Value Outliers

26 posts

Value Outliers

Value Outliers

@ValueOutliers

Value investor from Poland 27 years old

เข้าร่วม Şubat 2026
7 กำลังติดตาม1 ผู้ติดตาม
Rene Sellmann
Rene Sellmann@ReneSellmann·
Bob Wilson's net worth over time 👇🏻 (legendary American hedge fund manager and philanthropist) Notice how slow the first million came… and how fast the next hundred million followed. That’s compounding.
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Rene Sellmann
Rene Sellmann@ReneSellmann·
Asking for a friend, is Claude significantly superior to Gemini and ChatGPT?
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Value Investigator
Value Investigator@value_invest12·
Duolingo bears are having a great day, but there is an interesting near term set up: 1) 25% of Duolingo float is shorted ($1.2b). 2) Duolingo just launched a $400m buyback program. That adds up to $1.6 billion to be bought sooner or later vs a market cap of $4.6b. $DUOL
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nvt
nvt@nvanthuan·
@EU_Commission Transition to self driving will save 80% as of now. In a few years, maybe 99%. Thanks to @Tesla and @elonmusk
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European Commission
European Commission@EU_Commission·
We're committed to halving road deaths by 2030. To achieve this, we are putting forward a set of measures, such as: 🔹Strengthening enforcement of road traffic rules 🔹Addressing new forms of mobility 🔹Prioritising road safety research More: link.europa.eu/NBYq9h
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Value Outliers
Value Outliers@ValueOutliers·
@RBrzoska Yes, deregulate = free labor, all money to investors
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Rafał Brzoska
Rafał Brzoska@RBrzoska·
Deregulacja w Europie MUSI NABRAĆ TEMPA, a sama UE zmienić sposób funkcjonowania! Wczoraj w Brukseli, podczas US–EU Transatlantic Business Summit 2026🇺🇸🇪🇺, jako przedstawiciele polskiej inicjatywy społecznej SprawdzaMY, rozmawialiśmy z przedstawicielami administracji USA i Komisji Europejskiej o tym, jak wzmocnić konkurencyjność Europy i uwolnić potencjał przedsiębiorczości po obu stronach Atlantyku. W Polsce inicjatywa „SprawdzaMY”, wygenerowała już ponad 500 propozycji przekazanych rządowi, z czego 140 zostało wdrożonych. To konkretne uproszczenia dla obywateli i małych firm, które realnie ułatwiają codzienne funkcjonowanie.Czekamy na pozostałe. Teraz czas na Unię Europejską. Jak zwiększyć konkurencyjność UE na globalnych rynkach? Gdzie regulacji jest za dużo i jak uprościć prawo, nie obniżając jakości ani bezpieczeństwa? Jak skrócić procesy administracyjne, przyspieszyć inwestycje i ułatwić rozwój innowacji? Nie ma czasu do stracenia. Jeśli Europa chce skutecznie konkurować z dynamicznie rosnącymi gospodarkami świata, musi postawić na odwagę, prostotę i przewidywalność prawa. Czas na deregulacyjny impuls dla całej Europy!Unia Europejska 2.0 -powrót do korzeni-do idei EWG (Europejska Wspólnota Gospodarcza), gdzie skupiano się na gospodarce i poprawie życia obywateli, a nie jego przeregulowywaniu.
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Value Outliers
Value Outliers@ValueOutliers·
$WKL Wide moat boring cash machine down 60%: Wolters Kluwer N.V. (AMS:WKL) Check out my article for free!
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Alessandro Palombo
Alessandro Palombo@thealepalombo·
Dutch exodus: I've been talking with multiple Dutch people considering relocating. Realistically, for 80% it's either UAE or somewhere else in Europe. Latin America is too far for many. My take: UAE is the cleanest exit. 0% income tax, 0% capital gains. Direct flights, massive expat network, world-class infrastructure. And the UAE will keep growing. The second approach is to optimise within Europe. This is what more people actually choose. Many want to stay close to family, don't want the cultural shift; some families simply won't do it. There are plenty of tax-optimised options with good international schools. The first ones that come to mind: 🇨🇾 Cyprus: 0% on foreign dividends, interest & capital gains for 17 years. 60-day rule. Best non-dom regime still standing. 15% corporate tax, plus all considerations from my recent post. 🇲🇹 Malta: evergreen. The non-dom lasts forever. Foreign capital gains always 0%. English-speaking. Though it's a small place, not for everyone. 🇨🇭 Switzerland: no capital gains tax. Lump-sum tax regimes available upon negotiation, for high net worth. Overall, the "stability play." Italy, Greece & Portugal also have special regimes, as you know well since I write about these constantly. Perhaps I'm biased because the people who DM me are already interested in Italy, but I'm surprised how many are considering Italy specifically; not necessarily for the flat tax, but for the 50% income exemption (impatriati regime). What else?
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Rene Sellmann
Rene Sellmann@ReneSellmann·
Show this to your Dutch politicians. The great Charlie Munger would likely turn in his grave if he heard about a 36% tax on unrealized gains. In the paragraphs below, he beautifully illustrates how taxes kill returns. His main point was that frequent selling can be a major drag on your returns. What he didn't anticipate, I believe, is that any government could be short-sighted enough to FORCE citizens to sell by taxing UNREALIZED profits.
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Investpro00
Investpro00@Investpro00·
Mam nadzieję, że ktoś to powstrzyma. Zaczyna się od jednego kraju, ludzie to akceptują, powoli przechodzi to również na inne państwa i mamy finansową patologie. Twoje ciężko zarobione pieniądze, zainwestowane. I jeszcze będziesz płacił za to karę. Chore. Stop takim trendom.
The Spectator Index@spectatorindex

