Splitting Pennies & Silly Shares

They call it a ‘stock split’, you see, and it sounds terribly important. But really, it’s just a bit of financial trickery. Like rearranging the sweets in a jar – you still have the same amount, but it looks bigger. Investors, bless their cotton socks, get all giddy about it. They imagine it’s a sign of booming business, or that the company is suddenly being generous. It’s usually neither, I assure you.

XRP’s $42 Mystery: Macro Mayhem or Market Magic?

Experts (aka the people who claim to know things) say it’s all about the macro drama, not your personal flaws, XRP. Liquidity? Thinner than my patience at a family reunion. No XRP-specific gossip to report, just the usual global meltdown.

Nvidia’s Rise: A Five-Year Harvest

Many companies have felt the warmth of this new AI spring, but none have flourished quite like Nvidia. They built their foundation on the images flickering across screens – the games we play, the worlds we lose ourselves in. Their graphics processing units, once dedicated to illusion, found a new purpose, a deeper calling. It turns out, those same chips are remarkably suited to the heavy lifting required to nurture these new artificial minds.

Vanguard ETFs: The Slightly Less Terrible Choice

Both of these funds chase the same dream: large-cap growth stocks. They’re like two pigeons competing for the same crumb of a very large, potentially poisoned, baguette. VONG tracks the Russell 1000 Growth Index, while MGK follows the CRSP US Mega Cap Growth Index. Sounds thrilling, doesn’t it? It’s like watching paint dry, but with more paperwork. The difference, as we’ll see, is subtle, like the difference between a slightly overcooked and a perfectly cooked goose.

Constellation: Atoms & Accounting

There’s a lot of chatter about startups. NuScale, Oklo, Nano Nuclear. Tiny reactors, portable reactors. Ambitious. Bless their hearts. They’re building dreams out of atoms. But dreams don’t pay the bills. Not yet, anyway.

TSMC: Still Worth It (Probably)

Now it’s 2026. And everyone’s looking at TSMC like it’s some sort of overvalued behemoth. Like the party’s over. Which, let’s be honest, is exactly when I start to get interested. Because the sensible thing, the obvious thing, is rarely the right thing. At least, that’s what I tell myself to justify my questionable investment choices.

Voyager’s Ascent: A Fund’s Bold Thesis

The filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission revealed a purchase of 136,925 shares, a transaction valued at approximately $3.71 million, calculated against the prevailing quarterly average. It is not merely the sum, however, but the weight of it. The position, at quarter’s end, had appreciated by $1.60 million, a testament to both the initial judgment and the market’s tentative embrace of Voyager’s prospects. A curious confluence, wouldn’t you agree?

A Most Peculiar Speculation

Should one possess a trifling amount of Dogecoin (DOGE +0.50%) or Shiba Inu (SHIB +0.12%) as a harmless amusement, let it remain so. But to entrust to these ventures any sum of consequence…ah, there lies the tragedy, a comedy of errors poised to conclude with empty purses and rueful sighs.

Hecla Mining: Silver Lining or Fool’s Gold?

It’s not just the silver, though, is it? Never is. It’s like diets. You think it’s about the salad, then you realize it’s about the emotional void you’re trying to fill with lettuce. Hecla’s been added to a stock index, the S&P MidCap 400, which is… reassuring. And gold prices are up too. Not as dramatically, but enough to make one feel slightly less guilty about that impulse purchase of gold-plated teaspoons.

A Penny Saved, and a World to Invest In

The SPDW, bless its simple heart, just buys shares in companies ‘cross the pond – Europe, Japan, the like – leavin’ the American ones alone. It’s a broad sweep, like castin’ a net for fish. The NZAC, now, that one’s a bit more particular. It’s got itself all worked up about climate change, and only buys companies that meet its standards. Noble, perhaps, but sometimes a fella just wants a return on his investment, not a pat on the back.