January 30, 2026

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Weekend Market Commentary:

Week Ending January 31, 2026

The Great Mid-Cap Rotation: What Worked, What Died, and What Comes Next

Executive Summary: A Week of Violent Rotation

This week delivered a masterclass in momentum exhaustion and sector rotation. We watched AI infrastructure names explode higher early in the week, then give back gains as fast money took profits. We saw energy transition darlings like Bloom Energy get absolutely destroyed. We witnessed commodity plays—copper, uranium, gold—peak and reverse hard. And by Friday, the market was making it crystal clear which stocks have real earnings support and which ones were riding pure speculation.

The final Friday scan tells the story in one chart: AAOI up 10.2% on massive volume while Micron cratered 4.8% on 50 million shares. LITE up 2.7% while Bloom Energy, Fluence, and the entire negative-earnings cohort got pummeled. This isn’t random. This is the market separating companies with actual business models from companies trading on narratives and hope. For systematic income traders, this week revealed exactly where to focus and what to avoid. Let’s break it down day by day, then synthesize what it means for the weeks ahead.

Monday-Tuesday: The Explosive Rally in AI Infrastructure

The week started with a violent upside move in mid-cap AI infrastructure and commodity names. Corning (GLW), Ciena (CIEN), Lumentum (LITE), Celestica (CLS), and a parade of mining stocks all ripped 20-50% in what looked like a genuine breakout. The catalyst? A convergence of factors: AI CapEx spending announcements from hyperscalers, China stimulus whispers driving hard asset reflation, space/defense hype, and—most importantly—massive short covering in heavily shorted names.

This wasn’t vapor. Companies like GLW and CIEN were reporting real order flow, growing backlogs, and actual earnings beats tied to hyperscaler demand. The fiber optics, optical networking, and AI server manufacturing plays all had legitimate fundamental support. Even the commodity plays—Cameco (CCJ) in uranium, Iamgold (IAG) in gold, Century Aluminum (CENX)—had reasonable theses tied to nuclear renaissance and infrastructure spending.

But buried in the rally were warning signs. Stocks with negative P/E ratios—Bloom Energy (BE), Applied Digital (APLD), Hut 8 (HUT)—were ripping just as hard as quality names. When garbage moves with gold, it’s a sign the rally is liquidity-driven, not fundamentally selective. And that’s exactly what started unraveling mid-week.

Wednesday-Thursday: Reality Checks and Profit-Taking

By mid-week, the music started to stop. Bloom Energy (BE) got crushed 7.2%. Iamgold (IAG) dropped 6.4%. Hut 8 (HUT) fell 5.7%. Applied Digital (APLD) lost 5.3%. The pattern was unmistakable: stocks with no earnings, negative cash flow, and narrative-dependent valuations were getting destroyed. Meanwhile, quality names were experiencing normal profit-taking but holding up relatively well.

The divergence revealed exactly what we’ve been saying: there’s a fundamental difference between companies with real earnings support and companies riding pure momentum. Ciena (CIEN) pulled back 3.1% but held above key support levels. Seagate (STX) and Western Digital (WDC) were nearly flat. These stocks have actual profits, institutional backing, and durable demand drivers. When they correct, they find buyers. When speculative garbage corrects, it keeps falling because there’s no fundamental floor to catch it.

The commodity names—copper miners (ERO, SCCO) and uranium (CCJ)—also pulled back hard, down 3-6%. But these are different from the energy transition garbage. Miners have real assets, real production, and real cash flow tied to commodity prices. When copper or uranium prices stabilize, the stocks find support. They’re cyclical and volatile, but they’re not going to zero. The key distinction: commodity exposure is manageable risk; zero-earnings speculation is unmanageable risk.

Thursday also brought a critical insight: the market was rotating out of commodity speculation and into manufacturing reality. While copper miners bled, electronic component manufacturers rallied. TTM Technologies jumped 6% on real PCB demand for AI servers. Corning held its gains on fiber and glass substrate orders. The message was clear: Wall Street is moving from ‘copper will be needed someday’ to ‘these companies are filling purchase orders right now.’