BREAKING: 🇳🇱 Netherlands House of Representatives approves 36% tax on unrealized capital gains in stocks, crypto and bonds.

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Ashot Gabrelyanov
Ashot Gabrelyanov@gabrelyanov·
Taxes are meant to fund a society, not to liquidate its citizens' futures. The moment you tax "unrealized" value, you have moved from governance to raiding. 🏴‍☠️🇳🇱 #Netherlands #Taxes
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Value Outliers
Value Outliers@ValueOutliers·
@SimonHoiberg EU is the best place to live on earth. Nobody cares about wealth of Billioners, so go f yourself , thanks!
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Simon Høiberg
Simon Høiberg@SimonHoiberg·
The biggest issue with Cyprus and Malta: They are EU member states. A few years ago, Malta had a citizenship-by-investment program. And they were really proud of it too. But EU didn't like it, and asked Malta to remove it. Malta pushed back. But EU put them on a non-compliance blacklist and eventually filed a court order to have the program removed. Malta complied and removed the program. Cause this is what the EU commission does. They bully until they get their way. Both Cyprus and Bulgaria were working on citizenship-by-investment programs too, but they're shutting them down due to EU pressure. Malta and Cyprus are tiny countries. They don't really have the capacity to push back, and they are terribly dependent on EU. EU now has a problem with Malta and Cyprus's non-dom tax regimes. And EU is DESPERATE for your tax money right now. So what might look like a good tax deal today, probably won't be a good deal tomorrow. And most certainly not for the next 17 years. Actively moving to an EU member state is financial suicide. Whatever you pick, make it your highest priority that it is OUTSIDE of EU.
Alessandro Palombo@thealepalombo

I think 80% of families looking for a European base will end up in Cyprus. Here's why. 15% corporate tax. A 17-year non-dom regime that eliminates tax on foreign dividends and interest with just 60 days of presence. English everywhere. British common law. No wealth tax. No inheritance tax. 340 days of sunshine. EU citizenship after 7 years of residency. Direct flights to London, Dubai, and most of Europe. Healthcare is affordable and high quality. International schools in every major city. And with €300K in real estate, you qualify for permanent residency if you prefer the investment route. No other country gives you this combination at this price point. Some people find it boring. As Portugal cools down, 80% of globally mobile families will most likely end up choosing Cyprus. What's your take: how's life in Cyprus? Is it really as boring? Please share your honest pros and cons.

