BYD: A Quiet Trajectory

The next three years, I suspect, will not be a story of leaps and bounds, but of gradual maturation. A turning, perhaps, from the feverish pursuit of growth to the more sober task of consolidation.

Berkshire: Still a Buy, Folks! (Don’t Worry, It’s Not a Shtick)

Look, Berkshire wasn’t built on stock tips and lucky guesses. It was built on a system. Buffett and Munger, they had this… philosophy. Like a secret sauce. They’d buy companies, invest in stocks, and generally make a fortune. And they didn’t just throw money at anything shiny. They had principles! Imagine that! Principles in the stock market! It’s enough to make a cynic like me almost believe in something.

Every Single Sherlock Holmes Actor, Ranked From Worst to Best

In the comedy film ‘Holmes & Watson’, Will Ferrell played the detective, offering a very silly and over-the-top take on the classic characters created by Arthur Conan Doyle. Instead of the clever, thinking detective fans know, this version focuses on goofy situations and physical humor. Critics didn’t like the movie, feeling it missed the point of what makes Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson so popular.

Capital B Buys 2 BTC for €0.1M, Expands Treasury to 2,836 BTC – A Tale of Fiscal Finesse and Digital Gold

Ladies and gentlemen, allow me to present Capital B, the Parisian paragon of fiscal daring. With the grace of a fox in a henhouse, it has acquired 2 BTC for €0.1 million ($0.11M), a purchase as bold as a hat tilted at a scandalous angle. This comes mere moments after a capital increase, where shares were priced at €0.60 ($0.65) apiece-because nothing says “confidence” like charging less for more.

The Weight of Gold, the Whisper of Bitcoin

A few years past, Bitcoin existed only as a whisper in the corridors of innovation. Its ascent, a peculiar bloom in the arid landscape of finance, compels one to wonder if it might, one day, not merely equal gold, but surpass it. Is it a plausible imagining, or a fanciful dream spun from the threads of hope and speculation? Let us consider the matter, not with the cold logic of accounting, but with the patient eye of a gardener observing the growth of a rare and delicate plant.