I’ve got 10 brand new AirBNB’s coming for sale in Sevierville, TN later this year!
All 2 bedroom/2.5 bathroom with oversized back porch and private hot tubs!
Projected yearly revenue of $60,000-70,000.
Assuming 100% bonus depreciation coming back, the estimated tax savings are over $150,000.
Messaged me if interested in purchasing. Estimated completion September 2025.
@DannyFXScalping@GrantCardone There’s more sellers than buyers. Most people don’t want to give up their 3% rate for a 6.5% rate. The rates need to be lowered. That’s why we see an influx of buyers when rates drop.
@Tim_Walz Except you left out where your crazy, lunatic followers vandalized it because they can’t fathom Trump doing good. They’d rather trash their own country. Fuck you. You being in jail.
Some notes with $AMC. Please share to spread awareness.
Tomorrow, June 2nd, marks the 5-year anniversary for the top of the squeeze of 2021. Just a note.
The $5.66 trigger to convert $414M in debt to shares is completely optional, UNLESS... AMC's stock price closes over $7.92 for 15 consecutive days. If that happens $414 million in debt is completely eliminated from the balance sheet without AMC spending a single dollar. The tradeoff is 73.14M new shares will be outstanding. But at that point, the shares are held by investors and it's not a huge impact on price unless it was all offloaded at once and the price drops 2-5% (unlikely).
Where retail can actually positively impact this is within this 15 day window. Follow along.
The 15-day squeeze is a race to bankrupt short sellers before new shares flood the market on Day 16.
Days 1–5: AMC holds above $7.92, starting the clock. Shorts hold out for dilution, while retail buys to trap them.
Days 6–10: Rising costs and margin calls force smaller shorts to buy back shares, triggering a gamma squeeze.
Days 11–14: Terrified hedge funds capitulate. They scramble to buy from a non-existent supply, causing an exponential price spike.
Day 15+: AMC issues 73.14 million new shares to creditors at $5.66, giving them massive paper profits.
What if note holders do NOT sell immediately on Day 15?
If note holders choose to hold their new shares instead of dumping them, the short squeeze is extended and intensified.
The Supply Squeeze Continues: The market does not get the expected injection of 73 million shares. The float stays incredibly tight, keeping short sellers completely trapped.
The "Diamond Hands" Effect: If both retail investors and institutional note holders refuse to sell, short sellers have zero exit options. They must keep bidding the price to astronomical highs just to find a seller.
The current situation with shorts:
There's roughly 10% of the float that is short right now. As price gets closer to $5.66 mark, it's likely short sellers expect a fall from there to not trigger the note holders, so we can expect short interest to increase. If short interest doubles, triples, or even quadruples, retail has to be all-in to trigger the $7.92 price and start the 15 day clock. At that point, retail must do everything they can to keep that price climbing for 15 days, because the shorts would, indeed, be fucked and 2021 would look like childs play.
So TLDR: investors need to pick a date to start buying back (or more) and not sell (major key).
EVERY FUCKING PERSON WHO HAS BEEN SCREAMING ABOUT THE EPSTEIN FILES FOR MONTHS...
...IS DEAD FUCKING SILENT ABOUT A QUARTER-OF-A-MILLION WHITE GIRLS BEING GANG RAPED BY MUSLIMS!!!
I DON'T GIVE A DAMN ABOUT WHAT ANY OF YOU FUCKING PEOPLE HAVE TO SAY EVER AGAIN!!!!!!
Fun to see $AMC do well and all today, and I hope it continues. But I STG that if $7.92 comes and retail doesn't do what is laid out below, it's a generational fumble.
Some notes with $AMC. Please share to spread awareness.
Tomorrow, June 2nd, marks the 5-year anniversary for the top of the squeeze of 2021. Just a note.
The $5.66 trigger to convert $414M in debt to shares is completely optional, UNLESS... AMC's stock price closes over $7.92 for 15 consecutive days. If that happens $414 million in debt is completely eliminated from the balance sheet without AMC spending a single dollar. The tradeoff is 73.14M new shares will be outstanding. But at that point, the shares are held by investors and it's not a huge impact on price unless it was all offloaded at once and the price drops 2-5% (unlikely).
Where retail can actually positively impact this is within this 15 day window. Follow along.
The 15-day squeeze is a race to bankrupt short sellers before new shares flood the market on Day 16.
Days 1–5: AMC holds above $7.92, starting the clock. Shorts hold out for dilution, while retail buys to trap them.
Days 6–10: Rising costs and margin calls force smaller shorts to buy back shares, triggering a gamma squeeze.
Days 11–14: Terrified hedge funds capitulate. They scramble to buy from a non-existent supply, causing an exponential price spike.
Day 15+: AMC issues 73.14 million new shares to creditors at $5.66, giving them massive paper profits.
What if note holders do NOT sell immediately on Day 15?
If note holders choose to hold their new shares instead of dumping them, the short squeeze is extended and intensified.
The Supply Squeeze Continues: The market does not get the expected injection of 73 million shares. The float stays incredibly tight, keeping short sellers completely trapped.
The "Diamond Hands" Effect: If both retail investors and institutional note holders refuse to sell, short sellers have zero exit options. They must keep bidding the price to astronomical highs just to find a seller.
