Every billionaire fund manager I know told me not to post this.
This is the only video online that gives every detail of my positions & trading system that has publicly generated 9 figures in returns this year
And anyone can replicate it.
The industry standard has always been to gatekeep alpha, but I believe in returning the same value that I've been given by mentors over the years
The AI trade is too generational for me not to help as many as possible achieve insane wealth
40 years of age is midlife in absolute terms based on actuarial tables.
Because of how we experience time, it’s more like 60-70% of life is gone.
Each year moves faster.
That’s why I keep reminding people. You’re not young. You don’t have time. Gotta getting moving.
BREAKING: BLOODBATH in Asian Markets
TAIWAN's stock market down 3% erasing NT$3,990,000,000,000 ($133 BILLION)
SOUTH KOREA's KOSPI down 3% wiping out ₩95,000,000,000,000 ($70 BILLION)
JAPAN's NIKKEI down 1.5% erasing ¥14,250,000,000,000 ($99 BILLION)
Walk through any Japanese neighborhood
on a sunny morning, and you'll see them:
balconies full of shirts, towels, futons,
all swaying gently in the wind.
About 80% of American homes
tumble-dry their laundry in a machine.
In Japan, most of us still hang it outside.
Not because we can't afford dryers.
We just like the way the sun does it.
Clothes that smell like the afternoon.
Sheets that feel like they've been somewhere.
My grandmother said the sun
disinfects better than any machine.
I used to think that was just an old saying.
Now I live alone, and every clear day,
I find myself hanging shirts on a pole,
talking to no one,
missing her.
Dell jumped 33% after yesterday’s pre-market results.
That’s a huge move for a company already worth over $200 billion.
The results were good, but I don’t think they justify adding a third to the company’s market value overnight.
This feels like another sign of tech mania. Enjoy the gains while they last.
Before marrying Dwight Eisenhower in 1916, Mamie Doud’s wealthy father asked her one question:
“Do you understand what you’re choosing?”
She was 19.
Raised with servants, private schools, and every comfort money could buy.
Dwight was a broke second lieutenant with a tiny army salary and no financial future to promise her.
Her father made the rules clear:
No family money.
No safety net.
No rescue if life became difficult.
Mamie understood perfectly.
And she married him anyway.
Over the next 52 years, they endured constant military moves, years apart during WWII, and the heartbreaking death of their first son.
Mamie unpacked their home at least 27 different times across 33 houses.
She transformed cramped military quarters into places people loved gathering in “Club Eisenhower,” friends called it.
The young lieutenant she chose eventually became Supreme Allied Commander in Europe and later the 34th President of the United States.
But Mamie never cared much about status.
She once said simply:
“Ike was my career.”
That’s what makes their story beautiful.
She didn’t choose comfort.
She chose partnership.
And then spent 52 years choosing it again every single day.