Reddit Posts
Last week's market performance and economic news review
What do y’all think about using ChatGPT for stock researching?
It’s 2024, how are you guys planning on taking advantage the “AI Craze”?
TSM - I was right, kind of, and i think there's still more value here.
My portfolio idea - Going into 2023 betting on supply chains
Taiwan Semi (TSMC) will be 'back to strong growth in 2024' - JPMorgan (holding small position)
Thinking about a higher growth portfolio for the new year.
$KO outperforms half of the Mag 7 in 2024 because of $NVO and $LLY
$INTC Israels : 3.2Billion for a Western Worlds TSM. And that ASML NM Machine. 5nm, 3nm, 2nm coming. No More Taiwan TSM China Fear.
How can normalized-diluted-EPS be increasing while total common equity decreases?
Canon, known for its cameras, launches ASML challenge with machine to make the most advanced chips
ASML Misses Earning Huge. EPS 4.81 vs 4.99 est, Rev 6.67B vs 7.31B est
If China invades Taiwan would ASML explode or crash?
Time for the AI bubble to Pop out.
What allocation approach is implied by Toby Nangle's new FT article on narrow markets driving equity returns?
Tesla CEO Elon Musk: 'We're using a lot of Nvidia hardware'
So with both ASML and TSM(C) earnings/calls complete how do we feel for the future of AI/semi-conductor chips sentiment?
ASML- reporting on 7-19. I bought 740 strike call, Aug 18 expiry.
How to decide from which exchange to buy a stock from in a dual listing NASDAQ: ASML vs AMS: ASML?
Samsung Electronics makes 17-fold gains from investment in ASML
The future picks and shovels of AI may not be GPUs but ASICs, following the crypto trajectory. GOOGL and the dreaded Samsung appear to be the leaders in this space. What is the highest-weighted Samsung ETF and what are other industry-leading AI FPGA/ASICs tickers?
The Giant Behind AI Technology: ASML Holdings N.V.
ASML sales and gross margin beat guidance, but continues to see mixed demand signals
Investment Strategy China Invasion of Taiwan + interefence USA
List of public companies that are integral to AI?
Nvidia released a new "nuclear bomb", Google chatbot is also coming, computing power stocks again on the tide of halt
Daily U.S. Stock Market News Flash (Thursday, March 9)
Why did ASML stock drop 5% between 13:30 and 14:40 CET (Amsterdam time)?
Ride the AI Roller Coaster to Strike Gold: Invest in NVIDIA, ASML, and TSMC and step into the future.
AMD, Nvidia lead chips lower as results from Texas Instruments, ASML spurs caution
There‘s a massive earnings week coming up. All Betards looking for Tesla. I‘m more interested in Blackstone, ASML, Microsoft, Credit card companies, 3M and Intel.
Semiconductor. how did other countries become #1 and not USA?
What are some good semiconductor stocks to hold long-term?
Are these tech stocks all worthy of long term investment?
A globally critical chip firm (ASML) is driving a wedge between the U.S. and Netherlands over China tech policy
What is holding the US back from global semiconductor dominance?
Market Weekly Recap: FAAMG, Chip, Software Sectors jumped heavily, coin market tumbled
must read book to under stand the semi conductor industry - Chip wars, chip shortages - etc
Is ASML a less risky semi conductor play because it is not based in China/Taiwan?
Powell did exactly as i thought yesterday which makes me even more bullish now
Market Weekly Recap: Streaming, Chips, Airline Stocks Led the Gain, Tesla Earnings Alarmed the Tech
ASML shrugs off slowdown, U.S. China sanctions, reports strong Q3 earnings
ASML, a major global chip company, jumps 6% after earnings; do you think semiconductor stocks are about to start rising sharply?
Semiconductor route wipes out $240 Billion from chipmakers - TSMC drops 8.3% and Samsung and Tokyo Electron also declined.
Signs are piling up that the tech downturn may be deeper and longer-lasting than feared.
