Rally Day 69: NASDAQ-100 (QQQ) Reaches Our Intermediate-term Target; Nvidia reaches Annual Target; Assets are at The Top of their Ranges

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Bill H

Great to hear as always Sam. It’s always tempting to jump in when prices are high!

Alex Klap

This is very illuminating. It’s funny how hype works in the stock market. 3 months ago it was all doom and now it seems like the rally will never stop. Looing at our puts, it seems like we are bleeding money, but we have already seen how these things play out.

Alex Klap

Well, bleeding was a strong word. I follow your model portfolios (Stark and Frey). So I am net green today by a decent margin, but the hedges are certainly eating into the profits a bit.

In other news, I got the Options Tier 2 in Fidelity approved today finally. Very excited about that as it should allow me to follow the spread strategies as well. When you do them next time, can you please spell out both legs of the trade? I’m new to it and I wanna make I get it right.

Alf London

Sam – great analysis. I love how data-backed all your decisions are. One high level / broad question. Probabilistically speaking, there’s roughly a 30% chance we see a red year (negative SPY returns) in any given year. At some point in the next 5 years, I have to assume we’ll see at least one of those. How do you approach that? Put another way: What if the next correction doesn’t follow the playbook? You’ve shown how dips often recover – and they have, historically – but at some point there’s not a bounce back as expected, right? Not because it’s “the end of the world,” but because we enter a longer grind, a sideways market, or something more structurally challenging. How does your analysis take that into account? I understand the puts are there for hedging, but more curious how you take red years into account for how you think about where we are in a given year and the likelihood of a green finish? Thanks

Alf London

great answer – thanks for this

First Name

NVDA puts cooked

Karl Peak

Hello Sam,

Thank you again for your detailed analysis of NVIDIA and the comparison of NVIDIA’s price situation with historical prices.

I completely agree with you that the current upside is low, potentially reaching $180. However, your May analyses mentioned a probable threshold of $140 to $150, and the scenario of reaching $170-$180 today was very likely, if I remember correctly.

Also, the scenario of a sharp correction to less than $100 in April was unlikely, but it fell to less than $90.

Given these two factors and this explosive and historic rally since 2010, isn’t it relevant to also consider a scenario where NVIDIA corrects to less than $120 or even $110?

Let’s also remember that TSMC’s financial statements outperformed expectations by 40%, and NVIDIA’s results for the end of August 2025 will likely reflect this.

We’ve already seen NVIDIA decline very sharply before the releases, only to rebound sharply afterwards.

Is it possible to weight the analysis with a probabilistic approach, as the opportunity cost and risk seem very significant to me if the scenarios of April 2025, August 2024, and September 2024 are repeated, i.e., a sharper decline?

For my part, I consider it much more likely that NVIDIA will reach $100-$110 with a price of $170-$180.

Best regards,
Karl

Frankfurter

Not super important, but I think day 66 was skipped in the titles of these posts

Mr. Meow

A moment of appreciation for all the extremely insightful information along with the precision of your analysis – there were times I was skeptical but this has been tremendously net positive learning experience. Thanks man!

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