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J Hutt
Wall Street Millennial
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Comments by "J Hutt" (@jhutt8002) on "Wall Street Millennial" channel.
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@tomlxyz Brilliant.
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@Tone2K So where that money comes from?
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I had no idea how massive this company is... I just thought it was some upstart company located somewhere in Nordics. I live in town of 3000 people (and about 1000 cows...) in northeast Finland, and you could get Oatly from local grocery store here...
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To be fair to them, I kind of like their honesty. Paying 50 % back so you can a supposedly see how much they're ripping you off😂
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There's two things I don't understand with this whole Metaverse thing: 1) How in anyway it differs from, say Habbo Hotel etc... multiplayer online games and worlds that have existed 20 year? Except of course that there is no specific game in it, which relates to second question: 2) Why anyone, who's already invested in those would move to Metaverse? And why would aynone who's not, would want to?
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Truth to be told, dieselgate was only really an issue for ecofools crying about emissions. And sadly those are the people EU bows to. Being able to not choke the engine with regulation means better durability, economy and performance. It's good for car buyers just like it's good for manufacturer. It's a win/win situation. If I had bought one of those cars, I would never have allowed them to "fix" it.
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Haven't people heard of lactose-free milk? It's offered everywhere here in Finland despite most people being fine with regular milk. It doesn't taste the same, but definitely better than any plant based alternatives.
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Or the opposite, when everything works, and management is so freaked out about security they keep breaking down perfectly working systems for no good reason. Currently companies are a gold mine for IT firms as most are still managed by boomers with absolutely no understanding for technology, so IT firms can rip them off completely freely.
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Yeah. I suspect that is the actual business idea of this ridiculously stupid idea.
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Oh my... This seems quite nuclear video. Huge respect for you for publishing this rundown!
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Yeah. It's easy to feel disgusted by the cuthroat business practices that he uses, but when the businessess he handles are publicly traded companies selling ridiculous luxury and fashion to a fools with too much money, it kind of makes it okay.
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@cventer838 No product is more hilarious to me than the 1400 $ Yves saint Laurent boombox. It's literally a 200 $ piece of crap from China you can order with whatever branding you want but it's official YSL product just painted beige and their logo slapped on it.
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Reminds of this finnish band who started out in 1976-77. They we're big fans of classic rock bands like The Who, CCR etc... in the middle of punk craze (and not very good musicians at the time.) So they made their first album as a one-off parody of current punk scene, which turned to become huge success and since they've been thought as the grandfathers of finnish punk scene... Despite moving to more AOR sound shortly after that first album
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@weird-guy When the regulation is making the product worse, and bypassing it makes the resulting product better for the consumer? Yes, I appreciate that. Sure it was bad for their business, but it also shows their dedication to the craft. They took a risk in behalf of their clients in this case, and they got burned. That was the only negative aspect of it. That they got caught. I wonder how many people in EU are currently driving vehicles they've illegally modified, because the overzealous regulatory systems have started to cause problems in their almost new vehicles. My -96 Audi has none of those troubles. Now has 630 000 in meter and counting.
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@LFRAS94 What I thought too. Not using credit has nothing to do with minimalism, It's just sensible.
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I feel your pain. It's common in Finland too. You usually can get proper milk for coffee from places that have buffet lunch, from meal drinks line.
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@weird-guy I was going to comment something condescending about you clearly missing what I was saying, but I have no idea what you mean with that either, so I guess we have to agree to disagree here. Or maybe agree, I don't know. Personally I'm not going to exhange my car any time soon. It's the last model with the last truly great engine VAG did, 2,5 liter, 5 inline TDI. Some people in the know say 3,0 liter V6 TDI was still great engine. I'm not that sure, as it does seem quite overcomplicated and overengineered to me. But I don't have personal experience with that, so I hope I'm wrong and there still at least that option to upgrade if some day in the future commuting with 90's vehicle becomes impossible to continue. Parts supplies tend to dry out over time.
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Ehm... Nokia
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I had to check before saying it. But Nokia has more patents on 5G than Huawei. 4000 vs. Huaweis 3000.
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My grandfather drove taxi. He read car magazines and bought his new Mercedes via phone call back in the 80's. Dealer would have driven it to him for a fee, but he wanted to go pick it up from a ship brand new by himself. I think Carvana is one of these firms where only real invention they've made is to market the "internet" side of existing business model. There 's nothing unique or or even special in what they do.
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Then again, if you like milk, you can adjust your diet accordingly. That's why people have drank it for millenias, since "balanced diet" hasn't really been a option for 99'9 % of people before refrigeration.
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Why? How?
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Value increase is just as legit return as dividends. If company can use the money to make more money better than I could, I don't want their cash outs, and pay taxes. It's actually doubly better, since company can underwrite their investments from their revenue.
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People who go into debt by buying fashion deserves their bankruptcy.
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@weird-guy Ok. That makes sense. English isn't my first language either. I don't know how they were marketed to the public in the US. They're pretty much the "every mans car" in Europe so that's how I look at them as manufacturer, even if they've been trying to go upmarket recent years. More of a tool, than something you'd buy for the brand value.
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If I was playing devils advocate here, you know "eco" as a selling point could refer to fuel economy, which they've been marketing ever since the 80's. Bypassing regulations could in fact improve that. Lupo I think used to even have a meter called "eco" in dashboard that measured fuel consumption. But as I said I don't know exactly how it was marketed.
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@weird-guy I didn't know they made a documentary about it. I have to look that up.
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Managing to lose over 80 % of portfolio just by holding shares in 2021 is probably the most impressive feat of stock picking I've ever seen... Just... Why?
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True. When praising what Tesla did right people often forget that it only was able to survive long enough to succeed, because of Musks public image and deep pockets. Not that there's anything wrong with it. Just saying.
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They're like leechy weed pushing between the companies selling things and the customer. Here in Europe we've never had any issue with bank transfers.
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Norway hit the jackpot with their natural reserves in Europe. But you can't feel envious, when the money goes to fund one of the best welfare states in world and pension funds for all her populace.
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I think it's actually an invention of Volkswagen. They've had one in Wolfsburg for a long time and I recall there marketing of trips for a new car buyers to come and see it back in the day.
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