Luke Andrew Morris

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Luke Andrew Morris

Luke Andrew Morris

@LukeAndrewM

Chef, food, mma , stocks.

Mount Martha, Melbourne Katılım Ocak 2018
475 Takip Edilen281 Takipçiler
Decensored News
Decensored News@decensorednews·
Tucker Carlson says Trump “probably couldn't pick a more credible person” to make a deal with the Iranians than JD Vance because Vance is “honest” and has a suitable “moral rectitude.”
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vu ng
vu ng@vunguye50157456·
$BMG looking to turn its existing resource into a discovery similar to the 2.1M ounce “Never Never” discovery made by Spartan Resources (taken over for $2.5BN). #DREAM nextinvestors.com/articles/bmg-w…
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smallcaps_asx
smallcaps_asx@SmallCaps_asx·
What on asx is at peak fear / 52 week lows (☺️and cashed up)?
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Luke Andrew Morris
Luke Andrew Morris@LukeAndrewM·
@van00sa This is definitely a marketing campaign to make more people feel like they can win on slots.
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Luke Andrew Morris
Luke Andrew Morris@LukeAndrewM·
@asxpeasant @DemoniacoASX Supply & demand Sure , CBD’s with an abundance apartments will lose value. Or the cookie cutter dystopian mega burbs. But suberbs with high (90%) PPOR with families will gradually increase. Especially those close to hospitals, good schools etc.
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Peasant
Peasant@asxpeasant·
@DemoniacoASX I don’t disagree but definitely wouldn’t be early Thats been outstanding for the last 4 years I think
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Peasant
Peasant@asxpeasant·
Australian bond yields are flying! We are in BIG trouble. These are the free and open markets our major banks borrow from to then mark up debt they lend out to us peasants. INTEREST RATES will rise regardless of whether RBA raises official interest rates or NOT. RBA will be forced to continue to raise or be bite the bullet - intervene! Intervention causes HUGE longer term issues. Our Australian dollar is continuing to fall! Was 71c, 68c now. The markets anticipate a massive debt bail out by the Government to protect our mortgage holders from apocalyptically unaffordable interest rates. Of which landlords will immediately pass down to renters. Rising yields on longer duration bonds is extremely dangerous for businesses as this can’t be easily controlled by it RBA, and it sets the RISK FREE rate of which asset prices are also priced off. It’s wealth destruction through both asset price deterioration AND inflation of cost for goods and services. Crunch on both sides of the ledger for businesses nationwide.
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Peasant@asxpeasant

Aussie dollar is going DOWN! Australia’s bonds are FLYING. Interest rates are going to go through the roof. The currency market is now pricing in serious RBA intervention. They will certainly step in a major way to help mortgage holders and prop up our big banks. Aussie dollar..DOWN!

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Bollinger Banter
Bollinger Banter@BollingerBanter·
I shouldn't have to age verify for this post. We as Australians should only have to verify on low IQ poster takes - like 'That Stock Chicks' post. Saving us from 'dumb' would serve Australia more than saving us from all factual information. Even 15 year olds deserve facts.
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Matt Barrie@matt_barrie

Bondi Junction servo out of petrol.

