The retweetoor

Joined March 2009
332 Photos and videos
Weston retweeted
If you just give us a few percent more of your money, we could finally fix the worsening education, homelessness and crime caused by our own terrible policies… Please bro… just a few percent more. One last tax. I swear bro. Then I’m done.
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Weston retweeted
Calling it now
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Weston retweeted
If the socialists had their way, Elon would have had his paypal profits taken and redistributed for the greater good. The world would never have seen Tesla, nor SpaceX. And the world wouldn't know it, because they were uncreated, and thus unseen. Imagine the companies that don't exist, because Washington destroyed them before they were born.
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Weston retweeted
There are 2 types of people: 1. People who see a trillionaire and wonder how they can innovate and emulate such success 2. People who see a trillionaire and seethe with resentment Do everything you can to ensure you're always around the first kind of person.
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Weston retweeted
So a lot of people are upset that Elon Musk is a trillionaire. And they’re suggesting he share his wealth with the world. Which would entail liquidating his companies, laying off over 100,000 employees, bankrupting all the people who now own SPCX stock, and crashing the economy. I don’t think they’ve thought this through.
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Weston retweeted
"... the political left has long had a remarkable lack of interest in how wealth is created. As far as they are concerned, wealth exists somehow and the only interesting question is how to redistribute it." — Thomas Sowell
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Weston retweeted
Whenever Trump see the stock market going down
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A good time to add more dots.
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Jun 6
Milton Friedman's greatest regret. The federal government discovered the perfect crime in 1943: make employers collect taxes before workers ever see their paychecks. You think you earn $60,000 per year, but you actually earn $75,000 and hand over $15,000 to politicians without ever touching it. The psychological difference is enormous. Before payroll withholding, Americans wrote quarterly checks directly to the Treasury. Picture yourself sitting at your kitchen table, writing a $3,750 check to the IRS every three months. The pain was immediate and visceral. Politicians faced constant pressure to justify every dollar because citizens felt the extraction in real time. Withholding transforms this concrete loss into an abstract accounting entry. Your employer becomes an unpaid tax collector, and you never experience the actual cost of government. Worse, most people celebrate their tax refunds as government generosity rather than recognizing them as interest-free loans they provided to politicians. The Treasury collects your money throughout the year, spends it immediately, then returns your own cash and receives gratitude. This system enables the explosion in government spending you witness today. Defense contractors billing $640 for toilet seats, agricultural subsidies for corn syrup, and congressional salaries for 535 people who rarely show up to work. When taxation feels painless, voters stop demanding accountability for how their money gets spent. Milton Friedman helped design withholding as a wartime emergency measure and later called it his greatest regret. Free market economists recognized that the psychological pain of direct taxation creates political pressure for fiscal restraint. The temporary always becomes permanent in government hands, and the emergency justification disappears while the extraction mechanism remains forever.
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Weston retweeted
Checking my crypto portfolio
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Weston retweeted
TETHER FLIPPED ETH HOLY SHIT
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Weston retweeted
Crypto people don't like how Saylor owns 4% of the BTC supply but turn a blind eye to the guy who owns 20000% of the Zcash supply.
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Weston retweeted
CT realizing the bear market was in fact not over
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i may have severely underestimated saylor's game dude literally started the dot-com crash
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Jun 4
🚨 BREAKING: LILY PHILLIPS ACCUSES MICHAEL SAYLOR OF STEALING HER IDEA OF FUCKING 100'000 MEN IN A DAY
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Weston retweeted
Prophecy fulfilled. Raoul Pal’s investment track record remains unmatched. Zcash -50% and still falling.

