 Hi everyone. This is Gicho. Welcome to my channel and welcome to another live stream. Let me bring this up. Make sure we're doing good and it is recording and everything's coming through which is fantastic. Today, today, today is December 7th 2020 and we're doing a live stream open discussion investing in personal finance and this is something sort of a new series that we're starting off and basically I titled it let's take a look at the stock market and what we're going to do is look at certain metrics in the markets and the metrics we're going to look at are going to be introductory, right? We're going to start off, see death, how are you doing? Welcome, welcome to another live stream. I hope you're doing well. Today right now is actually 9.30 in the morning It's a fun time actually. When I used to do this, do trading, active trading and follow the markets and stuff like this. I'm on the west coast of Canada, United States and we used to start at 5.30 in the morning, start looking at the data coming in, right? So it's fun to do it. Sleepy waves that we've been doing, been waiting for this for a while, never looking at the stock market, never looked at the stock market, can't wait to follow along any websites to have open. Awesome, sleep and what we're going to do gang, we're going to go slow, we're going to look at some of the terminology, net profit, PE ratio, earnings per share and stuff like this. We're going to build this up slowly and I'm going to give the intro as soon as we wait until notifications go out until after I do my little intro thing, but I'll let you know how it's going to go. We're going to go really slow with this man, we're going to enjoy this. I was very active in the markets 20 years ago, okay? So I used to have a lot of websites, the way I do my news channels and stuff, I had lots of websites, lots of metrics I was following and stuff like this. I lost a lot of those and a lot of those websites went under, right? So we're going to build up that whole database together, okay? Betty whites, the man, the myth, the legend, hey, isn't the Smith? What's going on? The man, the myth, the myth, Smith, did you change your name? Betty whites. Whitey, Betty Whitey, cd the 1230 here, awesome, East Coast. Yo, Void, let's go, how you doing? Touching Jason's greeting gangs. I think I can finally stick around for the whole stream today. Awesome, Touching Jason. Should be fun and we're, this is just pure education, right? And refresher for me. So we're going to go through the whole thing. Alex, how are you doing? Hey Chico, hope you're well, really doing well, man. I got my tea going on, got some little bananas chopped up just for a snack if I need to. If I get the munchies, X, how are you doing? Truffles present, right on. Where's the truffles at, by the way? Huckleberry, how are you doing? Hey Chico, hey chat. Glad you're streaming. I've taken two finals already today. And my brain is slush in need of some relaxation and education also. Hopefully, like we're not going to go too hardcore with this stuff. It's going to be very chill, enjoyable stream that we're about to do. Okay, I hope so anyway. And gang, as far as who I am, what this is about, I'm on Patreon. Patreon.com forward slash Chico, C-H-Y-C-H-O. If you want to follow this work, if you want to know what this work is about is layered on mathematics as personal finance, stock market ratios, stuff we're going to look at right now is going to make it pretty clear why we need the mathematics to be able to do this, right? For those of you who've been supporting this work through Patreon, thank you very much for your support. I hope, I hope that based on the messages I get and I have been getting over the years, I hope people are appreciative of your support for this work because it is mainly in large part because of your support that we're able to do this. I can sort of extend, do the calculus and figure out where we're going and how fast I can roll things out. So I appreciate it very much and I know a lot of other people appreciate it as well. Okay, lack of caring. I feel your brain pain, lack of caring says. Oh, and how are you doing, Chico? Just want to say I really appreciate your email response to me. Oh, you're welcome, brother. I'm going to sit through some Assange videos later. Thank you so much. Owen, brother, thank you for reaching out. Thank you for the trust. Take everything I say with a grain of salt. Just to let you guys know, people know what's going on. Owen just sent me a message last night after the stream we did. I checked it out and it was a very nice, intricate message. He was a little hard on himself, the truth. I hope you're okay with me saying this stuff. I replied right away because the email that he wrote was, head and shoulders above anything I could have ever written when I was his age. And I mentioned this to Owen, right? Gang, don't be hard on yourself. There's a lot of noise in the world, right? And this noise is by design. It's by design from centralized power that wants to keep you enslaved, wants to keep you uninformed, confused, right? Take a breather, relax. Don't try to consume one minute memes, 30 second bits of information, five minute bits of information, 10 minute bits of information. Get into, if you're being a little overwhelmed with what's going on in the world and what's going on in your life and you're confused, you want to find out what this is all about. Start consuming extended, long play, long books, read books, read long articles, follow a series, right? Because what that does is gives you enough time to be able to process the information before jumping from one point to another point, right? What's going on right now is there's a lot of noise coming in, right? And the noise might be not just noise if it was part of the bigger picture, but because everything's so disconnected and there's a lot of censorship going on, it's hard to put things in the appropriate context. So slow the F down. When centralized power, the powers that we want you to speed up, right? Slow down, right? Be a contrarian and that is something that an amazing investment technique in the markets as well to be a contrarian, okay? So Owen, my pleasure. Thank you for the response. And what I did, gang, what I sent on, aside from just some advice regarding mathematics to get back into it, and the best way to get into learning mathematics is to teach mathematics. That was the road that I took. And you have to put your students on the forefront, okay? The other one was Owen asked me about Julian Assange. And I sent him a link on the world, what was it called? World Next, oh my god. Julian Assange, okay, I'm going to find it for you guys. I'm going to link it up to you guys as well. World Tomorrow, World Tomorrow. Julian Assange, World Tomorrow. Is it 12? There it is. No, no, there it is. World Tomorrow, Weekly Column, Julian Assange. Wait a second. Well, this should be it. This should be on wiki. No, this is a weekly column. I haven't been to this one. Cool. But it was on a wiki thing. So let me find it. Gbiz, Gbiz, where is it? World, oh, I know how I found it. I went to here and I clicked their website here. There we go. Okay, here's the link, gang. You want to know what's going on with Julian Assange, and you need to know what's going on with Julian Assange. Everyone needs to know what's going on with Julian Assange. Julian Assange put out a 12 episode series where he interviewed some of some very important people and discussed some very important topics regarding our world. And this came out in early 2010s. Watch them, all of them. Okay, that's what I'll say about that. I'm going to catch up with Chad. Man, I went off on a tangent there. Owen, my pleasure. Lonely Piggy, HHO, Hope, all as well, got back from a chiral, chirurgical tooth removal, chiral, chirurgical, I'm not ever excited for a chance to relax with my stream. Pain and headache is annoying. Oh man, I feel you dentist or hardcore. Cheryl, how are you doing? Hope you're doing well. Good morning, by the way. Huckleberry, this week is going to be a struggle, but after that I'm off. Yes, yes. And never forget, chase your dreams. Yeah, chase your dreams. Don't let these evil people suck you up in simple life. Young Polax, agree, agree, agree. Oh, thanks, Owen. Unfortunately, well, fortunately, unfortunately, the way we've set it up, only me and mods can provide links. So just because we're getting fishing scams. Okay, aside from that gang, we are live streaming on Twitch. If you want to participate in the chat, as is happening, Twitch is where you want to be at. And for those of you who are following, liking, sharing, commenting, being here on Twitch. Thank you very much for being here. Gina, how are you doing? I do announce these live streams 30 minutes before we go live on parlor, LOMinds, VKGap and Twitter. And we do share additional content there. And we do have a Discord page as well. Okay. And at any time you want, you can come to our Twitch channel and type in social and all the links will be provided, including our Discord page. And people are sharing a lot of information there and talking a lot and discussing things, which is a fantastic thing. Open forum, right? Kebabs, greetings, greetings. How are you doing? Ding Bobber, choo-choo. I just finished a beat over two packs verse for his song, Pain. I'll link it in Discord. It's an intense verse and I'm happy with the beats. Awesome. Good stuff, Ding Bobber. Chase your dreams gang. You want to play, you want to create music? Create music. Really. Create it, share it. Period. End of story. You want to write poetry? Write poetry. Share it. Don't hold it to yourself, right? The best way to learn is to share because you get feedback, both positive and negative, constructive and destructive. Take it all with a grain of salt and try to improve. Okay. Period. That's how I started doing my stuff. We will be uploading the audio for this to SoundCloud.com forward slash Chicho, C-H-Y-C-H-O as a podcast and it should be available on your favorite podcast and platform, including Spotify and iTunes. And we will be uploading this live stream, this video, to both BitShoot and YouTube. Okay. Now, let me do this, Chicho. That 30 seconds was words golden soundbites. Awesome. And by the way, gang, if you want to support this work on BitShoot and YouTube, you can like, you can subscribe, you can turn on notifications for sure. BitShoot, you're guaranteed to get on YouTube, not so much. But if you're on YouTube, you want to support this work, you can join YouTube membership. There's a button under the video. And for those of you who've supported this work through YouTube membership, thank you very much for the support. I'm going to take these guys down and we're going to get into this. Okay. Investing in personal finance, we're looking at the markets gang. We're looking at the markets, specifically Wall Street, because we're going to look at some of the metrics and the metrics are basically ratios and that directly links up with the math content that we're creating. And this is considered as part one of a new series that we're starting that is a continuation of previous stuff that we've done, which you can find here. Okay. Huckleberry, is anyone else getting a weird window inside a window? Oh, you are indeed, because, oh no, are you? Let me turn this off. Okay. Is that gone now? The sound effect? Feed? Maybe I'll leave and come back and see. Chicho, does YouTube premium include a free sub to a channel like Amazon Prime and Twitch? It should. What is YouTube? Thank you very much for the Twitch Prime sub. And how you doing, brother? Sorry about the audio. We will be turning on the audio when we play videos. Okay. So I had the audio on. My apologies for that. Oh, what I need to do is do this. Hold on a second. I know what I need to do. I need to go here and I need to turn off the audio here. Oh, that is off. So that is off. Let me know if you guys get any sound problems getting. Okay. And before we start the videos, I'm going to turn on the audio for the computer, right? Yeah. So for if you join YouTube premium, what happens is you don't see advertisements dingbobber. So you get ad free content, which is not a bad thing actually. Touching Jason. I