FrontRowBrian™ 🇺🇸 ₿

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FrontRowBrian™ 🇺🇸 ₿

FrontRowBrian™ 🇺🇸 ₿

@FrontRowBrian

Waste Management Consultant. investor📈. Insights into fight sports and finance

North Caldwell, New Jersey เข้าร่วม Ocak 2019
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FrontRowBrian™ 🇺🇸 ₿
Get 3 months of Full Self-Driving (Supervised) or $400 off Solar Panel installation with my referral link. ts.la/brian912617
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Kelley Franco
Kelley Franco@threeinningfan·
Cancel the 2028 All Star Game in favor of the Olympics. Here’s the play: -extend the would-be ASG break -MLB stars go to the LA Olympics -shorten the season by a few games -grow baseball globally and watch the best compete for Gold.
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Yiannis Zourmpanos
Yiannis Zourmpanos@yianisz·
Two days ago I used $SMCI as a case study, don’t marry stocks.. A few days later… co-founder arrested. This is exactly the point. Some stocks are great for making money, but never for holding blindly. Co-founder reportedly arrested for smuggling $NVDA AI servers to China via shell companies to bypass export controls. Nothing to do with demand. Nothing to do with AI. Just risk showing up overnight. Narratives change fast. Risks show up faster. Detach.. trade the opportunity, not the story.
Yiannis Zourmpanos tweet mediaYiannis Zourmpanos tweet media
Yiannis Zourmpanos@yianisz

I made good money with $SMCI in the past but that’s no longer the case. ..and honestly it’s one of the most important case studies in this AI cycle. $SMCI is right in the middle of the $NVDA boom. Revenue is exploding (+100%+), demand is real and orders keep coming. Yet the stock isn’t re-rating.. Why? Because it doesn’t control the stack, it assembles it. Margins collapsed, cash flow turned weak, inventory piled up, and the accounting scandal broke institutional trust (auditor exit was the turning point). So despite massive growth, very little value actually flows to shareholders. And here’s the real lesson: Narratives change fast.. the moment you see the story break don’t wait on broken dreams.

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Yiannis Zourmpanos
Yiannis Zourmpanos@yianisz·
Let me explain why I believe $AEHR is one of the most underappreciated choke points in the entire AI infrastructure stack.. As silicon photonics scales into CPO and 1.6T, power density is exploding. These chips run so hot and so hard that even a single failure can take down an entire GPU rack. That’s not acceptable at hyperscale.. So before any of these optical ICs ship, they must go through extreme stress testing, basically pushed to their limits for hours to eliminate early failures.. This is where AEHR comes in. Their FOX-XP system can deliver up to 3,500 watts/wafer, which is exactly what these next-gen photonics chips require during burn-in. Without that level of testing, manufacturers simply can’t guarantee reliability at scale. And without reliability, there is NO deployment. What’s interesting is that AEHR doesn’t compete with $COHR, $LITE, $AAOI, or even $TSEM it sits underneath all of them. Every CPO system, every optical engine, every high-power SiPho chip ultimately needs to pass through this qualification step. That makes AEHR less visible but structurally tied to the entire ecosystem.
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FrontRowBrian™ 🇺🇸 ₿
Why all the private equity shops getting wrecked. Brookfield $BN looking interesting. Significant complexity discount.
George Noble@gnoble79