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Weston retweeted
"A man doesn't ask the mountain to be shorter"
USA. Summer. It is 95 degrees outside, and I am shivering inside a sandwich shop. I have discovered how Americans forge strong souls. Outside, the sun is trying to kill everyone. Inside this small restaurant, it is winter. My breath does not fog, but it is thinking about it. A man near me is eating a cold sandwich while wearing a jacket. In summer. Indoors. In Japan we would simply turn it down. Americans do not turn it down. And now I understand them better than they understand themselves. This cold is not an accident. This cold is a gift. The owner has built, inside his shop, a second season. He invites you in from the brutal heat and hands you the one thing the sun has denied you all day: a reason to be cold. To endure it is to be tempered. You walk in soft and sweating. You walk out sharp and clear, a slightly stronger person than you were. So I did not complain. I removed my outer layer and offered it to the woman at the next table, who was hugging herself. She said, "Oh, no, I'm fine, thank you." She was not fine. Her lips were blue. But she, too, understood the training. She would not break first. I respected her deeply. The owner asked if everything was okay. "It is perfect," I said, through my teeth, which were chattering. "Thank you for the winter." He said, "...I can turn the AC down if you want?" I told him no. A man does not ask the mountain to be shorter. I stayed two hours. I ordered a hot coffee to survive. Then a second one, to hold. By the end I could no longer feel my hands, but my spirit had never been clearer. So now, on the hottest days, I seek out the coldest rooms. I sit. I shiver. I sharpen. And when I finally step back out into the summer heat, and it wraps around me like a warm bath, I feel it. Reborn. A man who has survived the winter, in August, indoors, for the price of a sandwich.
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Weston retweeted
MSTR Summary (As I understand it) The market basically has an extremely large overhang of a potential BTC seller. Now MSTR has been a big reason why rallies at highs have always continued on longer than it should - it is an essential indicator to track for the health of the bull market - early stage bull = MSTR buys usually was sustained continuous bullish momentum ; late stage bull = MSTR buys would hold price up, before a nuke after the announcement that Saylor has been buying Now this is potentially unravelling, essentially because the day of reckoning has come - after all, when someone buys, one must ask - how does he get the capital to buy? Saylor has historically funded it through equity financing / convertible notes / term loans / and more recently, preferred equity product financing - and I'll try to explain it simply as how I understand it. Now for most of the time, equity financing was actually a very sustainable ponzi. Equity had no guarantee of returns. That is a good thing. Of course, this all came at the expense of MSTR shareholders, but the idea that I believe Saylor had, was that "we are selling the stock, to buy something that has more convexity than the stock (BTC), so that, in 10 years, we will end up with a lot more money, and so the stock will be a lot higher" - i.e you're trading short term PA for long term CAGR This of course assumes a lot of things - 1) that BTC will be higher in 10 years, 2) that BTC has some sort of CAGR, and 3) that stock price will reflect this, and 4) that people will buy the story, and 5) that the market will like it, will reward it (and it has, for the past 4 years) Now, all's well. This is where we get to the trouble - Saylor launched a bunch of new products recently - STRC / STRD / etc. I'm not an expert in these products, so feel free to correct me where I'm wrong, but these are preferred shares that pay yield. They say: Hey, give me cash. I'll give you yield. This yield varies in order to keep the product at par value ; i.e If today it goes to 90, the yield increases to get people to "buy" it so as to "peg" it there; I'm not going to go through each product - they all work slightly differently. The rest are fixed yield instead of variable; All you have to understand is at this point, MSTR now began giving out money (i.e having yield) This is a bad thing and where the story is now. Having obligations means having to spend cash to pay yield, which means, in a company that hinges on an assumption of the 15% CAGR of a magical internet asset with no real cashflows ( other than software biz) - where is the money coming from? The way I see it, you basically have an extremely huge cloud looming on the horizon. You don't know when the hurricane will start, but you see it. This is enough to prevent BTC from reaching new highs in the first place - it is possible to kick the can down the road, to "look away from the hurricane", but the hurricane is there all the same, just waiting for its reckoning. He holds $53 BILLION in Bitcoin (Based on Price of 63k), yet only has enough cash for 6 months of dividend coverage (numbers are from strategy.com/). And back in February they claimed a $2.25 Billion reserve - this reserve has been drawn hard (now it's 900M) Saylor has 3 ways out. And again - this is just my analysis - I could be missing something: 1. Stop the yield. He can theoretically (since these are all preferreds, correct me if I'm wrong) just stop payments. 