Mark Wombles
244 posts


@Aliya562219 @Jabir826945 2 people went which was the couple
IT never said that anyone else went
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@Aliya562219 A couple went to the picnic ,that's 2 people .They didn't state or say that anyone went with them
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@PSInvestor Your story especially in your youth is so similar with mine I grew up in Appalachia Had to get our water from a well and bath in a large wash tub ,slept on the floor for yrs, Family of 10 children, I learned the value of hard work and the va due of money at an early age
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I do not share this often, but a short glimpse of where I came from. A small reflection I had today how far we have come.
Until age six, we lived in a single small room. My mom carried water from a well and climbed three floors every day, even while pregnant with me and later my sister. My parents started with nothing. No savings. No safety net. My father had no formal education and grew up malnourished. They were married through family arrangements and learned life together from zero.
For 15 years, my sister and I slept on the floor next to our parents’ bed. We did not grow up with comforts. We grew up with discipline, limits, and focus on education. Every money mattered. Every decision mattered.
My father worked nonstop. Any job. Any task. From cleaning toilets to fixing them. From building small structures to learning construction piece by piece. I started going to his business by age eight. By twelve, I was helping with vendors and negotiations. Not because it was glamorous, but because everyone had to carry their share.
Moving from one bedroom to four bedrooms felt unreal. Having my own bed and room felt like winning the lottery. While my friends now I made when I was 28 and they were 19 already have Amex Black cards and lots of Patek 4th gen millionaires.
Nothing happened overnight. It took decades of frugal living and compounding effort. Those early years shaped how I think about money, risk, and patience. I still live that way.
Today, I manage investments and help build large residential and mixed-use projects we once only imagined. I am grateful. And I never forget where it started.
Everyone has their own path and timing. This is just mine.
It’s not a sprint it’s a marathon.
Someday will share my ID and my company website.
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@PSInvestor That news popped up in my Charles Schwab account and I was trying to get a read on it I think you just did it for me,Thank u
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Vanguard just updated its ownership in $FUBO fuboTV.
A Schedule 13G/A filed on January 30 shows Vanguard now holds 21,923,236 shares, representing 6.39% of the company as of December 31, 2025.
This filing matters for two reasons.
1. The size A 6.39% stake puts Vanguard firmly in the top institutional holders. That is not a trade. That is structural ownership tied to long-term mandates, index exposure, and fund allocations.
2. The update reflects an internal Vanguard realignment completed on January 12, 2026. Portfolio management and proxy voting responsibilities were reorganized across subsidiaries, which required disaggregated reporting. The filing explicitly states the shares are held in the ordinary course of business, with no intent to influence control.
What this tells me.
This is not new speculative demand. It is confirmation of continued institutional presence through a volatile period for the stock. Vanguard maintained a meaningful position through restructuring, market drawdowns, and uncertainty around the business model.
From a market structure perspective, ownership like this tends to reduce float sensitivity over time. Large passive and quasi-passive holders are not reacting to daily price action. They rebalance on rules, not emotion.
My thoughts right on fillings like this do not move a stock tomorrow. They matter for durability. When fundamentals improve, the upside tends to travel faster when a real base of institutional ownership is already in place.
It’s not a sprint it’s a marathon.

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