Before the market closed at dawn, I brewed a cup of black coffee. I only meant to skim the U.S. stock perpetual ranking, but $FLNC paused me for two minutes. It wasn’t because it surged by how much in a single day; rather, this kind of stock appears near the top of the list while the funding rate is still sitting at +0.0000%. That feels more like capital has just started noticing it, not like it’s already packed into everyone’s trading.
For names like Fluence Energy, I first look at the sector, then at whether the chart gives it a spot. From what I understand, it roughly sits along the energy storage / energy transition theme. The characteristics of this direction are pretty clear: it’s not the most “story-telling” sector. But once grid stability needs, renewable energy supporting infrastructure, and demand-side load management rise, the market tends to reprice valuations. Money may not come every day. When it does, it usually isn’t only for one day.
Today’s chart also doesn’t look bad. The current perpetual price is $20.07. Over the past 24 hours it ranged from $18.72 to $20.98, and it didn’t pull back to the lows at the end. That suggests the buy pressure isn’t just a quick poke and then disappear. Turnover is 15.63M USDT, with an open position of 64,326 shares, indicating that attention is genuinely picking up. The funding rate is still 0—at least I haven’t seen the kind of sentiment overheating where everyone rushes in—so it’s friendlier for trend-following trading.
On my side, I won’t chase directly above $20. My orders will be set a bit lower on a pullback before re-entry, starting with a 3% position. The logic is simple: if this stock really has staying power later, pullbacks typically still offer a chance to get on again. But if it’s only there because the ranking is hot and it’s just a one-off move, chasing at the highs makes it easy to get hit by the drawdown. The key variable, basically, is that the energy theme often gets influenced by policy timing and overall market risk appetite. If the sector rotates back into “harder” AI or large-cap index-weighted stocks, the continuity of capital in names like this will be discounted.
But purely looking at today’s data set, I’d put it into a moderately bullish watchlist—not just for the excitement, but because it’s started to have trading value. If I’m wrong, I’ll cut the position quickly—I won’t fall in love with it. $FLNC #USStocks
If you can’t handle the pressure, don’t get on the ride. In any case, I’m learning from experience that I lost money on.
For names like Fluence Energy, I first look at the sector, then at whether the chart gives it a spot. From what I understand, it roughly sits along the energy storage / energy transition theme. The characteristics of this direction are pretty clear: it’s not the most “story-telling” sector. But once grid stability needs, renewable energy supporting infrastructure, and demand-side load management rise, the market tends to reprice valuations. Money may not come every day. When it does, it usually isn’t only for one day.
Today’s chart also doesn’t look bad. The current perpetual price is $20.07. Over the past 24 hours it ranged from $18.72 to $20.98, and it didn’t pull back to the lows at the end. That suggests the buy pressure isn’t just a quick poke and then disappear. Turnover is 15.63M USDT, with an open position of 64,326 shares, indicating that attention is genuinely picking up. The funding rate is still 0—at least I haven’t seen the kind of sentiment overheating where everyone rushes in—so it’s friendlier for trend-following trading.
On my side, I won’t chase directly above $20. My orders will be set a bit lower on a pullback before re-entry, starting with a 3% position. The logic is simple: if this stock really has staying power later, pullbacks typically still offer a chance to get on again. But if it’s only there because the ranking is hot and it’s just a one-off move, chasing at the highs makes it easy to get hit by the drawdown. The key variable, basically, is that the energy theme often gets influenced by policy timing and overall market risk appetite. If the sector rotates back into “harder” AI or large-cap index-weighted stocks, the continuity of capital in names like this will be discounted.
But purely looking at today’s data set, I’d put it into a moderately bullish watchlist—not just for the excitement, but because it’s started to have trading value. If I’m wrong, I’ll cut the position quickly—I won’t fall in love with it. $FLNC #USStocks
If you can’t handle the pressure, don’t get on the ride. In any case, I’m learning from experience that I lost money on.