Chris Hendrix

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Chris Hendrix

Chris Hendrix

@ChrisHendrixAG

Founder of AlphaGrade. Institutional data + AI thinking partner for investors who manage their own money. Built the tool I wish I’d had in 2020.

Memphis, TN Katılım Haziran 2026
159 Takip Edilen15 Takipçiler
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
In 2020, near the bottom of the Covid crash, I told my business partner to buy airlines, cruise lines, and hotels. He did. He made good money. I didn’t buy a thing. Not because I didn’t see it - I did. But I had no way to know whether a savvy investor would’ve thought the same way, or whether I was just guessing. So I sat on the sideline and watched. That feeling - having the instinct but no way to pressure test it - is exactly why I built AlphaGrade: institutional-grade data and an AI thinking partner, so you can check your thinking against the kind of analysis the pros use and trust your own process. For people who manage their own money and are done sitting on the sideline.
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
@danheld Yes! Imagine the future where all money is programmable, and then someone tries to reintroduce paper currency. The financial institutions of that day will hate on paper currency worse than the way big banks today hate on BTC today.
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Dan Held
Dan Held@danheld·
Bitcoin will last longer than the US Dollar.
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
@BrianFeroldi I agree completely, but watch out for the tail of never finishing. I love to see finishers start something because I know they’ll get it done. The problem is that most people are starters first and never finishers. First learn how to finish…. Then start something.
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Brian Feroldi
Brian Feroldi@BrianFeroldi·
Want to be an author? Start writing. Want to be an investor? Start investing. Want to be a programmer? Start coding. Want to be a marathoner? Start running. You don't need permission. Just start.
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
Terrible question. Baffles me that people don’t get this. In your thought process, every founder builds their company by themselves. Whether a founder builds their company with 100 people or 1 coder, it’s still their idea. I don’t see Claude code pumping out business ideas. Big difference between idea and execution my friend.
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Ben Sage
Ben Sage@benlsage·
If Claude wrote 90% of your code, what really makes you the founder?
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
@Jason How is it any different than all the features and gimmicks we've created around every form of currency ever created. Funny how people have such a problem with programmable money when if it was created before paper currency, we'd be throwing fits about fiat.
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@jason
@jason@Jason·
Can you imagine constructing something this complex and meaningless to humanity? What’s the point of all this financial engineering that $MSTR is doing!?! Aren’t there more important problem to solve then this three card Monty imaginary money shell game?
Jesse Myers@Croesus_BTC

STRC down to $82.6 today. Here's my read: 1. Strategy is fine. If everything stays as is, they can pay STRC dividends for 32 years. If BTC appreciates at ~2% CAGR, they can pay dividends indefinitely. 2. Why the sell-off? This appears to be a liquidation cascade. Over the last 6 months, the narrative became that STRC volatility was reducing, and price began to spend all its time in $99-100 range. This invites leverage. If you expect the price to always be north of $95, you can take on 20x leverage with your portfolio to buy more STRC and dramatically increase the yield on your portfolio. This works great, until it doesn't. STRC is designed as a free-market asset. When attention shifted to SATA and STRC price flagged, it may have raised the attention of opportunistic short-selling hedge funds. By shorting aggressively, they could push the price down and start triggering margin calls and liquidations from folks who aggressively levered up their STRC positions. The price action today is a clear liquidation cascade, rapidly pushing prices lower, in turn triggering additional liquidations. 3. What happens now? The market will heal itself. Opportunistic hedge funds will recognize that this is a firesale and the fundamentals are unchanged for STRC and step in as buyers. Shorts will close, becoming buyers. Individuals are getting a tremendous entry price for long-term holding STRC shares. Buyers at this level will get ~13.7% effective yield. If STRC trades back to $100 and they sell, they get an easy +18% return. 4. What will Strategy do? Strategy will likely increase the dividend rate on June 30 - maybe to 11.75% but possibly to 12%. Buyers at the current price level then would get 14.2% effective yield from that point forward. Strategy may also step in to buy STRC shares back. They could do this by issuing new shares of MSTR (currently at 1.14 mNAV) or by taking on traditional debt and deploying those funds to buy discounted STRC shares on the market. If/when STRC trades back to $100, Strategy could then re-issue those STRC shares. The ~$15 delta per share could be used to buy BTC as pure accretion to MSTR holders, with no net change to amplification. No doubt that Saylor has already at least considered this, and it wouldn't surprise me if they're currently doing this. 5. In summary... The market is freaked out that this depeg is like Terra/Luna... but this is not an asset like that. Strategy's balance sheet determines whether STRC continues to receive dividend payments... and Strategy's balance sheet is completely unchanged. This is a leverage wipeout. From this, the market will learn that Digital Credit is mostly very low volatility. But because it is a free market asset, the longer that a Digital Credit instrument trades within a tight range to par... the more leverage will inevitably pile up as people get greedy. And that creates the conditions for a leverage wipeout depeg. Following that, the instrument will make its way back to par value as the market heals itself and recognizes that the dividend payments will continue uninterrupted because the issuer's balance sheet is unaffected.

