Meta and the Three Trillion Dollar Club

I’m looking at Meta, the one formerly known as Facebook. I suspect they’ll be joining the others within three years. It’s not about magic. It’s about attention. People look at screens. Meta provides screens. They’re figuring out how to keep those eyes glued, and that, predictably, translates to money.

Chen’s Modest Pruning

The weighted average purchase price, according to the SEC Form 4, was $49.70. A perfectly respectable number, though one suspects Mr. Chen wouldn’t be overly concerned with a few dollars here or there, given the recent performance of AXT.

Nuclear Currents: A Study in Energy Futures

Both, undeniably, offer a pathway into this burgeoning sector, yet their characters, their prospects, diverge considerably. To discern which merits a place in a discerning portfolio requires a closer examination, a weighing of potential against the immutable realities of the market.

Commodity Funds & My Portfolio: A Confession

It’s just… commodities. It feels so… un-chic. I’ve been focusing on tech, a bit of ethical investing (mostly guilt-driven, if I’m honest), and the occasional splurge on something with “disruptive potential.” But commodities? It’s like discovering your accountant has a secret passion for competitive ferret-legging.

The Crude Spectacle: ExxonMobil’s Little Dance

The brief respite we observed yesterday stemmed from the Trump administration’s sudden enthusiasm for dialogue with Iran – a performance as believable as a politician’s promise. The threat of military intervention, momentarily withdrawn, had briefly calmed the markets, though one suspects the relief was more about avoiding immediate chaos than achieving genuine peace. Iran, it seems, was prepared to disrupt the flow of energy through the Strait of Hormuz – a gesture that would have reminded everyone precisely how dependent we are on the whims of those who control the oil taps.

Markets Today: Oil, Pixies, and Slightly Worried Accountants

Oracle, a purveyor of prophecies…err, software, shed almost 5%, continuing a retreat from its earlier, inflated valuation. One begins to suspect the oracles were simply very good at marketing. Similar establishments, such as ServiceNow and Salesforce, also experienced a downward adjustment in perceived worth. The arrival of new, shiny, artificial intelligences from Amazon.com—those little clockwork minds—seems to have unsettled the sector. Even Microsoft, a company that once cornered the market on digital scrolls, lost a bit of its lustre, dipping almost 3%. It appears even the most established empires can be caught unawares by a clever new innovation…or a particularly persuasive sales goblin.

Energy Stocks: Fine, Whatever

Bloom Energy (BE +3.28%), Brookfield Renewable (BEP +2.32%)(BEPC +2.37%), and NuScale Power (SMR 2.86%). Three names. They all claim to be the future. The future. Like the present isn’t good enough? I’m telling you, it’s exhausting. Anyway, here’s the deal with each of them, as I see it. And believe me, I see things.

SMCI: AI Hype & Export Controls—A Server Story

Trading volume? A cool 65.3 million shares. That’s a lot of servers. Or, you know, a lot of people hoping to catch the next wave. They went public in 2007, and have grown 2438% since. Which, let’s be real, is a number that makes my accountant slightly panic.

Nvidia & AMD: A Pragmatic View

Both have felt the sting of recent troubles, become…more accessible, shall we say. The question isn’t simply which is cheaper, but which offers a sliver of genuine opportunity for those of us who aren’t counting pennies from a tower. Which one, if either, offers a path beyond mere speculation?