
Inside Baseball with Old Chestnut
2K posts





When you get Lloyd Blankfein of $GS warning "I smell a crash coming" and now Point72 David Rosen saying private credit is a fraudulent bubble... all within 24 hrs of each other... I dunno. Wall Street seems ... nervous.

At times like this, I miss @MarketsWithMB

Last week, Wall Street lost a legend. I never met Morris Sachs (‘MB’) in person. I first came across him when ‘Motown’ was a regular visitor to the comments section of Kevin Muir’s research notes from where he was finally persuaded to make a ‘blockbuster’ debut appearance on The Market Huddle in the depths of the Covid lockdowns of May 2020. MB’s ‘must listen’ appearances on ‘The Huddle’ were the springboard for the launch of his own ‘Inside Baseball with Old Chestnut’ podcast with his friend, cycling buddy and market 'padawan' Liam Allen. The 🐿️ never missed a single one of the show’s 186 episodes (though I do confess to have skipped the Phish intro every week). When someone with MB’s deep experience in markets is prepared to share an hour of his wisdom (almost) every weekend, only a fool would not take advantage. So much learning from what was said (and often from what was not said). I was truly ‘star struck’ when I learned that MB was a regular reader of my own letter and the first time the 🐿️ got a ‘shout out’ on the podcast was a genuine ‘mic drop’ moment. My yelp of excitement at that moment turned every head in the dog park! I am honored and truly grateful that he became a huge supporter of my work. We became regular ‘pen pals’ over the next 3 years. His innate kindness, razor-sharp wit and impish sense of humor sang out of his emails. I often found myself wishing I had had a mentor of MB’s caliber and character helping me grapple with the greasy pole of high finance. Am sure that countless other listeners feel the same way. I used to wonder why, on occasion during an episode of the pod, Liam appeared to sound almost hyper protective of a man who, schooled by the hand-to-hand combat of the futures pits of Chicago, most certainly could fight his own corner. Sometimes a couple of weeks would pass before I got a response to a note or question. I now understand why. He was fighting for his life and yet still generously making the time to educate and to entertain us all. He will be truly missed, and I again send my deepest condolences to Liam, Sheryl, his daughters and the broader Sachs clan. How fitting it was that I learned of his passing during that ‘deep red’ futures open last Sunday night. These are the types of markets that were made for trading legends like MB. I am convinced that he would have been in his ‘alpha long bond trader’ element last week. The rest of us trading mortals are left behind to make sense of the bond markets without his invaluable guidance. And it was quite a week to have to start doing that alone! Rest in peace, Old Chestnut.


Carvana: Bridgecrest and the Undisclosed Transactions and Debts - Last year: both @HindenburgRes and @RealJimChanos lamented at the limited transparency into $CVNA related parties, DriveTime and Bridgecrest. - Last week: $CVNA refused to release financial details about DriveTime in a closely watched lawsuit against Carvana and its executives, alleging they carried out a fraudulent “pump and dump scheme” - TODAY: We are releasing the DriveTime 2024 Annual Report and the GoFI LLC Annual Report we obtained via Freedom of Information Act request, along with our report. for our full report, DriveTime's 2024 Annual Report, and GoFi LLC Annual Report visit here: gothamcityresearch.com/post/carvana-b…

$CVNA Everyone knows they cook their books. The CEO of DriveTime is the father of the CEO of $CVNA . Sooner or later the market will realize this stock is a ponzi. A 2025 Hindenburg Research report claimed Carvana made a noticeable amount of revenue by selling used cars wholesale to DriveTime, a privately-held used-car dealer owned by Ernest Garcia II — the father of Carvana’s CEO, Ernest Garcia III Carvana: A Father-Son Accounting Grift For The Ages – Hindenburg Research hindenburgresearch.com/carvana/ forbes.com/sites/nathanva…


The old bond market adage is that yields will keep rising until something breaks. In 2022/23, rising U.S. yields "broke" several banks by March 2023 (Silicon Valley Bank). Japanese yields are now at a 27-year high and going vertical. When does something "break" in Japan?