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Ardent_Dev
Ardent_Dev@ardent__dev·
Are you building something people want... or something you want?
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
@AndrewYang But it's also bringing jobs we've yet to discover. I'm good with pointing out one side, but we must also be honest about the balance that we may not be able to see yet.
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
@ChrisMMillas If it's possible to go to $5,000 a share then going to $0 has to stay on the table. Law of the pendulum. One side can't exist without the other.
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Chris Millas
Chris Millas@ChrisMMillas·
If $MSTR isn’t going to zero then it’s going to $5,000 a share.
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
@NavalismHQ @naval And once you own a piece of one, then you can bite a piece of another and then another and then another until you've created an unkillable income strategy. Don't be greedy. Own the amount proportionate to what you bring to the table.
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Navalism
Navalism@NavalismHQ·
You’re not going to get rich renting out your time. You must own equity - a piece of a business - to gain your financial freedom. @naval
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
@SJosephBurns Hands down - Meditations by Marcus Aurelius and an honorable mention is Poor Charlie's Almanac.
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Steve Burns
Steve Burns@SJosephBurns·
Name an INVESTING book that you think is a 10 out of 10. But only one book.
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
@PeterDiamandis Yes, we removed the power of the yen and yang that should exist between leading and following by simply labeling it employee and employer. The best leaders were once the best followers and maybe still are.
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Peter H. Diamandis, MD
Peter H. Diamandis, MD@PeterDiamandis·
We taught a generation to be employees in an age that rewards leaders.
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
In 2020, near the bottom of the Covid crash, I told my business partner to buy airlines, cruise lines, and hotels. He did. He made good money. I didn’t buy a thing. Not because I didn’t see it - I did. But I had no way to know whether a savvy investor would’ve thought the same way, or whether I was just guessing. So I sat on the sideline and watched. That feeling - having the instinct but no way to pressure test it - is exactly why I built AlphaGrade: institutional-grade data and an AI thinking partner, so you can check your thinking against the kind of analysis the pros use and trust your own process. For people who manage their own money and are done sitting on the sideline.
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
Big funds don't win because they're smarter. They win because they see more: Fundamentals, institutional flows, insider activity, the macro backdrop — together, in one place. Most retail investors see a price and a headline. Closing that gap was the point.
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
@byryangambrell I feel like those things can be found in various ways within and outside of ourselves in others. I feel like the greatest key is true self awareness of who you are and what you actually bring to the table and who you’re not. Outsource who you’re not. Maximize on who you are.
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Ryan Gambrell
Ryan Gambrell@byryangambrell·
What’s most important for a founder to have: Sales skills Humility Community A+ team Personal brand
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
Totally agree in minimizing exposure to the hyperscalers. However, I’m maintaining a position in GOOGL and NVDA as hedges to the moonshots. My GC company is also building out one of Google’s data centers in Memphis, and they just run a super solid and streamlined operation. It’s been impressive to work alongside them.
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Jordi Visser
Jordi Visser@jvisserlabs·
The hyperscalers continue to be the funding side of the rotation into AI names. Equal weight (GOOGL, META, MSFT, AMZN) relative to SPX breaks to lowest level since early 2024 and is having 2nd worst relative month in the last decade heading into the end of the qtr. The spenders continue to see multiple compression.
Jordi Visser tweet mediaJordi Visser tweet media
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
@zdogmode alphagrade.io. Saves and Grades portfolios, screens stocks, correlation mapping, market trends, and all is tied into an AI thinking partner that you talk to just like your other LLMs, only this one gets behind all the institutional paywalls for institutional data.
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Zander
Zander@zdogmode·
Looking to connect with founders building products: AI, SaaS, dev tools, etc. Drop what you're building 👇
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
@itssmdri @inferredbylisa Could be because there are 10 to 100x failures for every one success. The success of the few is the homage paid to all those who failed and laid the groundwork for the few who succeed. They are inextricably connected to each other.
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Somadri Chatterjee
Somadri Chatterjee@itssmdri·
@inferredbylisa For every startup success story, there are thousands of people who took risks, worked hard, and still came up short. We celebrate the winners and quietly forget the cost paid by everyone else.
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Lisa
Lisa@inferredbylisa·
Whenever I meet engineers out in the wild, I always ask if they ever thought about starting something of their own. Last night this guy told me that he had no desire to be a startup founder because his dad had been an entrepreneur all his life and he never “made it” he just failed over and over again and they really struggled. You don’t hear these stories going viral on twitter.
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
@QCompounding True self awareness and the knowledge of who you are and an even greater awareness of who you’re not is one of the true untapped super powers. As Oscar Wilde said “most people are other people.”
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Compounding Quality
Compounding Quality@QCompounding·
"Some people are extraordinarily good at knowing the limits of their knowledge because they have to be." -Charlie Munger
Compounding Quality tweet media
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
@valueover_hype @QCompounding And a great one to add after that is the 4 words “I changed my mind”. People hate not knowing and hate almost as much changing their mind because it takes opening themselves up to new information to do that…
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The Value Investor
The Value Investor@valueover_hype·
@QCompounding It's remarkable how much trouble can be avoided by saying three words: "I don't know." Markets punish overconfidence far more often than ignorance.
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
The most expensive seat in investing isn't a bad trade. It's the sideline. My biggest misses weren't losses — they were the moves I saw, believed in, and didn't act on because I wasn't sure enough.
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Chris Hendrix
Chris Hendrix@ChrisHendrixAG·
@PeterSchiff You say this like you actually did a deep dive into the numbers and found your statement to be completely true. If so, please share your evidence. If not, then don’t post until you have clear evidence. Saying something is true on X doesn’t make it so.
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Peter Schiff
Peter Schiff@PeterSchiff·
U.S. retail sales rose 0.9% in May, exceeding expectations for a 0.5% rise. This doesn't reflect wealthier consumers buying more, but poorer consumers paying more. Retail sales are not inflation-adjusted. Consumers forced to spend more on basic necessities is a loss, not a win!
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