Rugdoc.eth

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Wait, so Rampage Jackson made more money streaming in 8 months than fighting for 20 years? That's absolutely wild when you think about it. The guy was a UFC champion, had those insane highlight moments in PRIDE, and now he's telling us streaming pays way better. His rampage net worth is around $4 million but apparently the streaming money came in crazy fast compared to his entire fighting career, including all those UFC years. I mean, this guy fought Wanderlei Silva, Chuck Liddell, had that legendary KO of Ricardo Arona - proper legend status. Yet streaming just outpaced everything. Makes you
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Been thinking about this lately – Elon Musk's wealth accumulation is absolutely wild when you break it down by time increments. Back in 2024, his net worth hit around $429 billion, which already puts him in a league of his own. But here's what really gets me: the math on his one second income.
So we're talking roughly $3,708 every single second. Let that sink in for a moment. That's more than what most people earn in an entire month, just vanishing in the blink of an eye. If you stretched it out, he's pulling in about $222,500 per minute – basically the down payment on a luxury property somewh
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Just saw that Justin Sun got his Rednote account banned too. So now he's basically locked out of all the major Chinese social platforms - TikTok, Weibo, and now this. Pretty wild considering he's such a huge figure in crypto with TRON and everything.
Apparently this is part of a broader crackdown by Chinese social media on him specifically. Like they're really not having it. But the funny part is he still has millions of followers on Western platforms, so it's this weird situation where he's basically invisible in China but massive everywhere else.
Makes you wonder what's driving this on the C
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You know what's wild? I've been watching people throw money at PEPE like it's 2021 all over again. But honestly, the whole meme coin thing feels different now. The magic's gone. These coins that used to turn pocket change into life-changing gains? They're just sitting there. PEPE is up 0.53% today, but that's not the story anymore.
Here's the thing that nobody wants to admit: the meta has completely shifted. Back in the day, meme coins worked because they were pure community hype. No utility, no real purpose, just vibes and FOMO. And yeah, some people made bank. But those days feel over. The s
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I thought you needed professional equipment to make money with cryptocurrencies, but it turns out that free mining of cryptocurrencies on your phone is actually a viable option. Many people don't realize that mobile mining is a completely different world from traditional mining — you don't need massive machines or tons of electricity. Sure, the earnings won't be the same, but for beginners, it's a great way to get familiar with the whole topic.
Why Android? Primarily because it's open-source, and developers have a lot of freedom there. There are plenty of mining apps on Android, giving you a w
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Just caught the PPI numbers coming in and the dollar's taking a hit. Inflation data's been spooking the market lately, and today's no exception. The greenback's sliding across the board, which means emerging market currencies are having a moment. Peso and rand both hit fresh lows today as traders reassess what this means for Fed policy down the line. The rand especially caught my eye since it's been volatile with all the global macro uncertainty. These producer price readings matter because they signal where consumer inflation might be heading, and that directly impacts how aggressive central
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Been researching emerging markets etfs lately and stumbled on an interesting comparison between SCHE and SPGM. The Schwab Emerging Markets Equity ETF has been catching my eye because of the higher dividend yield at 2.7% versus SPGM's 1.8%, plus it's cheaper to hold at 0.07% expense ratio. Over the past year, SCHE returned 28.5% compared to SPGM's 25.2%, which is pretty solid.
That said, there's a trade-off here. SCHE is heavily concentrated - Taiwan Semiconductor alone is almost 15% of the fund, and you've got Tencent and Alibaba making up a big chunk too. So your returns are basically riding
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Been digging into when traders actually make their best moves in crypto, and there's some interesting patterns in the data. Turns out the best time to trade crypto isn't random at all — there's real historical evidence behind it.
Monday usually kicks off with lower prices after the weekend slowdown. Since crypto trades 24/7 but most people are actually active during business hours, you get this sweet spot where the market's waking up. If you're looking to buy, Monday's typically your best entry point before prices start climbing through the week.
Now if you're actively trading — buying and sel
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Just been looking at Circle's recent moves and honestly, the partnerships they're pulling in are pretty wild. This crypto ipo story actually gets more interesting the deeper you dig.
So Circle went public in June 2025 at $31 and now it's trading around $87 — solid run for a company betting on USD Coin becoming the backbone of global payments. But here's what caught my attention: they're not just hoping this happens, they're actively making it happen through some heavyweight partnerships.
