is the daily life of hot money. Holding positions beautifully and making money from holdings are two different things.
Based on public data estimates, the actual market value of top speculative funds' holdings after the New Year is in the range of 3 to 5 billion. They have focused on 7 to 8 individual stocks, all pointing towards the two major sectors of commercial aerospace and AI applications. This allocation somewhat reflects the market's top trend detectors' sense of direction. However, a turning point occurred last Wednesday when the market began to warm up and adjust. The related stocks have since declined for four consecutive trading days, with some individual stocks experiencing a maximum drop of over 40%. The localized damage has approached the level of the "530" crash years ago. Interestingly, during this wave of market activity, the operations of speculative funds have generally not been very smooth. The elevator-like fluctuations left many with minimal gains and also subjected them to public criticism. The transition from holdings to actual returns is clearly not that simple.