Free investment tips:
1. The grifters selling substacks on here are not professional money managers.
2. They are not wealthy.
3. 99% have no financial experience, financial education.
4. You don’t need charts and TA to make a lot of money. That only helps if you are making trades in real size and none of them have that ability.
@benjamincowen Real investors and professional investors don’t care about any of this noise. I’m wealthy because I hold both for a very long time. No need to time the market with gold and btc.
@btc_overflow They have literally fleeced the common base that was supporting them. The only people who think this is good, are the ones getting the subscription, and retail who doesn't understand the math.
You have Jurrien who is one of the most well regarded pros in the business at one of the biggest institution in the world posting the chart below, but here on CT we have ex-djs, students, teenagers, and so called experts calling for $30-40K BTC to be the floor, lol.
Bitcoin has continued to search for a bottom, and I still think that the $60k is a good place to look. We may well undercut it at some point, but based on the power law support line and the gold/Bitcoin ratio, I believe that level should act as a floor.
Jeff has been posting heaters lately. Love to see it. Soon the biggest article of clothing we will see on the homeless of NYC are Patagonia vests with PE names on them.
This parabolic rise doesn’t have anything to do with the ending of a business cycle. I agree with most of your views, but this rise has nothing to do with. If you ran money, you would know the rise in oil has been called by some of the better analysts. But, this has nothing to do with the business cycle.
Now you feel in your portfolio the pain from following all the idiots/grifters/substack sellers. They have no financial intelligence. You need to understand the incentives.....
@dmweisberger The major money center banks have been paying our politicians even before it became legal with lobbying. But, you know this. There are cracks brewing and then they will over react and be late as usual.
What happened at Social Capital was several things:
1) Personally, I was going through a divorce. It was a very hard time.
2) My ostensible “cofounders” spent more time jostling for board seats and credit for deals with outsiders vs doing good work and mentoring a team. They made the place a political snake pit - something that I had unfortunately allowed to happen. So I killed the snake.
3) It was increasingly clear that my returns were sporadic but gargantuan and didn’t fit in a classic fund with LPs. I was a home run hitter in a business where raising new funds invariably led you to hitting singles and doubles. In other words, I was making suboptimal portfolio decisions so I would return capital in order to keep raising funds. This was important to stack the compensation of my team who had far less capital than I did.
I’m in a much better place now personally and professionally. We invest only my capital and so far, so good.
Long live Social Capital.
Now that the idiot has briefed himself and somehow believes anyone cares what comes out his mouth, the liberation of the Iranian people can continue.
Go fuck yourself Zohran.
Today’s military strikes on Iran — carried out by the United States and Israel — mark a catastrophic escalation in an illegal war of aggression. Bombing cities. Killing civilians. Opening a new theater of war. Americans do not want this. They do not want another war in pursuit of regime change. They want relief from the affordability crisis. They want peace.
I am focused on making sure that every New Yorker is safe. I have been in contact with our Police Commissioner and emergency management officials. We are taking proactive steps, including increasing coordination across agencies and enhancing patrols of sensitive locations out of an abundance of caution.
Additionally, I want to speak directly to Iranian New Yorkers: you are part of the fabric of this city — you are our neighbors, small business owners, students, artists, workers, and community leaders. You will be safe here.
@LawrenceLepard@gnoble79 The downfall of George Noble needs to be studied. At one point he was reasonable. He must be so broke at this point in his life to be on this rage baiting to get subs and people to subscribe to him.
Someone’s looking for a pardon and doesn’t realize the Clarity Act would have you locked up for much longer than 25 years.
My legislation couldn’t be more different than the bill you tried to buy from Congress over my objection in 2022.
We do not need—nor want—your support.
(revision) US Treasury TBill Auction Schedule totals ~$12.2 trillion short term liquidity to be issued.
122 distinct T-Bill auctions in this schedule.
The Tentative Auction Schedule PDF (the current version as of February 2026, covering auctions primarily from early February 2026 through early August 2026, roughly a 6-7 month horizon) includes the following distinct Treasury Bill (T-Bill) auctions, based on the listed auction dates per tenor:
4-Week Bill: 20 auctions
6-Week Bill: 16 auctions
8-Week Bill: 20 auctions
13-Week Bill: 20 auctions
17-Week Bill: 20 auctions
26-Week Bill: 20 auctions
52-Week Bill: 6 auctions
(Short-term T-Bills are generally auctioned weekly, while 52-week are roughly monthly/every 4 weeks. Counts are tentative and may shift slightly for holidays, but no major omissions are noted.)Auction sizes vary by tenor and aren't uniform ~$100 billion each—recent actual/typical sizes (from 2025–2026 data) are more like:4-week, 6-week, 8-week: Often $90–$110 billion (e.g., recent 4-week at up to $110B record, others commonly $95B)
13-week: Around $80–$90 billion (e.g., recent ~$89B)
17-week: Historically lower when introduced (~$30–$40B), but now aligned closer to benchmarks, often $60–$90B range in practice
26-week: Similar to 13-week, ~$80–$90B or higher
52-week: Typically lower, often $40–$60B or so (less frequent, so sized accordingly)
Using approximation of ~$100 billion per auction across the board (a reasonable rough average for many short-term tenors in the current environment, though it overstates some longer ones slightly):Total gross amount auctioned in T-Bills over this schedule ≈ 122 auctions × $100 billion = $12.2 trillion
https://t.co/4lgOueEFxG
@SBF_FTX Will you just stfu. Can you not read the room? Nobody cares for you and the BS you keep paying people to post. Your only possible savior was Epstein but supposedly he is dead. Have you tried reaching out to Bill Gates and Pocohontas?
@TomerStrolight They are not a real management team. The CEO was a low level researcher at Calpers. The rest of the staff are greener than the scam AG1. Have been saying this from the start. The founder was the tell.
CT tends to find narratives to support price action, especially if price goes in a direction that they did not expect.
It is common to want to take out your anger on others, and I think everyone generally struggles with that at times (including me).
Now many people blame Jane Street for the selloff, as people tend to want someone to blame.
In midterm years, BTC Is often weak into February, some slight renewed strength into March, then lower as the year goes on. We do not need to search for a narrative to explain every price movement. It is honestly just a massive waste of time and energy.
There is much more to life than being mad at people because things did not go your way.
Think about the empty boat mindset.