believe so anyway. Or that's YouTube Prime. When you join YouTube membership, it allows content creators to share additional content that they're not sharing with the general public, which is sort of as a thank you for people who've joined the YouTube membership, right? They get extra content. But for me, I believe in sharing everything. I'm not putting anything behind paywalls. So with the YouTube membership, you're not getting any additional content from me. Later on the future, when I make things, the modules, the math modules and stuff, I'll probably send those out for free to the people who've been supporting me on YouTube, YouTube membership and stuff like that, and maybe send out some additional free content for them. But we're not there yet. Okay. And I haven't told people that I'm going to do that yet because I don't know when I'm going to get into it. I don't want people to join expecting things to come right away. I don't want to fool people into joining and stuff like this. I don't want to incentivize people in that manner to join YouTube membership. I just sort of, I guess it's my arrogance or whatever you want to call it. I want people to join YouTube membership because of all the content I'm creating and all the work that I'm doing. Okay. Which is the reason that people on Patreon have joined, right? And which is the reason that people are joining on Twitch Prime, Tier 1 and stuff like this. And YouTube membership to our handful of people that are doing that. Twitching Jason, I assume we'll be going through fundamentals for a little while. Indeed, Twitching Jason. But I'm curious if anyone here has heard of fire, financially independent, retire early. I haven't done community. I haven't heard about it, Twitching Jason. I just cut back my, just over the last few years, I've really cut back on my presence on Reddit after like 13 years of being on Reddit. For the last four years, I've really slowed it down just because of censorship, right? Yes, it's the video feed. Is there still a sound? Finestream, Nicholas. What's up? Good morning, Carlos. How are you doing? Good morning, Chicho. How are you doing this morning? Crap. Just realized I missed the movie choice stream. All good. This personal Finestream seems to be something I need. Awesome. Chicho, you have a mirrored video. Video, there's a video tunnel. Okay. Is the sound sorted out now? Chicho, I don't know how familiar you are with groups, rings, and other algebraic structures. Not very, but it would be cool to talk about it next month. Yeah, I'm not, group theory, a number theory and stuff like this. I'm not the best at it. Okay, young Pilex is fine. I think it was just the OBS that was opened. So it looked like a video tunnel. Oh, is that what it was? Okay, okay. So it wasn't the sound. So what happens if I turn on the desktop sound right now? That way I don't have to worry about turning it on and off before videos just in case I forget. So I hope we're not getting an echo right now. Is that okay? We shouldn't be. The sound is fine. Sound is fine. Nothing happened. Awesome. We're going to leave it on then. Okay, gang, let me give you a little intro as where to where we are. Okay. One of the things lacking in our current educational system is information on personal finance. Okay. Is he using his browser to show us something? My bad. I didn't know he had that window open. Yeah, I did. Well, no, no, you're not dumbding Robert. Just a little confusion. Chicho, I'm good bro. Nicholas says hope all is well in your end. Do you still plan on growing the beard out or has the notion passed you by? I still intend on it. And I sort of go on four 20 times. Sometimes I do think speedy ones out of style. Sometimes I'm like that up chilling through it, right? So at some point I will be growing a beard. I really do miss it, but maybe, maybe at the end of this school year, I might take this off, go without facial hair for maximum like two months because I love facial hair. And then I'm going to start growing a beard back again. So maybe in the summer we do maybe. Okay. And one of the things is is bugging me right now is the masks, right? That we have to wear. So whenever I wear a mask, my goatee goes all wacko. So beard will go crazy wacko, right? And it's mandatory mask and it's mandatory mask wearing insides right now where I am. So growing a beard right now is not an option, but I'm not going to cut my goatee because of masks. It pissed me off too much, I think. I visit this playlist often. Ha ha. Sounds okay to me. Okay, awesome. Odd, man. How are you doing? Chicho, I haven't slept since the movie series. Are you serious odd, man? Fuck off. You're working on a math problem. You know, there's some really neat math behind the stock indeed, stock market gambling kind of math like you would use for poker indeed, indeed, odd, and it's fun. Are you going, uh, you crop it short? My goatee? No. If that's what you mean, you know, I ain't going to crop this. No, no, no, no, no, no. What I plan on to do with the facial hair is do a handlebar for just a little bit, just a few streams with a handlebar mustache and then do a mustache live stream, some videos with mustache. I haven't done just a full mustache for a long time, only a mustache and then cut it all off and then go full beard. All right, gang, this playlist. Okay, I created this playlist because our education system completely sucks. They don't teach people personal finance, what it's all about and whatnot. So I put these videos together intentionally to explain what's going on and what my perspective is. The first one is an introduction. The second one is an introduction just talking about, you know, some of the elements that you should really consider. The top one here is sort of a disclaimer, right? This one is telling you that, look, there are five important things, health, family, friends, network, budget, you know, experience and stuff like this. And then we get into timing markets. We talked about some of the metrics. We zoomed in. If you want to go micro or macro, what's your time scale? You're going to be trading on a millisecond level if you're a high speed trader or you're going to go into retirement level, right? You're going to be trading on a weekly level, daily level, monthly level, yearly level. What are you going to be doing, right? Have your time frame in mind, right? And then we put out a full on video about automation because most of the trading that's taking place in the markets right now is automated. A lot of our economy right now is run through automation. If there's anything that they call a black swan events, right? Any black swan event that kicks in, that sends these algorithms into cell mode instantly, you're going to see a gigantic economic collapse globally, especially, and we've seen multiple versions of these. They've put in sort of what do you call it, blockers, right? We've had these flash crashes, but at some point we're going to get a flash crash that's going to take down a lot of things for a long time. Be aware of what it implies, right? And then I put our video regarding cryptocurrencies, my history with cryptocurrencies that I got into 2010 and their importance, right? And then we looked at a few different metrics, growth rates of a few different types of investments. It was a two-parter. These two videos are ridiculously important. Okay, ridiculously important. We define terms. I recommend some articles to read. We look at the growth rate of what the CPI is, income, housing, stock markets, certain funds, Bitcoin, collectibles, such as Action Comics number one and stuff like this. It took me what is it two hours to do this, including editing. These are full-on edited ASMR videos. And then we kicked it back into cryptocurrencies, explained the importance of blockchain technology and decentralizations. Very, very important. And then we did an open discussion live stream, right? An investing personal finance. One of my early Twitch live streams. And then we kicked it into ICOs, cryptocurrencies again. And then we looked at return on investment. These two are full-on edited videos as well. Return on investment specifically looked at currencies. And currency is extremely important no matter where it is that you're investing money. Have a global perspective in regards what your currency is relative and what its value is and how it's changing relative to other currencies. Because we're in a global market, right? And there's a lot of money moving, big money moving between different nations, mainly to chasing growth, right? Because the world's flooded with money right now with credit, right? Credit and money, right? So there's been a lot of money going on across the world trying to find someplace for growth. And that's why we've seen a huge ass bubble in asset prices, including real estate, the stock market, but like money is chasing growth and safe havens, right? And that is affecting currencies. And currencies can go up and down. And in this case, we looked at Canadian dollars versus US dollar, where the Canadian dollar increased 30% relative to US dollar in like a matter of a couple of years and then dropped again in a matter of a year, like 40% or something, right? It currency matters. And then after this, we just did tons of live streams talking about personal finance, investing and whatnot. It just continues. And these are all, almost all of them are going to be live streams that we did unedited videos because mainly one of the reasons we went into this because my main editing computer had hiccups. This is an important playlist, at least the first eight videos you should be watching if you're thinking about investing in personal finance, okay? Oh, like I woke up when the movie, oh, you woke up when the movie stream started. Okay, quarantine has wrecked my sleep cycle. You and me both and everybody, I think. Starts a shirtless Skylo. How are you doing? Hell yeah. To the solo musta. Yeah, we've got to do it, man. Oh, and this exact playlist is the way I found your videos. Future, what a throwback. Awesome. Oh, I'm glad. I'm glad you found this. Really, as far as I'm concerned, these videos are amazing. Okay. It takes a little bit of time to go through them. It's a few hours there, right? Extremely important. I wish someone had shared this information with me when I was younger. And that was the purpose of me creating these things, right? Should I collect gold or silver or cans of beans? Depends. Are you going to have food shortages where you are? Gold and silver is not going to do anything for you. Cans of beans will be way better, okay? Depending on where you are, right? Gold and silver, you should have a little bit of gold and silver, just a hedge inflation, currency, collapses and stuff like this. But I wouldn't put your nest egg in gold and silver, not by a long shot. Gina, I've already seen a black swan on a single stock a few years ago. It wiped out a chunk of my folks' retirement savings. Yeah. They can't sell those stocks until the share recovers. Otherwise, they liquidize that loss. Yeah. They realize that loss, basically, right? And Gina, that's a fallacy. They can sell it, right? And at the same time, what they can do is sell another stock that's gone up, write off the losses on this stock, and against the profits of this stock, at least they don't end up paying capital gains on the gains of this stock, right? So losses, you can realize them, okay? As long as you're writing against certain profits, because some people say, oh, it's too late to sell and then ride a certain stock all the way down to nothing, right? And then they're like, well, I couldn't sell it then. Why not? At least you would have recouped 20% of your money. And then take that 80% loss that you had, write it against other profits that you had, things that you're afraid to liquidate because of the capital gains hit that you're going to take, right? So whenever you get hit with a major loss somewhere, look at your whole portfolio. And if there's things that you didn't want to sell because the capital gains was going to take a huge chunk of your profits away, depending on where you are, by the way, take everything I say with a grain of salt, capital gains was going to take your chunk away. What you