Mentions
Isn’t Mistral French ? [update] Google says: Mistral, an AI gem co-founded by two X graduates, doubles its valuation to €12 billion. French artificial intelligence champion Mistral has almost doubled its valuation to €11.7 billion following a new round of fundraising that saw Dutch semiconductor manufacturing equipment giant ASML acquire a stake in the company.10 Sept 2025
Always the Bashing that EU stocks are irrelevant. I hold US tech through QQQ and a EU ETF ( which has little tech ) and actually I do pretty well this way. The EU etf grows pretty stable without a lot of tech / AI exposure outside of ASML. Accumulating ETF so any dividends get reinvested. Not doing bad at all. Yes its not as high growth, but consistent returns year on year. No overvalued stocks you really have to worry about and less worry for me about exchange rate risk. And no hedging is not worth it over long term 20 year plus. Take out magnificent 7 from S&P500 and performance would be worse than the EU ETF. So yes I take the qqq and other US stocks for higher growth more risk and keep a stable foundation of EU stocks. Its not terrible in returns. Without the EU stocks, return this year would be lower.
I would do ungodly things for an ASML stock split
What do they sell? What is their moat? It seems that companies can spin up usable AI LLMs pretty quickly. I know reddit hates Elon, but he was able to bring Grok online very quickly, and it is a totally acceptable AI model for most applications. 3 years ago, this stuff felt like magic. Now every 3 months a different AI player is taking the crown. Currently Gemini is my personal favorite, but three months ago it was Grok, and a year ago it was ChatGPT. So, what is ChatGPT going to sell or create that makes them irreplaceable? They don't have a sticky ecosystem like Apple. They don't have a foothold in software like Microsoft. They don't produce the picks and shovels like NVidia, ASML, or TSM.
ASML on a non stop pumperoni
No mention of TSM or ASML? Cute graph I guess..
Sure, tell me. How many companies have been in the exact same position in such an extremely hard market to penetrate? Tell me. It’s like saying ASML will soon be overthroned by an emerging company, they won’t. The reality here is that CUDA is proprietary. And will still be a proprietary technology in the future. Intel is a joke when it comes to GPU’s and AMD, as good as they are, still are not in the same ballpark. Feel free to save the comment and come back in a year or two.
Nope. Novo has crashed and ASML is the largest by market cap in Europe I believe.
As per google: "Broadcom (AVGO) does not build TPUs (Tensor Processing Units) entirely on its own; rather, it has a long-standing partnership with Google to help design and manufacture them. **Google designs the proprietary architecture of its TPUs**, which are a type of Application-Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC). " \--- It's literally googles proprietary architecture - they design them. There are always a ton of people with hands in the pie / helping to build hardware - the important thing is who owns the final product. You stated "avgo is basically the one with the TPUs". That is blatantly false - the ownership & architecture & final product lies with Google. That makes it theirs. There are 100 companies with their hands in the pie of every piece of hardware we use today (ie: MU, TSMC, ASML, AVGO, etc, etc). The only thing that really matters is who owns the final product. Yes, AVGO plays a large part in the R&D of TPUs, but they are googles.
If you’re thinking long-term, it’s probably safer to look at the big, established memory and semiconductor suppliers rather than small speculative plays. Companies like Micron, Samsung, and SK Hynix are already scaling production and have the capital, infrastructure, and customer base to ride this AI-driven demand. Also consider some of the equipment suppliers like ASML or Applied Materials—they don’t make memory themselves, but their machines are essential for production, so they benefit indirectly from every new fab being built. These aren’t “guaranteed” by any means, but they’re much less likely to be wiped out by a bubble compared to tiny startups.
You can better invest in ASML then usa semi stocks asml is green and go big green end of year
What I do not get is why ASML is also down.
It's because ASML is a lagging pick. They sell only a few machines an year and the AI boom won't hit their books until another 6 to 18 months from now. Been holding ASML for a while but with where they're situated in the supply chain they're not an immediate ROI sorta company like Nvidia. Only now they're starting to see their number start to tick up since when it comes to FABs they're the last in line in terms of seeing the returns.
This. Nobody knows the real picks and shovels dealers for AI and it shows. TSM and ASML should be booming. Without them, these advanced chips dont see the light of day.
Also doesn't make sense how ASML is down. They are needed to supply the machines to TSMC so more chips can be build.
ASML is only 10% of NVIDIA's market cap and 27% of TSMC's (but 2x Intel), so they could be doing better imho
TSMC, Samsung, and Intel are 70% of ASML's revenue. It has much less opportunity for price gauging compared to MSFT, GOOG or META. It is locked into a symbiotic relationsship with it's customers, not a parasitic.
