Offshore
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memenodes
Me showing up to Christmas party when the crypto market is pumping https://t.co/hJgppu096i
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Me showing up to Christmas party when the crypto market is pumping https://t.co/hJgppu096i
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Offshore
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WealthyReadings
I published a new write up on the two best opportunities on the sportswear industry today.
The fundamentals, reasons for appreciations and how to capitalize on them.
Already bought shares in one.
$ONON $LULU https://t.co/LcQC8Ydx2d
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I published a new write up on the two best opportunities on the sportswear industry today.
The fundamentals, reasons for appreciations and how to capitalize on them.
Already bought shares in one.
$ONON $LULU https://t.co/LcQC8Ydx2d
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Offshore
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Quiver Quantitative
Carvana stock has now risen 10,000% since we posted this.
10,000%
In 3 years.
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Carvana stock has now risen 10,000% since we posted this.
10,000%
In 3 years.
Carvana going bankrupt? Insiders don't think so
They've bought more than $663 million in $CVNA shares over the past year https://t.co/xRUSoJPUQh - Quiver Quantitativetweet
Offshore
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Fiscal.ai
Remitly just said that by 2028 it expects:
$2.6B-$3B in Revenue
$575M-$600M in Adj. EBITDA
The company currently has an enterprise value of $2.6 billion.
$RELY https://t.co/TFBnGiR7F4
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Remitly just said that by 2028 it expects:
$2.6B-$3B in Revenue
$575M-$600M in Adj. EBITDA
The company currently has an enterprise value of $2.6 billion.
$RELY https://t.co/TFBnGiR7F4
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WealthyReadings
The next big wave of returns in AI will come from new narratives. I believe two mainly.
Companies pushing compute forward. Not "more" compute, better compute. Optimized compute notably in term of energy consumption, which will be achieved by reducing bottlenecks.
Companies actually leveraging AI to deliver value. Right now, we barely have any. Image generation is impressive but it was never something people were actively asking for. We’ve seen improvements in ads and some automation, but that’s nothing compared to what's coming.
Finding those handful names will be enough to beat the market by a wide margin over the next decade.
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The next big wave of returns in AI will come from new narratives. I believe two mainly.
Companies pushing compute forward. Not "more" compute, better compute. Optimized compute notably in term of energy consumption, which will be achieved by reducing bottlenecks.
Companies actually leveraging AI to deliver value. Right now, we barely have any. Image generation is impressive but it was never something people were actively asking for. We’ve seen improvements in ads and some automation, but that’s nothing compared to what's coming.
Finding those handful names will be enough to beat the market by a wide margin over the next decade.
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Offshore
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App Economy Insights
Global MAUs in November:
• ChatGPT: 810M (+7M)
• Gemini: 346M (+20M)
• Others: 302M (-9M)
Will ChatGPT and Gemini lines ever cross? https://t.co/21KP6k5vuY
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Global MAUs in November:
• ChatGPT: 810M (+7M)
• Gemini: 346M (+20M)
• Others: 302M (-9M)
Will ChatGPT and Gemini lines ever cross? https://t.co/21KP6k5vuY
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AkhenOsiris
OpenAI
Wired:
OPENAI HAS ALLEGEDLY become more guarded about publishing research that highlights the potentially negative impact that AI could have on the economy, four people familiar with the matter tell WIRED.
The perceived pullback has contributed to the departure of at least two employees on OpenAI’s economic research team in recent months, according to the same four people, who spoke to WIRED on the condition of anonymity.
One of these employees, Tom Cunningham, left the company entirely in September after concluding it had become difficult to publish high-quality research, WIRED has learned. In a parting message shared internally, Cunningham wrote that the team faced a growing tension between conducting rigorous analysis and functioning as a de facto advocacy arm for OpenAI, according to sources familiar with the situation.
Cunningham declined WIRED’s request for comment.
OpenAI chief strategy officer Jason Kwon addressed these concerns in an internal memo following Cunningham’s departure. In a copy of the message obtained by WIRED, Kwon argued that OpenAI must act as a responsible leader in the AI sector and should not only raise problems with the technology, but also “build the solutions.”
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OpenAI
Wired:
OPENAI HAS ALLEGEDLY become more guarded about publishing research that highlights the potentially negative impact that AI could have on the economy, four people familiar with the matter tell WIRED.
The perceived pullback has contributed to the departure of at least two employees on OpenAI’s economic research team in recent months, according to the same four people, who spoke to WIRED on the condition of anonymity.
One of these employees, Tom Cunningham, left the company entirely in September after concluding it had become difficult to publish high-quality research, WIRED has learned. In a parting message shared internally, Cunningham wrote that the team faced a growing tension between conducting rigorous analysis and functioning as a de facto advocacy arm for OpenAI, according to sources familiar with the situation.
Cunningham declined WIRED’s request for comment.
OpenAI chief strategy officer Jason Kwon addressed these concerns in an internal memo following Cunningham’s departure. In a copy of the message obtained by WIRED, Kwon argued that OpenAI must act as a responsible leader in the AI sector and should not only raise problems with the technology, but also “build the solutions.”
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AkhenOsiris
Ads:
WPP Media, one of the world's largest ad-buying agencies, now says it expects the global advertising market to grow by 8.8% this year (excluding U.S. political advertising), up from 6% in June.
Similarly, Brian Wieser — a top advertising industry analyst — raised his U.S. forecast for 2025, projecting 11% growth for 2025 (excluding political advertising), compared to 6% in June.
WPP Media is so optimistic that is has increased its growth estimates for 2026, from the 6.1% it predicted in June to 7.1% now. In the U.S., Wieser believes the ad market will grow 8.9% next year, thanks in part to a boost in midterm political advertising spend.
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Ads:
WPP Media, one of the world's largest ad-buying agencies, now says it expects the global advertising market to grow by 8.8% this year (excluding U.S. political advertising), up from 6% in June.
Similarly, Brian Wieser — a top advertising industry analyst — raised his U.S. forecast for 2025, projecting 11% growth for 2025 (excluding political advertising), compared to 6% in June.
WPP Media is so optimistic that is has increased its growth estimates for 2026, from the 6.1% it predicted in June to 7.1% now. In the U.S., Wieser believes the ad market will grow 8.9% next year, thanks in part to a boost in midterm political advertising spend.
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