Offshore
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Benjamin Hernandez😎
Created a WhatsApp circle for traders who want an edge. Market opens, earnings plays, technical breakdowns—all shared in real-time.
I post my top conviction plays daily with exact levels.
Join now ⚡ https://t.co/71FIJId47G
Message "Join" to enter.
$SOC $ASST $OPEN https://t.co/BJEEkW2wN4
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Created a WhatsApp circle for traders who want an edge. Market opens, earnings plays, technical breakdowns—all shared in real-time.
I post my top conviction plays daily with exact levels.
Join now ⚡ https://t.co/71FIJId47G
Message "Join" to enter.
$SOC $ASST $OPEN https://t.co/BJEEkW2wN4
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Offshore
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Benjamin Hernandez😎
$SXTC PRE-MARKET EXPLOSION🚀
China SXT Pharmaceuticals blasting +150.97% to $0.0778.
From prev close $0.0310 with +24.52% prev gain, but -38.00% over 5D—momentum flipping hard.
Top stock rocket alert.
Exact entry zones and triggers pinned on profile
$BYND $NB $ASST $BMNR $OPEN https://t.co/prmtAUf8NS
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$SXTC PRE-MARKET EXPLOSION🚀
China SXT Pharmaceuticals blasting +150.97% to $0.0778.
From prev close $0.0310 with +24.52% prev gain, but -38.00% over 5D—momentum flipping hard.
Top stock rocket alert.
Exact entry zones and triggers pinned on profile
$BYND $NB $ASST $BMNR $OPEN https://t.co/prmtAUf8NS
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Offshore
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Michael Fritzell (Asian Century Stocks)
The watchlist has been added to the top menu bar https://t.co/cn1kE9L4Ns
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The watchlist has been added to the top menu bar https://t.co/cn1kE9L4Ns
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Dimitry Nakhla | Babylon Capital®
25 Quality Stocks With Estimated EPS CAGR ≥15% Over the Next 2 Years 💵
1. $INTU 15%
2. $BKNG 16%
3. $GE 16%
4. $MSFT 16%
5. $AMZN 17%
6. $MA 17%
7. $KLAC 18%
8. $HWM 19%
9. $TXN 19%
10. $CSU 20%
11. $NOW 20%
12. $NFLX 22%
13. $ANET 24%
14. $APH 24%
15. $AXON 24%
16. $TSM 29%
17. $LRCX 30%
18. $FICO 33%
19. $ALAB 35%
20. $PLTR 35%
21. $FTAI 42%
22. $MELI 44%
23. $NVDA 45%
24. $AMD 61%
25. $GEV 74%
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25 Quality Stocks With Estimated EPS CAGR ≥15% Over the Next 2 Years 💵
1. $INTU 15%
2. $BKNG 16%
3. $GE 16%
4. $MSFT 16%
5. $AMZN 17%
6. $MA 17%
7. $KLAC 18%
8. $HWM 19%
9. $TXN 19%
10. $CSU 20%
11. $NOW 20%
12. $NFLX 22%
13. $ANET 24%
14. $APH 24%
15. $AXON 24%
16. $TSM 29%
17. $LRCX 30%
18. $FICO 33%
19. $ALAB 35%
20. $PLTR 35%
21. $FTAI 42%
22. $MELI 44%
23. $NVDA 45%
24. $AMD 61%
25. $GEV 74%
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Offshore
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Jukan
As usual, AYZ has dropped another brilliant piece.
He starts by firmly disclaiming that it’s not financial advice, but the moment I read it, I couldn’t help but go ahead and invest lol. https://t.co/VMwMshEdYu
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As usual, AYZ has dropped another brilliant piece.
He starts by firmly disclaiming that it’s not financial advice, but the moment I read it, I couldn’t help but go ahead and invest lol. https://t.co/VMwMshEdYu
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Offshore
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Michael Fritzell (Asian Century Stocks)
RT @arctotherium42: In the early 20th century, Chinese intellectuals who studied overseas in Japan or the US tended to become right-wing, those who studied in France tended to become Communists. https://t.co/RMJSkSgjJx
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RT @arctotherium42: In the early 20th century, Chinese intellectuals who studied overseas in Japan or the US tended to become right-wing, those who studied in France tended to become Communists. https://t.co/RMJSkSgjJx
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Offshore
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Michael Fritzell (Asian Century Stocks)
RT @henrysgao: If you live long enough... https://t.co/68Xa5Bz2Zm
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RT @henrysgao: If you live long enough... https://t.co/68Xa5Bz2Zm
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Offshore
Video
Startup Archive
Marc Andreessen on the 3 things he looks for when investing in a startup
The first thing Marc Andreesen looks for is a big market:
“Is there a big existing market that you think you can go after and displace incumbents? Or do you believe there will be a new market that will be big?”
The second thing he looks for is a 10x better product:
“Is there a fundamental technology or economic change that justifies a new company? And the way I always think about that is: Is there a 10x change happening in the technology landscape? Is something 10x faster, 10x cheaper, or 10x better? If it’s not 10x, we as both VCs and entrepreneurs have to ask ourselves if it’s really worth doing because it’s really hard to start new companies . . . Existing companies are usually pretty good at what they do. So for a new company to exist, it has to bring a product to market that’s so much better than what exists that it punches through the status quo.”