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Vita G
Vita G@GioCheryl·
Just paid $680 AUD for a week of food for a family of four Sydney Australia🇦🇺 -no eggs or toilet paper(bought them last week) - no icecream -no junk food - meat (2 x mince & chicken whole plus 6 breasts) ,veges, fruit, some emergency tins of beans, 4L milk, - honey x 2 large
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Peasant
Peasant@asxpeasant·
Hanging in for dear life on today’s open. PROBABLY a blood bath.
GIF
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Luke Andrew Morris
Luke Andrew Morris@LukeAndrewM·
@LukeyTrags At what stage do Australians say they’ve had enough of incompetent govt parties? Clearly there is a lack of integrity. Like buying 2M costal homes the day after rising rates? We are being walked over. Families are drowning. Life should not be this complicated in a first world
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Coal
Coal@LukeyTrags·
This is my longest post on X but I feel like it needs to be said as Aussies will now suffer & front higher costs due to disgraceful long-term negligence by our politicians.. We are facing one of our biggest real-world tests in decades.. moreso than COVID, the GFC or the dotcom.. Diesel is not just fuel - it is the lifeblood of our export economy & food security, an input into just about everything in our lives.. Bipartisan politics has neglected our diminished refining capabilities for decades (see below), despite repeated expert warnings & investigations.. diesel should be treated as a strategic national asset, not a commodity left to “just-in-time” global markets.. We sit at the end of the supply chain, fully exposed to Hormuz crude refined in Asia and shipped here.. a serious vulnerability with no quick fix.. If politicians faced the same fiduciary duties as public company directors, many would be in prison.. instead they prioritise NDIS, green dreams & import dependence leaving us highly exposed with zero accountability.. Hydrocarbons are essential to humanity (my bio) & to Australia.. physical reality does NOT care about narratives.. stay safe out there folks.. 🙏 #coaltwitter #OOTT #energy #diesel #energycrisis #oil #Auspol $YAL.AX $WHC.AX $NHC.AX $BTU $WDS.AX $STO.AX
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OSINT Capital
OSINT Capital@formerhfpm·
Anyone screen shot that Dave Taylor tweet where he implied he earns less than a nurse?
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Shanaka Anslem Perera ⚡
BREAKING. The United States Treasury’s own consolidated financial statements for fiscal year 2025 report $6.06 trillion in total assets against $47.78 trillion in total liabilities. That is a negative net position of $41.72 trillion. And that number excludes Social Security and Medicare, which CBO projects add another $50 to $70 trillion in unfunded obligations over 30 years. Steve Hanke and David Walker wrote in Fortune on March 23 that these numbers constitute insolvency under any standard accounting framework. The Treasury has not used that word. No sovereign government that issues its own reserve currency calls itself insolvent. But the numbers are the Treasury’s own. They are published on Treasury.gov. They are audited. And they show a government whose liabilities exceed its assets by a ratio of nearly 8 to 1. Now layer the war on top. Annual interest on the national debt reached $1.22 trillion in fiscal year 2025. That is more than the defence budget. More than Medicare. The war supplemental request for the Iran conflict exceeds $200 billion. The Federal Reserve cannot cut rates because Hormuz-driven energy inflation has pushed PCE to 2.7 percent and rising. Every basis point the Fed holds is a basis point that compounds against $39 trillion in gross debt. The war that was supposed to last weeks is now costing hundreds of billions while the borrowing cost of financing it rises with every barrel of oil that does not transit the strait. The arithmetic is circular and accelerating. The war spikes energy prices. Energy prices spike inflation. Inflation prevents rate cuts. Higher rates increase the cost of servicing $39 trillion in debt. Higher debt service costs expand the deficit. The expanded deficit requires more borrowing. The borrowing occurs at higher rates because the war is still running. The circle has no exit as long as the strait is closed. Japan is watching from the other side of the carry trade. Life insurers hold $5 trillion in foreign assets, heavily weighted toward US Treasuries. The BOJ is tightening. The 10-year JGB hit 2.278 percent. If Japanese institutions begin repatriating, the largest marginal buyer of American debt becomes a seller at the exact moment the US needs to borrow $200 billion more for the war. The yuan is entering the gap. Every tanker that pays $2 million in yuan at the IRGC toll booth is a transaction that does not require dollar settlement. Every