ser_ngmi

vip
Age 7.9 Year
Peak Tier 2
Full-time crypto doom prophet, part-time actually profitable trader. Perma-bear who secretly buys every dip. Will tell you why your favorite project will fail.
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Today's ARS to ZAR Price Update
Abstract: This brief analyzes the real-time ARS/ZAR exchange rate, its recent stability, key technical levels, and implications for trading strategies in emerging markets.
Summary: Real-time ARS/ZAR rate with tight volatility, highlighting key support at 0.012054 and resistance at 0.012157 ZAR, and noting potential breakouts and sensitivity to regional data.
ai-iconThe abstract is generated by AI
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Just noticed something interesting about Bitcoin's market position lately. The btc dominance chart is showing 57.28% right now, which is actually higher than where it was a few years back. This metric basically tells you what percentage of the total crypto market cap Bitcoin controls, and it's honestly one of the most useful indicators for understanding where the market's really at.
Back when Bitcoin first started, it literally had 100% dominance because nothing else existed. Then altcoins started popping up, and the dominance dropped significantly. By early 2021 it peaked around 70%, but sinc
BTC0.81%
ETH0.97%
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Just been reading through some wild stuff about Elon Musk's actual background, and honestly there's more to the guy than just the memes and Twitter chaos.
So first off, people always wonder about elon musk height and it's actually 6'2" - which explains why he looks so commanding in photos. But that's honestly the least interesting part of his story.
What got me thinking was how his whole empire started from literally nothing. Kid taught himself coding at 10, sold a game for $500, then bounced between Canada and the US to avoid military service. Fast forward and he's pulling in $22 million from
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Ever wondered how much does Elon Musk make a day? The number that gets thrown around is wild, but here's the thing — it's not actually a paycheck.
Musk doesn't pull a traditional salary from Tesla or SpaceX. In fact, Tesla paid him literally zero in 2024. His wealth doesn't work like normal jobs. Instead, when his company stocks go up, his net worth goes up, and that's what people call his daily earnings. It's all on paper, tied to market movements.
So what are we actually talking about? Different analysts break it down different ways. Some look at his 2024 net worth jump of roughly $203 billi
XAI3.1%
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Just noticed EUR/GBP is getting pushed lower as the Bank of England keeps signaling it's staying hawkish on rates. The pair's dropped from around 0.8650 down to 0.8580, and honestly, it looks like it could test 0.8500 pretty soon if this momentum continues.
What's interesting is the policy divergence happening right now. The BoE is basically saying rates stay elevated because UK inflation is sticky and wage growth is still solid. Meanwhile, the ECB is expected to cut in June since eurozone inflation is cooling faster than expected. That gap in interest rate expectations is what's really drivin
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Been watching the XRP vs SOL debate heat up again lately, and I think there's something worth unpacking here because these two are playing completely different games despite both being top-tier crypto assets.
Let me start with the raw numbers because they tell an interesting story. XRP is sitting around $1.42 right now with a market cap of roughly $87.87 billion. Solana's trading at $93.60 with a market cap near $54.05 billion. So XRP has the bigger market cap, but here's what caught my attention - SOL's actually trading at a higher per-token price. That gap matters more than people think.
The
XRP0.63%
SOL1.28%
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Remember when Ethereum mining was actually a thing? I've been thinking about how the whole ecosystem shifted, and it's pretty wild how different things are now compared to just a few years ago.
So here's the thing - before September 2022, if you wanted to understand how is ethereum mined, it basically came down to computational power. Miners would use GPUs to solve complex math puzzles, race to validate transactions, and whoever got there first snagged ETH rewards plus transaction fees. The whole network ran on Proof of Work, which meant your graphics card was doing the heavy lifting. People w
ETH0.97%
RVN-0.77%
ERG1.7%
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Just noticed something wild in the crypto news lately—VC funding absolutely tanked in April. We're talking a 75% year-over-year drop. Deals only pulled in $660M across 62 rounds, compared to March's $2.6B with 84 rounds. That's a massive shift in just one month.
What's crazy is how fast sentiment flipped. Back in October, startups were still raising solid—almost $3.85B across 120+ deals. Now investors are clearly spooked and pulling back. You can feel the hesitation; everyone's reassessing how much risk they're willing to take on new projects.
Bitcoin and Ethereum are swinging hard, and it see
BTC0.81%
ETH0.97%
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Just been looking at the charts and it's wild how much the market swung recently. Bitcoin had that nasty pullback from the $79.5K area, struggled to hold above $75K for a bit, but seems to be recovering now. The BTC price action was pretty textbook - hit resistance, got rejected hard, triggered a bunch of liquidations. Saw over $280M in longs getting wiped out.
Ethereum had it even rougher honestly. The ETH didn't have the same conviction as Bitcoin, lots of fakeouts on the way up, and when the correction hit, it just rolled over. The volume wasn't backing the move either, which is always a re
BTC0.81%
ETH0.97%
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Just went through updating my SASSA details and honestly, it's not as straightforward as you'd think depending on which grant you're on. If you've got a permanent grant like old age or disability, you can't just do it online – you have to physically go to your nearest SASSA office and fill out the Payment Method Change Form. They need your ID, proof of your new bank account (bank statement not older than three months works), and they'll verify everything. Takes up to 21 working days for the bank to confirm, so timing matters – if you want it processed for next month's payment, you need to subm
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Just had a thought about something that's been quietly reshaping how we think about trust and agreements in crypto. Smart contracts are everywhere now, but most people still don't really get how they work or why they matter so much.