can do is now realize those gains against the losses, right? So that's one thing that some people don't consider, which is really unfortunate. What are your thoughts on buying fractional stocks via service like cash apps? I haven't done it. The return is obviously smaller, but is it still something worth getting into? I haven't looked into that stuff, Huckleberry. Those are sort of, I consider those to be derivatives, secondary, tertiary markets. I rather, if I want to play derivatives, I go put some calls. That's what I do. Or that's what I used to do. Crafter, hello, how are you doing? NEO stock, NIO stock, NIO, NIO, NIO. Is that the Miro? Is that the camera? What that is? That's very good advice. I hadn't considered it, Gina says. Yeah, about realizing capital gains, very important, very important. Losses may seem traumatic, but if you've been doing it right, you just haven't acquired losses, you're diversified. You have capital gains. Look at your portfolio, see where you think the capital gains has maxed out. Write it off. What protects investors from bankruptcy? What protects investors from bankruptcy? Incorporating individually, that way you can bankrupt the corporation and you don't lose your own personal assets. The other thing is information, being aware of what's going on, sleepy ways. What do you mean writing off your losses versus your gains? I don't understand, to be honest. Sleepy ways, think about it this way. Let's say you've got investments in two different stocks. Two different, I'm not going to even say stocks, two different recognized investment instruments. John Zuck, thank you very much for the Twitch Prime sub. Let's say you've got investments, and we're calling it investments, and two different instruments. Let's say you put $100 in each one. Let's say this one goes up to $200. That means you have $100 worth of profit. Now, if you sell that, depending on where you are, you're going to pay anywhere between 25-50% capital gains. So your $100 profit on this, let's say it's 50%, your $100 profit on this, you only get to keep $50 of it because the tax man takes 50%. That's capital gains. Now, at the same time, let's assume the investment you made in this stock, so you had $100 in both, this one went up to $200. Let's say this one that you invested $100 in went down to 50, so you lost 50%. And keep in mind, losing 50% to get that back up again, you have to gain 100% from where the stock is. It's a much harder climb back up than it is on the way down. Going down, you lose a lot compared to how you can make it up again. So this is the situation right now. You had $100 in each, this one up to two, this one down to 50. You want to realize these gains because you assume that this isn't going to go up anymore. You sell your $200 worth of stock and this. $100 was your initial investment, so your profit is $100. And let's assume you don't even have to sell the 100, but you don't even need to sell the 200. You could just realize 100, keep half your shares, but let's assume you sell the whole thing. So you got $100 in profit you've made here, but you lost $50 here. Now, if you didn't sell this, you would have to pay $50 in taxes and you only kept 50. But what you can do is sell your position in this stock as well, liquidate both of them. So you had a $50 loss here. So you can write that off against your $100 gain here. And your $100 gain here is now $50. Now $50 gain, first of all, it kicks you down to a lower tax bracket, but we're not even going to consider that. Because in a lower tax bracket, you probably won't even end up paying a $50. You paid like, not 50%, but you paid like 35%. But we're not going to assume that. So now that it's down to $50, you're only going to be paying 50% on $50 and that's $25. So on the $100 gain that you had here, now you're only paying $25 tax and you're keeping 75 instead of paying $50 tax and keeping 50 because you wrote off, you sold this and wrote it off against this. So your total money that you have right now is this. You invested $100, you invested $200, you sold this for $200, you sold this for $50. So you pulled out $250. You put in $200, you pulled out $250 when you sold everything. On the $250 that you pulled out, there was only $50 profit, so you ended up paying $25 in taxes. So your net gain was $25 on $200. Does that make sense? So kudos to you, you made a profit of, what is it? 10 plus percent, right? 11 percent, 12 and a half percent, right? And free as such, free as such, free as such. Yeah, NEO is the Chinese manufacturing, the battery one, right? The one that went up crazy. Learning very fridges. Is it still going crazy? Tesla is going insane, right? No. If anything, I would want to start my own company that incorporate, am I on the right track? You are on the right track. Our Western world economic system is based on incorporating, writing things off. Everybody should have either sole proprietorship or incorporation or partnership going on. Partnerships are more tricky, by the way. Twitching Jason, I personally don't intend on trading individual stocks for some time. I'm generally focused on indexes and mutual funds. I may refocus on individual stocks and their derivatives, like options, once it's a small percentage of my portfolio. Cool. Gina. And you generate cash inflows on both, and you generate cash inflows on both. Odmic. Essentially invest in a long-term gains instead of trying to cheat the market. It's very hard to win in less fair than straight up gambling. You have to spend a lot of time and not make any mistakes in order to profit. But the profits could be huge, right? And you shouldn't have your whole portfolio in trading stocks on a daily basis, or a weekly basis, or a monthly basis. Because as Odmic mentions, it requires a lot of time. You got to stay on top of the thing. So it becomes more of a business. Okay. Sleepy waves. Curious on leveraging losses versus profit from my next tax. For instance, someone like, what would you consider your losses annually? I don't know. Sleepy waves, that really personal dependent, right? What I want to do, gang, in today's stream to a certain degree, okay, is let's take a look at Amazon. Okay. Let's define some terms right now, some basic terms that we need to understand before we can think about investing. And we're using the stock market right now just because all the metrics are available. Keep in mind that all of this can apply to anything else that you want to invest in, including yourself, right? And you don't have to just measure things based on what Wall Street considers to be assets, or growth, or gains, or profits. Having a good health, if you are ill health, and you invest in yourself, and you're in better health a year down the road, that is a huge return on your investment. And you can't be taxed on it. Okay. Unless you're buying a lot of things and paying taxes, you know, whatever the PST or GST taxes are on it. Odmic, it's also worth noting that gambling is super fun, and therefore playing the markets is a real fun time. It is a real fun time, and it can be extremely addictive. Okay. Odmic has a math perspective. I have a math perspective. Anyone with a math perspective loves the markets, loves data. Okay. If you understand mathematics, if you're a literate in the language of mathematics, and I've had a lot of students come to me and say, oh, Gijo, you know, you know, I ask them, I ask all my students, listen, after I start working with them, I explain to them what language of mathematics is, I get to know them a little bit and find out what they're interested in. I slowly start asking them, how did they envision themselves in the future? What would they like to do? Not like to be or anything, but like to do, how would they would like to interact with the world? And I've had some people tell me that, some of my students tell me that they would like to make lots of money, be very rich, and then they don't do their math homework, or they say, oh, math is not important. That's when I rip up a new one, right? Because I say, you got to be the biggest dingaling, biggest dum-dum there ever is. Because if you're really, if your only purpose in life is to have, make lots of money, okay, become a multimillionaire, then you would have to be a moron, not to basically focus on learning mathematics, because it's all mathematics, all of it. There's a little bit of wisdom there, there's a lot of experience, right? Because if you, as Audmik says with the gambling stuff, if you want to learn how to gamble, you can't just read a book and learn. You need to sit on a table and play, right? And with any type of investing, markets, gambling, any, anything that you're going to go into, initially you're going to take losses, initially you're going to get hit, because that's the learning experience. You're going to make mistakes because emotions come into play and there's a lot of things, a lot of fine tweaking that happens when you're playing a certain market that does not come into play. You can't read about it, okay? You're going to read about it, but it doesn't stick, right? It's those little nuances that really make the difference. Keep that in mind, gang. Keep that in mind. Very important, okay? Now, the stock that I've chosen to sort of define some of the terms that we're going to look at is Amazon, okay? And the reason I chose this is because it's a well-known name. A lot of people use it. It's a company that's basically gaming the system up the yin and yang, up the yin and yang, right? It involves a lot of different industries, okay? Not just, it is high tech, right? Where people are, you know, marketplace, people are buying, selling, but there's a lot of cloud services there as well. They are diversified. They have real estate in game, and they have their hands in government, right? So it's important, and there's a lot of data, and it shows you a certain type of market, okay? Now, there's some websites that I've hooked up here. If there's any other websites that you think are worth adding to our repertoire here, and what we're going to do, we're going to create a whole playlist. This is my eco folder, and I've created a Twitch playlist here, or Twitch folder here, where I'm going to start linking things up, right? We're going to look some of the websites and then consolidate things and sort of formalize things, right? Now, Amazon, we're looking, Amazon is on Nasdaq, right? Again, thank you for the follows. Thank you for the subs. Apologies if I'm not catching them. I just heard the sound, so that tells me what's going on, right? But one of the things you want to do, you want to look at the trading, whatever stock that you're looking at, you want to go to the website where, or the exchange where that company is being hosted, is being traded, right? So Amazon is on the Nasdaq, right? So we go on to the Nasdaq, you type in, there's a search here, you can type in Amazon, Amazon, press enter, and Amazon comes up, right? It gives you this stuff, the news, and whatnot, and you click on this thing, and it takes you to Amazon, right? First thing you've got to do is you can look at it here, and by the way, I'm using, I'm doing this, here, let me open it up further. In here, this thing that you see here, okay, before markets, you get a little, another box here, here, let me make this smaller again, okay? Right now, this is what's going on. This is as of right now, because we're on Monday, the stock market is open, and Amazon trading, right now, Amazon is down $7.84, which is 0.25%. Before the market opens, and after the market, there's another window here where it gives the trades before and after market, right? And you can take a look at the stuff here. This is real-time data coming in, after hours, pre-market, and then you can see the charts, right? So if we go real-time data, actually before we do that, take a look at this thing. This is the chart, and this is one day, five days, one month, six months, year to date, one year, five year, and NASDAQ sucks because, and a lot of websites do this, right? When you say maximum, you want the maximum data available here? Well, take a look at this thing. NASDAQ has only taken it down to 2010. What the hell? Amazon was around 2000, right? I was trading Amazon, right? There was a time where Amazon, Amazon's sitting at right now $3,155, trading at $3,150 to $5, back in 2001, after Doc Cumbable, two years after Doc Cumbable, I was tracking the stuff, right? Amazon stock was down at $3,500, right? Figure that out. $3,500 up to $3,000, right? So let's assume you bought $1,000 worth of Amazon stock in 2002, I believe here. I got the other chart here. Here's the other chart, okay? This is another website called here. Let me give you the links to these into chat, and I'll provide the links in the description of these videos. I won't say low amount to be shooting YouTube. That's the NASDAQ stock. Amazon was $0.11 a share when I was, yeah, yeah. Here is investing.com, okay? And I'm using this website because I am familiar with that a little bit, and it gives you the chart all the way back. This is what Amazon stock looks like if you do the maximum. If you scroll down here, this is the maximum. This is what it really looks like. Down here, if you go in here, it doesn't give you the price. It does not give you the price. It is right now. It's $1.5 down here, right? So Amazon stock in 1997 was $1.5, right? Right now, and we're going to go free massage, free massage, free massage, right? And it was $1.5, and right now is $3,150, right? So let's do the multiple. $1.5 to $15 is 10 times. So 10 times, $150 is 100 times, up to $1,500 is 1,000 times, and then double it to get to 3,000. So 2,000 times your return. In 1997, if you put $1,000 into Amazon stock, right now, you would have $2 million, right? If I did my calculations, right? If Audmix is still here, I hope she will confirm, right? We can bring out the calculator, right? $1,000 times, what did we say? 2,000. 