The current situation with shorts:
There's roughly 10% of the float that is short right now. As price gets closer to $5.66 mark, it's likely short sellers expect a fall from there to not trigger the note holders, so we can expect short interest to increase. If short interest doubles, triples, or even quadruples, retail has to be all-in to trigger the $7.92 price and start the 15 day clock. At that point, retail must do everything they can to keep that price climbing for 15 days, because the shorts would, indeed, be fucked and 2021 would look like childs play.
So TLDR: investors need to pick a date to start buying back (or more) and not sell (major key).
This is the problem with liberals. We need to be celebrating that someone has become a TRILLIONAIRE!
All of the hard work, jobs created, positive economic impact. But these cucks would rather the government have that money and waste it.
Congrats on trillionaire status, @elonmusk!
Americans are struggling to pay for groceries and gas while Elon Musk becomes a TRILLIONAIRE.
When the federal government is for sale, the rich get richer and everyone else gets shafted.
The system is rigged.
Some notes with $AMC. Please share to spread awareness.
Tomorrow, June 2nd, marks the 5-year anniversary for the top of the squeeze of 2021. Just a note.
The $5.66 trigger to convert $414M in debt to shares is completely optional, UNLESS... AMC's stock price closes over $7.92 for 15 consecutive days. If that happens $414 million in debt is completely eliminated from the balance sheet without AMC spending a single dollar. The tradeoff is 73.14M new shares will be outstanding. But at that point, the shares are held by investors and it's not a huge impact on price unless it was all offloaded at once and the price drops 2-5% (unlikely).
Where retail can actually positively impact this is within this 15 day window. Follow along.
The 15-day squeeze is a race to bankrupt short sellers before new shares flood the market on Day 16.
Days 1–5: AMC holds above $7.92, starting the clock. Shorts hold out for dilution, while retail buys to trap them.
Days 6–10: Rising costs and margin calls force smaller shorts to buy back shares, triggering a gamma squeeze.
Days 11–14: Terrified hedge funds capitulate. They scramble to buy from a non-existent supply, causing an exponential price spike.
Day 15+: AMC issues 73.14 million new shares to creditors at $5.66, giving them massive paper profits.
What if note holders do NOT sell immediately on Day 15?
If note holders choose to hold their new shares instead of dumping them, the short squeeze is extended and intensified.
The Supply Squeeze Continues: The market does not get the expected injection of 73 million shares. The float stays incredibly tight, keeping short sellers completely trapped.
The "Diamond Hands" Effect: If both retail investors and institutional note holders refuse to sell, short sellers have zero exit options. They must keep bidding the price to astronomical highs just to find a seller.
The current situation with shorts:
There's roughly 10% of the float that is short right now. As price gets closer to $5.66 mark, it's likely short sellers expect a fall from there to not trigger the note holders, so we can expect short interest to increase. If short interest doubles, triples, or even quadruples, retail has to be all-in to trigger the $7.92 price and start the 15 day clock. At that point, retail must do everything they can to keep that price climbing for 15 days, because the shorts would, indeed, be fucked and 2021 would look like childs play.
So TLDR: investors need to pick a date to start buying back (or more) and not sell (major key).
Some notes with $AMC. Please share to spread awareness.
Tomorrow, June 2nd, marks the 5-year anniversary for the top of the squeeze of 2021. Just a note.
The $5.66 trigger to convert $414M in debt to shares is completely optional, UNLESS... AMC's stock price closes over $7.92 for 15 consecutive days. If that happens $414 million in debt is completely eliminated from the balance sheet without AMC spending a single dollar. The tradeoff is 73.14M new shares will be outstanding. But at that point, the shares are held by investors and it's not a huge impact on price unless it was all offloaded at once and the price drops 2-5% (unlikely).
Where retail can actually positively impact this is within this 15 day window. Follow along.
The 15-day squeeze is a race to bankrupt short sellers before new shares flood the market on Day 16.
Days 1–5: AMC holds above $7.92, starting the clock. Shorts hold out for dilution, while retail buys to trap them.
Days 6–10: Rising costs and margin calls force smaller shorts to buy back shares, triggering a gamma squeeze.
Days 11–14: Terrified hedge funds capitulate. They scramble to buy from a non-existent supply, causing an exponential price spike.
Day 15+: AMC issues 73.14 million new shares to creditors at $5.66, giving them massive paper profits.
What if note holders do NOT sell immediately on Day 15?
If note holders choose to hold their new shares instead of dumping them, the short squeeze is extended and intensified.
The Supply Squeeze Continues: The market does not get the expected injection of 73 million shares. The float stays incredibly tight, keeping short sellers completely trapped.
The "Diamond Hands" Effect: If both retail investors and institutional note holders refuse to sell, short sellers have zero exit options. They must keep bidding the price to astronomical highs just to find a seller.
The current situation with shorts:
There's roughly 10% of the float that is short right now. As price gets closer to $5.66 mark, it's likely short sellers expect a fall from there to not trigger the note holders, so we can expect short interest to increase. If short interest doubles, triples, or even quadruples, retail has to be all-in to trigger the $7.92 price and start the 15 day clock. At that point, retail must do everything they can to keep that price climbing for 15 days, because the shorts would, indeed, be fucked and 2021 would look like childs play.
So TLDR: investors need to pick a date to start buying back (or more) and not sell (major key).