Oracle Corporation (ORCL) had a rough Thursday, dropping nearly 11% after delivering earnings results that disappointed investors. Friday brought continued volatility as traders tried to figure out what comes next. But here's the interesting part: some market watchers think the stock might be setting up for a bounce.
The selloff wasn't random. It stopped right around $191, and that number matters. Back in January, $191 acted as a ceiling—a resistance level that shares couldn't break through. Now it might be doing the opposite, acting as a floor. This kind of role reversal happens all the time in markets, and the psychology behind it is pretty fascinating.
The Remorseful Seller Effect
Think about the people who sold their Oracle shares around $191 back in January. At first, they felt pretty smart. The stock drifted lower afterward, and they patted themselves on the back for getting out at a good price.
Then June rolled around. The stock broke through that $191 resistance and kept climbing. Suddenly those same sellers weren't feeling so clever anymore. They'd sold too early, and now they were watching from the sidelines as the stock moved higher.
Many of these traders made themselves a promise: if the stock ever came back down to $191, they'd buy back in. No higher, just at the price they originally sold. It's a common psychological pattern in trading.
Yesterday, when Oracle crashed back to around $191, those remorseful sellers got their chance. They flooded back into the market as buyers, and all those buy orders piling up at the same price level created support. That's why the stock stopped falling right there.
What Happens Next
When a stock finds support like this, it can sometimes trigger a rally. Not always, but often enough that traders pay attention. The mechanism is straightforward: buyers get impatient.
Some traders who want to buy Oracle start worrying that other buyers will offer higher prices and snag the available shares first. So they bump up their bids. Then other buyers see those higher prices and raise their own bids to compete. Before long, you've got a bidding war pushing the price upward.
It's a snowball effect, and the technical setup suggests it might be starting with Oracle. Whether the support at $191 holds and launches a genuine rebound remains to be seen, but the pattern is there. For traders watching the stock, this former resistance-turned-support level will be the key area to monitor in the coming sessions.