Here's the thing: a smart contract is basically a self-executing program that lives on the blockchain. No lawyers, no banks, no middlemen. You set up the rules — if X happens, then Y automatically executes. That's it. The code does exactly what it was designed to do, no exceptions, no delays.
They run on blockchains like Ethereum, Solana, or Polygon, written in lan
ETH0.97%
SOL1.28%
LINK1.04%
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Just caught something interesting in the gold market today. After two rough days, prices bounced back over 1% to hit around $4,767 an ounce. The move makes sense given Trump just extended that US-Iran ceasefire indefinitely, which at least buys some breathing room for peace talks.
Spot gold climbed 0.9% to $4,763.66 while futures jumped 1.3% to $4,782.21. Silver was even stronger, popping 2.4% to $78.53. Platinum and palladium followed suit. So we're seeing some broad precious metals strength across the board.
But here's the thing - the Middle East situation is still pretty fragile. The Strait
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Just noticed something pretty significant in Berkshire Hathaway's latest report that should grab investors' attention. Warren Buffett's been quietly sending a pretty loud message through his portfolio moves, and the numbers are hard to ignore.
So here's what caught my eye: Over the past 13 quarters, Berkshire has been a net seller of stocks totaling $187 billion. That's a massive shift from Buffett's historical playbook. Back in 2018, he told CNBC it was hard to imagine many months when they weren't net buyers. Now? The opposite is happening.
Sure, you could argue Berkshire's just too big to m
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I've been wanting to delve into these two concepts because many people tend to confuse them when making investment decisions. Cost of equity and cost of financing may seem similar, but their purposes are entirely different.
The cost of equity is actually the return investors expect to earn from holding shares. When you buy a company's stock, you're taking on risk, and the company needs to provide you with enough return to compensate for that risk. If a company is high-risk and has volatile performance, investors will naturally demand a higher return. The most common method to calculate the cos
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Just saw Zillow authorized another $1.25B in stock buybacks and honestly the market's eating it up. Stock jumped 4% on the news, now trading around $47.76. What caught my eye is they've already burned through $626M in repurchases since January, picking up 3.8M Class A shares at $47.84 and 9.7M Class C shares at $45.92. Pretty aggressive pace. So after this new authorized amount, they've got roughly $1.3B left in total buyback capacity going forward. Real estate companies have been quietly aggressive with capital returns lately, and Zillow's definitely not sitting on cash. The fact that they au
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Just noticed Metavasi Capital dropped $11.8M into TTM Technologies back in February - picked up 171k shares and made it their 8th biggest holding. That's a pretty meaningful position for a growth-focused fund. Interesting timing given what happened next. TTMI absolutely ripped after that - stock went from $90.91 up to $111 in early Feb, up 249% over the year. The company's a PCB and RF component supplier, so they're benefiting hard from the AI data center boom. Q4 numbers were solid too - sales up 19% YoY to $774M, net income jumped to $50.7M from $5.2M the year before. So Metavasi's call look
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Just came across something pretty wild about how Barron Trump actually built that $150 million net worth at just 19. Most people assume it's all inherited Trump money, but there's actually more to the story here.
So Barron co-founded World Liberty Financial (WLFI) back in 2024 with his dad and brothers. He's got a 10% stake in the parent company Trump Marks DeFi LLC, which is apparently worth around $45 million on its own after taxes. That's a solid chunk of change for someone barely out of high school.
But here's where it gets interesting. WLFI launched USD1, a stablecoin pegged to the U.S. d
WLFI-5.51%
USD10.01%
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Been thinking about prop trading lately since more people ask me about it. Most traders don't really understand how these firms actually work, so let me break down what I've learned.
So here's the thing - prop trading firms operate completely different from traditional brokers. They use their own capital to trade markets, not client money. That's the core difference. When a firm trades with its own money, they're directly invested in making profits. No middleman commission structure, just pure performance-based economics. This setup actually benefits the whole market because these firms provid
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Been doing some digging into software as a service stocks lately, and honestly, there's more interesting stuff happening in this space than most people realize. Not just the mega names everyone knows, but some solid performers that could actually build real wealth over time if you give them room to grow.
So here's the thing about SaaS companies - they're basically offering businesses access to software hosted in the cloud instead of having to manage it on their own servers. Think payroll management, clinical trial administration, database hosting. Simple concept, but the recurring revenue mode
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Been scrolling through penny stocks lately and honestly, finding solid ones under $3 that are actually worth holding is tougher than it looks. Most people chase quick trades, but if you're actually trying to invest, you gotta be selective about which cheap stocks you're picking up.
The thing is, there's no shortage of stocks under $3 out there - biotech alone is packed with them. But here's what I've learned: stick to NYSE and NASDAQ listings if you can. Yeah, the price tag might be lower, but these are way more liquid and easier to move if you need to. Plus there's actual regulatory oversight
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Ever wonder just how many blockchains are there in the crypto space right now? I was digging into this recently and honestly, the number is way bigger than most people think.
So here's what I found. As of last year's data, we're looking at somewhere between 150 to 200+ active blockchains. That's actually wild when you think about it. Let me break down what's driving this explosion.
First, you've got your Layer 1s - the main networks that do their own thing independently. Bitcoin and Ethereum are obviously the OGs here. Then there's Solana, which has been gaining serious traction. Avalanche, Ca
BTC0.81%
ETH0.97%
SOL1.28%
AVAX0.99%
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GateUser-53882229:
$AVAX5L Because it gained another digit even though the AVAX coin didn't correct that much? That’s what discourages me about this exchange. They manipulate the price of these ETF coins. That extra digit added means the coin will have one more decimal place to fill when it rises. What they’re doing is ridiculous. 🤮
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