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Challenge the norm, achieve the exceptional.
Nurp
Most people think about investing in a straight line.
Pick one asset.
Hope it goes up.
But some investors think in layers.
That’s where the idea of vertical stacking comes in.
Instead of relying on one source of returns, you stack multiple strategies on top of each other.
Long-term holdings
Income or yield
Active or systematic strategies
Each layer does something different.
The goal isn’t just growth. It’s building a portfolio that can work in different environments at the same time.
Not all your returns coming from one place.
5 days ago | [YT] | 0
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Nurp
May 6, 2010.
In minutes, the market collapsed… then snapped back like nothing happened.
No news. No warning.
Just machines reacting to machines.
They called it the Flash Crash.
Some people call it the day the machines took over.
Fast forward to today…
A huge portion of market volume is driven by algorithms.
Trades happen in milliseconds.
Entire moves start and finish before most people can even react.
That’s the environment now.
It’s not that individuals can’t win…
but the game being played today isn’t the same one it used to be.
The real question is whether your approach has evolved with it.
Or if you’re still playing by the old rules
6 days ago | [YT] | 0
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Nurp
Warren Buffett’s track record is hard to even comprehend.
He once said that if his original partners had left their $10,000 investment with him… it would be worth around $500 million today.
Decades of disciplined decision making, patience, and consistency...
Through crashes, bubbles, recessions… he just kept compounding.
There are a lot of investors.
Very few have ever operated at that level for that long.
Kind of puts into perspective how rare that kind of performance really is.
Is that type of performance possible today?
1 week ago | [YT] | 0
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Nurp
We’ve entered a different era of investing.
Markets now move in fractions of a second.
Algorithms react faster than any human ever could.
The old way of trading… watching charts, reacting manually, trying to outguess the market… just isn’t the same game anymore.
Today, a huge portion of volume is driven by machines.
That doesn’t mean individuals are out.
But it does mean the approach has to evolve.
Portfolios need to reflect the reality of how markets actually operate now.
Do you think the old way still works… or is this truly the machine era? 👇
1 week ago | [YT] | 0
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Nurp
Jim Simons changed how people think about markets.
He wasn’t a traditional investor. He was a mathematician who built models, analyzed data, and focused on probabilities instead of predictions.
At Renaissance Technologies, that approach led to one of the most successful track records ever.
He is part of the shift that have made algorithmic and systematic strategies so important today.
It’s not about reacting to the market.
It’s about having a system that can operate within it.
1 week ago | [YT] | 0
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Nurp
Before quants were a thing, there was Ed Thorp.
He was a math professor who figured out how to beat blackjack… then applied the same thinking to the stock market.
Instead of opinions, he used probability, data, and models to find small edges and repeat them over and over.
That approach ended up laying the groundwork for modern quantitative and algorithmic trading.
Long before AI, before hedge funds made it mainstream… people like Thorp were already doing it.
Kind of wild how long this has been around.
1 week ago | [YT] | 0
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Nurp
The playbook has changed.
It used to be about timing trades and cashing out.
Now it’s more about holding onto good assets and letting them compound.
Not pulling money out.
Not resetting the game.
Just letting it build over time.
The real power isn’t in one big win. It’s in what happens when you don’t interrupt the growth.
Different mindset entirely.
2 weeks ago | [YT] | 0
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Nurp
Take a look at U.S. interest payments on debt since the 1960s.
For decades, it climbs… slowly.
Then after 2020, it spikes.
Not because the system suddenly changed, but because of two things hitting at once:
More debt
Higher interest rates
When rates were near zero, the cost was manageable.
Now that rates are higher, the same debt becomes much more expensive to carry.
That shift matters more than people think.
Is this sustainable long term?
2 weeks ago | [YT] | 0
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Nurp
There’s an old idea from Ibn Khaldun that still shows up in modern economics.
At the beginning of an empire, taxes are low and revenue is high.
By the end, taxes are high and revenue is low.
The logic is simple. Lower taxes encourage growth, activity, and expansion. Over time, as systems get bigger and more complex, taxes rise… and incentives start to break down.
Ronald Reagan referenced this idea when talking about economic policy.
It’s interesting because it raises a bigger question:
Do higher taxes always mean more revenue… or can they eventually have the opposite effect?
2 weeks ago | [YT] | 0
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Nurp
People think about their investments in a lot of different ways:
Returns.
Risk.
Time horizon.
But one thing that often gets overlooked is liquidity.
How quickly can you actually access your money if you need it?
Some investments look great on paper… until you try to exit.
Others may offer lower returns, but give you flexibility when it matters most.
Liquidity doesn’t feel important until it is.
2 weeks ago | [YT] | 0
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