2,000. You had $2 million, right? And people talk about investing in real estate. Are they out of their F in minds, right? Are they out of their F in minds? It's not a bad place to be, but you're leveraging. You got burdens. You're locked in. $1,000 in 1997. Now, you'd be a fool. You'd be a savant if you had held on to all of that, right? You would be a fool in the markets, consider the fool in the markets if you had held on to all of that, even though your return would have been $1,000, $2 million, right? You would have liquidated some of those assets, some of those stocks as you started gaining profits, because if you put $1,000 in 1997 into Amazon, real estate, young pollacks, my take is real estate was in the long term a great place to be, depending on where you were. Some places, real estate was not a good place to be, depending on where you were. Right now, there's a huge real estate bubble to a certain degree. However, there are certain sectors that the real estate is going to go up. There are certain sectors that real estate is going to crash and it's going to crash hard. Be aware, real estate is like saying stocks are a good place to be. So Joe Bellow goes and buys stocks in Kodak versus Amazon. If you bought Kodak, if you bought $1,000 in Kodak in 1997, you would have had zero right now. You would have had zero, I think Kodak collapsed in mid-2000s, right? You would have no money, right? So when people say investing in real estate is a good idea, that's such a general statement, it's insane to me, right? It depends where. It's like saying investing in stocks is a good idea. Which stocks? Right? Investing in collectibles is a good idea. Which collectibles? Pogs? Are Pogs a great place to invest your money? They were at a time when Pogs came out, right? They were selling for a lot. Now they ain't worth anything. Pokemon cars, great place to invest your money. Stock market, great place. A comic books, depending on the comic books, and general, all of them got a pretty good place to invest your money. Comic books, damn right. A lot of people for a number of decades kept on saying comic books are not a great investment. They're fools. Comic books are a great investment depending on where you put that money, okay? Noid, no, you can go fast or slow in real estate. Yeah, you can go fast or slow in real estate, but to go fast you need a lot of capital. You need a lot of capital, and you need a lot of connections, okay? Autistic, shorting stocks is also kind of interesting. Shorting stocks could be amazing, okay? For some reason, people think that the only way to go when you're investing in stocks is to ride something up. They don't realize that you can ride something down, and that's a beautiful thing to do, right? And there are multiple ways of riding a stock down. You can make it short. I don't recommend unless you have huge capital and you know what it is that you're doing. You could buy, share in a company, and keep writing, writing calls. And writing calls is basically call, puts and calls are this. Calls are betting that a stock is going to go up. Puts is betting that a stock is going to go down. Writing something means that you're selling it without having it, and hopefully in the future you can buy it at a cheaper price. So some people short by buying a position into a stock and then writing calls on it. And if the stock stays stagnant or goes down, they make money. If the stock goes above the strike price, then they have to pay the difference, right? So that's one way of doing it. The other way of doing it is just buying puts, right? You buy puts and sell them when the stock has gone down. And puts is the right to sell a stock at a certain price. Erisley number one, how are you doing? Thank you very much for redeeming points. We can about a stock market is just long-term gambling. It is indeed or short-term if you want it to be. Beanie babies were a bad place to invest your money. My poor mom makes us. Beanie babies were selling for insane. I don't know how much that some of the other toys are going for. Other toys? Transformers? What a place to invest your money. Gaming games, right? Actual games. What a place to invest your money. What a place to invest your money. Flip a house though. If you want to flip a house though, if the buyers aren't there, you're going to take a huge hit. And remember if you buy a house, there's maintenance, there's taxes, there's bad tenants if you're renting, right? I'm working competitive. I think that's fun. Okay, so this is another, did I give you guys the link for this one as well? Yeah, I did. So here's what Amazon stock has done over the last 20 years, 23 years, right? So, okay. Now, this is another website that someone recommended on our Discord page. And I couldn't figure out how to create an account here, because what I want to do with these videos, this series that we're going to do, I want to start sort of creating an account on one of these websites, okay? And basically start tracking certain stocks, right? And once we're tracking certain stock, we can take a look at their PE ratio, their return on investment, their earnings per share, and some of the other metrics that we're going to look at, okay? We can take a look at that stuff over a long period of time, which is what you need to do. Okay, Emily, how are you doing? Welcome, welcome to another live stream, which is what you need to do. You need to track something for an extended period of time to have a feel for how that stock, that company behaves. And that's one thing that I did and I highly recommend, right? There are thousands of companies that are on the stock market, tens of thousands of companies that are on the stock market all over the world, right? You're going to have a bad time trying to trade everything, okay? Really, you're going to have a bad time chasing the hot stocks, shorting the bad stocks. You're going to have a bad time. What you need to do is follow a basket of stocks, okay? Sometimes a basket of stocks in one or two different industries, or a basket of stocks that are related to each other, or a basket of stocks where you have five of this type of stock, five of this type of stock, five of this type of stocks. That way, you get a feel for how they're trading, right? Because it's very important. Each stock has its own behavior. Each company has its own behavior. If you don't believe that, take a look at how Tesla trades, okay? Really, okay? Take a look at how Microsoft, how Amazon, how Boeing, how some of these stocks trade, okay? Each one has its own life and its own life to a certain degree, okay? Here's a metric. Where is our metrics? Let me scroll down here. This is the NASDAQ stock, by the way, and you can scroll down and see some of the key data. And we will look at these, by the way. We're going to look at these key data. And the key data varies depending on which website you're looking at. Some of them are more recent. Some of them will go give you a couple of more, what do you call it, accuracy decimal places. So for example, the life, the behavior of a stock, okay? I would consider that to be the beta definition. And beta is a metric that tells you what the extremes, how extreme this company, the stock trades, right? So on the NASDAQ website for Amazon, it says the beta is one. But if you go to invest, investing.com, it should show the data. Take a look at this thing. It's got more places, more significant figures in it. So it's telling you that the beta is 1.21. This is a better metric than 1. You're getting more accurate data. So one thing, when you're looking at stocks or any other type of investment is, you want to have at least two or three different websites you go to to get the metrics you need. Okay, really, if you want to dig down, if you don't want to really dig down into multiple layers for each of the metrics, you want to get a general feel of what the stock is doing. And then you can dig down into the different metrics, right? So beta has sort of a formula to it. And it's basically you can consider it to be a high beta is something that trades like mad, the extremes are huge, goes up and down like crazy, like a roller coaster, and people lose their shit on it or lose their shirt in it, right? Trading it or make a lot. And a low beta is basically a stock which is fairly stagnant, you know, just does this, right? Or does this, or does this, right? The extremes aren't as much. It's not telling you what the trend is. If it's going up, stagnant or going down, it tells you what the noise is, what the extremes are. Okay, so keep that in mind. And to me, that is the, is how a stock behaves. That's what the beta is to me, okay? Women, womeny, great to catch another stream. An interesting subject. Now the stock market have had a bad hit. Have they had a bad hit? I don't know if they've had a bad hit. They're doing pretty damn good as far as I see it. Is it gonna last? I don't know. Is the market down today? I don't know what the market's doing today. It was doing okay. It was just normal, normal range of trading, right? We can have barnies. One of my classmates has flipped houses by buying them, make out smart house features like air handling and electricity control. He's made about 90,000 in his flips as smart house editions. Yeah, for sure we can have barnies. There's multiple ways to make money on the housing sector, right? You can take over a house, rent it, sell it, you make profit. You can take over a house, live in half of it, rent out the other half. You can take over a house, partition it, and rent out rooms, right? You can live in the house, assume that the market's gonna go up, the land value gonna go up, and sell it when the value goes up. Or you can do what housing was meant to be as far as I'm concerned, right? Because as far as I see it, the Wall Street mentality has turned housing into they introduced it as an investment, right? So what people have done with that is start flip-flopping houses left and right, right? And that has driven up the price of housing, right? What happens when that it's basically like money flow, how fast certain commodity, certain asset is switching hands. Housing market has been switching hands very rapidly over the last 15 years or so. Huge relative to historical. As far as last time I checked anyway, right? Or last 10 years, right? Is that gonna continue with housing flipping constantly? I don't know, man. I don't know. One of the other things is once you buy an asset at an inflated price, if the market does a correction or when the market does a