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Value Outliers
Value Outliers@ValueOutliers·
@mr_deepvalue It’s good pro-workers system. When you sell shares to pay taxes you give a chance for other participants and new comers to buy cheaper, fair and square
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Mr Deep-Value
Mr Deep-Value@mr_deepvalue·
This is like some comedy skit.... Except it's real
Bitcoin News@BitcoinNewsCom

NEW: Dutch Parliament Member Michel Hoogeveen explains how the 36% unrealized capital gains tax, just passed by the House of Representatives, will work. Here is a more detailed example: Step 1. Starting position You own 500 shares. Value on Jan 1, 2028: €50,000 Value on Jan 1, 2029: €100,000 So the paper gain is: €100,000 − €50,000 = €50,000 unrealized profit You did not sell. But for tax purposes, that €50,000 is treated as income. Step 2. Apply exemption You are married, so you get a €3,600 exemption. €50,000 − €3,600 = €46,400 taxable amount Tax rate: 36% €46,400 × 36% = €16,704 tax bill That bill is due in May, even though you never sold anything. Step 3. Market falls before you pay Now suppose by May the shares drop in value. New total value: €60,000 So your portfolio is no longer worth €100,000. It’s worth €60,000. But the tax bill is still €16,704, because it was calculated based on the January 1 valuation. Step 4. You must sell shares to pay tax To raise €16,704, you sell part of your shares. After paying the tax, you’re left with: €60,000 − €16,704 = €43,296 Originally you had 500 shares. Now you have 360 shares left. You were forced to sell 140 shares. 140 ÷ 500 = 28% of your shares gone. Step 5. What happened economically? Before the correction: Paper gain was €50,000. After the correction: Portfolio is worth €60,000. Original cost basis was €50,000. Real gain is only €10,000. But you paid €16,704 in tax. So instead of being up €10,000, you are now: €43,296 − €50,000 = €6,704 below your original starting value. You turned a €10,000 real gain into a €6,704 net loss. And you lost 28% of your shares permanently.

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Value Outliers
Value Outliers@ValueOutliers·
@InvestingVisual 36% from 60k is 21.6k Second when you sell your gain, you left with 38.4K. The company you sell became cheaper for newcomers to compound their wealth. Fair and square.
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Investing visuals
Investing visuals@InvestingVisual·
You’re a Dutch citizen. • You’re working your butt off to invest for the long term • You eat ‘boterhammen’ and ‘stamppot’ to invest even more • You’ve compounded nicely for years • You built your portfolio to $300K • You have a $15K emergency fund • 95% of your net worth is in stocks • Your portfolio grows +20% ($60K) and is now worth $360K • You now owe the state $38.4K in tax, due 5 months after year end • But you don’t have that cash • You invest in SaaS stocks • Your portfolio drops 30% in a matter of months • Your portfolio is now worth $252K • The tax bill is due • You’re forced to sell $38.4K to cover it • Your portfolio drops to $213.6K You just paid tax on gains you no long have and were forced to sell at the worst possible time to fund it. Make it make sense.
Investing visuals tweet media
Investing visuals@InvestingVisual

The Dutch government is destroying long term compounding by introducing a 36% tax on unrealized gains. As a Dutch citizen and long term investor, I’m at a loss for words about the lack of vision behind this new tax. I normally don’t post anything politically related, but what our government is planning to do is disastrous for long term investors. This is the sad truth. Most people here start investing to protect themselves against inflation and ever rising pension ages. They’re trying to put hard earned money to work, hoping they can retire before the age of 71. And they had a real shot at that before this bill. If you started at 25 with €10,000 and contributed €1,000 every month, you could compound to €3,320,000 over 40 years. If you lived prudently, you could retire early and live off it for the rest of your life. With the new capital tax? After 40 years of compounding, you’d end up at €1,885,000. That’s a €1,435,000 difference. This tax denies generations the chance of early retirement, punishes those who take risks, and introduces severe liquidity issues for people who have been compounding successfully for years. And to what end? To fill a €2.4 billion tax hole. I’m beyond words. If you’re Dutch like me, please share this visual with fellow investors to increase awareness. Hopefully we can make our politicians understand the severity of this tax, and the breadth and depth of its destructive implications. ~ Jan

