flyiggles

2.1K posts

flyiggles

flyiggles

@flyiggles1

Katılım Mart 2018
1.7K Takip Edilen75 Takipçiler
John Intel
John Intel@intelfabs·
Very interesting and scary report from Morgan Stanley The financial engineering behind hyperscaler capex The truly unsettling part of the AI boom isn’t how much money is being spent It’s how that money is being engineered through accounting Hidden liabilities (> $1.8T) Huge obligations sit off‑balance‑sheet: nearly $1T in purchase commitments, $800B+ in leases not yet started, $2T+ in RPO. Future cash outflows that don’t show up as debt. The coming depreciation hit Profits look good only because spending is stuck in CIP. Big Tech faces $520B+ in depreciation over 3 years. ORCL’s depreciation ratio: 7% → 28%. Supplier financing pressure Unpaid capex is ~$110B. ORCL’s DPO exploded from 35 → 170 days. The whole supply chain is effectively financing the AI build‑out. Lease accounting gray zones Whether GPU contracts count as leases or services is subjective — and companies use that flexibility to shift billions on/off the balance sheet. $ORCL = the most aggressive Largest lease commitments, RPO up 300%+, capex‑to‑sales hitting 189%. Oracle is running the highest financial leverage in the ecosystem.
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flyiggles
flyiggles@flyiggles1·
@Philsbirdsthrow I think he’s incredibly valuable as part of the battery and overlooked as part of the success of the pitching staff, which is why he is paid - and not paid to do what trea and bryce and bohm should be doing more of which is hitting the damn ball
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Phillies and Eagles throwbacks
Phillies and Eagles throwbacks@Philsbirdsthrow·
@flyiggles1 AHHH always the blank profile picture. I am very well aware of what a catcher does. Just believe they didn't allocate their resources correctly. You disagree, that's fine
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flyiggles retweetledi
Roger
Roger@rdd147·
If you listened to Jensen Wrong, congratulations, he lost you 23% in days on $QCOM
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flyiggles
flyiggles@flyiggles1·
@RealJimChanos And Jane street selling 9.2M shares that they bought @ $109 a month or so ago
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James Chanos
James Chanos@RealJimChanos·
So not only have the $CRWV execs sold almost a quarter of their holdings since going public, but Magnetar has cut its holdings in half, as well…?! Lol, ok.
James Chanos tweet media
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Phil Stiefel
Phil Stiefel@Beardaknowledge·
Which Phillies starting pitcher concerns you more? Comment how and why you voted how you did?
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⛏️💰
⛏️💰@EVLongshots·
How do the Knicks close as +5.5 and +6.5 on the road in Games 1 and 2, win both games outright, come back to MSG, and end up only -1.5 in Game 3? What am I missing?
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flyiggles
flyiggles@flyiggles1·
@shahh Take profits while you have them especially for high valuation stocks
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shah
shah@shahh·
For people who have survived multiple bear markets What’s the #1 piece of advice you’d give to someone right now?
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flyiggles
flyiggles@flyiggles1·
@MsVeilMoney Needing the govt as a source of funds is a last resort option that signals no other available investor is willing to provide additional funding - that sends a chilling warning to the markets - but thats just one mans opinion- maybe the markets will see it differently
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flyiggles
flyiggles@flyiggles1·
Crazy how little she understands
Cathie Wood@CathieDWood

The jobs report was a barnburner. Nonfarm payrolls increased by 172,000 versus expectations for 88,000, while prior months were revised higher by 93,000. Wage growth came in at roughly 0.3%.

Yet the market sold off.

In our view, the market is misreading the signal. It is assuming that stronger than expected employment and growth will cause a an acceleration in inflation. History would suggest otherwise. 

Productivity growth is running near 3%, while unit labor costs are hovering around 0.5%. Those are not the hallmarks of an inflationary boom. They are the hallmarks of healthy, productivity-driven growth that will lower inflation.

Meanwhile, the yield curve continues to flatten despite a roughly 55% increase in oil prices year-over-year based on a three month moving average. In past cycles, an energy shock of this magnitude steepened the yield curve when the Federal Reserve was accommodating it. Instead, the bond market appears to be discounting something much more powerful: the deflationary impact of technological innovation, particularly artificial intelligence, which is beginning to increase productivity across broad swaths of the economy.

If tensions with Iran ease and oil prices retreat, we believe inflation could move into negative territory before year-end.

In our view, the Fed made a historic policy error when it raised rates aggressively into what was largely a supply-driven inflation shock in 2022. We do not believe the next generation of monetary policymakers will be eager to repeat that mistake.

Notably, gold peaked on the day Kevin Warsh was appointed. The inflation trade may already be behind us.

If our research is correct, the next phase of this cycle could be characterized by accelerating growth, declining inflation, falling interest rates, and a strengthening U.S. dollar. That combination would create a remarkably supportive backdrop for innovation-led equities and the technologies driving the next productivity boom.

I discuss this framework in greater detail in this month’s episode of In The Know.

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Evan | Investments
Evan | Investments@NotA_Bull·
I have $15,500 to buy the dip. Which stocks should I buy?
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KnicksMuse
KnicksMuse@KnicksMuse·
I can’t imagine what life is like for Brooklyn Nets fans living in the city rn
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flyiggles
flyiggles@flyiggles1·
@traderpodcaste Also focus on the data in 1999-2001 which is the last time a tech bubble popped
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Pod Caste
Pod Caste@traderpodcaste·
the "friday crash = monday bounce" table going around is missing the thing that matters most: where the vix started. so i pulled every NDX friday <= -3% since 1990. n=63. bucketed by vix open, tracked mon, wed, end-of-week. Friday opened with vix at 15.87. that bucket monday is a coin flip. the real bleed shows up later in the week.
Pod Caste tweet media
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