correction, if you bought at the peak, you're gonna get burned, man. It's gonna take you a while to recover, a long while to recover, especially if interest rates go up, which is one of the problems with the housing market. People assume that, okay, let's say they're gonna buy a $500,000 house. They're gonna put 10% down. They put $50,000 down. They're carrying the debt of $450,000. Interest rates are low. They got good credit. Let's say they can get it at a 4%, right? Or 5%, whatever it is. What happens when the market does a serious adjustment and the house that you bought or the property that you bought rose from $500,000 to $350,000, right? Now you're sitting at a loss of $150,000. So even the $50,000 that you put in, that's gone, plus you owe another $100,000 on an asset that's only worth, that's worth $100,000 less, or $150,000 less than what you paid for it, right? Now that's okay if you live in the house. You're just gonna keep on paying your mortgage and you're done and you can refinance and do whatever you want later on. What if, what if this was your second property? What if you needed the rental income and the rent is not there anymore? What if you had a job and the job is not there anymore and the market is taking a belly up and you're not bringing as much money as you had to pay the mortgage? What if interest rates go up and that's something that people haven't considered because they assume the interest rate is going to stay down forever, right? What happens, right? When you're paying a mortgage that you can afford to pay on a $450,000 loan that you have on a house, on a mortgage that you have on a house, at 5%, but what happens if the interest rate goes up to 7.5%? Can you still afford to pay that, right? And if you can't, you need to liquidate. Now, if the housing prices have come down, you're selling at a loss. That means you're gonna carry the debt and you got no assets. If you end up selling the house, you got no assets to show for it. Now you're in a debt of $150,000 because you lost your 50 and you got another $100,000 on top of that, right? It's a tricky game. You got to take all the metrics into consideration. G-lift denoid. I want to start a green and sleek business personally. Negative carbon footprint. All my shirts are made of recycled bottles and I want to be going in that direction. That's great. Yeah, that'll work. The question is, how much energy does it take? He hate me. Thank you very much for the bits. How much is it going to take to recycle your bottles, right? Like plastic, like everybody recycles, not everybody, but most people recycle where I am, plastic, but we know that only 20% of the plastic that we're recycling actually gets recycled, right? So 20% of the bottles and stuff that we put in our recycling bin is being recycled. So 80% is still going through the landfills. That's not a sustainable way of being. And what is the cost of that recycling? That's what it decides on, right? So here's another website where there's information you can gather. I want to provide this as well. Okay. Now for some reason, if you go here, when this is in, it's not opened up all the way in the browser, it won't let you click on it to go to the Amazon page that they have. So, but if you open it up, check this out. If I open it up, I can click on it and it opens up a page, right? So what I'm going to do is open up a page, boink, and we're going to go to the Amazon. I'm going to reduce this again. Okay. And oops, that's not it. This is the one. So here is the data from this website. And I'd like this data. It's not bad. Can we look at this, look at like socially responsible investing stocks? For sure, sleepy ways. If you know any, let me know. I used to track some. They all went bankrupt. They took them off the funds. There were socially responsible funds that I knew of 15 years ago, but they couldn't maintain it. Maybe the situation has changed up a little bit since then, right? So here is this website that I linked this up. This is a macrotrans stocks, stock screener. And this is the stock chart for Amazon, right? And I like this website because it gives you the charts, right? It takes it all the way down to, what is it? Does it tell us the date here? It says 1997, right? It gives you the full chart, right? And you can do the different years, which is really good. You can do the 50-day moving average, right? There's a black line there. You can do the 200-day moving average. There's a red line there. And these are metrics that we're going to look at, right? Here's a log version of the stock, which is linear. So technically speaking, a lot of people say you can short Amazon. You could, but it hasn't gone exponentially on a logarithmic scale yet, right? As opposed to, let me see if I can find Tesla here. Where's Tesla? There's Tesla. Let's click on Tesla. I'll show you Tesla on this, right? And then let's reduce this. So here's Tesla. Let's take a look at the Tesla on a semi-log graph. Oops, that's not it. I don't want this one. Where did my Amazon go? Oh, did it close Amazon? Oh, it closed Amazon a little thing. So take a look at this. This is Tesla. And I've mentioned this before. Back in 2011, I bought into Tesla for someone that was managing money for, right? At the time, it was $25. Tesla did a five-for-one split. So I basically bought into Tesla when it was $5. Right now it's trading at $600. What? $600. What? $600. What? Right now it's trading at almost $600 or something right now. Tesla is up today like big time, right? We can look at that as well. Sure. But here's the log. Here's the log. Now take a look at this thing. Tesla went exponential on a semi-log graph, right? Semi-log graph, we talked about this. This personal finance stuff. Take a look. These two videos. These two videos. Really, watch these videos. It's called personal finance, currency, money, and the economy part one. Graphing US dollar versus CPI. And part two is personal finance, currency, money, economy, part two. Gold, S&P, Superman, income, Bitcoin, and different things, right? Take a look at this thing. If you were shorting, if you were in the business of shorting stocks to make money, when Tesla went up here, it means it went exponential on a semi-log graph. Usually this is a great time to short a stock. If you shorted it, there wasn't a, you would have to cover right down here, right? You would have shorted a 38 covered at 24, right? And this is pre the five-for-one split. So multiply these by five. That was what the stock was trading at, right? Now, it kept on going up, kept on going up. Now it's gone to a certain degree exponential again on a semi-log graph. And it's not at 547. It's actually a 600 something right now. But on a semi-log graph, it's just another blip up. Will it go above 1000? If I had lots of capital, if I had extra capital to burn, if Tesla right now would start, this is not stock recommendation by the way, gangs, please take this with a grain of salt. If I had extra money laying around and I was looking to do something to maybe make some quick cash on the side, right? Maybe or lose it. This is called gambling. I'd be buying puts for this right now, right? Building a put position. And if it went above a thousand dollars, I'd be loading it, okay? Because look at the jump from here to here. And let's look, and this is all of it. Yeah, this is all of it, right? This is two step exponentials on a logarithmic scale. Interesting, interesting. This is, so let's take the log out. This is what it looks like. And here's another metric you can look at, right? Here's the 200-day moving average, the red line that you see here. The 200-day moving average is sitting around 275 dollars and Tesla's trading at 600 something dollars. The gap between the 200-day moving average and the stock price right now is huge. And what happens in general, there's a 50-day moving average as well, right? Here's a 50-day moving average is the black line. These trend lines, the moving averages tend to pull the daily price of a stock in that direction, okay? So if the 200-day moving average is here, it means there's a lot of weight pulling it down. So the tendency for the stock try to come down closer to close that gap is more, right? Because basically what it means, there's a lot of people that are sitting on a lot of profit that they might want to cash out, right? So there's more pressure on it being sold. On the flip side, if a stock, if this is a 200-day moving average and a stock price has collapsed and the gap between 200-day moving average and what it is right now is huge on the downside, then there's a lot of people who don't want to sell and there might be some people that are stepping in to buy to kick it back up towards a 200-day or 50-day moving average. And the 200-day moving averages and the 50-day moving averages tend to have bounces occurring on them. I mean, take a look at this, right? Here's a 50-day moving average for Tesla and the 200-day moving average. Here's Tesla stock in 2020 kicking up to $160, $170, burned through the 50-day moving average and bounced off the 200-day moving average. Boom! And then burned through the 50-day moving average and it stayed basically above the 50-day moving average for a long time and it's doing bounces off the 50-day moving average, right? This is something else that you can look into charts and we will look into this further, okay? But as far as just numbers-wise goes, this is a pretty good website as well. And take a look at this thing. I'm just going to read the chat for a little bit. This is called gambling. Chico knows how it is. This is called gambling, okay? Young Polaris, you haven't lost anything if you don't sell, correct? That's famous last words of people that hold Kodak and Xerox stock. We haven't sold anything so we haven't realized the losses yet. There's nothing wrong, gang, with selling something you have and buying it at a lower price if it's on the way down and you think it hasn't bottomed out yet. And there's nothing wrong with selling something that is gone up fairly high, assuming that it's going to come down that you can buy it at a lower price. If it gets away from you and the stock goes up higher, there's nothing wrong buying it at a higher price if the fundamentals have changed and justifies you buying that stock at a higher price, okay? Very important, very important. Okay? Chico, what is a dead cat bounce? Dead cat bounce is basically when a stock, when a company's fundamentals are done and the stock is collapsing, but it's collapsing too fast, right? So let's say a stock is $100 and goes boom, drops down to $10 in one shot, right? Now, usually after the first fall of a stock dropping huge, I wouldn't step in. Let's say on the next day, because there's people that couldn't pull the trigger on the first day and there's going to be like two or three days of people pulling triggers, right? So let's say a stock goes from $100, let's say not $10, let's go for $100 to $30, it just drops 70%. On the next day, let's say it drops another 50%. So it goes from $30 to $50, wow, that's an 85% of two days, right? On the third day, let's say it drops another $5, goes down to $10. For me, when a stock has collapsed 90%, I quickly, I start seriously looking at it for a dead cat bounce or I used to anyway, I shouldn't say do, I used to. Start looking at it. When a stock has collapsed 95% of its value, in a short period of time, you could play a dead bounce, assuming that people are going to buy into it and watch the stock go up a little bit. And keep in mind, if a stock goes from $100 down to $5, it's collapsed 95%, right? So now the value of the stock is $5. Let's say the stock does a dead cat bounce and goes up to $15, right? The stock is still down 85% from where it was at $100, however, it's gone from $5 when you bought it to $15. That's two, three times your money, right? You put $1,000 in, you're cashing out $3,000, right? That's 300% return, 200% return. I always mix them up. 200% return on your dead cat bounce. I would be selling at that point and seeing what happens with the stock, right? Oh, no, I mean, when a stock drops and then people say they haven't sold so they didn't lose anything. Yeah, I'm not expert in this field. So I'm just curious. Yeah, young