There’s something deeply seductive about the idea of getting paid for existing. Not working. Not clocking in. Not smiling through another soul-draining Zoom meeting while pretending Brad’s “quick update” isn’t slowly murdering your will to live. Just waking up, checking your account, and seeing money appear because somewhere, somehow, your investments kept doing their little capitalist photosynthesis routine overnight. That’s the fantasy dividend investing sells: money that quietly breeds more money while you sit there eating cereal in sweatpants wondering whether humanity peaked before smartphones. And honestly? I get it. Because modern work culture has turned millions of people into emotionally exhausted productivity hamsters sprinting inside corporate wheels that somehow move faster every year while paying proportionally less in psychological dignity. People aren’t obsessed with passive income because they’re lazy. They’re obsessed with passive income because they’re tire...
Wall Street has developed a dangerous addiction. Not to profits. Not to innovation. Not even to artificial intelligence itself. No, Wall Street has become addicted to expectation inflation — the financial equivalent of a dopamine tolerance problem where yesterday’s miracle becomes today’s disappointment if it doesn’t arrive wearing fireworks and levitating above the Nasdaq. And nobody embodies that insanity more than NVIDIA right now. Which is exactly why I think May 21 could become one of the most psychologically violent days Nvidia investors have experienced in a long time. Not because Nvidia suddenly became a bad company. That’s the funny part. The company is still a monster. Still dominant. Still printing money like the Federal Reserve discovered steroids and GPU clusters simultaneously. But markets don’t collapse because companies are weak. Markets collapse because expectations become detached from biological reality. And that’s exactly what Palantir Technologies j...