Probably_nothing_anon

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Been noticing a bunch of ETFs absolutely crushing it in terms of trading volume lately. Makes sense when you think about it - the more liquid an ETF is, the easier it is to actually get in and out without moving the price too much. That's huge for anyone trying to execute trades without slippage.
So what makes certain ETFs so heavily traded? Usually it's the leveraged plays and sector bets that draw the most action. Like, SOXL (semiconductor bull 3x) has been averaging 75+ million shares daily - that kind of volume means you're getting tight bid-ask spreads and basically zero market impact whe
BTC4,76%
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So gold had quite the year in 2024 — absolutely wild run from around $2,000 to nearly $2,800 per ounce. I was watching this unfold and honestly, there were so many moving parts driving the price of gold in 2024 that it's worth breaking down.
The Fed's rate cuts obviously played a role, but what really caught my attention was the geopolitical stuff. You had Eastern Europe tensions, Middle East instability, and that whole uncertainty in global markets just pushing people toward gold as a safety play. When Trump won the election though, things got interesting — everyone suddenly got FOMO on Bitco
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Just looked up what the most expensive high school tuition actually costs in America and honestly I'm shocked. Like, we're talking $60k-$64k per year for some of these schools. That's more than a year at a lot of state universities.
So apparently Milton School in Massachusetts is hitting $63,950 annually, and Noble and Greenough (Nobles) right nearby is $60,100. Both in the Boston area. Then you've got Groton School at nearly $60k, The Peddie School in New Jersey at $58,700, and Middlesex School also in Massachusetts at $58,350. These most expensive high school tuition prices are just wild whe
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So looking back at 2023, that was actually a pretty wild year for the stock market if you really think about it. After 2022 got absolutely wrecked, the S&P 500 came roaring back with something like 21% gains through the end of the year. Yeah, most of that happened early on, but still - that's well above the typical 10% annual average we usually see.
What really stood out to me was how much the narrative shifted throughout the year. Everyone was freaking about interest rates and inflation at the start, then suddenly the whole market started pricing in rate cuts for early 2024. That single shift
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Just been digging into side hustles lately and honestly some of these gig platforms are pretty legit if you actually put in the work. Like I'm not gonna sugarcoat it—most won't make you rich quick, but I've seen people genuinely pull in a hundred dollars or more on platforms that are completely free to join.
Foap's interesting if you've got decent photography skills. You upload pics and brands buy them, or you enter missions where the winner gets like $50-200. People are selling everything from sunset shots to airplane photos apparently. Then there's stuff like Fiverr where the earning potenti
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So I've been seeing a lot of people get confused about options trading lately, and honestly the terminology alone is enough to make most traders' heads spin. Let me break down something that trips up a lot of people - the difference between buying to open and buying to close, especially when you're dealing with put options and call options.
First, here's the thing about options contracts. They're derivatives, meaning they get their value from some underlying asset. When you own one, you have the right (not the obligation) to trade that asset at a specific price called the strike price by a cer
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Today's CNY to UAH Price Update
This report analyzes the exchange rate of the Chinese Yuan (CNY) against the Ukrainian Hryvnia (UAH), providing insights into market dynamics and trading opportunities. Current trends indicate potential movements and volatility within specific ranges.
ai-iconThe abstract is generated by AI
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Been watching the AI chip market pretty closely, and there's something interesting happening that most people are still sleeping on. Everyone's focused on Nvidia being the obvious play, but I think Alphabet might actually be the better stock to own going into the next phase of this AI cycle.
Here's what caught my attention. Google Cloud just posted 34% revenue growth last quarter with operating margins hitting 24%. That's solid execution. But the real story is their custom TPU chips starting to gain real traction. Anthropic is already planning to use them in 2026, and there's talk of Meta pote
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Been spending some time on Polymarket lately, and I gotta say - the rush you get from nailing a prediction is genuinely addictive. But here's what nobody talks about: does scratching that itch actually make you money?
I think most people miss the fundamental difference between betting on outcomes and actually building wealth. When you're on Polymarket, you're playing a binary game. Right or wrong. Win or lose. Your capital either comes back or it doesn't. There's no middle ground, no partial wins. Compare that to owning a real AI stock like Nvidia, and suddenly you realize you're comparing two
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Just been watching the software stock carnage and honestly, I think the market is way too spooked right now.
So here's what's happening - everyone's freaking out that AI is going to destroy enterprise software companies. Anthropic released Claude Cowork earlier this year, and suddenly Wall Street thinks all these SaaS businesses are done for. The tech sector software ETF is down 30% since October, valuations have compressed hard, and investors are treating software like it's going out of style.
But I think they're missing something obvious. Have you actually tried switching enterprise software
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Ever wonder how much Elon Musk makes a day? I looked into this recently and the numbers are honestly mind-bending when you break them down.