Friday: The Final Shakeout and Weekend Positioning

Friday’s scan revealed the week’s ultimate winners and losers. Applied Optoelectronics (AAOI) exploded 10.2% on nearly 12 million shares—a company that makes optical components for data centers finally getting recognized for having real revenue growth. Lumentum (LITE) up 2.7% on 7 million shares, continuing its steady climb. TTM Technologies up 1.78% on 4.3 million shares, consolidating Thursday’s 6% surge.

But the real story was the bloodbath in former high-flyers. Micron Technology (MU) absolutely cratered 4.8% on a staggering 50 million shares—the highest volume name on the entire scan. This wasn’t just profit-taking. This was institutional distribution. MU trades at 39 P/E with slowing memory pricing, and the market is finally waking up to the fact that not every semiconductor stock deserves AI-level valuations.

The negative-earnings cohort continued to suffer. Bloom Energy (BE) down another 3.3% on 11.4 million shares. Fluence Energy (FLNC) down 2.5% on 7.3 million shares. Allegro Microsystems (ALGM) down 2.8% on 5.2 million shares. Viasat (VSAT) down 2.3%. Every single one of these companies has a negative P/E ratio. Every single one burns cash. And every single one is getting systematically destroyed as momentum fades and fundamentals matter again.

Meanwhile, the quality names showed resilience. Corning (GLW) up 0.24% on 13.4 million shares—massive institutional volume holding the stock steady. Ciena (CIEN) down only 0.68% on 3.2 million shares, barely a scratch after a huge run. Coherent (COHR) down 1.7%—high valuation (306 P/E) but profitable with tech moats. These are the names that survive rotation because they have earnings floors and institutional support.

Five Key Themes from This Week

1. Liquidity-Driven Rallies End When Liquidity Tightens

Monday and Tuesday’s explosive rally was driven by rates stabilizing, liquidity loosening, massive short interest getting squeezed, and momentum funds returning. When those forces converge, high-beta mid-caps rip together regardless of individual fundamentals. But by Wednesday, liquidity conditions shifted—fast money started booking profits, momentum funds rotated, and suddenly fundamentals mattered. The result? Quality names corrected 3-5%. Garbage names fell 20-40% from highs.

2. Negative-Earnings Companies Are Death Traps in Rotation

Every single stock with a negative P/E ratio got destroyed this week. BE, FLNC, HUT, APLD, ALGM, VSAT—all down 20-40% from weekly highs. These companies don’t have earnings floors to catch them when momentum reverses. They burn cash, depend on narratives (hydrogen! solar! crypto! AI!), and evaporate when those narratives cool. For income traders, the lesson is brutal but simple: rich IV on unprofitable companies is a trap, not an opportunity.

3. Commodity Plays Need Price Stability to Work

Copper miners (ERO, SCCO) and uranium plays (CCJ) ran hard early week, then reversed violently. The thesis—electrification needs copper, AI needs nuclear power—isn’t wrong. But commodity stocks are leveraged bets on commodity prices. When copper or uranium prices stabilize or pull back, the stocks get hit twice: once on the commodity, once on sentiment. Unlike unprofitable tech, these companies have real assets and cash flow, so they find floors. But they’re not collar-friendly until commodity prices stabilize.

4. Manufacturing Reality Beats Narrative Speculation

The biggest insight of the week: the market is rotating from ‘this commodity will be needed someday’ to ‘this company is filling purchase orders right now.’ Electronic component manufacturers—TTM (PCBs), GLW (fiber/glass), AAOI (optical components), LITE (optical networking)—all rallied or held steady because they have actual order books from hyperscalers. These aren’t speculative bets. Microsoft, Amazon, Google, and Meta are writing checks. That’s investable.

5. High Volume on Down Days Means Distribution, Not Opportunity

Micron (MU) dropping 4.8% on 50 million shares is institutional distribution, period. BE down on 11.4 million shares, COHR down on 7 million shares, FLNC down on 7.3 million shares—when stocks fall on massive volume, it’s not ‘cheap shares for smart buyers.’ It’s institutions heading for the exits. High volume on up days is accumulation. High volume on down days is distribution. Know the difference.

