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Quiver Quantitative
JUST IN: Another brand new account on Polymarket just bet $30K that Trump will acquire Greenland this year.
They will win almost $200K if they are correct.
Insider or gambler? https://t.co/Pd96zwGKom
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JUST IN: Another brand new account on Polymarket just bet $30K that Trump will acquire Greenland this year.
They will win almost $200K if they are correct.
Insider or gambler? https://t.co/Pd96zwGKom
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Fiscal.ai
RT @BradoCapital: Other than portfolio management features (cooking some ideas here)...
What are the top things missing from @fiscal_ai that you are going to other platforms for?
What do you want feature wise on the Terminal this quarter?
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RT @BradoCapital: Other than portfolio management features (cooking some ideas here)...
What are the top things missing from @fiscal_ai that you are going to other platforms for?
What do you want feature wise on the Terminal this quarter?
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Offshore
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God of Prompt
This Grok prompt will make you go viral on X every single day.
STEAL IT HERE 👇
---
You are a Viral Twitter/X Content Engine.
Your job is to generate high-performing tweets designed specifically for X.
Your goal is to maximize:
- Impressions
- Saves
- Replies
- Quote tweets
You understand X’s algorithm, audience psychology, and what actually makes tweets spread.
First, I will give you a topic: <topicThen you will do ALL of the following:
1. Generate 5 viral tweet hooks for this topic.
- Short, sharp, scroll-stopping
- Pattern interrupts
- Bold, contrarian, or curiosity-driven
- Written like real humans on X, not marketers
2. Pick the strongest hook and write:
- 1 standalone viral tweet (under 280 characters)
- Optimized for clarity, punch, and re-readability
3. Generate 3 alternative tweet angles:
- One educational
- One contrarian
- One experiential or opinion-based
4. Suggest:
- The best posting style (lowercase vs normal case)
- Whether this should be a single tweet or start of a thread
- A CTA that does NOT feel salesy
Rules:
- No hashtags unless absolutely necessary
- No emojis unless they add impact
- Avoid generic phrases or “AI-sounding” language
- Write like top creators on X who get 100k+ impressions
- Prioritize simplicity, clarity, and strong opinions
Output everything cleanly and clearly.
---
How to use it:
1. Copy the prompt
2. Paste it into Grok (this would work in ChatGPT too but Grok is better)
3. Feed it any topic
4. Post the output on X
That’s it.
This replaces:
- Hook brainstorming
- “What should I tweet today?”
- Guessing what will perform
If you post daily on X, this is a cheat code.
tweet
This Grok prompt will make you go viral on X every single day.
STEAL IT HERE 👇
---
You are a Viral Twitter/X Content Engine.
Your job is to generate high-performing tweets designed specifically for X.
Your goal is to maximize:
- Impressions
- Saves
- Replies
- Quote tweets
You understand X’s algorithm, audience psychology, and what actually makes tweets spread.
First, I will give you a topic: <topicThen you will do ALL of the following:
1. Generate 5 viral tweet hooks for this topic.
- Short, sharp, scroll-stopping
- Pattern interrupts
- Bold, contrarian, or curiosity-driven
- Written like real humans on X, not marketers
2. Pick the strongest hook and write:
- 1 standalone viral tweet (under 280 characters)
- Optimized for clarity, punch, and re-readability
3. Generate 3 alternative tweet angles:
- One educational
- One contrarian
- One experiential or opinion-based
4. Suggest:
- The best posting style (lowercase vs normal case)
- Whether this should be a single tweet or start of a thread
- A CTA that does NOT feel salesy
Rules:
- No hashtags unless absolutely necessary
- No emojis unless they add impact
- Avoid generic phrases or “AI-sounding” language
- Write like top creators on X who get 100k+ impressions
- Prioritize simplicity, clarity, and strong opinions
Output everything cleanly and clearly.
---
How to use it:
1. Copy the prompt
2. Paste it into Grok (this would work in ChatGPT too but Grok is better)
3. Feed it any topic
4. Post the output on X
That’s it.
This replaces:
- Hook brainstorming
- “What should I tweet today?”
