1.The charts were basically screaming at me: Buy now!
MSFT at the time showed:
Bollinger Band compression → Big move brewing
MACD momentum strengthening → Buying pressure arriving
RSI divergence → Price makes a new low but RSI refuses to follow
This triple-signal pattern even impressed my wife, who said,
"Hmm, it looks like it's really going to go up."
She doesn't trade at all.
- Microsoft isn't just a "tech stock"; it's the foundation of AI infrastructure.
While others are still debating which AI startups will win,
Microsoft already:
has Azure (a money-making machine),
is betting on OpenAI,
has integrated AI into its entire ecosystem,
has stable cash flow, and
its CEO doesn't engage in questionable practices.
In the AI gold rush, they're selling the tools.
Why wouldn't you buy?
- Excellent risk-reward ratio.
My entry points: Clear stop-loss level; ample upside potential; near 3:1 risk-reward ratio. Even if it weren't Microsoft, I would have made this setup.
But since it's Microsoft?
I clicked "Buy" with the same composure as drinking my third cup of coffee
- Institutional funds were clearly accumulating positions quietly at that time.
Trading volume, blockchain transactions, a gradual upward trend… typical signs of large investors.
No insider information needed, just the ability to read the charts.
- Microsoft is a company that won't do anything foolish.
Some companies are like a 22-year-old romantic interest: chaotic, impulsive, and unpredictable.
Microsoft is more like a highly reliable elementary school teacher: stable, dependable, and doesn't mess around.
I like this kind of quality when dealing with large sums of money.
In short, this deal went very well…
I didn't predict the AI era, but the metrics are up to par, the logic is sound, and the risk-reward ratio is excellent.
Just follow the rules.
Now is the time to casually say, "I told you so." Lol
If anyone wants to discuss the specific Bollinger Bands/MACD/RSI parameters I used, I'm always ready.