The Survivors: What Held Up and Why

Not every stock got destroyed this week. The names that survived and even thrived share common characteristics: actual earnings, institutional support, liquid options markets, and durable demand drivers. These are the stocks systematic traders should focus on for income strategies.

Ticker Week Performance Why It Matters
GLW Strong +4% Best collar candidate. 58 P/E with real earnings. Fiber optics, specialty glass for data centers. Boring company, exciting demand. Friday held steady on 13.4M shares.
LITE Up +15%+ Optical networking for AI clusters. 262 P/E reflects explosive growth. Friday up 2.7% on 7M shares. Use wider collars due to volatility but trend is intact.
TTM Up +7-8% PCB manufacturer with explosive AI server demand. Thursday +6%, Friday +1.8% on 4.3M shares. 78 P/E but growing fast. Let it consolidate then add.
CIEN Slight pullback AI networking equipment. Friday down 0.68% on 3.2M shares after huge run. Normal profit-taking. Support held at 230. Still Tier 1 collar candidate.
WDC/STX Flat to slight down Hard drive storage for AI data. Minor weakness is consolidation. 28-50 P/E with actual profits. Institutional backing. Perfect for selling puts on dips.
AAOI Explosive +10% Optical components for data centers. Friday +10.2% on 12M shares. Negative P/E is concerning but revenue growing. High risk, high reward. Watch for follow-through.

The Casualties: What Died and Why It Won’t Come Back

Some stocks didn’t just pull back this week—they broke. These names revealed fundamental problems that momentum was masking. For systematic traders, these are cautionary tales about what happens when you confuse liquidity-driven rallies with investable business models.

Ticker Week Performance The Autopsy
BE Down 20%+ Hydrogen fuel cells. Negative P/E, burns cash. Wed -7.2%, Fri -3.3% on 11.4M shares. Momentum died, no earnings floor caught it. Dead money.
FLNC Down 15%+ Battery storage. Negative P/E. Friday -2.5% on 7.3M shares. Government subsidy dependent. If energy transition hype fades, this follows BE lower.
HUT Down 10%+ Bitcoin miner pretending to be AI play. Wed -5.7%, then continued bleeding. When crypto sentiment turns, this collapses further. Pure speculation.
MU Friday -4.8% Huge institutional distribution. 50M shares on down day. Memory pricing slowing. 39 P/E doesn’t justify slowing growth. This is distribution, not opportunity.
ALGM Down 8%+ Semiconductor with negative P/E. Friday -2.8% on 5.2M shares. Losing money in hot semi market signals terrible competitive position. Avoid.

What Comes Next: Strategic Guidance for the Weeks Ahead

This week taught us exactly where the opportunities and dangers lie. The market has made its preferences clear: companies with actual earnings and order books survive rotation. Companies that burn cash and depend on narratives get destroyed. For systematic income traders running collars, wheel strategies, or put-selling programs, here’s what matters going forward.

Near-Term Setup (Next 2-4 Weeks)

We’re entering a critical earnings period. GOOGL reports February 4, LLY reports February 11, and NVDA reports February 25. These are the companies that will determine whether AI infrastructure spending is accelerating, stable, or peaking. Until we get through this earnings gauntlet, volatility will remain elevated and momentum will be choppy.

For collar traders, the best strategy is patience. Let earnings pass, let IV crush happen, then establish positions 2-3 weeks after reports. The sweet spot is when stocks have found support post-earnings but IV is still slightly elevated. Don’t sell puts into earnings unless you’re deliberately trading the event. Wait for the dust to settle.

Focus on the Tier 1 survivors: GLW, CIEN, WDC, STX, LITE. These stocks held up during rotation, have institutional support, and offer liquid option markets. Any 3-5% pullback in these names is an entry opportunity, not a reason to panic. Use wider strikes on LITE due to volatility. Tighter collars work fine on GLW, WDC, and STX.