TSM, but indirectly ASML especially if TSM starts mass building new fabs
ASML has only one large customer
ASML is the real winner here
I learned not to barrel into stocks that had a headline but that I knew little about. I learned to be patient and follow a stock for awhile before acting - I watched ASML for a couple of years before finally starting to buy early this year, for example. I like low debt, ROIC, cash flow, a good moat, actual profits. On the other hand I've hung onto dogs like DVN for too long. Will the reinvesting dividends and waiting for someone to buy them for their valuable assets eventually work? We'll see. Thank God I own alot of index etf's also.
Do you have an idea on how much time do you need to design a chip? Google TPU was launched in 2015. Then, you need fabs and capacity. Google is using TSMC, do you think TSMC can just press a button and increase their capacity without issues? Same with ASML and their machinery. You really need to learn a bit how all this works.
I did the math. Five years timeframe like the original article: | Region | With top 7 | Without top 7 | |----------------------------------|------------|----------------| | Europe – STOXX Europe 600 | +45% | +35% | | US – US large caps (Syntax 500) | +109% | +82% | So US still significantly outperforms Europe, but US's Mag7 are more meaningful than EU's top 7. **Methodology** - for the Europe's Mag7 equivalent I chose: 1. Schneider Electric – +196% 2. Hermès – +159% 3. ASML – +135% 4. SAP – +120% 5. AstraZeneca – +84% 6. Novo Nordisk – +56% 7. LVMH – +30%
The other 11 over the News: BNP.France BNVA.Spain EBS.Austria ROG.Swistzerland Enel.Italy Ora.France BA.UK SAF.France LDO.Italy ASML.Netherlands IFX.Germany
Probably ASML among them
I wouldn't buy ASML above 900 unless you plan to hold for a decade.
ASML was down 7% in one day last Friday.
We can analyze the current AI investment environtment as an economic system made up of multiple players (OpenAI, NVIDIA, ASML, Oracle, ...), each with their own incentives. For this system to be sustainable long-term incentives need to be aligned between players. Disclosure: right now they aren't. The entire AI investment hype relies on OpenAI. OpenAI is deeply unprofitable, they have around 13B$ annual losses, this is a basic economic equation: **Profit = price \* volume - costs** The core problem lies in costs, the enormous computing power required per prompt. And here is where it gets concerning for me: 1. Nvidia is a major investor of OpenAI. 2. If OpenAI made their business sustainable by reducing compute per prompt (optimizing models by requiring less GPU), then Nvidia revenue (or its expectations thereof) would fell because demand chips would shrunk. 3. Former point means Nvidia has no incentive to support a path where OpenAI turns out profitable by reducing costs variable. The other path for profitability is increasing the price \* volume component, and this is not a path forward either: 1. B2C OpenAI users are highly price-elastic, if OpenAI rises monthly suscription price to let's say +100$/month mosts users will leave for free or cheaper alternatives like Gemini or DeepSeek. So its a race to the bottom in terms of prices for these business model as competition increases. 2. B2B OpenAI users can be a bit more flexible, but even many SME won't be able to justify the cost, especially with open-source LLMs catching up fast. For it to be sustainable there should be massive ROI for AI implementation in these companies (cutting cost or increasing revenue). As a consequence If OpenAI increases price then price \* volume stays flat or even decreases, not solving the profitability issue. This is structurally unsustainable, just came to the conclusion this is a perversed system in terms of incentives.
There are strong concerns to claim this is a bubble. We can analyze the current AI investment environtment as an economic system made up of multiple players (OpenAI, NVIDIA, ASML, Oracle, ...), each with their own incentives. For this system to be sustainable long-term incentives need to be aligned between players. Disclosure: right now they aren't. The entire AI investment hype relies on OpenAI. OpenAI is deeply unprofitable, they have around 13B$ annual losses, this is a basic economic equation: **Profit = price \* volume - costs** The core problem lies in costs, the enormous computing power required per prompt. And here is where it gets concerning for me: 1. Nvidia is a major investor of OpenAI. 2. If OpenAI made their business sustainable by reducing compute per prompt (optimizing models by requiring less GPU), then Nvidia revenue (or its expectations thereof) would fell because demand chips would shrunk. 3. Former point means Nvidia has no incentive to support a path where OpenAI turns out profitable by reducing costs variable. The other path for profitability is increasing the price \* volume component, and this is not a path forward either: 1. B2C OpenAI users are highly price-elastic, if OpenAI rises monthly suscription price to let's say +100$/month mosts users will leave for free or cheaper alternatives like Gemini or DeepSeek. So its a race to the bottom in terms of prices for these business model as competition increases. 2. B2B OpenAI users can be a bit more flexible, but even many SME won't be able to justify the cost, especially with open-source LLMs catching up fast. For it to be sustainable there should be massive ROI for AI implementation in these companies (cutting cost or increasing revenue). As a consequence If OpenAI increases price then price \* volume stays flat or even decreases, not solving the profitability issue. This is structurally unsustainable, just came to the conclusion this is a perversed system in terms of incentives.
