Jeff D

1.2K posts

Jeff D

Jeff D

@Waynestang

Katılım Nisan 2009
1.2K Takip Edilen259 Takipçiler
Jeff D
Jeff D@Waynestang·
@WhiteySwolz @yungchomsky I was this guy last year. Down 20 lbs and still have 20 to lose for 15 to 18% bf. You're spot on.
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Changing Consumer Habits
Changing Consumer Habits@WhiteySwolz·
@yungchomsky Anyone saying I'm wrong is a fat fuck that looks like this and doesn't want to accept the fact that you are 30-40lbs away from six pack abs. Sorry, but time to except reality and end the perma-bulk.
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Gastro stuff
Gastro stuff@GastroStuff·
@FinanceLancelot Don’t be an idiot. You’re claiming that ppl don’t have their own opinion. You claiming that ppl just controlled by money. You’re an idiot. Stick to finance and STFU
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Financelot
Financelot@FinanceLancelot·
Still think they don't control everything?
Financelot tweet media
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ShortSeller
ShortSeller@ShortSeller·
Chart of the day....
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Jeff D
Jeff D@Waynestang·
@big_yemm Dude looks like a 45 yr old lesbian assistant manager at Walmart gtfoh
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Yem🌹
Yem🌹@big_yemm·
Not bro asking if she’s a man 💀
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Eric Matheny 🎙️
Eric Matheny 🎙️@ericmmatheny·
Senior ditch day April 2000. Parents at work. Party at my house. Burgers on the grill. Sublime on the CD player. Man, what a simple and beautiful time…
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Dr. Jeremy
Dr. Jeremy@leolonsuma·
@NFL_DovKleiman @adamglyn BS sure work at Goldman Sachs if your a legendary NFL player the white guys can brag “look who we got” as they get shitfaced off blow and drink 😭😂. His hiring has absolutely 0 to do with is financial ability. More like trophy employee, which is a real thing.
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Dov Kleiman
Dov Kleiman@NFL_DovKleiman·
𝗧𝗥𝗘𝗡𝗗𝗜𝗡𝗚: NFL legend Justin Tuck is now a Managing Director at Goldman Sachs after his 11-year football career. After the NFL, Tuck went back to school, earning an MBA from the prestigious Wharton School. Justin is a true inspiration and role model. (via @adamglyn)
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Kiran
Kiran@kirantalks·
@hamids Amazon at 80B profit is a 3T company, with almost 200B in capex spend commitments. These guys are clueless. MU by any common sense standards should be at 1.5T. It’s a $1500 stock. Chart watchers are pitiful
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Hamid
Hamid@hamids·
Takes like this drive me nuts. They ignore revenue and profits entirely and rely only on a price chart. Over the next 24 months, $MU will likely generate $200 Billion+ in profits. But to a chart-watcher, the stock is "overvalued" no matter the market cap, purely because it ran up last year. The question investors should be asking: what is a company generating $100B/year in profits worth, when that profit stream might grow OR shrink with roughly equal odds over the next 3-5 years? Nobody knows exactly when AI demand (and the memory demand that goes hand-in-hand with it) slows. But "slows" doesn't mean "crashes." It could just as easily stabilize. What we DO know: - DRAM, HBM, and NAND demand is so backlogged that all capacity for the next year is sold out - Prices of these products have gone vertical, which means margins are about to be enormous (80%+) And we're supposed to take seriously a chart account saying "this stock will crash because it went up"? Have you heard of AI? Turns out it's kind of popular!
The Long Investor@TheLongInvest

$MU Honestly, we are in living in a time where people think this is normal And FOMO'ing that they did not chase this. This is as parabolic as you'll see and this is a $817 BILLION MARKET CAP company Yes we are in a bubble, yes they will all collapse and yes this time IT IS NOT DIFFERENT.

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Jeff D
Jeff D@Waynestang·
@KayaCngl @TheLongInvest Cyclical stocks top with cheap valuations and bottom with expensive valuations. Go back and look if you dont believe me.
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Kaya Cinoglu
Kaya Cinoglu@KayaCngl·
Yes it can pull back but I think the hardware cycle will not peak and they will continue to print profits. They are expected to make 65-70 billion in profits this year and 110 billion next year. Thats more profits than even Amazon, Microsoft, Meta. I think the market has started to take that into account even though late, because this demand cycle for memory is not cyclical this time, it is there to stay. Market will continue to price that imo.
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The Long Investor
The Long Investor@TheLongInvest·
The comments below this post are worse than feared. I honestly thought you knew we were in a bubble and understood what parabolic moves mean when the market is in Wave 5. There is a 100% guarantee that all parabolic moves like on the $MU chart below will trigger a decline of at least -50%. That is a certainty. It can still run higher in the short term but the crash will come. Bookmark this because I will be referencing this a lot
The Long Investor@TheLongInvest

$MU Honestly, we are in living in a time where people think this is normal And FOMO'ing that they did not chase this. This is as parabolic as you'll see and this is a $817 BILLION MARKET CAP company Yes we are in a bubble, yes they will all collapse and yes this time IT IS NOT DIFFERENT.