pollocks, people say that. And for sure, legit, you might want to hold on to it. Ding Bobber, my friends were snipping dead cat bounces in the early days of Bitcoin, yeah. Oh, my, crypto is kind of crazy, because if you try to invest in all the different markets, you get into the dumbest pump and dump schemes with dog going or anything. Yeah, indeed, right? And they're just fun. And what they are is basically there's different levels of these things on the stock market as well, right? There's blue chip stocks and whatever chip stocks and pink slips, right? There's a lot of stocks on the markets that are basically shell companies that are pump pump and dump in any market, really, even comic books, right? They also did pump and dump, not very Ding Bobber said, not very ethical. They lied and convinced people to buy a coin all at the same time they had bought earlier. And when it went up, they sold. Yeah, indeed. And this happens in the stock market. Okay, Chico, what's a forex trading forex trading is I didn't play it play it, right? But it's basically messing around with currencies, right? I believe so anyway. I have a friend who keeps trying to get me to trade currency. Yeah, currencies with currencies are risky. You need a lot. When I looked at it, you need a serious coin to be able to do currency trading, right? Not my game. I'm not into forex trading. If you want to do playing the currencies, what you can do is just buy certain certain stocks in certain markets and take a look at based on what the currency is doing, right? So for example, I'll give you an example. For comic books, right? When Brexit passed, when it first passed, the pound, the British pound dropped, right? Dropped like 10%, 15%. It was something, I can't remember what it was exactly, right? So what I ended up doing, I played the currency difference, right? I went on eBay, and I bought five issues of Geomancer valiance, legends of the Geomancer number one, coming to me from the UK in British pounds, right? Converting it from Canadian dollars to British pounds. So I basically got a 15% discount on the asset on the collectible I was buying. So if you want to play currencies, you don't need to do one on forex exchange. That's straight up gambling. You can do it with assets. You can do it with anything you want. I actually think forex trading would be more fun with stocks, just because you can tie more direct political events with it. You mean, you mean, buying stocks in a certain currency? Is that what you mean, which is what I'm referring to? Dingbao, is it wise to buy gold and other precious metals and gems and keep them as nest eggs? To a certain degree, yeah, it's hedge against inflation, but I wouldn't go too heavy with those personally, right? Maximum 10%, maximum, maybe 15%, and that's only assuming that you don't need the cash right away. So I mean, I mean, forex might be more fun than stocks. I had a type of, oh, forex might be more fun than, it would be because it would take into consideration the political events, right? And gang, if you don't think that's viable, take a look at this here. I didn't open these up, but let's take a look at it. Here is, here's the price of Iranian Tomans relative or real, yeah, real basically relative to the US dollar is 25,000, right? Now, it was sitting at 32,000, okay? I had friends, family friends, that were telling me that they had money in Iranian bank accounts that was paying them 20%, 18% interest per year, right? Back in 2000, 2000, early 2000 stuff. And I told them, look, man, there's a reason why they're paying you that percent because the currency, Iranian currency, is not very stable and it's going to go down like relative to the US dollar. That interest rate that you're getting is not going to compensate for the drop in its value on the global stock, on the global markets, right? And they were getting 18% living off the money in Canada or United States or wherever it was, right? They had money in the bank, so they were just living off the interest, right? At that time, US dollars to Canadian Tomans was 1 to 600. It went up to 1 to 32,000 in 2017, so in about 15 years, it went from 1 to 600 to 1 to 32,000, right? The value of the Iranian currency dropped huge. And I haven't played around with this, so here, let's do this. Let's go from 2,000. I don't even know if it's going to... Oh, it only goes to 2,012, unfortunately. Fine. No, it doesn't even do that. Stupid. Come on. 2,012. Do it. Hey, what the hell? Okay, let's go 2,013. Will it do it? 2,012. Let's see if it does it. Oh, it did. Oh, it didn't. It doesn't see it. Anyway, that's what the trade is, right? Here's another one. Here's a Turkish real, right? And I track these, by the way. And I'm tracking, for example, Turkey, is because Turkey's waging a lot of wars all around the region. One of the reasons is waging all these wars because Erdogan is a dictator, right? And Turkish economy has completely collapsed, and he's trying to occupy Turkish mines with war, with the enemy, with the other, right? In some places trying to commit genocide, for example, Armenia, because to distract people from their economy, Turkish economy completely collapsing, right? So here's the Turkish lira, right? Going from one US dollar to 1.5 to one to almost eight, right? So drop by 85%, okay? When you see countries' currencies collapsing like this, that area is going to become unstable. If they're a military power, they're going to wage war, okay, to boost up their economy and distract the population so the population doesn't dethrone the dictators, right? Or dethrone the oligarchs, or dethrone the technocrats. Right now, for example, the US dollar relative to the Canadian dollar in the last year, year, year and a bit, has collapsed 12%. So Canadian dollar has increased 12% relative to the US dollar in the last year and a bit. Okay, here, we can take a look at it. And I do track these, right? You have to track currencies going, oh, it's not showing me the chart view chart. Here we go. Here's the chart, right? One day, one year. Here's the Canadian dollar. One Canadian dollar would only get you in the beginning of this year, 68 cents at the bottom, 69 US dollars. Right now, one Canadian dollar gets you 78 cents US dollar, right? So US dollar has collapsed to a certain degree. When it comes to currencies, it's a huge drop, okay, 12% in one year. Here's the five-year chart. In a five-year chart, it looks reasonable. Take a look at the 10-year chart. Holy Kamolis, Canadian dollar in 2011. And we talked about this, by the way, gang. This is the chart we're talking about. This video right here. Here, let me link it up for you. Okay. Because we do talk about, where's the, okay, I'm going to give you this link. Okay. This is something we talked about, right? Let me close this. This is something that we graphed, right? If you look at this, where's our thing, right? One Canadian dollar used to be able to get you $1.05 US. Whoa, whoa. Now, out of back then, you would, it would have been smart for you to convert all your Canadian dollars to US dollars because it collapsed down to $0.65 or $0.68, $0.69, right? So you would have gained 30% in a matter of four years on your investment doing currencies. Okay. Oh, sleepy ways. You want to look at that one? Okay. Let's take a look at that one. Let's take a look at the stock. Neo, okay. I'm just going to read the chart. Get caught up with the chart that we can take a look at these things. How are we doing here? We're doing okay. Okay. Let's see the chat. Ding, Bob, a chicho. If a genie gave me one wish, I might make him create a super intelligent algorithm AI that would surf the stock market for me. Ding, Bob, there's already algorithms out there doing this here. We talked about this in this video. We talked about a fund. Okay. Oops. In this video, we talked about a fund here. Let's see if we can bring it up. We talked about this fund right here. See the slope, the one with the greatest slope, give you the greatest return. This slope right here, I think it's that one. Oops. Yeah. It is that one. Oops. There's another one. I did a lot of editing on this game. Like I put a lot of work in this video. It's a great video. This green line that you see here was a company that was started off by mathematicians. It was sort of a hedge fund or like a basket. It was a company that was buying into stocks. It started off by mathematicians. They created automated algorithms that were doing trading automatically and moving from one stock to another one field to another and what not. Their return on average over a 10-year period, ready for this? Average return per year was 78% per year. Did you get that? 78% per year. Okay. I hope you appreciate that. I think this is the green stock. I don't think that's Bitcoin because Bitcoin came. We did later on. We did early on or something. Let me see if I can confirm this. Actually, let's go here. I hope I'm picking the right one. Let's see. Because I jaw, my video is saying which one's what. Did I put it on there? This is what we want. Oh, yeah. No, no. This is Bitcoin. Take a look at this one. This light one is Bitcoin. This is a stock traded company of fund. 78% per year on average over a 10-year period. I think if you had put in $100, you would have cashed out a million. A insanity. AI right now, I don't want to say AI, but automated trading does occur on the stock market. Includes self-destruct in the bios. Do you have relatives in Armenia? If so, how is this currency doing? I haven't looked at the Armenian currency, but I'm assuming it's not doing very well. There's three countries basically try to annihilate a whole region of Armenia or Armenian-occupied territory where ancestry, historically speaking, were Armenians, and they're committing genocide there. Azerbaijan, Turkey, and Israel tag team each other killed a lot of Armenians, and they're committing cultural genocide in lower part of northern Arabic. I'm assuming Armenia is not doing too well, but it could be at the bottom. Who knows? We'll see. But then we'd have to know when it is sentient that there's a chance we might not be sentient. We might think we are. Indeed. Sleepways, can we look at the US currency? Want to hear your prediction about it? I think the US currency possibly will go up. It really depends, man. Oh, shit. A follow Duck Duck Go user. Indeed. Why would anyone use Google? You want your search a censored, information censored by the technocrats in Silicon Valley? Duck Duck Go is the way to go. Right now, I started off slowly gang. I was using Duck Duck Go around 20%, 30%, 50%, 60%, 70%. Right now, 95% of my searches, more than that, 90, let's say 95. 