Medium-Term Themes (Next 2-3 Months)

The rotation from commodity speculation to manufacturing reality will continue. Copper and uranium may find floors if commodity prices stabilize, but they’re not systematic income candidates yet. Wait for 30-40% corrections from highs, then reassess. CCJ at $90-100 would be interesting. ERO needs copper prices to stop falling.

The electronic component manufacturers (TTM, GLW, AAOI, LITE) will continue to benefit from hyperscaler CapEx. This isn’t a one-quarter story. Microsoft, Amazon, Google, and Meta have multi-year build-out plans for AI infrastructure. These companies are filling orders that were placed 6-12 months ago and have visibility into the next 12-18 months. As long as hyperscaler spending continues—and all indications suggest it will—these stocks have fundamental support.

Watch for broadening participation. If the rally was healthy, we’d see money rotate from semiconductors into industrial automation, into power infrastructure, into cooling systems. If participation narrows and only a handful of names keep working, that’s a warning sign that the AI infrastructure thesis is losing steam. So far, participation is actually broadening—TTM, AAOI, and other second-tier plays are finally getting recognized.

What to Avoid Completely

Any stock with a negative P/E ratio should be off-limits for systematic income strategies. BE, FLNC, HUT, APLD, ALGM, VSAT—every single one got destroyed this week. Rich IV on these names looks tempting until the stock gaps down 20% and you’re stuck owning unprofitable businesses with no path to profitability. The premiums aren’t worth the risk.

Also avoid stocks showing massive distribution volume. Micron’s 50 million share down day on Friday is a giant red flag. When institutions are selling in size, you don’t want to be the one catching the knife. Let MU find a floor, let it consolidate for weeks, then reassess. Same applies to any stock showing repeated high-volume down days.

Finally, avoid parabolic movers immediately after big runs. When stocks go vertical—up 50% in two weeks—they need time to consolidate. That consolidation can be sideways (best case), a 20-30% pullback (normal case), or a complete reversal (worst case). Don’t chase. Let the move complete, let the stock digest gains, then enter on weakness if fundamentals support it.

Final Rankings: Your Systematic Income Watchlist

Based on everything we saw this week, here’s the definitive ranking for systematic income strategies. These are collar-friendly stocks with liquid options, institutional support, and earnings floors.

Tier 1: Core Holdings (Sell Puts on Any 3-5% Weakness)

1. GLW (Corning) – The gold standard. 58 P/E with real earnings. Deep options. Institutional quality. Any pullback is a gift.2. WDC (Western Digital) – Storage for AI data. 28 P/E with profits. Minor weakness is consolidation. Perfect for puts.3. STX (Seagate) – Same story as WDC. 50 P/E, actual earnings, institutional backing.4. CIEN (Ciena) – AI networking. 296 P/E reflects growth. Support held at 230. Still Tier 1 despite valuation.

Tier 2: Tactical Opportunities (Use Wider Collars, Smaller Positions)

5. LITE (Lumentum) – Optical networking. 262 P/E, volatile but profitable. Use wider strikes.6. TTM (TTM Tech) – PCB manufacturing. 78 P/E, explosive growth. Let it consolidate from +6% move.7. COHR (Coherent) – 306 P/E stretched but profitable with moats. Only for aggressive traders.8. AAOI (Applied Opto) – Just broke out +10%. Negative P/E is concerning. Watch for follow-through before entering.

Tier 3: Watch List (Wait for Deeper Corrections)

9. CCJ (Cameco) – Down 3.9% this week after huge run. 148 P/E needs perfect execution. Wait for 25-30% off highs.10. CVX (Chevron) – Reported earnings Friday. 4.4% yield provides cushion. Wait for post-earnings settle.Copper miners (ERO, SCCO) – Real assets but need commodity price stability. Not ready yet.

