Gonzo Capitalists Bet Big on Millrose’s Land Play

Connecticut’s finest, Gilman Hill, filed with the SEC a third-quarter pounce on 235,475 shares of Millrose, now valued at $7.9 million. This addition swells their equity portfolio to 231 positions, but let’s not mistake this for diversification-it’s a surgical strike. The real question isn’t *why* they bought, but *how* they didn’t see this coming sooner.

NuScale’s Big Jump: A Contrarian’s Dilemma

Let’s parse this. The Army wants to deploy small modular reactors (SMRs) globally, which, in theory, sounds like a plot from a Bond film. But here’s the kicker: NuScale’s SMRs are the first to get U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission approval. Which is impressive, until you remember that regulatory approvals are like a toddler’s bedtime-always subject to last-minute tantrums.

Delta’s Deere Gambit: A Contrarian’s Dance with Greed and Gearwheels

The quarterly filing, a parchment scrawled with the ink of arithmetic and the breath of regulators, reveals Delta’s latest folly. They now hold 6,490 shares of Deere, their stake blooming from a mere seedling to a sapling in the span of a season. The cost? A princely sum of $2.97 million, enough to feed a thousand oxen-or, as fate would have it, to fund the next great agricultural revolution. Or perhaps not. The markets are a fickle mistress, and Delta, it seems, has chosen to dance with her on a stage built of gears and greed.

A Skeptic’s Stroll Through Booking Holdings’ $119.5M Gambit

On October 14, 2025, the fund disclosed its new stake in Booking Holdings (BKNG), acquired during the third quarter of 2025. The transaction, worth $119.52 million at average quarterly prices, suggests a confidence in the travel sector-or perhaps a belief that booking a vacation is the only thing more certain than death and taxes. To invest in Booking Holdings is to bet on humanity’s eternal need to flee from itself, a wager as old as the first merchant selling ship tickets to the New World.

Veracity’s Exit: A Tale of Capital and Contrarian Resolve

In the third quarter of this year, as the sun dipped below the horizon of optimism, Veracity Capital LLC, that astute observer of financial landscapes, chose to relinquish its hold on Pursuit Attractions and Hospitality. The transaction, meticulously recorded in the annals of the SEC, saw the sale of 121,290 shares, a maneuver that left the fund’s portfolio bereft of a 1.1% portion of its assets under management. One might ask: what drove this calculated retreat? Was it the whisper of caution, the shadow of doubt, or the cold calculus of risk assessment?

Chevron: A Dividend Drinker’s Guide to the Apocalypse

Chevron operates like a pragmatist at a poetry reading. It’s integrated-meaning it’s involved in every dirty, glamorous, and boring part of energy: digging it up (upstream), shoving it through pipes (midstream), and turning it into plastic bags and regret (downstream). This isn’t diversification for diversification’s sake. It’s a hedge against the universe’s tendency to ruin plans. When oil prices crash, refining margins might save the day. When refining tanks, maybe pipelines will limp forward. It’s not pretty, but neither is survival.

AST SpaceMobile: A 5-Year Skyrocket?

But here’s the kicker: ASTS isn’t done yet. If the company can pull off its vision, it’s not a rocket ship-we’re looking at a lottery ticket with delusions of grandeur. And who doesn’t love a good underdog story? (Spoiler: My therapist says I do.)