95% of my searches are Duck Duck Go, and I use Google for certain things, mainly their maps. There's only so much the consensus of the map. Sweetheart, Uncle Sweetheart off topic, but Bob Dylan just sold his entire 60 year catalog. Oh no, to Universal for nine digits unfortunate. I guess songwriting can be a good investment. Bob Dylan, man. What a damn mistake. Bob Dylan, that makes me so disappointed on Bob Dylan. Really? That is one of the worst pieces of news I ever heard. What Bob Dylan should have done is gone. Gang, I had an amazing run. My family's taken care of. They have enough money to live for two, three generations. Right? I have enough money to take care of myself. All my library is creative comments, share and share alike. Bob Dylan, F you for doing that. Really? You go against some of the music, some of the entire philosophy that he was preaching and singing about. And he is just a folk singer. Very unfortunate, Sweetheart. He should have made it all creative comments. He would have been remembered as a revolutionary if he did that. Now he's just Bob Dylan. Too bad. Too bad. Pathetic. Odmic. If anyone is interested in some of the math behind smart trading, look up the Black Scolese equation. Oh, cool. Stochastic Calculus is also really useful. Oh, cool. Thanks, Odmic. You know what I'm going to say. If you can, link it on Discord, please. Thank you. Either in investing or mathematics, preferably in both folders that we have. Think Bob, that's messed up. It is, it is. The hedge fund that made 78% per percent return was Renaissance Technologies created by James Simmons. Indeed, it was. And we talk about this, Odmic, in that video. Brilliant, brilliant. And by the way, in 2016, Renaissance Technologies, and this is the political game of play in the United States, Renaissance Technologies was supporting both the Democratic Party and the Republican Party because they didn't give a rat's ass who won. They just wanted to say in what happens, right? Mollegraus, how are you doing? I enjoy, I enjoy that vid. Watch it regularly for ASMR purposes. Awesome, awesome. And yeah, it's full on ASMR and it contains a tremendous amount of info. I'm very proud of these videos, by the way, gang. I thought my friend turning 10K into 300K overnight was good, but consistent 78% increase is nuts. Yeah. And take, turning 10K into $10,000 into $300,000 overnight is pretty damn good, man. That's nothing to cough at, right? Gicho, I use Eucasia. It doesn't track and plant trees. Oh, I've heard about that. I haven't used that yet. Oh, I really, really like Bob Dylan. I'm sad. Me too, Odmic. That really pissed me off, actually. Thank you for sharing the info. But F, Bob Dylan, what a piece of crap. Really, so disappointed with him. And this is, you guys are seeing me being a reactionary, so disappointed. He had the opportunity, he had the opportunity to set something in motion, which would make him a legend. Right now, his legend status went down the toilet for some of us, right? Really. How disappointing. He sold his soul for money. He sold his soul for money. Bob Dylan. My God. How disappointing. Wow. Wow, wow, wow. And there's people going to say, well, he has the right to do that. Yeah, he has the right to do that. And I have a right to trash talk him for selling out to Hollywood, selling out to Wall Street. What a garbage move. What a garbage move. Disgusting. Oh my God. How horrendous. How horrendous. My God. I can't even listen to Bob Dylan now. Oh, so disappointed. So disappointed. Slow train coming, as far as I was concerned, one of the greatest albums that Bob Dylan ever put out. And man, listen to Slow Train coming and tell me if that goes with the philosophy of selling his music to Universal. God damn it. Miro. So disappointed with the so-called revolutionaries from the 60s that can kiss my ass, right? Miro. So how exactly do you get into the stock market? I've heard about getting an online brokerage or using an app like Robinhood. Sure. You can, if you have a bank account, most banks now have an online trading option or trading option. All you have to do is go to your bank and say you're interested in trading stocks and what platform they're using for their stock trading and it links it up with your bank account and you can just transfer money to your stock trading account and trade stocks, right? Get into it slow if you're going to get into it. Dingbaober. Ciccio about Armenia. I know two content creators from there and they made public statements about the truth of the situation. It was inspiring. Yeah, for sure. We are definitely Armenians. We are definitely vocal creatures, but also hard to hear. Hard to hear indeed. Ciccio, you say this, but did you really expect him to do that? He sold it indeed. He sold it and you know what? I don't expect anybody. My expectations of people is very, I wouldn't say very low. My expectations of people is very high, but my expectations of what they will do is not set in stone. But to me, it is extremely disappointing when you know and I don't know what Bob Dylan's finances is. Maybe he needed the money. Maybe his whole family has some kind of health issues. They live in the United States and it's going to cost a millions of dollars for them to be able to live for however long they need to live, right? Maybe that is the case. Maybe he needed the money, right? Maybe he could have gone to the global community and said, gang, I want to make my whole library creative commons, okay? Universal Studios has offered me this. I'm willing to take 10%. Here's my crowdfunding page. Raise 10%. You have access to my whole library. You can do whatever you want to it. Now, mind you, I don't know Bob Dylan's financial situation. Maybe he needs to build a space rocket and go live in outer space with his family because there, whatever illness they have, mental, spiritual, physical, will not deteriorate, will allow them to live for 50 years, right? I don't know. Okay. What should he have done? Like, sweetheart, that's what I mean. Like, really, what was the money that important to him? Like, I can honestly tell you right now, gang, if I had a company come to me right now, Universal, Walt Disney, whatever, they offered me $10 million for my content, I wouldn't do it. I wouldn't sell them, I wouldn't sell my, what I've created, what I put my heart, sweat, and tears in, my essence into for $10 million. I wouldn't do it, right? For $100 million? Yeah. I'd do it for $100 million, not because I feel like I'm selling my heart and soul, but because with $100 million, I could go buy a gigantic studio, got all the equipment, and recreate everything, right? Because I have the time to recreate everything. Bob Dylan doesn't. Okay. Bob Dylan is at the end of his life. Maybe he did this so he knows that his family is taken care of, right? Maybe. Okay. But there's no way he can create his whole library again. Maybe I'm being a hypocrite. Maybe I'm being too harsh. Maybe I'm being an idealist. Maybe I'm not looking at the reality of the situation. Maybe I'm just really disappointed with Bob Dylan. Think about it, it would have been crazy if he did, but never was he ever going to make it Creative Commons. Very unfortunate. He should have made a Creative Commons. Now we know how much Rolling Stone costs. Now we know how much Rolling Stone costs. Yeah, indeed. Young Polax. I mean, that's his art and craft. He has the right to sell it. Am I right? No, he has a right to sell it, Young Polax. But Universal Studios is going to lock that shit up, right? Can you share Bob Dylan's music anywhere online now? Hell, no. No, you can't. Why? Here, for example, Chapelle, Dave Chapelle, I linked it up in our discord, right, under comedians and under economics, I believe, or ethics, under ethics folder. Dave Chapelle, I watched a video of Dave Chapelle like two days ago about the Chapelle show where he created the Chapelle show and he signed the contract and he doesn't have the rights to the Chapelle show. He doesn't have the rights even to the name Chapelle show. And the people that own the Chapelle show are live streaming it without Dave Chapelle getting anything from it, right? What did Dave Chapelle say in that video where he's trash talking to the corporation that he signed the contract with, right? Now, he made a mistake. He was youthful. He was young. He didn't know what he was doing. The lawyer screwed him over, right? And the cop, copyright police screwed him over and all that jazz, right? What does Dave Chapelle tell his audience to do? Dave Chapelle says, listen gang, do me a favor, do me a favor, okay? Do not watch the Dave Chapelle show. That's what Dave Chapelle says. Do not watch the Dave Chapelle show because he ain't getting shit from it. Okay, now that's what Dave Chapelle said. Okay, regarding his content, he has the right to do it. I would call Bob Dylan an asshole if he made a crowdfund. Not if he was saying, listen gang, I'm taking 10% and I'm going to allow that to happen. But I agree with you to a certain degree, right? Okay, I posted a technical version of the black scholars on the math section and a softer and easier version on the economics section. Awesome. Thank you very much, Odmyk. I'll check out the economics one. Gina, so what is your conversion rate on expectations? What percentage of expectations are fulfilled? In what way, Gina? In what way and regarding what? Man, I didn't mean to go off on Bob Dylan hard because I love his music, but man, so disappointed. Ding Bobber, Chicho. Imagine this. Bob Dylan.com and it's just a free streaming download platform for the whole Discord. Dude, Ding Bobber, amazing. Bob Dylan.com. Here's my whole library. All of it creative commons, share and share alike. Enjoy until the end of time or until the end of humanity. What a statement. What a statement. What a statement. Right? I don't know. Someone said nine figures. I don't know what it was. And those figures mean nothing, man. It's imaginary, right? Well, he's 80 years old and the entire catalog is preserved now. It could have been preserved. No, the entire catalog, Uncle Sweetheart, the entire catalog is not preserved. The entire catalog is now locked in a vault. That's what the entire catalog is now. Locked in a vault, controlled by central institutions, central corporation that really doesn't give a rat's ass about music, about creators or consumers of music. The only thing it cares about, it's Wall Street, shareholder value. Right? That's what it cares about. He gave his music to an institution that doesn't give a rat's ass about music. No. Uncle Sweetheart, since I started this can of worms, man, I've got to continue with the criticism of what I'm saying here. Well, I do think some people expect musicians to be moral, virtual heroes and a good business decision is considered unethical. I don't consider this to be a good business decision. A business decision is not just the end, what do you call it, the money you get out of it. A good business decision has multiple values to it, multiple layers to it. A lot of other musicians did the same thing, including Billy Elish, Stevie Nex, Kendrick Lamar. Yeah, I don't listen to any of those. I did Fleetwood Mac and stuff. I used to listen to it, but I don't anymore. Look, man, my main thing is artists, musicians, creators, content creators. I don't care who you are. We've reached a point in our society that you cannot sell out to Wall Street. You can't give them that power because that goes against everything that your content, if there was any essence, soul in it other than just trying to make money. If you had any type of political statement, social statement, any type of ethical, spiritual, any type of statement that matters to humanity and you sell that content to Wall Street, you just shot all over your philosophy and who you were. That's my take and I'm being hard. Okay, Miro, yeah, it's because I've got money sorted in my bank, not much, but enough for me to buy me some stocks. I'm really looking into, okay, let's take a look at Neo, okay? Neo, let's take a look at Neo, Neo. Let's look at the chart first, okay? Let's see if we're just going to find it here. Neo, Neo, Neo, Neo, here we go. Or we're going to look it on Class A. Let's take a look at this thing. It's $45 right now and let's look at lifetime and this is something that's gone through the roof, right? It's gone from $278 and it's sitting at $45 right now and whatever's financials. Let's see, is it on the Nasdaq? I'm assuming it's on the Nasdaq. Let's take a look at it on the Nasdaq. This has got to be it, right? Yeah, this is it. So let's look at the max. Okay, here's the chart, right? Let's take a look at this thing. What does it look like on a logarithmic? Is this the one we did on a logarithmic? No, it's not. Let's do this. Let's look at the financials. Forward price to earnings is negative $64. Weekly high was $57. Market gap is $61 billion. One year target is $33 by analysts. That really doesn't mean shit. Today volume, previous close, we need some more metrics. There is no dividend. The beta is one. Is the beta one really? There is no beta. So Nasdaq beta, I wouldn't trust the one here. I would have to dig down a little bit, right? Where do we go? Market cap is $53 billion right now for something that generates revenue. Check this out. Okay, so market cap is $53 billion and his revenue is $274 million. His earnings per share is negative $1.23. Now it's the same field as Tesla, right? So there is something to be said there. If Tesla is going up like mad, then this is riding as coattails, right? It's sort of something to happen with Linux, red hat and stuff like this. Let's take a look at it here. Let's see what this thing says, Nero. Here's Nero. And by the way, Nero, and Sleepy Waves, I think, was asking about this. Take a look at these metrics. Just read up on it. See what it tells you, right? And what you can do is all these things, all these buttons here, they give you information about it, right? Basic shares, earnings per share is negative $1.57. Here's a plus side. In 2018, his earnings per share was negative $10, but right now it's negative $1.59, which is pretty damn good. It's reduced. It's negative. It's earnings per share. It's not negative anymore, and it's reduced basically 10 folds. So that's not bad. Next year, it might be doing phenomenal, right? And you have to look at this data even more, okay? Cost of goods. So that's what I would do, Nero, right? That's what I would look into. I've looked at the CNN forecaster. Is that CNN, like the CNN news agency? And just got a feeling it's going to blow up at least for a while. So if I buy a stock now for like $50 and it raises to $75, how does the selling process work? You just sell it and you bank $25. That's all that happens, right, Nero? It's like, just look, think of stocks as like anything. Think of it as buying a collectible. Let's say you buy a baseball card that is $50 and then you sell it at $75. You make $25 less your trading fees, right? And make sure your trading fees aren't very high. It's worthwhile, right? If you buy something at $100 and your trading fees are $20, you need that stock to go up at least 20% for you to just break even, right? Because you pay your trading fees both on buying and selling. I would call Bob Dylan an asshole. 