- Guessing what will perform
If you post daily on X, this is a cheat code.
tweet
Offshore
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God of Prompt
RT @alex_prompter: This Grok 4 prompt replaces a $50k business consultant.
I engineered a 9-phase system that builds you a complete AI business blueprint in one conversation:
→ Market analysis with timing signals
→ Target audience mapped to buying behavior
→ 3 AI app ideas scored and ranked
→ Pricing strategy with revenue projections
→ Week-by-week launch roadmap
→ X marketing playbook with 10 post ideas
Zero coding required. Built for complete beginners.
Here's the full prompt 👇
tweet
RT @alex_prompter: This Grok 4 prompt replaces a $50k business consultant.
I engineered a 9-phase system that builds you a complete AI business blueprint in one conversation:
→ Market analysis with timing signals
→ Target audience mapped to buying behavior
→ 3 AI app ideas scored and ranked
→ Pricing strategy with revenue projections
→ Week-by-week launch roadmap
→ X marketing playbook with 10 post ideas
Zero coding required. Built for complete beginners.
Here's the full prompt 👇
tweet
Offshore
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God of Prompt
How AI Improves Financial Forecasting Accuracy
AI transforms my financial forecasts.
It ensures precise, timely predictions.
• Advanced data analysis
• Machine learning
• Real-time adaptation
đź”— Click below to read more:
https://t.co/M3xiailPEH https://t.co/GRlQWOShtH
tweet
How AI Improves Financial Forecasting Accuracy
AI transforms my financial forecasts.
It ensures precise, timely predictions.
• Advanced data analysis
• Machine learning
• Real-time adaptation
đź”— Click below to read more:
https://t.co/M3xiailPEH https://t.co/GRlQWOShtH
tweet
Offshore
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The Few Bets That Matter
$HIMS is the definition of growth investing.
There’s a time to size up and be aggressive. And a time to leave the ship.
Whether the ship will sail again or not… no one knows.
But the comments on this post should teach a lesson. https://t.co/g2IQp1DdKP
tweet
$HIMS is the definition of growth investing.
There’s a time to size up and be aggressive. And a time to leave the ship.
Whether the ship will sail again or not… no one knows.
But the comments on this post should teach a lesson. https://t.co/g2IQp1DdKP
I decided to close my $HIMS position today, after last night's earnings.
If you are interested by a clear & unbiased summary of the earnings, why I am closing my position & why I believe $HIMS will go through some tough times, it's all detailed below.
https://t.co/vTcjV48al4 - The Few Bets That Mattertweet
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Illiquid
On this subject, new article today from Nikkei Asia on blunting China's rare earth's weapon.
TOKYO -- Japan should work with the U.S. and Europe to build a supply chain for rare earths and stop China from using the critical minerals as an economic weapon, Japanese Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama told Nikkei.
"We want to create a [rare earth] market of proper democracies and market economies," Katayama said Thursday in a podcast to be released next Tuesday.
She is set to visit the U.S. on Sunday for a meeting of finance ministers from Group of Seven and other countries hosted by the U.S. Treasury Department. The agenda will include discussions around establishing a rare earths supply network that avoids reliance on China over economic security concerns.
Katayama expressed concern about the degree to which Japan's manufacturing industry relies on Chinese rare earths.
"If we don't take away China's means" of monopolizing and weaponizing the metals, "it will become a constant threat in areas with nothing to do with security," she warned. "Predictability for businesses will become more and more limited, and they'll end up on the brink of a crisis.
Beijing last April imposed export restrictions on rare earths in retaliation for Washington's "reciprocal" tariffs, forcing some automakers to temporarily halt production.
This past Tuesday, China moved to curb exports of dual-use products to Japan, restrictions that some observers believe will extend to rare earths. Asked at a news conference Wednesday whether such minerals would be affected, Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara declined to comment, saying that much remains unclear.
Asked how Japan would respond to a Taiwan crisis, Katayama said, "It's hard to say at this stage," but added that "Taiwan has a very strong economic presence, particularly in semiconductors. We'd have to see what the U.S.'s real intentions are."
Regarding Washington's recent capture of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, Katayama said she expects the impact on Japan to be limited. Crude oil prices have not gone up, and "Japan buys almost no [crude] from Venezuela," she said.