You make it seem like China is incapable of advanced manufacturing. They've got a space station for fucks sake. ASML has no competitors because of the cost to get caught up. It's not economical for another company to try. But China isn't a company, they're a nation very paranoid about self-reliance. At the end of the day NVDA is red despite the news, and massively down since the earnings pump. Take that as you will.
Go read the latest research in process nodes and you'll understand why on ASML is the only company in the world that can make these machines right now. These aren't fucking TEMU trinkets, retard. CUDA is so entrenched in the software stack and everybody uses CUDA. AMD can barely advance with its ROCm. Other companies can and will try but they will be distant second. TSMC already building 1.4nm fab. Of course they forecasts the supply and demand - that's why they are building MORE FABS. They will continue to build more as FORECASTED DEMANDS ARISE.
I just started investing individual stocks last Wednesday just before the start of this volatile period so I’ve been buying dips daily ever since. It’s only 5% of my total portfolio so it’s acceptable risk. I’m dip buying all in my portfolio: Nvidia Alphabet Microsoft Apple ASML First Solar I did a lot of research into these and am in it for the long haul, the more red days the more i get these at discounts.
ASML and European listed NVD just dropped another 6% in morning trading, id get the holy fuck out guys. Close your account. Cash out. The bubble has popped and the recession is coming. Hide your money under the mattress and stock up for nuclear winter.
Nvidia will keep their margin no matter what prices the underlying companies will do, ASML sells machines at the price specified in contracts so they can't jack up the price whenever they want, and tsmc has to be somewhat careful with pricing, because if they go too far noone will buy newer nodes (or even switch to samsung/intel)
I’m not an expert, but with nvidia margins it seems like TSMC and ASML undercharge
ASML should be valued so much higher. They have the bleeding edge fab industry by the short and curlies.
Flawed logic as Nvidia doesn't directly employ those who manufacture the chips. Or all the licensing costs for software to design or utilize certain tech (like codecs for exmaple). But yeah a lot of money is gonna trickle down towards TSMC, which will trickle down to ASML, etc etc.
Because Europe is pretty irrelevant in tech. They have ASML, but that's it.
They will try, just like they are trying to replace ASML & TSMC. But keeping them hooked on the NVIDIA/AMD ecosystem with cut-down chips ensures they stay reliant on Western architecture rather than being forced to perfect their own (inferior... for now) alternatives immediately.
lmao wait till u see EU. Were gonna dismantle ASML and sell it for scrap metal
Why is now filling, upon US market Open? Not only Nvidia, but also ASML and AMD?
Can absolutely confirm. I was doing so much research, stock, sectorwide, regionalwide and did my own calculations and invested a lot of time in deciding where to invest my money. Tech just outperformed me several fold and I just dumb shifted most of my money to tech stocks, AMD, NVIDIA, Alphabet, ASML and others without doing much research before and the money just goes up. Feels terrible, but profits speak for themselves (for now)
1. each incremental dollar of revenue has more leverage than the previous dollar. 2. you’re comparing revenue to market cap, which makes sense but is highly industry and margin dependent 3. the much larger driver is they forecasted revenue $3.5B higher than expectations 4. at some point the beats just accumulate - they’re guiding for a $5.5B beat over 2 quarters, which is for sure undersold because it’s guidance and which is also about half as much revenue as ASML (just picking a big company here) generates on much higher gross margin
#NVIDIA SURGE SET TO FUEL YEAR-END TECH RALLY Wedbush Securities says Nvidia’s strong earnings and upbeat guidance should reignite the tech rally into year-end. Analyst Dan Ives calls it a “monster quarter,” with earnings and revenue—especially data-center sales—topping expectations. Most notably, Nvidia’s $65 billion sales outlook beat forecasts and is seen as a major catalyst for both the stock and the broader AI boom. Wedbush adds that concerns about an AI bubble are “way overstated,” and expects a strong day across semiconductor names like AMD, TSMC, and ASML.
