Apr 18, 20266 min
AMD today: the trend is real, but the stock is already very hot
As of the April 17, 2026 US close, AMD finished at $278.39, only about 0.6% below its 52-week high. If you are trying to decide what to do with the stock here, the useful questions are not abstract. You need to know whether the trend is still healthy, whether the setup is already too stretched, whether institutions are still aligned, and what the May 5 earnings report could change.
AMDStock AnalysisMomentumInstitutionsEarnings Watch AMD looks more like a high-volatility trend asset than an early low-risk breakout. The uptrend is intact, but the better entry is more likely on a pullback or after the next earnings confirmation.
Apr 17, 20264 min
Video: why StockFlow’s multi-timeframe view makes ORCL easier to read
This video shows why ORCL looks clearer when you read it across 63D, 126D, and 252D instead of forcing one single answer. The short window has already turned strong buy, the mid window has settled into hold, and the long window still carries a sell alert. That gives you a much better sense of what has changed, and what still has not.
ORCLStockFlowVideoTimeframe AnalysisProduct In StockFlow, ORCL looks very different across the 63D, 126D, and 252D windows. That makes it easier to see where the move has started, where it has become more stable, and where longer-term risk still remains.
Apr 16, 20264 min
✨Default Shift
✨ StockFlow now defaults to 63D: from long-horizon judgment to a more sensitive short-term timing view
StockFlow previously opened with a more long-horizon default, which fit users who favored value-oriented and slower-moving trend analysis. But in a market defined by faster rotations and sharper swings, users need a default view that reacts sooner. So we have promoted the existing 63D short-term mode, previously available inside the multi-timeframe experience for subscribers, into the default entry point.
Product UpdateTimeframeMarket Timing
This is a default-entry change, not the removal of the long-term lens. The 252D view and multi-timeframe workflow still remain, but StockFlow now opens on the 63D mode that is better suited for timing opportunities.
Apr 15, 20266 min
What StockFlow sees earlier than most screeners: ORCL is already turning in the short and mid windows
On April 15, 2026, ORCL shows the exact advantage of StockFlow’s timeframe view. The 63-day screen reads 57.1% strong buy, the 126-day screen has already moved to 16.8% hold, and the 252-day screen still shows a 34.7% sell alert. That is not inconsistency. It is a reversal unfolding in sequence.
ORCLStockFlowTimeframe AnalysisProduct Most platforms try to force one answer onto every holding period. StockFlow does the opposite: it lets the signal change where the change is actually happening. ORCL is a clean example of why that matters.
Apr 15, 20266 min
How to read today’s US market: the tape is holding in, but sector dispersion is the real story
In early trading on April 15, 2026, the S&P 500 was modestly positive and the Nasdaq 100 was stronger, while both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Russell 2000 were softer. The more important point is not the index level itself. It is the internal dispersion: communication services and technology are leading, financials are still constructive, while industrials, staples, and utilities are lagging and semiconductors are not confirming Nasdaq strength.
If yesterday’s session looked like a repair in risk appetite, today looks more like a test of structure: leadership is holding, but participation remains selective.
Apr 15, 20265 min
Oracle kept pushing higher today, then faded. What does that mean
In early trading on April 15, 2026, ORCL traded around $163, still about 4.7% above the April 14 close of $155.62, but clearly below the intraday high of $166.92. The market is no longer trading off a fresh catalyst. It is testing the strength of yesterday’s follow-through and the quality of support above the prior close.
ORCLPrice ActionFollow-throughAI Infra If April 14 was the re-pricing day for Oracle, then April 15 looks more like a validation day: can the stock keep holding above the breakout area, or does the move fade into ordinary profit-taking?
Apr 14, 20265 min
Was Oracle’s rally a technical reversal signal
From a technical perspective, the move looks more like a reversal attempt than a confirmed medium-term reversal. The real test is what happens after the surge.
ORCLTechnical AnalysisBreakoutTrend Oracle’s April 13 rally carried real technical weight, but the cleaner label is bullish reversal attempt rather than full trend reversal confirmation. The key question now is whether the stock can turn the 150-156 zone from resistance into support.
Apr 14, 20266 min
Why Oracle surged yesterday
This was not a single-catalyst rally. It was the combination of post-earnings momentum, fresh AI execution signals, and a broader market re-rating of Oracle as an AI cloud infrastructure beneficiary.
ORCLAI InfraCloudMarket Reaction If you are talking about Oracle on April 13, 2026, the stock’s move was a classic event-driven surge. But the bigger story is not one announcement. It is that investors are increasingly evaluating Oracle through a different lens.