MEV_Whisperer

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Ever wonder what a nonce crypto really is? It's one of those terms that gets thrown around in mining discussions, but a lot of people don't actually understand what's happening under the hood.
So here's the thing - nonce stands for 'number used once,' and it's basically a randomly generated number that miners add to transaction data during the mining process. Think of it as a unique identifier that ensures every block on the blockchain is different from every other block. Without it, the whole system would fall apart.
When a miner is working on a block, they take transaction data and append th
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Just looked into what actually qualifies as middle class in Michigan and the numbers are pretty interesting. Turns out the threshold is way different depending on where you live in the Midwest. In Michigan specifically, if you're making around $110,676 or more, you're already hitting that upper-middle class range. That's based on the state's median household income of about $71,149. So the middle class in Michigan sits somewhere between roughly $47,433 and $142,298 annually. Compared to other Midwest states, Michigan's numbers are pretty middle-of-the-road. Minnesota's pushing higher at $136,1
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Just did some quick math on Elon Musk's wealth and honestly, the numbers are wild. His net worth sits somewhere around $470-500 billion right now, but here's the thing—he doesn't actually get a traditional salary. All his money is locked up in stock and company stakes.
So what does that mean for his per minute income? Let me break it down. Last year his net worth grew by roughly $203 billion, which works out to about $584 million per day. Per hour that's around $24 million. But the crazier part? His per minute income comes to about $405,000. Yeah, you read that right. Every single minute, the
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Been diving into 13F info lately and honestly, it's one of the most underrated tools for tracking what the smart money is actually doing. Let me break down why this matters.
So basically, any institutional investment manager handling over $100 million has to file Form 13F with the SEC every quarter. This gives you a window into their portfolio holdings - what they bought, sold, and held. It's like getting a cheat sheet on how the pros are positioning themselves.
The 13F filing requirement came about in 1975 and it's been pretty essential for market transparency ever since. The idea was simple:
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Just realized something wild - the state you live in can literally save or cost you thousands when buying a car. I was looking into cheapest states to buy a car and the differences are insane.
Turns out places like Oregon and Montana have basically zero sales tax on vehicles, which is a massive advantage. Meanwhile, states with cheapest cars overall tend to combine low taxes with reasonable dealer fees. Oregon tops the list with no sales tax and super low dealer fees ($353), while Montana pulls off the same tax trick despite car prices running 15% above national average.
Hawaii surprised me -
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Been looking at blockchain ETFs lately and honestly there's more going on in this space than a lot of people realize. Everyone talks about Bitcoin and Ethereum price swings, but the real infrastructure play might be worth paying attention to. Blockchain technology itself has become a legitimate investment category, and some serious money is flowing into it through ETFs.
So what exactly are blockchain ETFs? They're basically funds that let you get exposure to companies building and using blockchain tech without having to pick individual stocks. You're buying a basket of holdings all in one go,
BTC4,55%
ETH6,11%
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Been digging into Amazon's fundamentals lately, and there's actually a pretty compelling case for where this stock could be heading. Most people think about Amazon as just the e-commerce giant, but that's honestly missing the real story.
The actual growth drivers are AWS and their advertising business. These two segments are where the margins are insane compared to their retail operations. AWS was pushing 39% operating margins in their recent quarters, and their ad business is scaling fast. That's the kind of profitability that can actually move the needle on a company's valuation.
So here's w
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Today's EUR to AZN Price Update
This report analyzes the EUR/AZN exchange rate, highlighting key market dynamics, current rates, and the importance of technical analysis for traders to optimize their strategies.
ai-iconThe abstract is generated by AI
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Just fell down this rabbit hole about the most expensive things in the world and honestly, some of these are absolutely wild. Like, there's a $4.5 billion yacht called the History Supreme that's literally covered in gold and platinum. Not the biggest yacht out there, but definitely the most extra. Then there's this $2 billion house in Mumbai owned by Mukesh Ambani - 27 stories with helipads and a 50-seat home theater. I can't even imagine what that utility bill looks like. What got me though is the art prices. A Cézanne painting called 'The Card Players' sold for $275 million. Two hundred and
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Just stumbled on something that really puts wealth inequality into perspective. Michael Jordan's net worth sits around $3.8 billion as of last year, which makes him the richest athlete ever and basically the only former NBA player who became a billionaire. But here's the wild part - if he literally gave away every penny to every American right now, you'd each get about $11.11. Yeah, that's not even a decent meal.