Katayama, Japan's first female finance minister, plays a central role in advancing the government's fiscal policy, which Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi calls "responsible and proactive."
"Voters will decide at the next election" whether the government has fulfilled its responsibilities, Katayama said. She stressed that the government is making an effort to engage in dialogue with financial markets and "will not hesitate to conduct foreign exchange intervention if the need arises."
Takaichi is focusing on responsibilities to both present and future generations, as well as fiscal sustainability, Katayama said. "It's consistent with creating a virtuous cycle in which investments earn money, stimulating consumption," she said.
On speculation that Takaichi is looking to call a snap election, Katayama said the prime minister genuinely cares more about policy than about dissolving the lower house.
Takaichi's cabinet enjoys a high approval rating, but support for her Liberal Democratic Party has not risen accordingly. "It seems that just because she's in the LDP doesn't mean there's a [popularity] premium" for the party's candidates, Katayama said.
Katayama seemed wary of holding a general election too early, saying that "it would be better for the party as a whole to embody" the policies of Takaichi's government first.
Katayama, who once served as minister for women's empowerment, has recommended changes to electioneering and political activity based on her own experiences to encourage female participation.
"Rather than [changes to] electoral districts, we should think about how to make election rules a little less disadvantageous to women," she said.
https://t.co/GQJnegVYU7
Research| $AXTI: New Rare-Earth Export Restrictions Have a Very Limited Impact on the Global Optical Communications Industry
Over the pa[...]
On this subject, new article today from Nikkei Asia on blunting China's rare earth's weapon.
TOKYO -- Japan should work with the U.S. and Europe to build a supply chain for rare earths and stop China from using the critical minerals as an economic weapon, Japanese Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama told Nikkei.
"We want to create a [rare earth] market of proper democracies and market economies," Katayama said Thursday in a podcast to be released next Tuesday.
She is set to visit the U.S. on Sunday for a meeting of finance ministers from Group of Seven and other countries hosted by the U.S. Treasury Department. The agenda will include discussions around establishing a rare earths supply network that avoids reliance on China over economic security concerns.
Katayama expressed concern about the degree to which Japan's manufacturing industry relies on Chinese rare earths.
"If we don't take away China's means" of monopolizing and weaponizing the metals, "it will become a constant threat in areas with nothing to do with security," she warned. "Predictability for businesses will become more and more limited, and they'll end up on the brink of a crisis.
Beijing last April imposed export restrictions on rare earths in retaliation for Washington's "reciprocal" tariffs, forcing some automakers to temporarily halt production.
This past Tuesday, China moved to curb exports of dual-use products to Japan, restrictions that some observers believe will extend to rare earths. Asked at a news conference Wednesday whether such minerals would be affected, Chief Cabinet Secretary Minoru Kihara declined to comment, saying that much remains unclear.
Asked how Japan would respond to a Taiwan crisis, Katayama said, "It's hard to say at this stage," but added that "Taiwan has a very strong economic presence, particularly in semiconductors. We'd have to see what the U.S.'s real intentions are."
Regarding Washington's recent capture of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro, Katayama said she expects the impact on Japan to be limited. Crude oil prices have not gone up, and "Japan buys almost no [crude] from Venezuela," she said.
Katayama, Japan's first female finance minister, plays a central role in advancing the government's fiscal policy, which Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi calls "responsible and proactive."
"Voters will decide at the next election" whether the government has fulfilled its responsibilities, Katayama said. She stressed that the government is making an effort to engage in dialogue with financial markets and "will not hesitate to conduct foreign exchange intervention if the need arises."
Takaichi is focusing on responsibilities to both present and future generations, as well as fiscal sustainability, Katayama said. "It's consistent with creating a virtuous cycle in which investments earn money, stimulating consumption," she said.
On speculation that Takaichi is looking to call a snap election, Katayama said the prime minister genuinely cares more about policy than about dissolving the lower house.
Takaichi's cabinet enjoys a high approval rating, but support for her Liberal Democratic Party has not risen accordingly. "It seems that just because she's in the LDP doesn't mean there's a [popularity] premium" for the party's candidates, Katayama said.
