Wall Street’s Fancies and Fears

This Index, you see, it don’t rely on lookin’ into crystal balls. It adds up seven different reckonin’s – things like how the market’s movin’, how many stocks are climbin’ to new heights versus fallin’ into the dust, and even how folks are bettin’ on bonds. And lately, six out of those seven reckonin’s have been pointin’ straight to “extreme fear.” Why, it’s enough to make a sensible man hide his savings under the mattress!

The Automaton’s Promise: A Comedy of Capital

The World Economic Forum, ever eager to appear sensible, offers a palliative. A mere ninety-two million souls cast adrift, they concede, but a hundred and seventy million new opportunities shall blossom! As if one might replace a blacksmith with a purveyor of digital ephemera and expect societal tranquility. Morgan Stanley, ever the pragmatist, suggests a net positive, a carefully worded reassurance designed to quell the anxieties of those who fund their endeavors. One detects a whiff of self-preservation in their optimism.

A Spot of Bother, Darling?

This sort of thing, predictably, sends the investors into a bit of a flutter. Emotional decisions, you see, are so dreadfully common. They feel rather clever in the moment, these impulsive maneuvers, but history, darling, is usually quite unkind to them. It’s a perfectly good portfolio behaving badly, and one really must maintain a sense of proportion.

SpaceX: A Pre-IPO Diversion

The usual investor, naturally, will be left to scramble for scraps after the institutional players have had their fill. However, a curious loophole has presented itself, a means of gaining exposure to Mr. Musk’s latest venture before the inevitable post-IPO froth. It involves, as these things often do, a rather unlikely intermediary.

Oil & Fury: Riding the Iran Storm (If You Must)

So, you want to play? Fine. But don’t come crying to me when the whole thing implodes. Here are a couple of strategies, if you can call them that, for navigating this…situation. Consider them desperate measures for desperate times. And remember: there are no guarantees. Only probabilities. And the odds, my friends, are stacked against you.

Salesforce: A Pause in the March of Progress

One observes, with a certain detached amusement, the tendency of men to mistake the shadow for the substance. Salesforce, in the fiscal year concluding January 31st, 2026, achieved a revenue increase of ten percent, reaching $41.5 billion. A modest gain, perhaps, in the eyes of those accustomed to exponential growth, yet a testament to enduring value. More telling is the $72.4 billion in remaining performance obligations—a promise of future revenue, a debt owed to Salesforce by those who recognize its utility. Of this sum, $35.1 billion is expected to materialize within the coming year—a reassuring indicator that the company continues to secure its place in the long-term calculations of its clients. These are not the actions of a house teetering on the brink, but of one building for the future, brick by careful brick.

Uranium’s Chaotic Waltz: Cameco’s Filing and Market Shenanigans!

Cameco, that grand maestro of uranium, has once again thrown its annual report into the fray, filing the Form 40-F with the SEC on March 19 in Saskatoon. This bureaucratic ballet includes audited financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2025 (yes, the future is already documented!), along with a “discussion and analysis” by management and the Canadian annual information form. The documents were also sent to Canadian regulators, some of which were published in February-because nothing says “urgency” like a February filing for a March event.

Nvidia: A Trillion-Dollar Question

The proposition, if one dares to entertain it, is that this particular edifice of speculative finance could, within the next three years, reach the somewhat symbolic figure of $10 trillion. Should this prove accurate, one would be forced to concede that purchasing the shares at their current price represents, at the very least, a rational act. Though rationality, of course, is rarely a defining characteristic of these affairs.

XRP: A Commodity’s Slow Ascent

Then, on the 17th of March, a cautious pronouncement emerged – a joint classification by the SEC and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. XRP was designated a “digital commodity,” aligning it with the broad spectrum of other cryptocurrencies. It was a small step, perhaps, but a step nonetheless away from the precipice. The significance lies not in the act itself, but in the recognition – however belated – that XRP’s essence differed from the traditional securities it had been wrongly accused of emulating.