@koolgal:🌟🌟🌟$CapLand IntCom T(C38U.SI)$ is Singapore 's largest SReit. I invest in CICT because it gives me stability, visibility, income and exposure to Singapore's most valuable commercial assets. CICT's strength comes from its retail and office mix. Retail gives me daily necessity spending while Office gives me long leases and corporate stability. With a dividend yield of 4.6% on top of capital growth, CICT is one asset I will hold long term. When Singapore thrives, CICT thrives. @Tiger_comments @TigerStars @Tiger_SG
@Feijoa8025:$NEBIUS(NBIS)$ decided to take some profit now. Given the super volatile market, I feel profits are needed, at least we need cash to sustain our overall stock portfolio when the market goes bad!
This feels like a classic case of markets trying to price two completely different outcomes at once. On one hand, the Hormuz disruption is a real macro risk — if flows stay constrained, oil doesn’t just spike short term, it feeds directly into inflation expectations and puts pressure on equities. On the other hand, the willingness to reopen diplomacy suggests this could unwind just as quickly as it escalated. Personally, I think the key signal isn’t the headlines, it’s whether shipping throughput actually improves over the next 24–72 hours. If vessels start moving again, this likely gets faded as a panic spike. But if the choke point remains restricted, the market probably hasn’t fully priced the second-order effects yet. For now, it looks more like headline volatility than a confirmed ris