Ethereum’s Dance: Will It Waltz to $3,200 or Stumble in the Shadows?

Ethereum, like a wayward protagonist in one of my novels, hath managed to remain stable above $2,850, and begun its recovery wave, much like its comrade, Bitcoin. It cleared the resistance levels of $2,900 and $2,920, as if they were but trivial obstacles in its path to glory. The price surpassed the 61.8% Fib retracement level, a mathematical farce in the face of human greed and despair. It even breached the $3,000 mark, forming a high at $3,030, before consolidating its gains above the 23.6% Fib retracement level. A comedy of errors, is it not?

Centrus Energy: A Most Sensible Diversion

Let us consider, if you will, the spectacle of modern man, so eager to entrust his future to machines, yet so often neglecting the fundamental necessities of existence. Data centers, those temples of the digital age, consume power at a prodigious rate, and this appetite, as the International Energy Agency assures us, is poised to double by the decade’s end. Where, pray tell, is this power to come from? Not, it seems, from the whims of the wind, nor the caprice of the sun, but from a source far more reliable, and dare I say, more dignified: the atom.

The Neocloud Comedy: CoreWeave and the AI Illusion

The recent exuberance surrounding entities such as Nvidia has, predictably, inflated valuations to dizzying heights. One might be forgiven for suspecting a collective delusion, a fever dream fueled by the promise of untold riches. But let us not dismiss the possibility of genuine progress entirely. The question, as always, is discerning the signal from the noise.

Nvidia: A Mildly Improbable Scenario

Compared to the frankly alarming ascent of the past three years – an event that defied both logic and several established principles of financial physics – this relative calm has led some to wonder if the party’s over. Should one hold, sell, or perhaps invest in a slightly more predictable enterprise, like, say, a company that manufactures self-folding laundry? (The engineering challenges are considerable, naturally, but the potential market is… substantial.) I posit that there’s one thing Nvidia will do in 2026 that could, with a degree of improbability that shouldn’t be underestimated, reignite the upward trajectory.

Ephemeral Towers

From a modest beginning—$8.5 million—to a fleeting $144.2 million, the numbers swell, divorced from the slow, organic growth of things that endure. Two sites in North Dakota, holding 286 MW of power, a temporary fortress against the relentless tide. Fifteen years of contracted payments—$16 billion—mostly flowing toward CoreWeave, another name whispered on the wind. A delicate arrangement, built on the shifting sands of technological dependence.

Upstart: A Twenty-Five Year Speculation

The shares, naturally, have been subject to the usual manic fluctuations. Down 88% from its peak – a precipitous fall, even by the standards of this speculative age – yet somehow managing a 144% surge over the last three years, despite a recent dip. A performance that suggests either genius or sheer luck, and one is never quite certain which. The question, of course, is whether a modest investment today might, in a quarter of a century, blossom into a sum large enough to warrant a small island in the Aegean.

Tesla’s Echo of Automatons

Yet, there is a persistent current in his pronouncements, a tendency towards eventual realization that defies simple dismissal. Optimus, then, is not merely a machine, but a question posed to the coming years. It stands two-armed, two-legged, a torso bearing the weight of expectation. Not as a replacement, mind you, but as a willing servant for the tedious, the perilous – tasks that dull the human spirit and fray the sinews. A price, they say, between twenty and thirty thousand dollars. A sum that feels both substantial and strangely… hopeful.

Palantir’s Echo in the Machine

The air around this company, you see, is thick with a peculiar fragrance – not of silicon and electricity, but of more. More growth, more innovation, more… faith. Investors, captivated by its recent surge, had priced Palantir not merely for sustained expansion, but for a blossoming so extraordinary it bordered on the mythical. A dangerous game, to demand such perfection from the imperfect machinery of the market. For in the realm of numbers, as in the lives of men, every ascent is shadowed by the possibility of a fall, swift and unforgiving.

US Shutdown? Oh, the Drama!

Six out of twelve expenditures have already been sanctioned, and history demonstrates a penchant for last-minute resolutions – rather like a fashionable late arrival. The markets, being remarkably astute, are clearly anticipating a situation more akin to a brief theatrical pause than a full-blown tragedy.