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The Mongol
The Mongol@TheMongolttv·
@Zyphic i bet 1000 its inheritance or insurance money. no one says i invest in stocks, im a day trader and list off nvidia/apple
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Zyphic
Zyphic@Zyphic·
Clavicular was SHOCKED to find out a top onlyfans spender who spent 2 million dollars works as a day trader even though he doesn't look like one😳 "I'm wondering where the f-ck you get 2 million dollars looking like that? "I'm a day trader, I invest in stocks" "Like what?" "Stuff like Nvidia, Microsoft and Apple"
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Future Inclined
Future Inclined@FutureInclined·
@jasonc_nc @MaupinMari76912 Here's a fun one: I bet the Tesla Diner eats your lunch when it comes to average ticket and total sales. Lol. He's solved for food without even trying.
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Avery Scott
Avery Scott@HappySoberCo·
When I was on meth, I was a ghost. No direction. Skin breaking down. Barely eating. Slowly killing myself. Now I’m 1 year and 1 month sober. Eating real meals. Working again. Taking care of myself and responsibilities. If you’re struggling right now, please don’t quit. Keep pushing. Keep fighting. WE DO RECOVER.
Avery Scott tweet mediaAvery Scott tweet media
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Jeff D
Jeff D@Waynestang·
@SteveAlan321 @anishmoonka That's awesome! As someone also in the gym for decades, I have noticed that as people age, obesity does not simply increase. It is a matter of habits; specifically diet. I am wondering how you drew the conclusion that it is age that differentiates those photos as justification?
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Steve Alan
Steve Alan@SteveAlan321·
@Waynestang @anishmoonka Nope. Work out 6 days a week. Watch calories and take 100 gms of protein every day for my body weight
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka·
For 38 years, the US paid farmers NOT to grow too much corn. In 1971, one guy killed that rule. Within 13 years your Coke had corn syrup instead of sugar, food was the cheapest it had ever been, and Americans were getting heavier every year. Since the Great Depression, US farm policy ran on simple supply and demand. If everyone planted everything, prices would crash and farmers would go broke. So the government paid farmers to leave a chunk of their land empty, and held big stockpiles of grain like an emergency fund. Then Nixon picked Earl Butz to run the Department of Agriculture. Butz was a farm-economy professor from Indiana who also sat on the boards of giant food companies. He told farmers to "get big or get out" and to plant every inch of land they owned. In 1972, when the Soviet Union had a bad harvest and came shopping, Butz quietly sold them 30 million tons of grain in one deal. The US emergency stockpile was gone overnight. By 1976 he had killed the entire 38-year-old system. By the late 1970s, the country was drowning in corn, and Washington kept guaranteeing the prices anyway. Corn became the cheapest ingredient in the American grocery store. The government still hands corn farmers about 3.2 billion dollars a year, more than any other crop. That cheap corn went two places. The first was your soda. Scientists had recently figured out how to turn corn starch into a syrup that tasted almost like sugar. With corn this cheap, that syrup (high-fructose corn syrup, or HFCS) was way cheaper than cane sugar. Coca-Cola started swapping it in by 1980. By 1984, Coke and Pepsi had ditched cane sugar entirely in the US. The average American went from eating zero corn syrup in 1970 to almost 38 pounds of it a year by 1999. The second place was everything else. That same cheap corn fed the cows, pigs, and chickens packed into industrial farms. It also became the base ingredient or sweetener in most processed food on the shelf. Americans went from spending 17 percent of their take-home pay on food in 1960 to under 10 percent by 2000, one of the lowest rates in the world. Daily calories per person climbed from about 2,054 in 1970 to over 2,500 by 2010. The extra 500 came mostly from added fats, refined grains, and corn syrup. When Butz took office in 1971, about 15 percent of American adults were obese; today the CDC says it's 40.3 percent. Severely obese, defined as way past overweight, used to be under 1 percent. Now it's nearly 1 in 10. Butz's policy did exactly what it promised. Productivity, exports, and grocery prices all moved the way he said they would, year after year for three decades. The right photo is just what happens to the average American body after fifty years of policy designed to make calories as cheap as possible.
Wisdom@Wisdom_HQ

What went wrong?

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Jeff D
Jeff D@Waynestang·
@SteveAlan321 @anishmoonka I am assuming from your post that you're at least fifty years old, very overweight and justifying your current state of health.
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Steve Alan
Steve Alan@SteveAlan321·
@anishmoonka This is just a photo. The people on the left are way younger. Plus we are living way longer now. Your explanation does not take into account longer lifespans not do you provide data on obesity etc.
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Katie Miller
Katie Miller@KatieMiller·
DANA WHITE: “When you're a man, you are the provider. You are the one that that takes care of your family. You are the example for your kids when they grow up and your sons, and your daughters. “You can't be that guy that I see posting on social media. Oh, I had a bad day, and I'm so sad, and all this other crazy shit. “It’s just it's unattractive to other males, let alone women.”
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I’llbuythat
I’llbuythat@llbuythat·
@wahlstedt007 After the election, it was deep depression. Every day since DT went into office it’s been unending chaos & hell. Your mind screams, “who can save us?” but you know there is no one so you plod on & just hope ONE DAY he will receive justice, jail time & the humiliation he deserves
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Sidney W🇩🇪🇺🇦🇪🇺
As a German, I find the political situation in United States very stressful. How hard must it be for the American people???
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Jim Osman
Jim Osman@EdgeCGroup·
@mistressdivy Ruth’s Chris Steak House. Sounds like two restaurants got merged in a custody battle.
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Mistress Dividend
Mistress Dividend@mistressdivy·
What’s the dumbest name for a business? I’ll start: Fifth Third Bank
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Jeff D
Jeff D@Waynestang·
@skylarromines Good for you for being upfront and honest. Good for him for moving on and saving his money for someone else with whom he can have a future.
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