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  2. Posted by Charlie [ @Charlie ] in the 'Is Europe becomming uninvestable?' topic about going to Vrist, Jutland, Denmark for three weeks vacation : Charlie [ @Charlie ], The West Coast of Jutland [ in Danish called 'Vestkysten'] is to me an awesome place with a very special nature, shaped by location in the prevailing wind direction from the North Sea to the West. Here, the aerea also goes by 'The Summer Land' [in Danish 'Sommerlandet'], because it's popular area for summer vacation, with many areas with recreational houses, a share of them up for rent via bureaus. We have heatvawes here, too, but at the West Coast of Jutland is certainly not as bad as almost elsewhere here, the sea has it's own fuction as a heat pump, both ways, so to say. Bring clothes for all, so that any weather condition isen't in any way a showstopper for doing something together, going out. [Right now, we in period where the regalar warnings of cloudbursts. Go to the beach and enjoy the beach and the sea every day - all of you [I recall from your posts that you have kids]! Thyborøn is close by to the North! - go find a place to buy fresh fish at or near the harbour there! If possible, almost every day! Fresh grilled [BBQ] fish with salads and lots of veggies is fantastic food! The native population in the area has always been very accomodating towards visitors and tourists. - - - o 0 o - - - The West Coast of Jutland is a good place to get rid of stress, decouple from the dailyday at home, and to have a good time with kids and spouse. - - - o 0 o - - - It's now some many years past since I was there the last time, so I'm not actually updated about how it is today. When I was younger [late university years and the working years just after, I had typically a week each year in the area [ motorcycle, GF, tent, money, passport, condoms! ], later, that simply became impossible because of work, so the autumn became my prior vacation period, where I went to the area to decompress from an absolute awfull and stressfull worklife, typically in North Face gear with boots. Later in life with no kid[s] around any longer, vacations have somewhat swithced to short visits to European cities. - - - o 0 o - - - If you have more specific questions, please shoot me a PM, Charlie [ @Charlie ], and I'll see what I can do for you.
  3. Today
  4. Ahh I guess da KOSPI isn't going to hit 10k too bad, so sad, better luck next time, etc...
  5. assuming you make 15% on your active stock picks: 15% * 50% = 7% + 2% cash interest = 9% 15% * 95% = 14.25% - 2% drag for puts = 12.25% + better downside protection in bear markets With higher interest rates it might look different.
  6. I once had a brilliant but kind advisor. When I was way, way off, she would say, "You're not even wrong."
  7. Yesterday
  8. Parsad, What rights did Graham tear away from the LGBTQ community?
  9. Think of the RE as a $1M 'package' of land (750K) + building (250K). The lawyer severs the package into land + a 'X' years lease on the building, titles of both put on a secure blockchain. As only the dwelling 'lease' is transferring .... not the land itself, taxes and commission will only be paid on the 250K, not the full $1M. Game changer (and UK common practice). RE bro's have incentive to consolidate all local (less 'trustworthy') RE block chains, into a single 'Google USA RE' where a trusted title search is now simply a query of the immutable data blocks (blockchain property). Lawyers now paid primarily to put the new transaction onto the block chain, and not for a redundant title search. 'Google USA RE', now a monopoly way more effective than a Standard Oil Trust ever was .... and much harder to break-up. Game changers. This is what artificial intelligence actually is .... the other side of the blockchain coin, We're not going to see it for a while as established agency controls have strong incentive to kill it, but it's coming, Anything where a record (digital) documents a change in the physical world, done much faster, and more reliably by tech vs human. Doesn't affect the welder welding steel together (physical world), but does affect his/her time-sheet (digital world). Not the story being sold. SD
  10. If memory prices stay up for 2 years and then crash back to earth, the memory chip stocks are not worth their current valuations. The value depends on how high memory prices go , how long it lasts and how far they mean revert. I actually think NVDA has some resilience in terms of margins and it’s the better bet here, if you even want to make one. I think for token usage to explode from here, the tokens need to get cheaper which is the way technology works anyways.
  11. Trumps crack has a vacancy now.
  12. It was not just the Opium War that ended China’ Golden Age but also the deep corruption at the very top of Chinese ruling class as the ailing emperor gradually lost control to his deeply corrupt grand minister.