What's crazy is that Jordan didn't actually make most of his money playing basketball. During his 15 seasons in the NBA, he earned roughly $90 million total - solid, but not earth-sha
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Just looked into what is considered lower middle class income across different states and the gap is wild. Maryland tops the list at around $67,768 minimum to hit that bracket, while Mississippi sits at $36,610. That's nearly double the difference just based on where you live.
So what is considered lower middle class anyway? Basically it's defined as two-thirds to double your state's median household income. Sounds simple but the reality is crazy different depending on cost of living. Places like Massachusetts, New Jersey, and Hawaii all need $65k-$67k minimum to be considered lower middle cla
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Just checked out this housing market breakdown and the rent per square foot by city numbers are wild. DC and San Francisco are absolutely brutal if you care about space—paying over $225 per 100 sq ft in those markets. That's insane when you think about what you're actually getting.
What's interesting though is the availability angle. NYC has the tightest rental market with only 196 homes per 100k people, making it nearly impossible to find anything even though rent per square foot by city is slightly lower than SF. Boston on the other hand? They've got 2,154 available rentals per 100k, so way
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PayPal just took a brutal hit on the stock market today after their earnings completely missed the mark. The stock dropped over 20% after reporting Q4 results that fell short on both revenue and earnings per share, plus they slashed their profit guidance for this year. Not exactly what investors wanted to hear.
What made it worse is they also announced their CEO is stepping down. Alex Chriss is out, and Enrique Lores from HP is taking over. That's a lot of bad news hitting at once, which explains why trading volume went absolutely crazy—nearly 800% above normal levels.
The broader stock market
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Just came across this interesting angle on inverse Europe ETFs from a few years back when the eurozone was really struggling. The whole region was dealing with weak growth, banking issues, and Russia tensions which had investors running from European equities. The euro kept sliding against the dollar, and economic data was pretty grim across the board.
What caught my attention was how traders were using inverse ETF products to short Europe during that period. The article breaks down several options - from leveraged inverse ETFs tracking the FTSE Developed Europe Index to currency-focused inver
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Just looked at the latest data on America's wealthiest towns in the us and some interesting patterns are jumping out. Scarsdale, New York is still holding the top spot for the second year running with average household income around $601k. Pretty wild that it's staying at the top with such consistent wealth concentration.
What caught my eye though is how much California is dominating the wealthiest towns in the us rankings. They've got 17 suburbs in the top 50 now, which is a massive share. Los Altos is sitting around $4.5 million for average home values, and you've got Alamo popping into the
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Just caught wind of something pretty significant happening on Wall Street right now. Booking Holdings just pulled off what's being called the biggest stock split announcement to kick off 2026 - a massive 25-for-1 split that went live on April 2nd. For context, this is their largest ever, which tells you something about where the company's headed.
Here's what caught my attention: companies announcing forward stock splits have this interesting track record of absolutely crushing the S&P 500. We're talking about averaging 25.4% returns over 12 months after the announcement drops, compared to the
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I've been digging into the AI infrastructure play lately, and honestly, most people are looking at this wrong. Everyone's obsessed with who wins the AI model race, but the real money might be in the companies building the plumbing that powers everything. The next wave of AI stock companies isn't just about GPUs anymore—it's cooling, networking, automation, security. That's where I think the actual compounding happens.
See, I've always been skeptical about AI stocks in general. The valuations are wild, there's hype everywhere, and frankly a lot of these companies are getting caught up in the bu
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Just noticed something interesting in the market right now. There are actually some solid growth stocks that are down right now by 30% or more, and honestly, the sell-off looks way overdone on a few of them.
Let me break down three that caught my attention.
First up is DoorDash. Yeah, the food delivery app everyone uses. The stock got hammered about 38% from its peak last year, mostly because of the general tech selloff and some regulatory issues in cities like Seattle. But here's the thing - their business is still running strong. Q4 revenue jumped 38% year over year to $29.7 billion, and ear
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just realized how many cheap food options actually exist when you're broke and not just surviving on ramen lol. like seriously, pasta is your best friend - throw literally any sauce on it and suddenly you have a meal. same with rice, fills you up forever and costs almost nothing.
protein-wise, eggs are clutch. versatile af and so inexpensive. canned tuna too if you need something quick. peanut butter is underrated - jar lasts forever and keeps you full. then there's chickpeas and black beans, packed with protein and fiber, way cheaper than meat.
veggies don't have to kill your budget either. c
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