2. Somehow finance more $ to pay dividends, either by selling more MSTR, or raising debt. 3. Sell BTC to pay his bills Now, obviously, the second-order effects of all of these are incredibly bad no matter how you see it. For 1) if he does that, faith in MSTR would collapse, stock prices would probably go down, STRC goes to Mordor, and maybe he doesn't have to sell BTC, but there are still obligations to pay, so it doesn't fully solve the issue. The thing is - stop paying STRC can be done, but it's like putting a bandaid when your arm gets cut off. Because what happens here is that (and this is where I'm relying on Claude, who read the offering doc) - he stops the cash from going out, but the obligation still exists - i.e He can stop the payment, but he can't cancel the debt. It's like your landlord coming to you for this month's rent, and you defer it to next month - but you now have to pay two months' worth of rent next month, not just a month's rent STRC is cumulative - so stopping = you don't pay cash now, but the amount you skipped gets added to a tab and grows. And because STRC is a "Perpetual Stretch Preferred Stock" with perpetual being the key word here, there is no maturity date, it doesn't end, and the only true way to stop it is by buying it back with cash. Else, the dividend just keeps compounding at the back. Buying back is an option, and according to Claude, the cash redemption price is $101 per share - so $8 Bn if he wanted the whole STRC stack gone. But that's where we come back to the above - he doesn't have the cash! For 2) It's like rolling your credit card bill. This months bill comes in - you take a new credit card, use it to pay your old one, and for the next month, you're chilling, and you extend the runway. Now if BTC magically goes up to 200k, then you are safe, you can pay your obligations, selling some BTC won't matter. For 3) This is the worst case scenario. I mean, this is just a doom loop. On 1st June, MSTR already filed a sale of 32 BTC (2.5m), the first strategic / material sale in history. The other sale was in 2022, and that was a tax-loss sale which they bought back immediately. BTC instantly went down by 6-7% on the day, and it's down 12% since then. If they sell more, BTC is just going to go down faster than they would get $ back from selling, and they're basically left holding the bag. My analysis: For now, the markets will probably stay at a standstill until this is resolved. Everyone is watching to see what Saylor will do. Again, he owns roughly 4% of all BTC. And what happens if BTC keeps going down? That would be a doom loop playing out. And putting yourself into the mindset of a buyer - why would I buy BTC here, when I know there is a potential seller coming here tomorrow? I'm reminded of an old joke in the office that our head of trading used to say, that originated on wall street: A trader thinks that the prices of eggs are going to increase, and so he contacts his broker and asks him to buy 1,000,000 egg futures at $1.70 Sure enough, a week later, the price of egg futures is $2.50, and the trader, happy to ride his winners, places an order for 3,000,000 more egg futures Next month, at $4.30 a piece, he pats himself on the back and restructures his liquid investments to buy another 10,000,000 egg futures At the end of the quarter, egg futures are trading at $7, and the trader finally calls up his broker and tells him to sell them all The broker replies: “To who? You’re the egg man!” PSA: This is a personal opinion piece written in my individual capacity, not on behalf of or attributable to my employer. It is not investment research, a recommendation, or an offer or solicitation to buy or sell any security or asset. It does not constitute financial advice and should not be relied upon for any investment decision; readers should do their own research and consult their own advisors. All views are my own as of the date of writing and may change without notice. Factual claims are drawn from public sources and may contain errors or become outdated. I hold no position, long or short, in BTC, MSTR, or any related security, and have no economic interest in the price of any asset discussed. I receive no compensation from any party in connection with this piece.
someone give me the TLDR on MSTR if it goes below his avg he has to sell to meet debt obligation payments right? is there a scenario where he can sell and survive? any good write ups or threads on this? thnx
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May as well say “steady lads”
“Steady”…not sure the market agrees but let’s see. For the month of June it appears Strategy will be prioritizing MSTR owners over STRC owners.
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