That’s a dumb take. 30% of ASML’s revenue is from providing maintenance on old machines, that isn’t going to stop and if TSM and other customers cut their budget for new machines the maintenance costs are just going to increase giving ASML high margin consistent business. The net margins on the installed base segment is about 40% vs 25-30% for new machine sales. So ASML would be fine. It’s nothing like me doing everything I can to avoid updating my Epson printer and buying off brand ink
But who makes the lithography machines for TSM? ASML
The real shovels play is ASML. But TSM and NVDA, shit even AMD, are all pretty solid companies to own and at the forefront of the AI boom/bubble/revolution
This is why I only sold 70% of my ASML stake, not 100%. Take some gains, and let the rest ride.
its because Google just cooked with Gemini 3 and they don’t need Nvidia chips as they manufacture their own chips for AI inference (all still bottlenecked by TSMC and ASML though)
True and I guess it's this mutually assured destruction that keeps the peace. China can invade Taiwan, Taiwan can sabotage it, and the west can pull ASML out. So everybody just stay calm and we'll all continue getting our chips.
Hm that is a fair point, but I think Taiwan could do so themselves, and at that point they wouldn't have anything left to lose. It's also arguable that allowing China to gain access to technology and production sites we've been witholding for them for years would be worse than losing it altogether (with some production still possible in Korea). ASML could also make the decision themselves if they deem it a threat to their position (though said fabs rely on consistent ASML equipment and engineers anyway). But admittedly a fair point and the current person mostly in charge of western negotiation isn't very predictable I suppose
I've done well today. JNJ, GOOG and ASML have been my big picks for the last year. Sold a big chunk of my SP500 tracker today near the top in case the market dumps on NVDA earnings, will buy in again tomorrow regardless of the price. I feel like slightly down is more likely than up. Might even buy some MSTR because you KNOW a dumb bounce is coming.
Well, actually 🤓 Nvidia should be replaced by ASML in this picture. Without them, NVIDIA would not be where it is now
Fuck it elon why stop there? I hear ASML needs a competitor why don't you make the machines yourself too?
No, if TSM were to suddenly be wiped out, the entire semi industry would grind to a halt. TSM for security reasons has their 2nm chip to only be produced in Taiwan. Those machines are to be destroyed is the PRC was to invade. Factories outside of Taiwan can produce 4nm - 5nm chips which isn't cutting edge. Also you can't just buy the machine from ASML and make your own line. All companies tried to vertically integrate but it failed massively. TSM succeeded because they just put their entire business focus on that. Also it's not just the machines but the people who operate the line have the expertise to produce those chips at such efficiency (low counts of defects). The next option if TSM was to go down would realistically be Samsung but that's like giving your chip design to a rival who has conflict of interest. Then there's intel who are more likely to produce defective chips than effective ones. No one even comes close to TSM when it comes to foundry. That's why the entire semi industry depends on that one country and if Taiwan was to get invaded, the entire tech industry is going to grind to a halt.
like they're not trying to replicate EUV, the current most advanced cutting tech that only ASML has. They're going for a different approach that in theory would yield better results Forgot what the process revolves around though
I Think they're skipping ASML's EUV process and going straight to something more advanced
It's a sentiment thing at this point. Everyone was bullish on the infra costs until the last month. Remember $ORCL was worth $1T briefly with their outlandish forecast, now they're nearly down 40% in a few months. The energy bottleneck is the grid itself. > China pulling ahead because they have all the industry, metals and renewable energy infrastructure light years ahead. No, China has old ASML machines (at best) and no means of getting the latest NVDA chips. China is bottlenecked themselves but they have decided to do with what they can.
ASML anyway, how did that end?
That might be true in the long term, but players like AMZN, META, and GOOG can afford to make that gamble. These are AA rated companies who can borrow at cheaper rates that the US Treasury can. We won't know for a while if their debt fueled CAPEX bet pays off or not. In the short to medium term, huge continued demand from those companies for the products made by NVDA, TSM, ASML, and WDC figures to only get stronger on the back of these bond offerings.
Sold 70% of my ASML stake. With all the talk of the AI trade, I figured it was time to take profits and rotate to other opportunities after years of tumultuous holding.
I sold 70% of my ASML stake today. Been holding for a few years now. I thought it was time to take some well earned profits on the AI trade.
Maybe I'm stupid, but I don't understand why the consensus seems to be that META, Oracle, and Amazon issuing massive amounts of bonds to fund data center CAPEX is bearish for AI writ large. Won't that money be just be used to purchase more TSM and NVDA chips? It should be bullish for chip makers and ASML and data storage companies like STX and WDC.