The Avoid List (Do Not Touch)

BE (Bloom Energy) – Negative P/E, burns cash, down 20%+ this weekFLNC (Fluence) – Same story, government subsidy dependentHUT (Hut 8) – Bitcoin miner, pure speculationMU (Micron) – Massive distribution, 50M share down dayALGM (Allegro) – Losing money in hot marketVSAT (Viasat) – Negative P/E, thin volumeAPLD (Applied Digital) – Data center leasing with massive debt

Conclusion: Stick to What Works, Avoid What Doesn’t

This week delivered a masterclass in what happens when momentum meets fundamentals. The names with real earnings and institutional support—GLW, CIEN, WDC, STX, LITE, TTM—survived rotation and remain investable. The names that burn cash and depend on narratives—BE, FLNC, HUT, ALGM—got systematically destroyed and aren’t coming back anytime soon.

For systematic income traders, the lesson is brutally simple: you cannot generate repeatable income from unprofitable companies. Rich IV is a trap when there’s no earnings floor to catch the stock when momentum reverses. Stick to boring companies in exciting trends. Sell puts on quality names when they pull back 3-5%. Use collars to protect profits while generating income. And never, ever confuse a liquidity-driven rally with an investable business model.

The AI infrastructure build-out is real. Hyperscalers are spending billions on data centers, networking equipment, storage, and components. But within that theme, there’s a massive difference between companies filling purchase orders (GLW, TTM, LITE) and companies hoping to someday maybe get a contract (BE, FLNC, APLD). Focus on the former. Avoid the latter.

Next week brings critical earnings from GOOGL (Feb 4) and the setup into LLY (Feb 11) and NVDA (Feb 25). Use this time to build watchlists, identify entry points, and prepare for post-earnings opportunities. The stocks that survive the next earnings cycle will be the ones you want to own for the rest of 2026. Focus on quality, follow the earnings, and let the market separate wheat from chaff. That’s how you generate systematic income without blowing up your account.

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Market Commentary:

Market Commentary:

The Sector Divergence Continues

Why Electronic Components Are Ripping While Commodities Bleed

Today’s tape is showing you exactly what rotation looks like in real time. While copper miners and uranium names are getting crushed—ERO down 5.7%, CCJ off 3.9%—the electronic component plays are absolutely ripping. TTM Technologies up 6%, Corning up 4.1%. This isn’t random noise. This is smart money rotating out of commodities that ran too far too fast and into the picks-and-shovels companies that actually manufacture the components for AI infrastructure.

What makes this particularly important for systematic traders is that it’s revealing where the real earnings power sits. The commodity plays were narrative-driven momentum trades. The electronic component manufacturers have actual order books, real margins, and backlog visibility. Let’s break down what’s happening and which names are telling you where to focus versus which ones are screaming ‘stay away.’

The Clear Winners: Electronic Components and PCB Manufacturers

TTM Technologies (TTM) – Up 5.97%

This is the star of today’s show. TTM makes printed circuit boards—the actual physical boards that all semiconductor chips sit on. This stock trades at 81 P/E, which sounds expensive until you realize the company has explosive growth tied to AI server demand. Volume today: 282,801—well above average. This is institutional accumulation, not retail gambling.

What makes TTM critical: hyperscalers need PCBs for every AI server they build. Nvidia sells the chips, but TTM provides the boards those chips mount on. This is true picks-and-shovels exposure with actual manufacturing capacity and customer commitments. The 6% move today isn’t speculation—it’s a revaluation as the market figures out that PCB demand is going to be insane for years.

Corning (GLW) – Up 4.09%

We’ve talked about GLW before—it remains the gold standard for collar-friendly AI infrastructure plays. Today’s 4% move on 2.6 million shares is continuation of a steady, institutional-quality uptrend. GLW makes optical fiber, specialty glass for data centers, and glass substrates for displays. P/E of 58 with real earnings and a decades-long moat in specialty glass manufacturing.

Why GLW keeps working: boring company, exciting secular demand. AI data centers need fiber. Liquid cooling systems need specialty glass. Advanced packaging needs glass substrates. GLW has pricing power, long-term contracts, and the capacity to deliver. This is exactly what you want to own or sell puts against—predictable, profitable, and positioned in front of multi-year demand.

