|
Post by flearider on Jan 29, 2022 20:45:16 GMT
A Longer (more detailed) Jeremy Graham View WOW SMART GUY .. i like him basicly over the next 2 yrs we are fecked ... no wonder there planning a war in europe ..
|
|
|
Post by code on Jan 30, 2022 15:49:44 GMT
|
|
|
Post by code on Jan 30, 2022 16:13:53 GMT
My little hedge fund is up exactly 150% since launching January 26, 2020. Going to have audit done next month. Do the Auditors have an accent?
|
|
|
Post by code on Jan 30, 2022 16:14:50 GMT
Are you taking investors?
My partner is a trader named Rob DeAveiro who is genuinely very skilled. I was a broker for several years myself and actually never knew a more successful day trader over the long term. Rob and I developed our system for volatility trading over several years.
Rob sometimes posts on an active daytraders website fazination.proboards.com under the username TheMist. He often posts charts and daily calls which have been helpful for those traders over the years. Several of those members are investors in the fund. There are a few talented and knowledgable traders who post on that website. I go by walnut there same as here. I seldom post though.
BR Chris
Thanks
|
|
|
Post by walnut on Jan 30, 2022 16:26:46 GMT
My little hedge fund is up exactly 150% since launching January 26, 2020. Going to have audit done next month. Do the Auditors have an accent? Yiddish-y. No funny business though. We're also going to hire a professional fund administrator. The accounting for even a small fund like ours is not simple and must be absolutely without error. I think we're going with this firm: www.navconsulting.net/
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on Jan 30, 2022 23:03:08 GMT
OK Walnut. I watch this guy for fun. But his forecast of the next high growth real estate markets include two you would know ... OK City and Fayetteville, AR.
|
|
|
Post by walnut on Jan 30, 2022 23:35:29 GMT
OK Walnut. I watch this guy for fun. But his forecast of the next high growth real estate markets include two you would know ... OK City and Fayetteville, AR. He used the Tulsa skyline and Tulsa University campus shot when describing OKC and OU. But yeah Oklahoma City has a boomtown feel. I think that Tulsa still is prettier and seems a little more interesting to me. OKC is a major hub for natural gas development, and that is going to only get bigger. Fayettville, AR has achieved boomtown status if you include the entire Rogers-Bentonville-Springdale metro area. But I think that he is overhyping it a bit. It has grown, has all the trendy new restaurant chains and a very nice mall etc. Pretty area, although the natural beauty of the area is put somewhat at risk by all the development.
I'd choose NW Arkansas over OKC if I had to choose, nicer area. Home prices probably will remain about par with each other. I doubt either will be the next Austin.
I'd say that the Tulsa suburbs edge out both. Laid out nicer, sensible traffic, large-ish homes on big lots, good home price appreciation.
My 2 cents!
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on Jan 31, 2022 5:01:07 GMT
OK Walnut. I watch this guy for fun. But his forecast of the next high growth real estate markets include two you would know ... OK City and Fayetteville, AR. He used the Tulsa skyline and Tulsa University campus shot when describing OKC and OU. But yeah Oklahoma City has a boomtown feel. I think that Tulsa still is prettier and seems a little more interesting to me. OKC is a major hub for natural gas development, and that is going to only get bigger. Fayettville, AR has achieved boomtown status if you include the entire Rogers-Bentonville-Springdale metro area. But I think that he is overhyping it a bit. It has grown, has all the trendy new restaurant chains and a very nice mall etc. Pretty area, although the natural beauty of the area is put somewhat at risk by all the development.
I'd choose NW Arkansas over OKC if I had to choose, nicer area. Home prices probably will remain about par with each other. I doubt either will be the next Austin.
I'd say that the Tulsa suburbs edge out both. Laid out nicer, sensible traffic, large-ish homes on big lots, good home price appreciation.
My 2 cents!
I have driven through parts of the Fayetteville MSA on a couple of occasions. Columbia is about the same size as Fayetteville proper (also a university town), but is only about 1/3 the size of the MSA. I liked Fayetteville but didn't spend long enough to get to know the neighborhoods. I think I could live in NW Arkansas. Like the forests and landscape.
|
|
|
Post by nonentropic on Jan 31, 2022 7:48:16 GMT
Walnut I'm interested in your fund I will send note through you sound like you have a handle on things, what is consider the normal investment parcel.
|
|
|
Post by walnut on Jan 31, 2022 15:11:22 GMT
Walnut I'm interested in your fund I will send note through you sound like you have a handle on things, what is consider the normal investment parcel. The smallest investors were $20k, the largest was $450K USD
Yes talk to you then
|
|
|
Post by flearider on Jan 31, 2022 19:58:00 GMT
Walnut I'm interested in your fund I will send note through you sound like you have a handle on things, what is consider the normal investment parcel. send me 40k i'll double it in a yr unless i get caught .. uk weed farm ...lol
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on Feb 1, 2022 3:55:34 GMT
It is a really good day NOT to be a Turk. Perhaps Greece would like to buy back Constantinople.
|
|
|
Post by walnut on Feb 1, 2022 4:27:34 GMT
It is a really good day NOT to be a Turk. Perhaps Greece would like to buy back Constantinople.
I'm sure that the EU is dying to bring them in now.
|
|
|
Post by missouriboy on Feb 1, 2022 4:31:56 GMT
It is a really good day NOT to be a Turk. Perhaps Greece would like to buy back Constantinople.
I'm sure that the EU is dying to bring them in now. Erdogan may have to move out ... in a hurry. Couldn't happen to a nicer guy. Maybe our Central Bankers should be forced to take notes ... and explain how different we are. So we've got Grantham and Schiff talking similar scenarios. Who else? And who do we believe?
|
|
|
Post by code on Feb 2, 2022 16:55:45 GMT
U.S. National Debt Exceeds $30 Trillion for First Time
|
|