So here's the thing - Musk doesn't get a traditional paycheck. His wealth is almost entirely wrapped up in stock holdings across Tesla, SpaceX, and other ventures. That means how much Elon Musk makes a day fluctuates wildly depending on market movements and company performance.
Let me put this in perspective. His net worth hit around $486 billion by end of 2024, up about $203 billion that year. If you do the math on that kind of annual growth, you're looki
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Just looked at some housing data and honestly it's wild how much rent has exploded. Back in 1970, the average rent in 1970 was sitting around $108 a month. Now we're looking at nearly $2,000 for a basic one-bedroom in most places. That's not even accounting for inflation properly.
What really got me thinking - half of all renters in the U.S. are spending more than 30% of their income just on housing. Over 12 million people are literally giving half their paycheck to landlords. Meanwhile, salaries haven't kept up at all. Someone making decent money in 1970 was probably doing way better proporti
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Been diving into some advanced options strategies lately and naked call trading keeps coming up in discussions. It's definitely one of those strategies that can look attractive on paper but has some serious teeth if you're not careful.
So here's the thing about naked calls - you're essentially selling call options on a stock you don't actually own. The appeal is pretty straightforward: you collect premium upfront without putting up the full capital to buy shares. Sounds efficient, right? But that's where the trap starts.
Let me break down how it actually works. You sell a call option, say at a
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Trader006vip:
whats you idea about Cere network in the future ??
Just saw Senator Bill Cassidy's Q1 fundraising numbers and they're pretty interesting. Dude raised $783K, which honestly isn't crazy compared to other politicians, but what caught my eye is he's sitting on $7.5M in cash on hand. That's pretty solid position-wise. His net worth estimate is around $447.5K according to Quiver, which puts him at like 338th richest in Congress. Not exactly loaded by politician standards. The stock trading history is wild though - he's been dumping positions since 2016. Sold CMI and TM stocks back then, and both have done pretty well since (CMI up 156%, TM up 66%).
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I was reading the Forbes 2025 rankings and one thing caught my attention: Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal has returned as the richest billionaire in the Arab world with $16.5 billion. It’s not just the number that’s impressive, it’s the way this guy builds wealth—completely different from most billionaires I know.
So, the prince is not just anyone. Grandson of the Arabia Saudita founder, he was already on the Forbes list in 2017 with $18.7 billion; then he disappeared for years when Forbes stopped counting the sauditi. Now in 2025 he’s back, and you won’t believe it: he’s the only one among the saud
XAI6,39%
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Lately, I keep seeing this theory going around that China could throw the American economy into chaos by selling all of its debt at once. It’s a good idea on paper, but in reality things are far more complicated than that.
Let’s start with the basics. By the end of 2023, U.S. debt exceeded 34 trillion dollars. To put it in perspective, that means more than $100,000 of debt for each American. Meanwhile, the United States is spending 886 billion dollars on defense alone in 2024, and interest on the debt is becoming the heaviest spending item in the bilancio federale (federal budget). And this is
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There’s a question I often get asked in trading groups: Why does the same contract show two different prices on the futures platform? Today, let’s talk about this often-overlooked but very important aspect.
When you trade futures, you’ll encounter two price concepts. One is the price you see when trading—that is, the most recent transaction price, which we call the trading price. The other is a fairer valuation calculated by the platform to protect traders, called the mark price. Many people get confused about these, but understanding the difference between them is very helpful for risk manage
BTC4,76%
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Just scrolled through some wild takes about Dan Bilzerian, and honestly, the guy's story is pretty fascinating from a wealth-building perspective. So this dude went from trying to be Navy material to becoming basically the poster child of Instagram lifestyle content. That's quite a pivot.
The numbers are insane though. We're talking about someone with a net worth hovering around $200 million, which if you convert that to rupees, we're looking at something like 1.6+ billion rupees. Not exactly pocket change. The interesting part isn't just the amount—it's how he actually got there.
He did make
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Just saw Brad Garlinghouse tied the knot with Tara Milsti last weekend at this insanely luxurious hotel in the French Riviera? Hotel du Cap-Eden-Roc in Antibes - rooms go for over €5,100 a night. The guy really went all out for his bride lol.
Tara's a certified dietitian nutritionist, and apparently the wedding guest list was absolutely stacked - Nina Dobrev, Zac Efron, Miles Teller, Chace Crawford, and Chris Martin from Coldplay actually performed. Like, this is the kind of wedding most people only see in magazines. The whole vibe seems insanely elegant with that French-Victorian aesthetic.
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XRP5,5%
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Been noticing a lot of traders talking about grid trading lately, especially when crypto markets are doing their thing with all that volatility. It's basically a way to turn those constant price swings into potential profit opportunities without having to predict which way the market's actually going.
So here's how it works. Instead of trying to time one big trade, you set up a grid of buy and sell orders across a specific price range. You place buy orders below where the price is now and sell orders above it. When the price bounces around within that range, your orders execute automatically.
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