The Losers: Commodity Plays Hit Reality

ERO (Ero Copper) – Down 5.67%

Copper miners are getting destroyed today. ERO down 5.7% on heavy volume (575,033 shares) tells you that the copper reflation trade is cooling off. This stock trades at 27 P/E, which is actually reasonable for a miner, but the problem is copper prices themselves. When commodity prices pull back, miners get hit twice: once on the commodity, once on sentiment.

The narrative was that AI data centers and electrification would drive massive copper demand. That’s still probably true long-term, but short-term the trade got crowded and fast money is taking profits. Copper miners have real assets and real cash flow, so they’re not going to zero, but they’re also not collar-friendly right now because commodity volatility kills systematic income strategies.

CCJ (Cameco) – Down 3.91%

Uranium names are giving back gains. CCJ down 3.9% on 1.1 million shares after a monster run. This stock trades at 148 P/E—pure growth expectations priced in. The thesis was nuclear renaissance, data center power demand, and government support. All of that is still valid, but after a parabolic move, profit-taking is natural.

CCJ is a quality company with real uranium production and long-term contracts. Unlike garbage speculative names, this has fundamental support. But at 148 P/E, there’s no margin for error. If uranium prices stabilize or pull back, the stock has a long way to fall before it looks cheap again. This is a ‘watch and wait’ situation—not a sell-puts-into-weakness opportunity yet.

HUT (Hut 8) – Down 1.87%

Bitcoin miner trying to be an AI play. Down 1.87% which is actually showing relative strength compared to the beating other speculative names took yesterday. But let’s be clear: this remains pure speculation with a 32 P/E on erratic earnings. When crypto sentiment fades or AI hype cools, this goes much lower. Not collar material.

Mixed Signals: Tech Hardware Holding Firm

WDC (Western Digital) – Down 1.38%

Hard drive maker for AI storage. Down slightly at 1.4% on huge volume (3.86 million shares). This is not weakness—this is consolidation after a strong run. WDC trades at 28 P/E with actual profits and growing demand for high-capacity storage in data centers. AI models need somewhere to store training data. WDC provides that.

For systematic traders, WDC remains one of the best risk-reward setups. Slight pullbacks on high volume are buy-the-dip opportunities, not reasons to panic. The company has real earnings, institutional support, and secular demand. This is exactly the kind of name where you wait for 2-3% weakness, then sell puts or establish collar positions.

STX (Seagate Technology) – Down 0.64%

Nearly flat on the day at down 0.64%. Same story as WDC—hard drive demand for AI storage is real, the stock has earnings support (50 P/E), and institutions are holding positions. Minor weakness is noise, not a reason to abandon the thesis. Both STX and WDC belong in the ‘quality tech holding up well’ category.

The Garbage Bin: Avoid These Entirely

BE (Bloom Energy) – Up 0.97%

Tiny bounce today after getting crushed 7.2% yesterday. This stock has no earnings (negative P/E), burns cash, and depends entirely on hydrogen fuel cell hype and government subsidies. The 1% move today is dead-cat-bounce garbage. When momentum stocks with no earnings start bouncing, it’s usually retail trying to catch a falling knife. Stay away.

ALGM (Allegro Microsystems) – Down 2.53%

Semiconductor company with negative P/E. Down 2.5% today on thin volume (395,995 shares). This is a company losing money in a hot semiconductor market—that tells you everything you need to know about their competitive position. When the easy money dries up, these unprofitable semi companies get destroyed. Not collar material.

GFS (GlobalFoundries) – Down 1.26%

Contract chip manufacturer with negative P/E. Volume is incredibly thin (142,165 shares). This is a government-subsidized foundry that can’t make money despite massive semiconductor demand. The business model doesn’t work without subsidies, and thin volume means you’ll get terrible option pricing. Hard pass.

What This Sector Divergence Means

Today’s action is revealing a critical shift: the market is moving from commodity speculation to manufacturing reality. Copper and uranium ran on narrative-driven momentum—’electrification needs copper’ and ‘AI needs nuclear power.’ Those narratives aren’t wrong, but they got ahead of fundamentals. Now we’re seeing profit-taking and rotation.

