Rekt_Recovery

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Helping traders recover from bad leverage positions. Been liquidated more times than I can count but still up 500% lifetime. The best teachers are former failures.
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USDG Historical Price and Yield Analysis: Should I buy USDG now?
This article reviews the price and volatility of USDG since its inception, evaluates the potential gains from buying 10 units, and answers whether now is the right time to buy. USDG is a dollar-pegged stablecoin on Ethereum and Solana, 1:1 with the US dollar, with prices usually maintained around $1.00. Between 2025 and 2026, fluctuations are minimal; buying in 2025 and selling in 2026 would result in a potential loss of about $0.013. Conclusion: Stability is the core value, making it suitable as a payment and preservation tool rather than an investment chasing capital appreciation; it should be included in stable asset allocations.
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Been watching XRP's positioning in global payments pretty closely lately, and there's something worth paying attention to here.
So here's what's happening: XRP is quietly establishing itself as a legitimate bridge currency for cross-border transactions. Unlike traditional systems like SWIFT that require banks to lock up capital in pre-funded accounts across different jurisdictions, XRP enables something fundamentally different. Institutions can convert fiat to XRP, move value across borders in seconds, then convert back to local currency almost instantly. Capital stays liquid instead of sittin
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Just rewatched The Wolf of Wall Street and got curious about what actually happened to Jordan Belfort after prison. Turns out his net worth story is way more interesting than the movie itself.
So here's the thing—most people think the film glorified this guy's lifestyle, but they don't realize the real Jordan Belfort net worth situation is basically a cautionary tale on steroids. In 1990, the dude was sitting on roughly $25 million. By 1998, at the peak of his Stratton Oakmont scheme, he'd ballooned that to around $400 million. But then it all came crashing down.
The fraud was brutal. He and h
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Been watching the creator exodus from OnlyFans pretty closely, and honestly the shift is more real than people think. The 20% cut combined with policy whiplash has creators actively shopping around for alternatives now. Not just venting on Twitter anymore—they're actually moving their audiences and testing new platforms. Worth paying attention to if you're in the creator space.
So I dug into which onlyfans alternative for creators is actually gaining traction right now, and it's not just one-to-one clones. Some platforms are completely rethinking how creator monetization should work.
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Just looked up how much Clix actually makes and honestly it's wild. This guy's only 21 and already sitting on like $27 million net worth. Started out playing Fortnite seriously as a teenager and basically made it to the top of North America. Won the World Cup qualifiers back in 2019 when he was still a kid.
So what is Clix net worth breakdown? He's making money from literally everywhere - tournament winnings, YouTube (over 3 million subscribers), Twitch streams, brand deals, and merch. Tournament earnings alone are crazy, like $112k from the 2019 World Cup and another $80k from FNCS. YouTube p
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Ever wondered what Elon Musk actually earns in a single day? I've been looking into this and the numbers are honestly mind-blowing, but there's a catch most people miss.
First thing to understand: Musk doesn't get a regular paycheck. Tesla literally paid him zero salary in 2024. So when people talk about how much does Elon Musk earn a day, they're not talking about money hitting his bank account. They're talking about his net worth fluctuations based on stock prices and company valuations.
Here's where it gets interesting. Different calculations give wildly different numbers. According to some
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Just looked into Jordan Belfort's story again and it's honestly wild how much his net worth situation has changed. Most people only know him from the Scorsese film, but the real numbers behind his finances are pretty interesting.
So here's the thing—during the late 1980s and 90s, when he was running Stratton Oakmont, this guy was absolutely loaded. At his peak around 1998, estimates suggest he hit around $400 million. That's not even counting the $50-100 million in annual revenues his firm was pulling in. But that was then. Fast forward to now, and jordan belfort net worth estimates are all ov
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Just realized so many people applying for SASSA SRD aren't even checking their application status regularly. Like, you submit and then just... wait? That's how you miss payments or don't realize your app got rejected. Been there.
So here's the thing about SRD status check - it's actually pretty straightforward if you know where to look. You can go online, punch in your ID number and phone number, and boom, you get your result instantly. Takes like two minutes. But most people don't do it, which is wild because knowing whether you're approved, pending, or declined makes a huge difference.
I've
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Ever wonder how much does Elon Musk make in one day? The answer is wild — and also kind of misleading in the way people usually think about it.
Here's the thing: Musk doesn't get a paycheck. Tesla literally paid him zero salary in 2024. So when headlines scream about him making hundreds of millions daily, they're not talking about money hitting his bank account. They're measuring something way more abstract — the change in his net worth as stock prices and company valuations move around.
The numbers floating around are pretty insane. Some analyses suggest Musk's wealth grew by roughly $203 bil
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XAI3.88%
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Just realized something — why are so many brands struggling with Instagram and TikTok comments while their teams are drowning in DMs? I've been watching how companies handle customer issues on social, and it's wild how many still treat it like an afterthought.
