The market is always emphasizing the "non-technology sector trend," but if you look at the data from this week or even today, tech assets are not underperforming. This statement doesn't quite match the actual performance—so is the market narrative lagging, or is our understanding of the definition of "technology" flawed? The data is there: tech stocks are steadily strengthening, so why do we keep repeating the same "non-technology" framework?
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alpha_leaker
· 1h ago
To be honest, this is a typical case of the narrative not keeping up with reality. The media just loves to rehash old stories.
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AllInAlice
· 19h ago
Basically, it's the media's old routine, acting like they haven't seen the data right in front of them.
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SchrodingerWallet
· 19h ago
Tech stocks are quietly rallying again, while the media is still loudly claiming a non-tech market. Impressive.
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consensus_whisperer
· 19h ago
Narrative is just a tool, data doesn't lie. The gains in tech stocks are right there, yet they insist on holding them down. This kind of rhetoric is really exhausting.
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StableGenius
· 20h ago
lol the narrative lag is real... everyone's still peddling that non-tech story while the charts literally say otherwise. empirically speaking, the definition of "tech" is probably doing heavy lifting here—what counts changes every market cycle anyway
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DegenRecoveryGroup
· 20h ago
Narrative and reality are disconnected, and with technology starting to rise again, are the people in the crypto circle still shouting about non-technology?
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rugpull_survivor
· 20h ago
Yeah, the data is right there in black and white. It's really unreasonable to keep singing the praises of technology.
The market is always emphasizing the "non-technology sector trend," but if you look at the data from this week or even today, tech assets are not underperforming. This statement doesn't quite match the actual performance—so is the market narrative lagging, or is our understanding of the definition of "technology" flawed? The data is there: tech stocks are steadily strengthening, so why do we keep repeating the same "non-technology" framework?