You still in Netlist?that was a crazy start to the day, had 3 stocks crush earnings in AXON (one of the best stocks I ever bought in my 30+ years working in Finance), TGTX and EXEL both with surprise earnings beats which you don't see too often with Bios plus my GTHX got bought out.
You still in Netlist?
China has already de-facto collapsed. Systems like this don't collapse in a boom, they collapse progressively.
Just look at the US manufacturing investment index. it's a f***ing vertical line up. Tells the whole story.
And Canada is next as soon the conservatives are coming in.
We'll replace China's / Russia processing capabilities for the whole west.
That's WHY they are bringing this wave of immigrants.
View attachment 899305
It's been going on for so long and it has been a known problem all along too so i don't see this changing anytime soon unless people like Luis Rossman gets involved. And it's not only big tech. Patent trolls are a plague too.Big Tech’s abuse of the patent system must end—take it from me, I’ve fought Google over IP for years
The bipartisan PREVAIL Act and RESTORE Patent Rights Act would make critical reforms to curb the abuse of the U.S. patent system by Big Tech.finance.yahoo.com
To be expected.
Slowdowns are pretty much par for the course in a re-industrialization process for complex semiconductor factories, 30-40% is the industry standard.
And the IRA investments outside the chips act are very poor and not something I would advocate for in a blue moon. They just needed to block the Chinese markets from local businesses (for dumping), that's where 95% of the reindustrialization is happening, the government intervention is completely superfluous on top of trade policy. They should just focus on building the damn infrastructure and stay out of private enterprise.
Yeah with laws and rules not investments unless it's necessary for national security (Chips act)I disagree. Governement intervention is necessary to regulate the profit-driven and so inherently-amoral entities known as "private enterprise".
And those IRA investments, even if not the most efficient or profitable, can be a great stimulus for economic growth as they are more intended to foster confidence and "lubricate the machine" of private investments and interest in a meaningful way rather than "put the US federal governement in the black" if you will.
On a macro-economic viewpoint, the decision by the US governement to invest so heavily in chips and semiconductors is a bold but well-thought move. Even if their initiatives end up not paying the hoped-for dividends individually, as long as they get their overall picture to look somewhat like what they envisioned at the start, it's a win for them.
Basically, that investment-heavy approach is the complete opposite of years of Cameron-led (same thing for May, Johnson, Truss, Sunak too) conservative leadership for the UK since 2010 and untill Starmer became PM, where they invested very little in big projects in favor of reducing public debt/taxes for private enterprise and the rich thinking that non-intervention and a favorable tax environement for companies would help with economic growth.
And the apparent failure of that policy has led the UK, alongside numerous non-negligible factors to be clear (BREXIT, the war in Ukraine, Covid aftershocks, etc.), to being the least-healthy big economy in Europe last year and at least for the foreseeable short-term future.
How long you been in Netlist?that's my core long term position.
How long you been in Netlist?
i guess we can answer now ... no?Markets starting to take a beating. Are we on way to a recession?
It's going back that way
.87 centsI doubt it but I would buy the shit out of it if so, they have been playing games with the price but the story hasn't changed, my company will own part of Samsung at this rate. One of the current trials they have going against Samsung is for 19 Billion in damages. That's for a company that likely won't reach 150 Million this year in rev. They are already owed over 800 Million from Samsung and Micron.
But the big dog in this starts with the trial in Feb vs Google.
.87 cents