I get the ethical reasoning and ASML is one of the top companies of the world. But If you want to make money with the stock you should buy low and sell high, not the other way around. And I think there is definitely not enough upside. Not much downside either, but you want to make money, not try to break even
30 is virtually a guarantee. They are powering the AI revolution. EVERYONE needs them. They only need TSM and ASML
I'm buying INTC next time it really dips. Maybe ASML too.
What made you invest in ASML in the first place? Is your thesis still intact?
28M, I have my 401k matched, roth ira the boring VOO, VT portfolios but I wanted advice on my brokerage stock portfolio. Holdings: Please advice any holdings I should add. I added companies that I believe can't be replaced in the long term for what they do and are diversified around the world. Cash: 27% QQQ: 18% GOOGL: 13% META: 9% MSFT: 9% BRK-B: 8% TSM: 6% ASML: 5% MELI: 5%
Whoever can replace ASML and do it well. Also, rare earth refinement. Sorely needed and it's never been more obvious. I'm very much not a pure play guy because I don't think that exists. Everything is interconnected.
margin compression vs continual improvements - depends on which one moves faster. Nvdia got to where they are today because they out-improved the competition in the last cycle. ASML yes - but pretty much a China risk exposure thing.
Hmm that's interesting but wouldn't that result in permanent margin compressions? But also seems like ASML will come out as the winner in this
probably a no no for Tesla and Oklo. ASML has great moat but growth potential seems to be limited from here. Consider diversifying to Finance/healthcare as you're too much into tech stocks. ELV/UNH for healthcare and consider PayPal/sofi for finance.
28M, I have my 401k matched, roth ira the boring VOO, VT portfolios but I wanted advice on my brokerage stock portfolio. Holdings: Please advice any holdings I should add. I added companies that I believe can't be replaced in the long term for what they do. Cash: 27% QQQ: 18% GOOGL: 13% META: 9% MSFT: 9% BRK-B: 8% TSM: 6% ASML: 5% MELI: 5%
AMAT, MDB, NFLX, GS, ASML. short LULU puts need a rally.
To be more concrete and less cheeky... I'd say "things that worked before, with a new cast, and lower expectations" \- INTC fits here, but has already run, they still sell large amounts of things people pay for, and got overlooked because they weren't selling the new thing. New cast with Lip-Bu working all the angles and getting noticed. \- Going forward, I think UBER fits. They're not a growth darling anymore, but still the #1 company in a couple different fields that aren't going anywhere. The new management isn't new anymore, but feels like they still don't get full credit for how many things they do. It's not cheap, but might see a couple trends converge to help them out. \- SLB (or really any "oil" stock) - I like SLB because they're on the service end, and have everything needed to transfer to geothermal if that ever becomes favored. Any pop in either sector helps them out and they're trying to rebrand. Low expectations, no reason they can't exceed. \- NVO - worked before and still has core assets that will print for a long time, refocusing, new leadership, and the drama has them just too cheap right now... think ASML 6 months ago On the smaller side FUBO - teamed up with Disney, maybe you've heard of them. Low expectations because they have the less cool side of the streaming bundles, but sports are a thing people like ;) Right now priced like they're going to slowly evaporate. If they post even "mid" quarters, they should change multiples and start seeing effects of Disney selling ads and possibly bundles with ESPN/Disney+/etc... any subscriber growth plus any ARPU lift from ads or innovation and they get the share price out of "penny stock" land under $5, they could be in business. ACHV - gets labeled a biotech, but really licenses a known drug and are walking it through approvals to help people stop smoking. That's "worked before" with Chantix and other entries. Less people smoke, and that ship has sailed, but more people vape (new cast) and ACHV will be in line for early approval on that indication. Valued like speculative biotech, but with a $100M value voucher for accelerated approval that they can sell rather than dilute if needed.
