Intuitive Surgical: A Premium Valuation in a Growing Field

The preponderance of Intuitive Surgical’s revenue stream derives from ancillary sources, specifically instruments and accessories, which account for roughly 60% of overall sales. Services contribute approximately 15%. This configuration establishes a significant proportion – approximately 75% – of total revenue as recurring. This annuity-like characteristic is intrinsically linked to the installed base, with each new da Vinci system generating a predictable stream of consumables and maintenance revenue. The expansion of procedures performed utilizing the da Vinci system – an 18% increase in 2025 compared to 2024 – exceeds the growth rate of the installed base, indicating both robust patient acceptance and increasing utilization of existing systems. Management projects surgical procedure growth of up to 15% in 2026.

Alphabet: It’s Not About the AI, It’s the Principle

They’re saying Alphabet was “cheap” at the start of 2025. Cheap! Because people were worried AI would mess with Google Search? As if Google Search wasn’t already a mess! Try finding something specific. It’s an algorithm designed to show you what they want you to see, not what you need. And now they’re acting like this Gemini thing is some miracle? It’s a large language model. It strings words together. It’s not solving world hunger. It’s just… quicker at finding cat videos. The whole thing feels… disingenuous.

The Weight of Shares: A Glaukos Director’s Disposition

The figures themselves are sterile, aren’t they? $1.92 million. $4.71 million. They speak of wealth, yes, but also of its fragility. A man reduces his holding, a subtle shift in the balance. The weighted average purchase price of $127.71, the closing price of $125.90 on that fateful day… these are the minutiae of a larger, more terrifying game. One cannot help but feel a touch of melancholy for the shares lost, even as one acknowledges the inherent absurdity of such sentiment.

AMD: A Chipmaker’s Tale

The stock, it’s done climbed a good fifty percent in the last six months, which, in Wall Street terms, is akin to a jackrabbit on a hot stove. But hold your horses, friend, ’cause the real runnin’ hasn’t started yet. You see, this AI business is shiftin’. It’s no longer just about teachin’ these machines – what they call “trainin'” – but about gettin’ ’em to answer questions, conjure up pictures, and generally act like they know somethin’. That’s “inference,” and it demands a different sort of horsepower.

Netflix and the Weight of Ambition

The streaming giant, once a disruptive force reshaping the very fabric of entertainment, finds itself at a peculiar juncture. It proposes an acquisition of considerable magnitude—a substantial portion of Warner Bros. Discovery—a move that has stirred both anticipation and a palpable unease among investors. The price, a sum exceeding eighty billion dollars, looms large, casting a shadow of doubt over the venture’s ultimate success. It is a gamble, undeniably, but one perhaps born not of recklessness, but of a quiet desperation to maintain dominance in a rapidly evolving world.

Tech ETFs: The Usual Suspects

FTEC, the slightly less greedy parasite, boasts a lower expense ratio and a marginally better dividend yield. A pittance, really. But enough to soothe the consciences of the spreadsheet jockeys. They’ll tell you it’s about “value.” I say it’s about minimizing the damage while the whole thing burns. The AUM figures? Just vanity metrics. Proof that enough suckers are still willing to play.

Seeds in Silicon: A Harvest of AI

They say this intelligence could add twenty-two trillion to the world’s wealth by the end of the decade. A sum so large it feels…unreal. For every dollar spent, nearly five are promised in return. Promises are cheap things, though. It’s the work, the honest toil, that counts. And the question isn’t just what this wealth will be, but who will gather it. The current drifts toward those with the means to build the dams, leaving the smaller currents to swirl and dissipate.

AAOI Insider Sale: A Tiny Bit Worrisome?

So, he still has a fair chunk, to be fair. 114,636 shares, which equates to 0.17% of the total. It’s just… a 9.48% reduction. Like a tiny, incremental erosion of faith. Or maybe he’s just rebalancing his portfolio. One tries to be rational.