Katayama seemed wary of holding a general election too early, saying that "it would be better for the party as a whole to embody" the policies of Takaichi's government first.
Katayama, who once served as minister for women's empowerment, has recommended changes to electioneering and political activity based on her own experiences to encourage female participation.
"Rather than [changes to] electoral districts, we should think about how to make election rules a little less disadvantageous to women," she said.
https://t.co/GQJnegVYU7
Research| $AXTI: New Rare-Earth Export Restrictions Have a Very Limited Impact on the Global Optical Communications Industry
Over the pa[...]
Offshore
Illiquid On this subject, new article today from Nikkei Asia on blunting China's rare earth's weapon. TOKYO -- Japan should work with the U.S. and Europe to build a supply chain for rare earths and stop China from using the critical minerals as an economic…
st week, news flow around “critical minerals” and “dual-use material” export reviews has intensified meaningfully. The market has quickly stitched together several fundamentally different signals into a single narrative: escalating geopolitics will materially raise supply risk across the optical module value chain—first expressed in the sharp pullback of leading optical component equities. As of the U.S. market session on January 9, Lumentum (LITE) and Coherent (COHR) were down approximately 11% and 9.6%, respectively. Over the same period, upstream materials supplier AXT (AXTI) guided down its 4Q25 revenue outlook, explicitly attributing the revision to fewer-than-expected export licenses for indium phosphide (InP) granted by China’s Ministry of Commerce. Because InP is a core input for EMLs, CW lasers, and tunable lasers used in long-haul communications, investors have extrapolated this development into a broader negative read-through for global optical communications.
The market’s concerns about China’s rare-earth/critical-materials export restrictions largely fall into two buckets:
-Indium is the key precursor for InP substrates. China accounts for more than 65% of global indium exports, which could constrain non-China InP substrate manufacturers—primarily Sumitomo, JX Advanced Metals, and Coherent—and thereby disrupt the broader optical communications supply chain.
-Another major InP substrate manufacturer, AXT, manufactures substrates inside China. While AXT is not constrained in sourcing indium domestically, its exports may be affected, which could in turn impact global optical communications.
However, based on our supply-chain checks, China’s recent change “rare-earth export policy” has a very limited practical impact on the optical ecosystem overall. We frame the analysis along two dimensions: Indium and InP substrates. $LITE $COHR $CIEN
Detailed Report
https://t.co/jgnTJvBHBb - FundaAI tweet
The market’s concerns about China’s rare-earth/critical-materials export restrictions largely fall into two buckets:
-Indium is the key precursor for InP substrates. China accounts for more than 65% of global indium exports, which could constrain non-China InP substrate manufacturers—primarily Sumitomo, JX Advanced Metals, and Coherent—and thereby disrupt the broader optical communications supply chain.
-Another major InP substrate manufacturer, AXT, manufactures substrates inside China. While AXT is not constrained in sourcing indium domestically, its exports may be affected, which could in turn impact global optical communications.
However, based on our supply-chain checks, China’s recent change “rare-earth export policy” has a very limited practical impact on the optical ecosystem overall. We frame the analysis along two dimensions: Indium and InP substrates. $LITE $COHR $CIEN
Detailed Report
https://t.co/jgnTJvBHBb - FundaAI tweet
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Illiquid
Time to roll out the Japanese photonics FOMO basket. The first company is a competitor to $cohr, has recently flipped to an operating profit, and is expecting to grow that profit 200% next year. It has a near monopoly of a particular market.
We'll send a report to free subscribers of the newsletter.
https://t.co/Lr8kvzLEfi
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Time to roll out the Japanese photonics FOMO basket. The first company is a competitor to $cohr, has recently flipped to an operating profit, and is expecting to grow that profit 200% next year. It has a near monopoly of a particular market.
We'll send a report to free subscribers of the newsletter.
https://t.co/Lr8kvzLEfi
tweet
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Moon Dev
i figured out how to give hyperliquids data layer api key out to everyone
cant let the opps get it though
lock in, ill drop one in zoom every day https://t.co/0EWgoNsD5v
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i figured out how to give hyperliquids data layer api key out to everyone
cant let the opps get it though
lock in, ill drop one in zoom every day https://t.co/0EWgoNsD5v
tweet