Like, consumers now expect responses within minutes, not hours. One unanswered complaint can spiral into a whole thread of negativity. But here's the thing: most in-house teams can't scale that fast, especially during product launches or seasonal rushes. That's why social media customer service outsourcing has become such a big deal late
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Just noticed something interesting about how Peter Schiff positions himself in markets. Here's a guy who's been consistently contrarian for decades - and it's actually made him incredibly wealthy despite most people thinking he's too pessimistic.
Schiff's current wealth sits well over $80 million, which is wild considering his entire investment thesis goes against mainstream financial advice. He literally built his fortune by doing the opposite of what most investors do. While everyone was chasing the Magnificent Seven stocks and tech gains, he was loading up on gold and international assets.
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So I've been looking at the NFT market history, and honestly, the numbers are wild. We're talking about digital art pieces that have sold for over $250 million combined, with single works breaking $90 million. It's hard to wrap your head around until you actually dig into what's driving these prices.
Let me break down what I'm seeing. The most expensive NFT ever sold is The Merge by Pak, which hit $91.8 million back in December 2021. But here's the thing that makes it interesting - it wasn't one buyer. Instead, nearly 29,000 collectors participated through fractional ownership, each buying uni
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ETH0.85%
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Just noticed wlfi hit a historic low around $0.05 last week, and things were looking pretty rough for the token. The price had already dropped 38.5% through April, then continued sliding into early May. But here's what caught my attention - World Liberty Financial just dumped 5.9 billion tokens through private sales, pulling in about $550 million. That's a massive move.
What's interesting is that roughly 80% of early wlfi buyers still have their tokens locked up, so there's actually less selling pressure than you'd expect. The institutional buyers scooping up billions of coins at these discoun
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You know how everyone keeps asking about Blueface's net worth? Jonathan Michael Porter—that's his real name—went from zero to hero pretty fast thanks to 'Thotiana' dropping in 2018. That track just went viral and suddenly he was everywhere. But here's the thing about his wealth situation in 2026: the numbers are all over the place depending on who you ask. Some sources say around 4 million, others claim closer to 10 million. The gap usually comes down to what people are counting—liquid cash versus property, investments, and all that stuff.
So where's the money actually coming from? Music is ob
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Just noticed something wild—Wall Street is finally waking up to what we've known for years. The biggest banks are throwing out gold and silver price targets that would've sounded crazy a decade ago. JPMorgan's calling for gold above $6,300, UBS at $6,200, and some are even talking silver hitting $100+. That's not a small move. We're talking 30-50% from where we are now.
The story behind these gold and silver price targets is straightforward enough. Central banks keep buying gold like it's going out of style. Fiat keeps losing purchasing power. Meanwhile silver's got actual demand—solar panels,
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Just caught wind that COIN stock jumped 7.6% after the Senate finally hammered out a deal on stablecoin rewards. Honestly didn't think they'd get there, but apparently Tillis and Alsobrooks worked something out that both the crypto side and banks could live with. The whole thing was basically: can platforms let people earn yield on stablecoins or not? Banks were freaking out thinking it'd drain deposits, crypto companies said it was anticompetitive to block it. The compromise lets rewards happen but with some guardrails - can't just be a bank account copy-paste on blockchain. Pretty interestin
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Just noticed RH took a hit today while the broader market was actually up. Stock dropped about 3% to close around $151, which is interesting considering the S&P 500 gained almost a point. The furniture stock has been rough lately too - down about 22% over the past month while the overall market is basically flat. What caught my eye though is the valuation setup on RH right now. Trading at a forward P/E of 15.36, which is actually cheaper than the industry average of 19.61. The PEG ratio is sitting at 0.66 compared to the sector average of 2.83, so on paper it looks pretty reasonable. Analysts
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Just caught wind that Kai-Ulrich Deissner, the CEO of Ceconomy, is stepping down sometime this year. He apparently told the board back in March that he's done for personal reasons. Pretty interesting timing honestly.
So now the Supervisory Board has to figure out succession planning and all that. MTTRY stock was trading around $1.06 when this news hit, up a decent amount that day. The whole leadership transition thing should get ironed out soon based on what they said.
Kai had been leading the company, but I guess sometimes people just decide they're ready to move on. Curious to see who they b
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So you finally found that rare coin worth serious money. Now what? I've been thinking about this lately because a lot of collectors hit this exact moment and just... freeze. They've got cash in hand but no real plan for what comes next.
I talked to some financial folks about this, and the consensus is pretty interesting. One advisor told me that reinvesting back into coins could actually make sense if you're treating this as an ongoing hobby. But there's a bigger question: should you keep the money in collectibles, or spread it around?
Here's the thing about diversification. Most wealth manage
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Just saw Celldex dropped some solid retreatment data on Barzolvolimab at the AAAAI meeting. Apparently patients with cold urticaria who needed another round of treatment got the same strong results as the first time around - that's actually pretty encouraging for a chronic skin condition drug. The whole point is targeting mast cells, which is where these urticaria symptoms come from in the first place. What caught my attention is they're saying the drug works just as well on the second go, which means patients could potentially get retreated when symptoms come back instead of being stuck on co
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