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Value Outliers
Value Outliers@ValueOutliers·
@InvestingVisual What’s wrong with no with that? When you sell your shares you give a chance for other people to buy cheaper, it’s good fair pro workers system. It fights the rich who never worked.
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Investing visuals
Investing visuals@InvestingVisual·
The Dutch government is destroying long term compounding by introducing a 36% tax on unrealized gains. As a Dutch citizen and long term investor, I’m at a loss for words about the lack of vision behind this new tax. I normally don’t post anything politically related, but what our government is planning to do is disastrous for long term investors. This is the sad truth. Most people here start investing to protect themselves against inflation and ever rising pension ages. They’re trying to put hard earned money to work, hoping they can retire before the age of 71. And they had a real shot at that before this bill. If you started at 25 with €10,000 and contributed €1,000 every month, you could compound to €3,320,000 over 40 years. If you lived prudently, you could retire early and live off it for the rest of your life. With the new capital tax? After 40 years of compounding, you’d end up at €1,885,000. That’s a €1,435,000 difference. This tax denies generations the chance of early retirement, punishes those who take risks, and introduces severe liquidity issues for people who have been compounding successfully for years. And to what end? To fill a €2.4 billion tax hole. I’m beyond words. If you’re Dutch like me, please share this visual with fellow investors to increase awareness. Hopefully we can make our politicians understand the severity of this tax, and the breadth and depth of its destructive implications. ~ Jan
Investing visuals tweet media
Bitcoin News@BitcoinNewsCom

NETHERLANDS HOUSE PASSES 36% TAX ON UNREALIZED GAINS As expected, the Dutch House of Representatives has approved a 36% tax on unrealized capital gains, with only forward loss offsets permitted. The proposal now moves to the Senate, where parties that supported the bill also hold a majority, making final approval likely. Critics warn the measure could disrupt long term investment strategies, weaken compounding effects, and encourage capital outflows. Several right leaning parties had publicly criticized the proposal in advance, but most ultimately voted in favor, citing fiscal constraints and the cost of delaying or revising the plan, stating "we don't like it either but we have to".

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Value Outliers
Value Outliers@ValueOutliers·
@XFreeze I mean, this is the most stupid math I have ever seen. First of all 1800 eur gain is taxed at 0. Second If you crash, you carry loss forward. So it’s 36% only on real wealth creation. Why workers pay 40% on labor while investors does not pay anything?
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X Freeze
X Freeze@XFreeze·
Be me, Dutch investor Netherlands approved 36% unrealized gains tax WTF does that even mean Put $1,000 into stocks Year 1: • Stock goes to $2,000 • Government: "you made $1,000, pay $360 cash tax" • MFW I didn't sell anything • Forced to sell shares to pay • Everyone else forced to sell too • Mass panic selling • Stock crashes to $800 • I have $440 left after paying tax Year 2: • Stock recovers to $1,200 • Government: "you made $400, pay $144" • Forced selling again • Price drops to $900 • I have $756 left Year 3: • Stock at $1,000 • Government: "you made $100, pay $36"​ • Smart money has fled Netherlands • I have $964 in stock • MFW I paid $540 in taxes • MFW stock is back where it started (0% gain) • MFW I only have $460 left • Lost 54% on a stock that broke even MFW the government made more money off my investment than I did Government: "Thanks for the $540! 😊"
X Freeze tweet media
The Kobeissi Letter@KobeissiLetter

BREAKING: Netherlands’ House of Representatives has approved a 36% tax on unrealized capital gains.

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Value Outliers
Value Outliers@ValueOutliers·
@jakubhajost And you thought that workers will pay 40% taxes and your wealth is untouched? Why is that? 🤣
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Value Outliers
Value Outliers@ValueOutliers·
@alive_eth And you thought that work should be taxed, but your wealth isn’t? Why is that?
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Ali Yahya
Ali Yahya@alive_eth·
The Dutch: - Invent the modern stock market in 1602 - Build the financial capital of the world - Decline slowly for centuries - Go out with financial suicide in 2026 by taxing unrealized gains at 36%
Jelle@CryptoJelleNL

Sad day in NL, the Dutch government is expected to pass a bill introducing a 36% tax on unrealized capital gains. This will destroy long-term strategies, kill compounding effects & trigger a wealth exodus of biblical proportions. But they'll pass it anyway. Can't fix stupid.

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Value Outliers
Value Outliers@ValueOutliers·
@gabrelyanov Hope is will be done in all democratic countries, since inequality and neofeodolism is already here.
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Ashot Gabrelyanov
Ashot Gabrelyanov@gabrelyanov·
Dutch Govt: "We have a massive budget crisis." Citizens: "Okay, stop spending billions on asylum hotels." Dutch Govt: "No." Citizens: "Then cut foreign aid?" Dutch Govt: "No. We’re going to tax your capital gains 36%... even if you haven't sold them."
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