$LAES- Partnership with SpaceX
SEALSQ (working in collaboration with its parent company, WISeKey, and satellite subsidiary, WISeSat) has a partnership with SpaceX to launch a constellation of next-generation, quantum-secure Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellites.
Here are the specific details regarding the collaboration:
The Core Partnership:
SEALSQ and WISeSat contracted SpaceX to launch a series of satellites designed to support Post-Quantum Cryptography (PQC) and Internet of Things (IoT) connectivity from space.
The Technology:
These satellites are equipped with advanced semiconductors and post-quantum technology hardware developed by SEALSQ. This is designed to secure data for critical infrastructure, defense, and IoT devices against future quantum computing threats.
Launch History & Future Schedules:
The partnership includes a schedule of multiple satellite launches. A notable launch was successfully completed aboard a SpaceX mission, with additional launches on the books to continually expand their satellite constellation.
Broader Initiative: This arrangement falls under the larger Quantum-Enabled Orbital Cloud (QSOC) platform—a planned 100-satellite constellation meant to offer secure quantum communication and decentralized physical infrastructure network (DePIN) services from space
“If I put $100 in Bitcoin in 2010 I’d have $2.8B now.”
No.
If you bought $100 of Bitcoin in 2010 and watched it go to:
$1k → $100k → $1.7M
and did nothing
Then watched $1.7M go to $170k
and still did nothing
Then watched $170k go to $110M
and still did nothing
Then watched $110M wither to $18M
and still did nothing
Then watched $18M surge to $390M
and still did nothing
Then watched $390M deteriorate to $85M
Then watched $85M climb to $1.6B
and still did nothing
Then watched $1.6B shrink to $390M
and still did nothing
Then watched $390M surge to $2.8B
and then for some reason finally decided to do something…
Then yes, $100 in 2010 would be worth $2.8B today.
🚨XRP • HBAR • XLM 🚨
Everyone thinks there will be a “winner” in the new financial system.
Wrong!
The future isn’t monopoly, it’s interoperability.
• $XRP → institutional liquidity + cross-border settlement
• $HBAR → enterprise tokenization (ETFs, funds, real-world assets)
• $XLM → global remittances + consumer payments
ISO 20022 rails replacing legacy banking.
The flywheel hasn’t even started turning yet for @Hedera 🔥
#CryptoMarket #HBAR #XLM #XRP
10X Multibagger Reality Check 🚨
Everyone wants a 10X
But nobody wants to:
• Buy when volumes are dead
• Hold when price does nothing for months
• Read annual reports instead of timelines
• Look wrong before looking rich
A true 10X stock will:
❌ Feel boring
❌ Be ignored on Twitter
❌ Test your patience
❌ Make you doubt yourself
If it feels comfortable,
it’s probably already priced in.
10X is not luck.
It’s loneliness + conviction + time.
Do the work.
Hold your nerve.
Let compounding cook. 🔥📈
#Multibagger #10X #Investing #PatiencePays #SmallCaps
This is for people who are thinking FII's kyu bechte honge - Why FIIs may be selling - in simple language for beginners
FIIs Return on investing in stocks of another country depends on three big factors:
Stock Price Movement
If the company’s share price rises, FIIs make capital gains.
Example: Buy at ₹100, sell at ₹150 → profit ₹50 per share.
Currency Exchange Rate
FIIs invest in local currency (say Indian Rupees), but eventually convert profits back to their home currency (say US Dollars).
If the local currency depreciates, their returns shrink when converted back.
Example: If ₹1 = $0.012 at entry, but later ₹1 = $0.010, they get fewer dollars for the same rupee profits.
Taxes
Countries often impose capital gains tax, dividend tax, or withholding tax.
This reduces the net return FIIs take home.
What Happens When Currency Depreciates + High Taxes?
Currency depreciation eats into profits: Even if stock prices rise, the weaker currency reduces the value when converted back.
High taxes further cut returns: Gains are taxed before FIIs repatriate money.
Net effect: FIIs need very strong stock performance (or undervalued entry) to still make money.
‼️‼️Example
Imagine a US-based FII investing in India:
Initial Investment: $1,000 → converted to ₹80,000 (at $1 = ₹80).
Stock Purchase: Buys 800 shares at ₹100 each.
After 1 Year: Stock rises to ₹150 → value = ₹120,000.
Profit in Rupees: ₹40,000.
Now consider currency + tax:
Currency Depreciation: Exchange rate becomes $1 = ₹100.
₹120,000 → $1,200 (instead of $1,500 if currency stayed stable).
Tax: Assume 20% capital gains tax on ₹40,000 profit = ₹8,000.
Net value = ₹112,000 → $1,120.
Final Return: $1,120 – $1,000 = $120 (12% gain).
Without depreciation + tax, return would have been $500 (50% gain).
So, despite stock rising 50%, the FII only earns 12% because of currency depreciation + taxes.
there is a catch here - FIIs still earn money if:
The stock appreciation is strong enough to offset currency losses + taxes.
Or they hedge currency risk (using forex derivatives).
Or they invest in markets where growth potential outweighs these frictions.
Would you like to learn more things in simple language??
👇👇
https://t.co/193Dli9b9q
Listed Companies: 5,256
Correction from Peak Levels:
Down 15%–50% = 3,407 companies
Down 50%–75% = 903 companies
Down more than 75% = 103 companies
Over 4,400 listed companies are currently trading 15% or more below their 52 Week highs, highlighting the depth and breadth of the ongoing market correction, especially in mid- and small-cap segments...