Visa started integrating USDC into their settlement layer in late 2025. Instead of settling transactions th
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Just noticed cocoa futures getting hit pretty hard today - NY March contract down nearly 3% as the dollar's been pushing higher. London's following a similar pattern. What's interesting is this comes right after Monday's solid rally, so we're seeing some profit-taking mixed with technical pressure.
The supply story in the cocoa industries is still compelling though. Ivory Coast shipments came in light this season, and there's been talk about tighter global supplies pushing prices up. But here's the thing - weather in West Africa has actually been cooperating, helping trees bloom and develop we
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Just looked into where you can actually find affordable and safe places to live in the US without breaking the bank, and honestly some of the findings are pretty interesting. Turns out Ohio is absolutely dominating this category right now with 7 cities making the top 15 cheapest and safest locations to settle in. That's wild considering how spread out the rest of the list is across the country.
So if you're looking for the best combination of low crime and reasonable cost of living, New Philadelphia, Ohio is sitting at the top with an annual cost of living around $35,549 and a violent crime ra
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Just realized something interesting about California vs Florida taxes that could actually make a huge difference in your wallet. A household making around $91k annually could be saving close to $2,800 per year just by relocating. That's not nothing.
Here's the thing - Florida doesn't have state income tax at all, while California hits you with rates anywhere from 1% to 13.3% depending on what you earn. So if you're making $150k in California, you're looking at over $7k in state income taxes. Same income in Florida? Zero. The difference gets even crazier at higher income levels - $250k earners
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Just learned something interesting about how big corporations handle complex asset sales without getting hammered by taxes. There's this strategy called a reverse morris trust transaction that's been around for decades but doesn't get talked about much outside finance circles.
Basically, here's how it works. A company that wants to get rid of certain assets or business divisions can use this structure to avoid massive capital gains taxes. Instead of just selling off parts of the business directly, they spin off a subsidiary containing those assets, merge it with another company, and boom - the
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Just been watching the energy markets this week and the crude oil moves have been pretty wild. We're seeing April WTI up almost 10 bucks to close Friday, with gasoline jumping nearly 3% as well. Both hitting multi-year highs here - crude at a 2.5-year peak for nearest futures.
The Middle East situation is clearly the main driver. Day seven of the conflict and the Strait of Hormuz is still shut down, which is basically cutting off a fifth of the world's oil supply. Qatar's energy minister dropped some heavy comments to Financial Times saying this could "bring down economies of the world" and su
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Today's CNY to ZAR Price Update
This report analyzes the CNY/ZAR exchange rate, highlighting its current valuation, long-term trends, and market dynamics, aiding traders in identifying opportunities.
ai-iconThe abstract is generated by AI
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Ever notice how during market crashes, everyone suddenly talks about consumer staples, but when things are booming, it's all discretionary this and discretionary that? I've been thinking about this pattern lately and realized most people don't really understand the fundamental difference between consumer discretionary vs consumer staples stocks, even though it's one of the most important concepts for portfolio management.
Let me break down what's actually going on here. Consumer staples are basically the stuff you'd buy even if you lost half your income tomorrow. Food, toilet paper, soap, sham
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So I was thinking about Elon Musk's wealth the other day and it's honestly mind-bending. Everyone talks about his net worth hitting nearly $500 billion, but what does that actually mean day-to-day? Here's the thing - Musk doesn't get a traditional paycheck like most of us. His wealth is almost entirely tied to stock holdings and company valuations that swing wildly depending on market conditions.
Let me break down the math because it's actually wild. Back in 2024, his net worth grew by around $203 billion in a single year. That works out to roughly $584 million per day. Per day. If you want to
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Just spent some time digging into how the major stock indexes actually performed over the last 20 years, and the differences are pretty wild. Most people only look at year-to-year returns, but that's basically useless for understanding what's really going on in the market. There's this old saying from investing legend John Bogle about reversion to the mean - basically, markets always pull back to their historical average eventually, like gravity pulling things down. So I wanted to see what those long-term averages actually look like. The S&P 500 is probably what most people think of when they
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Been looking at the energy sector lately and there's something interesting happening with the big three oil majors. Even with all the uncertainty around crude prices, these companies are structured in a way that lets them print cash regardless of where oil goes.
Chevron's the one that caught my attention first. They're positioned to grow free cash flow by over 10% annually through 2030, and here's the kicker - they can do this even if oil falls from current levels. They've got this huge scale advantage and low-cost assets that just work in almost any market environment. Last year they returned
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