This is impossible to read as every other sentence sounds like it was written by an LLM. I had to stop after a few paragraphs.
This is a very weird use of terminology. None of Jane Street, Millennium or Citadel are High Frequency Traders (HFTs). Jane Street is a prop trading firm who engages in market making, but is not primarily known for HFT…
> The continuously updating global population counter is based on current aggregate birth and death rates (approximating values such as those from the U.S. Census Bureau International Database or UN DESA). The "live"…
Why do the estimated births/deaths per second counters have so much flicker? Surely you don't actually believe that the expected number of births/deaths per second fluctuates at 1dp precision multiple times per second?
Some Welsh, Scottish and Northern Irish people may take issue with your definition of "England"
Adam => Ad => Adkin/Atkin => Atkins/Atkinson
They are using "parks" to mean "settles"
- Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat by Samin Nosrat - Ruhlman's 20 by Michael Ruhlman - How to Cook Everything by Mark Bittman
The most common sizes for milk to be sold in are 1.136 litres and 2.272 litres (i.e. 2 pints and 4 pints)
The currency was USDC, which is a stablecoin pegged at $1 by Circle (www.circle.com) who are generally held to be reputable, so it very much was real money.
They are all very good choices.
Yes.
About the same, with lower volatility and much lower drawdowns (that's net of fees -- before fees they are much better).
In the UK (where I am) the main ones are SIPPs and investment ISAs. In the US I believe people mainly use Roth IRAs (this is not any special secret advice, it is like the first thing your tax adviser will tell you).
No. Invest everything that you can now (into low cost diversified index funds or ETFs) and then top it up regularly as you get more capital from whatever else it is you do to earn a living (e.g. a percentage of your…
The glib answer is that my own advice in 2022 wasn't available to me when I started my career in finance in 2010. The less glib answer is that what I said above applies to managing your own money as a part time…
I'm a professional investor (more than a decade of experience at hedge funds, particularly in global macro and quant, managing my own and other people's money). Your central premise is flawed -- in particular > Last 3…
I meant to say low.
Typo, I meant to say they are low now.
I’m a hedge fund manager. Not a big fund all things considered, just a few hundred million. But I think about stuff like this for a living. Here’s why you can safely ignore this article. There is always someone…
Buddy, your business is selling "privacy cards" and "virtual cards" which hide the identity of the person making the transaction. It's a massive money laundering red flag, it's not at all surprising that Stripe doesn't…
I thought it was worth clarifying exactly what has happened here, since neither the BBC nor the FT articles make it particularly clear. The entity that the FCA has acted against is Binance Markets Limited (BML) which…
"Many" schools. Why do you need more information than that? It must be a lot of schools, since it says "many".
A water contract is worth about $5,000, a Bitcoin contract is worth about $88,000 and an S&P 500 contract is worth about $183,000.
This is impossible to read as every other sentence sounds like it was written by an LLM. I had to stop after a few paragraphs.
This is a very weird use of terminology. None of Jane Street, Millennium or Citadel are High Frequency Traders (HFTs). Jane Street is a prop trading firm who engages in market making, but is not primarily known for HFT…
> The continuously updating global population counter is based on current aggregate birth and death rates (approximating values such as those from the U.S. Census Bureau International Database or UN DESA). The "live"…
Why do the estimated births/deaths per second counters have so much flicker? Surely you don't actually believe that the expected number of births/deaths per second fluctuates at 1dp precision multiple times per second?
Some Welsh, Scottish and Northern Irish people may take issue with your definition of "England"
Adam => Ad => Adkin/Atkin => Atkins/Atkinson
They are using "parks" to mean "settles"
- Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat by Samin Nosrat - Ruhlman's 20 by Michael Ruhlman - How to Cook Everything by Mark Bittman
The most common sizes for milk to be sold in are 1.136 litres and 2.272 litres (i.e. 2 pints and 4 pints)
The currency was USDC, which is a stablecoin pegged at $1 by Circle (www.circle.com) who are generally held to be reputable, so it very much was real money.
They are all very good choices.
Yes.
About the same, with lower volatility and much lower drawdowns (that's net of fees -- before fees they are much better).
In the UK (where I am) the main ones are SIPPs and investment ISAs. In the US I believe people mainly use Roth IRAs (this is not any special secret advice, it is like the first thing your tax adviser will tell you).
No. Invest everything that you can now (into low cost diversified index funds or ETFs) and then top it up regularly as you get more capital from whatever else it is you do to earn a living (e.g. a percentage of your…
The glib answer is that my own advice in 2022 wasn't available to me when I started my career in finance in 2010. The less glib answer is that what I said above applies to managing your own money as a part time…
I'm a professional investor (more than a decade of experience at hedge funds, particularly in global macro and quant, managing my own and other people's money). Your central premise is flawed -- in particular > Last 3…
I meant to say low.
Typo, I meant to say they are low now.
I’m a hedge fund manager. Not a big fund all things considered, just a few hundred million. But I think about stuff like this for a living. Here’s why you can safely ignore this article. There is always someone…
Buddy, your business is selling "privacy cards" and "virtual cards" which hide the identity of the person making the transaction. It's a massive money laundering red flag, it's not at all surprising that Stripe doesn't…
I thought it was worth clarifying exactly what has happened here, since neither the BBC nor the FT articles make it particularly clear. The entity that the FCA has acted against is Binance Markets Limited (BML) which…
I thought it was worth clarifying exactly what has happened here, since neither the BBC nor the FT articles make it particularly clear. The entity that the FCA has acted against is Binance Markets Limited (BML) which…
"Many" schools. Why do you need more information than that? It must be a lot of schools, since it says "many".
A water contract is worth about $5,000, a Bitcoin contract is worth about $88,000 and an S&P 500 contract is worth about $183,000.