Private credit didn't blow up because of Blue Owl or bad software loans or AI disruption. Those were SYMPTOMS. The disease is the same one I've seen 3 times in 45 years on Wall Street: Too much money, too much leverage, too little discipline, and a financial product sold as "safe" to people who didn't understand what they owned. Private credit grew to $3 trillion on a simple lie - that you could earn 9-10% yields with "semi-liquidity" on assets that have no liquid market. That's not investing. That's volatility laundering. And the Street dressed it up beautifully. "Private credit." Sounds so exclusive, so sophisticated. Illiquid loan sharking would be more accurate. And don't get me started on "private equity", another Wall Street rebrand designed to make LEVERAGED BUYOUTS sound like fine wine. They changed the name because the old one scared people. The risk didn't change. Just the marketing. Wall Street has always been brilliant at one thing: rebranding risk as exclusivity and selling it to people who don't know what they're buying. Now add oil at $113 a barrel and watch the whole thing come apart. The Strait of Hormuz is shut. The IEA is calling it the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market. The Fed held rates steady yesterday and the market just RIPPED AWAY expectations for even a single cut this year. Oil is the fuse. But the TNT was packed years ago. Oil above $100 means inflation stays sticky. No rate cuts. Every overleveraged borrower inside these private credit portfolios gets squeezed harder every single month. Interest coverage ratios deteriorate. Defaults tick up. Valuations get marked down. And when valuations drop, the leverage stacked on top of that leverage (the "back-leverage" that banks provide using those same loans as collateral) starts to unwind. And JPMorgan already started. They marked down software loan collateral and restricted lending to private credit funds. When the biggest bank in America pulls back, that's a SIGNAL. High-yield spreads just surged to 470 basis points. The widest in years. Credit markets are screaming what equity markets haven't fully heard yet. I've watched this exact pattern before. - Junk bonds in the '80s - Dot-com leverage in 2000 - Structured mortgage products in 2007 The product changes every time but the architecture never does: Wall Street creates something complex, sells it as safe, layers leverage on top, markets the yields to retail investors, and collects enormous fees on the way in. Then something breaks and the gates go up. The people who built the machine are fine - they already got paid. The people who bought the brochure are trapped behind locked doors. $265 billion in market cap already wiped from the major PE firms. I don't think we're close to done. And you know what? That's FANTASTIC. Perhaps we'll finally get some real price discovery. Just say no to mark to model. Holders of this fine merchandise will get the returns they deserve. The pension funds, endowments, and insurance companies that piled into this garbage should take the hit. No bailouts. NONE. This nonsense has gone on far too long and moral hazard is the predictable result. The only way to end this insanity is to let Mr. Market operate. Allow price discovery. Allow bankruptcy. No more money printing. No more crony capitalism. No more extend and pretend. Blow it all up. That is the only way. "But what about the individuals who get hurt!" Better to take the hit now and reset than continue down this road. Hyper-financialization is destroying our economy and enriching the fortunes of the few. This must stop. NOW. But I have little confidence it will. We'll get more of the same: Rule changes. Special accommodations. The inevitable big ease will come. Count on it. AND BUY GOLD

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Erik Grzela
Erik Grzela@ErikGrzela·
@FrontRowBrian Didn't he apprehend a mugger in Central Park the day before that fight?
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FrontRowBrian™ 🇺🇸 ₿
Jones is the greatest prodigy in the history of sport. He was the best fighter in the world within 12 months of beginning his MMA training. Only guy I can think of as good as young was Doc Gooden. LeBron wasn’t even at this level. Maybe Gretzky?
MMA On Point@mmaonpoint

15 years ago, Jon Jones became the youngest UFC champion in history. Since then, he has been in 15 UFC title fights, winning all of them apart from the DC no contest 🫣

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jzus14
jzus14@jzus141·
@FrontRowBrian The problem in ufc is not top or bottom (which makes more than boxers) is the middle class… the middle class getting robbed in the ufc
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FrontRowBrian™ 🇺🇸 ₿
STORY OF THE YEAR IS WITNESSING PUKE THOMAS LOSE HIS FUCKIN MIND. "an utterly compromised institution if ever there was one".
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Brandon Aaron
Brandon Aaron@BrandonAaron205·
@FrontRowBrian FRB I fully expect a snoozfest decision in Gina vs Ronda, but if Ronda gets a round 1 KO in brutal fashion is there a chance in hell she gets a one off UFC match?
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Jennifer Anderson
Jennifer Anderson@Jenbot6·
Stop trying to compare what the WNBA did with what UFC fighters could do. They are not the same nor is it the same landscape. One key hurdle: MMA fighters are independent contractors not employees.
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FrontRowBrian™ 🇺🇸 ₿
I was at UFC 87. Jon fought this polish guy who was a big time prospect himself. I’m like who the fook iz dis guy? He had just turned 21 in July. Event was August. Lesnar v Herring. Fitch v GSP.
Raven@ScRaven77

@FrontRowBrian Remember watching the Brandon Vera fight and being like oh shit

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Gina Carano 🕯
Gina Carano 🕯@ginacarano·
Great conversation with these gents! Jaxxon Podcast. Check it out. We shot this the day before the presser. youtu.be/R_lzlk_f5LQ?si…
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