Since 1929, the S&P 500 has risen 79% of the time during the Santa Claus Rally, with an average gain of +1.6%.
The Santa Claus Rally covers the last 5 trading days of December and the first 2 of January.
Since 1950, returns remain just as strong: • 79% win rate • +1.3% average gain Over the past 8 years, the S&P 500 has declined during this window only once.
The final two weeks of December have been the strongest two-week period for stocks over the past 75 years.
Be Binance» означает для меня не останавливаться, создавать новое и помогать другим в их финансовом пути. Сильное сообщество, как это, заставляет меня чувствовать, что будущее в наших руках. Поздравляю с 300 миллионами! 🎉 #OneUnstoppableCommunity
Can we call this a valid head and shoulders pattern?
It’s not perfect, but it looks likely to me that $SOL will break below $120 soon and continue lower, which would confirm the bearish head and shoulders pattern.
Both $XRP and $SOL are trading at the exact same dangerous level.
This is a very dangerous zone. Longs can still be considered since this level aligns with higher-timeframe support, but overall the structure doesn’t look strong.
If you’re currently long, stay cautious. A clear break of structure could turn shorts into a very attractive opportunity.
"Every major innovation requires heavy investment at the beginning. Time is what decides whether it’s worth it or not."
ZEINAB GABR
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The $1.1 Trillion AI Bubble: Is OpenAI Too Big to Fail?
OpenAI, with an estimated $20 Billion annual revenue by December 2025, has made an astonishing $1.15 TRILLION in infrastructure spending commitments over the next five years.
This isn't just growth, it's a financial black hole.
To put that in perspective: the annual Capital Expenditure (CapEx) of ALL US companies combined is about $1.2T.
OpenAI's 5-year commitment is nearly 100% of the combined US annual CapEx. They are committing to outspend their major partners (MSFT, NVDA, AMD, ORCL, AMZN, etc.) combined CapEx by nearly 5x.
The Math Does Not Add Up
To cover the operating costs and maintain projected gross margins, OpenAI's revenue must grow from $12B in 2025 to nearly $983B in 2030. That is an 85x growth in just 5 years.
To meet its obligations, OpenAI essentially needs to become the largest, most profitable company on Earth.
And if the math doesn't work? OpenAI's CFO has openly suggested seeking a GOVERNMENT BACKSTOP (taxpayer protection) in case they can't meet their obligations. The terrifying implication: Too Big To Fail?
The Interconnected 'Ouroboros' Loop
The core issue is the financial engineering. The money is flowing in an "Ouroboros" (snake eating its tail) loop, making real revenue and cash flow untraceable:
1. Microsoft invests in OpenAI (via Azure credits).
2. OpenAI buys Microsoft capacity.
3. Microsoft buys Nvidia GPUs to provide that capacity.
4. Nvidia takes the cash and invests in OpenAI.
5. OpenAI uses Nvidia's investment to buy Nvidia chips.
6. The loop continues, creating 'fake' revenue flows.
This web of interconnected deals means: "The revenue of one company is the cost of another is the investment of a third." If one key pillar in this $1.1T structure fails, the ripple effect (contagion) could be massive.
Is This 2000 or 2008?
Compared to the GFC (2008): The risk is different. OpenAI's obligations are not being securitized and multiplied 15x by exotic derivatives. Big Tech has strong balance sheets.
Compared to the Dot-Com Bubble (2000): Major players today (MSFT, NVDA) are profitable. The Nasdaq P/E is 30x, not the peak of 60x.
The problem is the mix, as Charlie Munger famously said: "If you mix raisins with turds, well, you still got turds."
The AI bubble has strong "raisins" (real, profitable businesses) surrounded by "turds" (trillions in inter-company fake revenue, impossible spending commitments, and whispers of taxpayer bailouts).
The spending is insane, and the sheer amount of financial engineering is raising red flags across the board.
The Question: Can any economy sustain $1.1T in interconnected spend from a company with $20B revenue?