Where’s the money going? Into the companies that actually make the physical components for AI infrastructure. TTM makes the circuit boards. GLW makes the fiber and glass. WDC and STX make the storage. These companies have order books, backlog visibility, and pricing power. They’re not trading on hope—they’re trading on actual purchase orders from hyperscalers.

The divergence also exposes which stocks have real earnings support versus which ones were pure momentum. Stocks with negative P/E ratios (BE, ALGM, GFS) are struggling or bouncing weakly. Stocks with actual profits and reasonable valuations (GLW, WDC, STX, TTM) are either rallying or holding steady. This is exactly what you want to see if you’re focused on quality over speculation.

Ranking Today’s Movers by Quality and Opportunity

Tier 1: Buy the Dip / Establish Positions

Ticker Rationale
GLW Up 4.1% on institutional volume. Boring company, exciting demand. Perfect collar DNA. Any pullback is a gift.
TTM Up 6% on real demand. PCB manufacturing for AI servers. High P/E but explosive growth. Watch for consolidation to add.
WDC Down 1.4% is consolidation, not weakness. Storage demand for AI is real. 28 P/E with profits. Sell puts on weakness.
STX Nearly flat. Same story as WDC. Quality tech with earnings support. Minor pullbacks are entry points.

Tier 2: Watch List – Wait for Better Setup

Ticker Rationale
CCJ Down 3.9% after big run. Quality company but 148 P/E needs perfect execution. Wait for deeper pullback to 25-30% off highs.
ERO Down 5.7%. Copper miner with real assets but commodity exposure cuts both ways. Wait for copper prices to stabilize.
SCCO Down 3%. Large-cap copper miner with 43 P/E. Better quality than ERO but same commodity risk. Wait for sector to find floor.
ACMR Up 1.7%. Semi equipment with 33 P/E. Thin volume (87,667 shares). Options will be expensive. Only for patient traders.

Tier 3: Avoid Completely

Ticker Rationale
BE Up 1% after down 7.2% yesterday. No earnings, burns cash, pure speculation. Dead cat bounce.
HUT Down 1.9%. Bitcoin miner pretending to be AI play. When crypto sentiment turns, this collapses.
ALGM Down 2.5%. Negative P/E. Losing money in a hot semi market means terrible competitive position.
GFS Down 1.3%. Negative P/E, thin volume (142K shares). Government-subsidized foundry that can’t make money.
VSAT Up 1.7%. Satellite communications with negative P/E. Thin volume (84,589 shares). Avoid.

Bottom Line: Follow the Earnings, Not the Narrative

Today’s divergence is teaching a critical lesson: narratives drive initial momentum, but earnings determine which stocks survive rotation. Copper and uranium ran on electrification and nuclear power stories. Those stories aren’t wrong, but they got ahead of actual commodity fundamentals and now they’re correcting.

Meanwhile, the companies that actually manufacture AI infrastructure components—circuit boards, optical fiber, specialty glass, data storage—are rallying because they have order books and backlog visibility. TTM and GLW aren’t guessing about future demand. They’re filling purchase orders from Microsoft, Amazon, Google, and Meta. That’s the difference between speculation and investable business models.

For systematic income traders, this creates clear guidance: focus on Tier 1 names with actual earnings and deep option liquidity. GLW remains the gold standard. WDC and STX offer storage exposure with profit support. TTM is higher risk due to valuation but has explosive growth. All of these are collar-friendly because they have earnings floors and institutional backing.

Avoid the garbage bin entirely—BE, HUT, ALGM, GFS, VSAT. These stocks have no earnings, burn cash, and depend on momentum that can evaporate overnight. Rich IV on these names is a trap, not an opportunity. The premiums look juicy until the stock gaps down 20% and you’re stuck owning unprofitable companies with no visibility to profitability. Stick to quality. Follow the earnings. Let the speculators chase narratives while you collect systematic income from companies that actually make money.

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