300 to 400 million. Does he need the 300 to 400 million? Really? Maybe. Maybe he wants to go to Vegas and roll the bones, right? Ticho. Someone who played the music industry is Frank Ocean. Frank Ocean, ha ha. Code for an article. Code for an article. Let's read this. Think, Bobber. The very next day after endless was released, Frank Ocean dropped Blonde exclusively via Apple Music. Blonde was number one in seven countries and sold 232,000 units, 275,000 with album equivalent units in the first week. He went from owning 17% to 70% of his royalties and publishing. Nice. Ocean also secured a bag from Apple Music for the exclusivity rumored to be worth 220 million. Chest move. Awesome. Yeah. If you're going to game the system, game the system. Don't sell out to the system. Sponsored by Apple Music, endless was announced via 140 40 minute live stream. During the stream, it appeared to be Frank Ocean building a staircase with the instrument of endless playing in a loop. The album eventually released and his contract was fulfilled with Def Jam. Nice. He was now independent and that's when the finesse was revealed. Awesome. Game the system game. Don't sell out to the system. We've also reached a point, crack says, where you don't have to either. There are way more options that put the control directly in the hands of the artist. Indeed. Like Bob Dylan should have known that we're in the age of information right now. There are platforms out there. Maybe he was getting bad advice. Seriously. Maybe he was under pressure from the family. Maybe he's just done right. He just he knows he my guess is Bob Dylan is going to going to kick the bucket in the next year if he did this because he's either lost his mind or doesn't give a rat's ass or he was under pressure from family or he just wanted to go out with a bang right. Be buried in the gold coffin. Uh, line with diamond diamonds. I don't know. I have no idea again. We didn't cover as much as I wanted to regarding the metrics. I wanted to get into these things like looking at some of the metrics, earnings per share, price to earning ratio and net income. Right. But we can cover all of the stuff in the second installment of this series and this is going to continue for a long time. We're going to continue to do this. Okay. Now that we're in it, we're going to continue to do this and we're going to bring in some of the metrics, learn some of the metrics here and incorporate it with the investing and personal finance series that we started with the with the comic books, right? Especially in regards to buying the comic books, all the comic book halls we've done and selling the comic books, all the data we've collected from selling comic books that I did on eBay, right? So we're going to slowly, it's going to take us a while to incorporate all of this data and the end game of all this gang, the end game of all this is basically to create a whole module on investing and personal finance. So we've done a pretty good job of it so far. Sleepy with Chicho. I wish there was a way to invest in musicians, kind of like IPOs indeed. I agree with you where the money isn't a donation, but rather would grow if the artist blew up. Sleepy waves, dude, that is exactly what I've been hoping for and check this out since you brought it up, since you brought it up. See this thing? Is it this one? Oh, it's this one. I think it's this one. Chicho currencies? Okay. One of these videos, the cryptocurrencies, let's explore them. Yeah, it's this one. Check this one. Blockchain technology gives you the opportunity to do this. Okay. Especially tokens, security tokens and stuff like this. I talk about this and what I mentioned here is just imagine at a certain point that I need to raise a certain amount of funds to kick this whole project up to another level is to introduce Chicho currencies, right? Chicho coins where people actually will get a certain amount of dividends, a certain amount of returns for funding this project, right? ICOs, initial coin offerings, right? So I talk about that in that video. I think it's in that video or the previous crypto video that we did and I do have a cryptocurrency playlist as well that you can find on my channel. Okay. Chicho, we leave as naked as we come. We leave as naked as we come, man. Man, if you want to be buried in a gold coffin, you know, more power to you, but what a waste. What a waste. Then, Barbara, quote, you don't need the double aka elites. They need you. They need us to be working our asses off for them, for their system to function. But if we detach ourselves from their system and free our minds, we don't need them. They are parasitic indeed. And just imagine it. They bought the heart and soul of Bob Dylan for fiat currency. What the f... Sleep with Chicho. Whoever makes the platform for that is going to be a successful because most musicians want to be independent and this is the way to do it. Sleepy waves, indeed, indeed. And I'm doing my best to put the seeds up. Planting seeds, brother. Planting seeds, brother. Saving fiat just to die. Yeah, saving fiat just to die. Maybe something else was going on. We don't know. We don't know. We don't know. Gang, thank you for being here. Thank you for discussions. Thank you for the interaction. Thank you for the criticism. Thank you for the comments. And thank you for the love. Thank you for the subs. Thank you for the follows. Okay. Chicho, Sleepy waves. Chicho, you got to make the platform for the... Right now I'm operating at 100 plus percent capacity, right? Once I create all these math modules, maybe we roll the money that we're going to generate from there, hopefully. I'm going to just support what we're going to get from there into other things that we can support different communities, right? We're in this for the long game, man. I am anyway. Look, 1000 plus videos on YouTube, 15 years ago when I started, I knew I was going to hit a thousand. I was under assumption I was going to be all related to mathematics, but it is 80% related to mathematics, about 50% all of it math, right? We do it 420 style, brother. We do it in our own way, in our own style, and we make sure there's a lot of love in it, right? You would be successful. I consider myself successful right now. Sleepy waves. Ding Bobber. Thanks, Chicho. Try and cheer up about the Bob Dylan thing. There are others like Frank Ocean out there. Indeed, Ding Bobber. And I'm glad I got that out of me because I said what I needed to be said and I don't need to say no more about that. I'm just going to make sure I ain't going to be playing Bob Dylan now for any time soon, right? Gina, thank you, Chicho. This was very interesting. My pleasure, Gina. Thank you for being here. Sleepy waves. When are we going to do the part two of this stock series? I wish we went more in detail today. Yeah, indeed. But this was sort of our intro, right? Juju B07. Thank you for the follow. We will do. We'll do. I'm not sure if we'll include an next set. Maybe we'll include an next set. Maybe we'll include it in two sets from now or something, right? We'll sort it out and we'll see how the video does, what the feedback is, what people want to do and whatnot. But we will do Sleepy waves. Personal finance is something that I knew I was going to start creating, especially when I put out the comic book, my first comic book video I ever put out. I mentioned that we're going to do this. So it is a long-term project that I really want to do. Good batch. Have a great day, you guys as well. Gang, if you want to follow this work, if you want to support this work, I am on Patreon. Patreon.com, forward slash Chicho. C-H-Y-C-H-O. I don't put anything behind paywalls. Everything is creative commons. Universal Studios or any of those big boys in Hollywood or Wall Street will never, ever put these things in a vault. Okay, so share and share alike. For those of you who have been supporting this work, thank you very much for the support. It is in large part because of your support that we're able to do this. And with your support and the support that hopefully will be coming in, more and more in the future will kick this up into higher gear and build the platforms that we need to build to make sure we share as much as we can, right? We are live streaming on twitch.tv forward slash Chicho. C-H-Y-C-H-O-L-I-V-E. If you want to participate in the chat, Twitch is where you want to be at. Okay, and gang, for those of you who are supporting this work, for those of you who are here subbing, following, sharing, liking, commenting, discussing, and mods, thank you for taking care of business. Thank you for being here, gang. And thank you for the support. I do announce these live streams 30 minutes before we go live on Parler, LoMinds, VKGap, elo, and Twitter. And all the links will be in the description of the video. And you can go to our Twitch channel and in the chat, irrelevant if we're live streaming or not, just type in exclamation mark, social and all links will pop up, including our discord page where there's a lot of discussion, a lot of people sharing a lot of information taking place and people slowly starting to work together as a cooperative to create certain things, which is amazing, including music, right? There was one track that Ding Bobber loaded up, and then someone else came in and put a bass riff to it. Awesome, awesome, right? And they fine-tuned it a little bit. Fantastic, gang, fantastic. We will be uploading this audio as a podcast with SoundCloud.com forward slash Chico, C-H-Y-C-H-O, and it should be available on your favorite podcasting platform, including Spotify and iTunes. And we will be uploading this video, this live stream, this discussion to both Bichu and YouTube. And you can support this work on those platforms by following, liking, commenting, turning on notifications. You're guaranteed to get the notifications through Bichu, not so much through YouTube. But if you're on YouTube, you want to support this work, you can join YouTube membership. There's a button there. And for those of you who haven't joined YouTube membership, thank you very much for your support. Gang, I hope you have a fantastic day. And tomorrow, we follow this up with mathematics. We've got another seven live streams lined up for the next week or so. Mathematics, comic book readings, current events, cooking stream. We're going to do meditation, I believe, this Thursday. We've got some stuff lined up for the next 10 days or so. I hope you join us. And tomorrow, 12 p.m. PDT on December 8th. Okay, it's already going to be done on YouTube. And Bichu, if you're watching this video, we're doing another drop-in while tutoring session. Aside from that, gang, I hope you guys have a fantastic, fantastic day, morning, afternoon, and free assange, free assange, free assange. Bye, everyone.