The third is the team:
“Is the team outstanding? . . . You want to have a founding team of complementary skillsets. You want to have at least one super strong technologist — quite possibly more than one. Some of the best startups are actually more than one founding technologist. And then it often helps to have someone who is a marketing or salesperson who has a really good understanding of business.”
Marc believes that you need all three of these, but if you’re going to compromise on one of those as an investor, it should be the product:
“A great market is a lot easier to make up for with iterative product execution. The problem with a poor or small market is that even if you do a good job on the product, there just aren’t that many customers so it’s hard to ever get big and people get demoralized . . . And then we evaluate the team of a startup by its ability to get into a big market with a good product.”
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Marc Andreessen on the 3 things he looks for when investing in a startup
The first thing Marc Andreesen looks for is a big market:
“Is there a big existing market that you think you can go after and displace incumbents? Or do you believe there will be a new market that will be big?”
The second thing he looks for is a 10x better product:
“Is there a fundamental technology or economic change that justifies a new company? And the way I always think about that is: Is there a 10x change happening in the technology landscape? Is something 10x faster, 10x cheaper, or 10x better? If it’s not 10x, we as both VCs and entrepreneurs have to ask ourselves if it’s really worth doing because it’s really hard to start new companies . . . Existing companies are usually pretty good at what they do. So for a new company to exist, it has to bring a product to market that’s so much better than what exists that it punches through the status quo.”
The third is the team:
“Is the team outstanding? . . . You want to have a founding team of complementary skillsets. You want to have at least one super strong technologist — quite possibly more than one. Some of the best startups are actually more than one founding technologist. And then it often helps to have someone who is a marketing or salesperson who has a really good understanding of business.”
Marc believes that you need all three of these, but if you’re going to compromise on one of those as an investor, it should be the product:
“A great market is a lot easier to make up for with iterative product execution. The problem with a poor or small market is that even if you do a good job on the product, there just aren’t that many customers so it’s hard to ever get big and people get demoralized . . . And then we evaluate the team of a startup by its ability to get into a big market with a good product.”
tweet
Offshore
Video
Startup Archive
Marc Andreessen on the 3 things he looks for when investing in a startup
The first thing Marc Andreesen looks for is a big market:
“Is there a big existing market that you think you can go after and displace incumbents? Or do you believe there will be a new market that will be big?”
The second thing he looks for is a 10x better product:
“Is there a fundamental technology or economic change that justifies a new company? And the way I always think about that is: Is there a 10x change happening in the technology landscape? Is something 10x faster, 10x cheaper, or 10x better? If it’s not 10x, we as both VCs and entrepreneurs have to ask ourselves if it’s really worth doing because it’s really hard to start new companies . . . Existing companies are usually pretty good at what they do. So for a new company to exist, it has to bring a product to market that’s so much better than what exists that it punches through the status quo.”
The third is the team:
“Is the team outstanding? . . . You want to have a founding team of complementary skillsets. You want to have at least one super strong technologist — quite possibly more than one. Some of the best startups are actually more than one founding technologist. And then it often helps to have someone who is a marketing or salesperson who has a really good understanding of business.”
Marc believes that you need all three of these, but if you’re going to compromise on one of those as an investor, it should be the product:
“A great market is a lot easier to make up for with iterative product execution. The problem with a poor or small market is that even if you do a good job on the product, there just aren’t that many customers so it’s hard to ever get big and people get demoralized . . . And then we evaluate the team of a startup by its ability to get into a big market with a good product.”
tweet
Marc Andreessen on the 3 things he looks for when investing in a startup
The first thing Marc Andreesen looks for is a big market:
“Is there a big existing market that you think you can go after and displace incumbents? Or do you believe there will be a new market that will be big?”
The second thing he looks for is a 10x better product:
“Is there a fundamental technology or economic change that justifies a new company? And the way I always think about that is: Is there a 10x change happening in the technology landscape? Is something 10x faster, 10x cheaper, or 10x better? If it’s not 10x, we as both VCs and entrepreneurs have to ask ourselves if it’s really worth doing because it’s really hard to start new companies . . . Existing companies are usually pretty good at what they do. So for a new company to exist, it has to bring a product to market that’s so much better than what exists that it punches through the status quo.”
The third is the team:
“Is the team outstanding? . . . You want to have a founding team of complementary skillsets. You want to have at least one super strong technologist — quite possibly more than one. Some of the best startups are actually more than one founding technologist. And then it often helps to have someone who is a marketing or salesperson who has a really good understanding of business.”
Marc believes that you need all three of these, but if you’re going to compromise on one of those as an investor, it should be the product:
“A great market is a lot easier to make up for with iterative product execution. The problem with a poor or small market is that even if you do a good job on the product, there just aren’t that many customers so it’s hard to ever get big and people get demoralized . . . And then we evaluate the team of a startup by its ability to get into a big market with a good product.”
tweet