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Do you remember that wave of recommendations? Micron Technology was only around 160 back then, and now it has surged past 300, doubling in value. The logic behind this is actually very simple— with the arrival of the AI era, chips and memory have become scarce resources. When there's a shortage of memory, invest in memory; when there's a shortage of electricity, invest in power infrastructure; whatever is lacking, invest in that. This is the certainty brought by the explosive growth of the AI chip industry chain. From the expansion of cloud computing data centers to the surge in power consumption for large model training, the entire ecosystem's demand for storage chips is continuously releasing. The industry trend is very clear: whoever can seize this wave will enjoy the benefits.
Why didn't I go all in back then... now it's too late to regret.
Invest in whatever is lacking, it sounds simple but actually doing it is really hard.
Micron has doubled, what about other chip concept stocks? Let's go all in together?
This logic makes sense, but retail investors are always a step behind.
I should have gone all in on memory chips a long time ago. Is it still not too late to get in now?
Got cut again, I can't accept it.
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Doubling and still bragging? I think you missed the previous wave.
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The logic of investing in what’s lacking sounds easy, but when it comes to actual operation, you still have to gamble on luck.
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Expanding data centers is fine, but I’m worried it’s another signal of a round of chopping the leeks.
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Can the mentality of buying at 300 yuan be the same as buying at 160 yuan? That’s the real difference.
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The so-called AI dividend is nice to talk about, but what if memory chip capacity is oversupplied?
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So, can you still get on now, or has the train already gone into the mountain valley?
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People who have been cut once understand what a "certain opportunity" really means, haha.
I've been bullish on AI for a long time. The logic of investing in what’s lacking is perfect. It's just a bit late to realize it now.
Still, I should pay more attention to opportunities in the industry chain. Don't want to miss out next time.
By the way, should I also consider investing in the power sector? They say data centers consume a lot of electricity.
This is the advantage of doing industry research—much more reliable than blindly chasing concepts.
Micron is only at 300? Feels like it hasn't even reached its ceiling yet.
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Invest in what’s lacking; it sounds simple but it’s really not that easy to operate, and the risks are not small.
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The chip industry chain is indeed the most certain track, but I’m just worried about another wave of sharp declines.
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The demand on the data center side is truly explosive. I believe in this logic, but the key is to choose the right targets.
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Doubling your investment and then showing off—have you ever retraced your gains? Such stability almost doesn’t exist.