which part exactly?.. Him rubbing his nose constantly?... The 2 times he mentions "*welders, plumbers & truck drivers*", pretending to care for the working class? When he tells the interviewer he should be asked a different question? When he brags about our military, without ever serving? Palantir's **AWESOME** support to deal with the Houthis? (that destroyed 3 F/A-18s and 7 MQ-9 reapers) When he makes up the story about PLTR Tesla drivers next to Bank Execs with broken down cars? When he forgets we rely on ASML (Dutch) and TSMC (Taiwan) for our AI chips? When he said bankers owe people money for saying not to buy Palatin at $6 or $12? When he says we shouldn't tolerate discrimination against white males? It was a cringe fest, sponsored by etoro, with softball questions provided in advance... and he fumbled. Whomever he looked at when repeating "I love it, I love it" was probably asking him to stop. Time stamp: [https://youtu.be/-6LakOrqDL4?t=937](https://youtu.be/-6LakOrqDL4?t=937)
Robinhood is so f-cked, It is gatekeeping trades for instant deposit by saying some are too volatile and some are not, I can buy PUTS in RUN, RBLX, and buy UVIX Calls, but if I want to buy an NFLX or ASML put it said no, I don't know if there is a monetary cap where I need to leave some left in or what but the odd rules are rubbing me the wrong way.
Dunno. I think it will rescue some of the direct AI plays (TSMC, SanDisk/SKHynix/Samsung for memory, maybe ASML, maaaybe AMD and Broadcom). But the underlying questions about the return on all this massive capex will still remain.
So the AI apocalypse continues huh. Probably going to derisk the port and ditch CEG and ASML. One thing the FOMC may not be considering as much, is what will happen to consumer spending if the market corrects to enters bear territory. The K shaped economy will flatline as the top10% households start pulling back as well.
What even are european stocks? Nebius, ASML, Bank of Africa? LMAO
This is exactly it I think. Everyone focuses on a handful of companies like NVIDIA, ASML, traditional big tech, which have paths to long-term profitability thanks to AI. They forget the current demand for these products is largely driven by a long-tail of “AI” companies which will all go under once the money faucet is turned off and investors realize they’re just objectively shit products with zero chance of ever turning a profit. I think when the bubble pops that long-tail will struggle to survive. The infra providers will take a big hit, but over time the surviving companies with practical use cases (so not some bullshit with “AI” slapped on the end for no reason) will thrive and infra providers will recover. I’ll personally be buying us as much possible at that point. I’d even go as far as to say the bubble bursting needs to happen at this point to clean out the bullshit, grifting, and incompetence.
Some people are getting killed. I'm beating the market nicely and one of my holdings is CSU, which I'm down on 30%. Three of my holdings (Nintendo, ASML, Google) make up the vast majority of my alpha.
!BanBet ASML -10% 2w
I know ASML is up 50% in the last 3 months but is it too much to ask for another 30%?
The top holdings in the Vanguard EX-US ETF are TSMC, Tencent, Alibaba, ASML & Samsung Electronics. Not exactly lowering your exposure to tech.
I’m bullish on semis and AI, just bearish on AMD. Nvidia, ASML and TSMC are the only stocks that can justify their valuations
Why choose Dutch bonds over the long term instead of ASML if we are looking at the Netherlands? It is a better short term defensive move, but in the long term, equities will very likely outperform. I would probably just buy bonds if I could predict the future very accurately.
NBIS is a Dutch company like ASML. They won’t pump the stock the stock like American companies do. So outlooks are always modest
Yes ASML lithographinator and Nvidia Cuda software engineer here 🥱
My port is 60% in asts but I gotta agree with you. It's short term neutral or slightly bearish. But long term, they will become ASML in communication space
So me and two buddies have been day trading options like responsible degenerates — solid data, deep analysis, backtesting the hell out of everything. We built a strategy that printed for weeks… and then the last two weeks came along and absolutely wrecked it. We broke the AI ecosystem into layers — NVDA obviously sits on the throne, but we actually ranked ASML higher because it’s basically the only company on Earth that can do what it does. Everything made sense… until the market decided logic was optional. Here’s the thing — day trading options is straight-up dangerous unless you have discipline. Hard stop losses. Strict entries and exits. No “I’ll just hold a bit longer.” That’s the quickest route from +80% to -100% before your coffee cools. Our core strategy: buy cheap short-dated calls (2-week expirations) on names our data flagged, hedge with puts for downside, roll and repeat. Simple — on paper. And honestly, if we’d just followed our damn plan, we’d be bathing in profit right now. Perfect example: IBM. We spotted that pop a week early. Our data was screaming at us. We even talked about how we’d play it… and then nobody pulled the trigger until it was already ripping on our screens. Moral of the story: the market doesn’t care how smart your model is if your discipline sucks. Don’t day trade options with money you can’t afford to lose. You’ll think it’s a cliche until it hits you in the face.