  13. The growing tea trade …. And the growing trade deficit as silver moved from west to east.
  14. Thanks John! Cheers!
  15. I am reading this book alongside “Return of the King” by William Dalrymple, who is the host of “Empire” podcast and author of many history books on India Both books that I am reading in parallel are set in the 1840s, the Return of King covers East India Company attempt to install an exiled monarch named Shuja as Shah in Afghanistan. That triggers the Anglo-Afghan Wars that ends with the annihilation of East India Company armies. Twenty years later, the Company itself is gone. The other book set in the same timeframe, covers British attempt to “open up” China under the then rule of Manchu emperors. The trade through Canton was too little for British taste, who wanted more. While the Anglo-Afghan Wars were disastrous, the Opium Wars was anything but. I would highly recommend this book I am a quarter way through it. Here are some excerpts:
  16. 100%! He cost his team the game by diving like that. The Swiss were stifling Argentina defensively when they were a man down, and dominating the play when they were even. It might have been a totally different outcome if the Swiss played the whole game intact. Cheers!
  17. Not celebrating it...but I certainly don't feel any tinge of sadness either. Not like when McCain passed, who was one of Graham's close friends, and Trump said the nastiest shit about a real war hero and lifetime statesman. Unlike McCain, Graham would do anything, ANYTHING, to get his agenda passed. As a gay man himself, he tore away rights from LGBTQ...yes, everyone knows Graham is/was gay. I applaud his support for Ukraine...but the man was a walking, talking hypocrite on most other issues! Cheers!
  18. My guess is that if FFH wants to exit without buying the block it will be based on some sort of VWAP so it’s not done all at once and the bank is never at risk. You are correct that those shares would have to be absorbed by the market.
  19. What a great story - and to think that only General Eisenhower and Grandma could dress down the good General !
  20. I agree on 1 and 2. I'm not sure about 3 though.
  21. Joe Biden was a disaster for the middle class. 21% total inflation during his term. During his 2nd year he printed 8% by pouring $1T into an already recovering economy. At the time, it was both controversial and stupid. Then, of course, he let in another 10M or so illegals - driving up rent and housing prices. Joe was no friend of the working class, that's for sure. His administration, unvetted, gave billions to social programs that fleeced American citizens beyond belief - billions stolen through fraud by NGOs, child care scams, education scams, welfare scams, immigration housing scams, etc, etc. NYT loser Paul Krugman and their editorial board kept warning of global recession under Trump - how stupid they look today. The same set of geniuses that missed the Ai boom.
  22. I don't know if real estate is a great use case. In my city there is a 1.5% transfer tax on real estate, and agents get their 6%, so the title stuff is the labor intensive side, but the other costs aren't going anywhere. I think restricted funds (hedge funds, private equity) where the wallet is approved and bypasses the bespoke human stuff is where it makes sense, kind of. But giving me a token for part of a Picasso starts to remind me of NFT nonsense.
  23. How does the counterparty exit their position without putting significant downward pressure on the stock when the TRS is unwound and if Fairfax decides not to purchase the shares?
  24. Parsad you seem like a gentle soul; it's jarring to hear this from you ( or Trump, or anyone). We shouldn't celebrate this.
  25. I know very little about Visser and perhaps am making a snap judgement. However, I once clicked on one of his videos and listened for a few minutes until he said that AI/non-AI stocks should be the new 60/40. I can't offer any comment about token or memory pricing and maybe it has a long way to run as you say, but this does sound close to peak bubble mentality.
  26. Ya I don’t think it’s a bubble either. Blown away each day with how helpful Claude is for my job. Only have the pro subscription for now and annoyingly keep hitting token limits. Could only imagine how much stuff could get done with unlimited tokens. Investment wise I’m just sticking with my mag 7 stocks (Amazon, Alphabet, Meta etc) who I continue to believe will see great payoffs to the large capex spend they are currently putting out. I’ve no edge in chips or memory type stocks so don’t own or plan to buy any of them. But they likely do have good runway ahead of them.
  27. We have a saying around my house, muttered under your breath, in a Bronx accent: " This F-ing guy." That's Visser to me. Because he's making me question some long-held beliefs (formed by spotting past bubbles), which is painful. From this clip, starting around 18:00, with a good graphic at 18:40: Digital demand for tokens can, and will, scale massively; especially as token prices drop. It's also a fact that computer-driven demand can always scale faster than physical supply can grow. Fabs take 2-3 years to build. Token demand is 10X-ing in short order. An eye-opener for me was hearing a dozen guys, 40-70 Y.O., in my men's group, gush about how much they use and love AI. Not a Luddite in the crowd. No complaining about hallucinations. AI is not a bubble. I'm finally getting that though my thick head. Plenty of participants will indeed go bust, but the Samsungs, MU's, NVDA's could still have a long way to run from here. All dependent on the theme that token usage continues to explode. Later in the episode is a good piece about the acceleration that will take place once we can easily use AI on our phones. So, God help me, I'm considering the likes of MU and Samsung AFTER they've gone through the roof. What's the argument against this theory- 1) token demand will explode 2) physical supply to support it will take years 3) memory prices will thus continue to rise faster and stay elevated longer than the market is pricing in.
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