bilateral deal between Russia and China in rubles and yuan is a trade flow that does not pass through SWIFT. Intra-BRICS trade reached $500 billion in 2025 with over half settled in local currencies. The dollar’s share of global reserves has fallen from 72 percent in 2000 to 56.9 percent. The Hormuz toll booth is not just blocking molecules. It is demonstrating in real time that global energy can settle without the dollar. And the demonstration occurs while the dollar’s issuer publishes financial statements showing $41.72 trillion in net liabilities. The Treasury is not insolvent. A sovereign that prints its own reserve currency can always meet its obligations. But the mechanism for meeting those obligations, borrowing at ever-higher rates, printing when borrowing becomes untenable, inflating when printing becomes visible, has a cost. That cost is measured in purchasing power, in credibility, and in the willingness of foreign holders to continue financing a government whose own statements show liabilities eight times its assets while fighting a war it cannot afford to win or afford to lose. The molecules are trapped behind the strait. The fiscal credibility is trapped behind the numbers. And the numbers are the Treasury’s own. open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
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Luke Andrew Morris
Luke Andrew Morris@LukeAndrewM·
@asxpeasant Add in 15 minute city’s, climate lockdown, climate tax They’ll push for EVs, so they can just switch off your EV once you hit your carbon footprint for the week/ month/ year The 2030 agenda is looming
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Peasant
Peasant@asxpeasant·
Australians. now that we’ve had the soft Trump always chickens out (TACO), the gold resistance (and soon rise again) and the AGI break through basically within the day / HOUR of my post.. Here’s what’s waiting for you Australia: Short term: 1. Fuel rationing 2. working from home mandates 3. Sovereignty vs globalisation (hopefully NOT within an hour of this post) Then, if we keep letting them get away with it - this is what’s in store for you Medium term: 4. Digital Currency roll out 5. Then comes the geofencing - limited movement outside your radius. But this time, they’re going to use CBDCs to enforce it. So you literally can’t spend out of your ‘digital wallet’ outside of your geo-fence. They’ll do this to deal with the massive social incohesion of their out of control immigration policy. A policy that they can’t stop because they’ve sold Australia out as a pawn to globalisation. Immigration will continue to RAMP up to feed GDP. Not GDP per capita mind you, the people coming here are mostly leeching off us hard working Australians. And I don’t mean that by RACE. I mean that by attitude. They come here to leach. Us first and second gen immigrants, we came here to build and create. Build for all to enjoy. But after all- We’re the “resource” country. Our current politicians use our resources to feed the rest of the world because they don’t HAVE our best interests at heart. They are all pawns. Do you know why they tax us so high, and why houses are so expensive? They can’t afford you getting RICH off our land of gold and wealth. Retiring in a home you own and enjoying life. Belong productive on your own accord. No way! Then you won’t work for THEM!! WHOS going to pump out the food and the minerals for the rest of the world if not for us PEASANTS. I am, you are, we are all Peasants. Wake up Australia. Wake the f up. Sincerely, one of you, A peasant
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Rats Rant
Rats Rant@RatsRant·
Rat's Rant 23/03/26 (The Chuck Norris Market Rise Edition) What's Hot - SUN What's Doing - Who cares Link: bit.ly/4bsPFHU Subscribe: eepurl.com/dAFGhL
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Anthony Albanese
Anthony Albanese@AlboMP·
We’ve set up a new Fuel Supply Taskforce, led by Anthea Harris. Working with states and territories, the taskforce will make sure fuel gets where it’s needed most. It will bring together experts and industry to protect our fuel supply, and make sure we have the latest information on supply and demand.
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Respeculator
Respeculator@respeculator·
Righto… done a bitta armchair expert research to share… 1. In 2020 the Covid year - where everything shutdown in Aus and the economy came to a standstill (especially Victoria).. diesel demand dropped a measly 5%. Petrol a bit more (~15%)… diesel is transport, agriculture, mining, heavy industry.. and the hilux tradie who cannot “work from home”.. 2. You can switch some refineries to do more diesel vs petrol/jet fuel but most of those complex refineries sit in Asian countries.. and diesel needs heavy sour crude.. ie the stuff from the Gulf (petrol is the light stuff) Conclusion: Diesel is fuct
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