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These are the tickers attached to this play, along with direction, confidence, and outcome so far.
This Product Is Sold Out Everywhere A simple squishy toy just became the #1 product on Amazon — and there’s a public stock behind it that most people don’t even know exists. This is a classic “social arbitrage” setup where a viral product could translate directly into revenue and market movement. In this video, we break down the trend, the company behind it, and why this kind of opportunity shows up more often than people think. — 👍 LIKE what we're doing? Smash the thumbs up! 🔔 SUBSCRIBE with "all" notifications to know when we're on ✅ CONNECT on IG, FB & Twitter @DumbMoneyTV 💬 JOIN our Discord https://DumbMoney.tv/discord 🐦 TWEET @ChrisCamillo @DaveHanson and @Jordan_Mclain 🎧 LISTEN to our podcast https://DumbMoney.tv/podcast 👕 BUY stuff with our logo https://DumbMoney.tv/merch — Our videos contain personal views and opinions and are intended strictly for information, education & entertainment purposes. We do not provide investment advice or investment strategy. #trading #investing #ai #artificialintelligence I believe that this company is perfectly suited to now massively ramp up manufacturing because they have distribution. Demand has started to accelerate, unlike really anything I've seen in a long time. This is the perfect storm scenario, and the product is very simple. The product is extraordinarily high margin. And if you want to know how high margin the product is, you can simply go on, I don't know, Temu or wherever, and see how much it costs you yourself to make a million of these things. They're not expensive. They cost like $4 to $7 to purchase retail. And I can't even imagine how cheap they are to make. It is the perfect storm. It's what we look for. So the big question is, you know, how quickly can the company actually ramp up manufacturing? Because it's not about one product. It's about various SKUs that they continue to modify and change different textures. Some have glitter, different shapes, different firmness levels. My assumption is that the company has a number of new products that they're preparing that will continue to be released every few weeks for the rest of the year. And this is a product that potentially, if you look at past trends, like the fidget spinner, the Silly Bands, they tend to trend for many, many, many months. They don't just trend for a few weeks. So this is a trend that could theoretically have legs on it and last long enough to be really, really impactful for this small company. So let's get to the trade. The name of the product is Neato. The name of the company that makes Neato, I should have had this prepared for the episode. What's the name of the company? Schilling, yes. And the name of the holding corporation that's publicly traded that owns Schilling is Gladstone Investment Corporation,GAIN. Now, I really, really warn against going out and just like buying this stock if it's popping because we're talking about it, which I'm sure it is. You've got to be really careful here. It's really difficult to assess a holding company and the degree to which one of 24, 25 of their portfolio companies has the ability to meaningfully move the needle. Invest at your own risk, guys. Full transparency. You know, I'm long the stock. I won't be selling into any of this in the next few days. If you read the most recent earnings transcript of Gladstone Investment Corporation, first of all, it's really confusing. A company like this generates revenue through basically debt interest payments that they get from some of the portfolio companies, as well as equity dividends that they get from companies that they outright own. This happens to be a company based on my research that they outright own. They appear to own the majority of this company, if not potentially the entire company. It was really difficult for me to to fully assess that. So they get dividend payments based on the amount of profits that this company makes. Now, they also generate income when they flip a company. So it is possible that a company like this could even get sold. This company appears to be doing tens of millions to a hundred million ish in revenue annualized. I believe that a trend like this is strong enough that they could see their revenue double, triple, quadruple over the course of a year. That's how big of a deal this is. Because if you look at the company that makes Neato, their products are so junky. They've I don't think they've ever had anything like this before. So this is a true anomaly. But the most interesting thing that I found was when I read the earnings transcript that came out in early February for Gladstone, this was only one of two companies that they own that they specifically mentioned as driving earnings last quarter. And last quarter, this product was barely trending. It was trending, but not nearly to the extent that it's trending this quarter. Do you know what this reminds me of, guys? This reminds me of the Newell Brands trade I did many years ago with Slime when it first came out on Elmer's Glue, which was the key ingredient in Slime. They had mentioned that Elmer's Glue sales were up because of the Slime trade, and then the Slime trade ended up accelerating 5x to 10x more the following quarter. And that's when I placed my trade. So I already knew that it was a needle mover for the company from the prior earnings transcript. I made the investment, and it was that next quarter when it really popped. This is following a similar trajectory, where I now have validation that it is a needle mover already for the holding company, and now the product is trending meaningfully more than it was when they had made that comment in early February. So I'm kind of excited about this trade, guys. It's as old school social arb as it gets. There's a couple negatives here. One, believe it or not, this stupid war that we're in right now with Iran that's driving oil prices up, impartial screwing my Amazon trade, partially screw it because, you know, high oil prices is terrible for Amazon due to their shippi
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This Product Is Sold Out Everywhere A simple squishy toy just became the #1 product on Amazon — and there’s a public stock behind it that most people don’t even know exists. This is a classic “social arbitrage” setup where a viral product could translate directly into revenue and market movement. In this video, we break down the trend, the company behind it, and why this kind of opportunity shows up more often than people think. — 👍 LIKE what we're doing? Smash the thumbs up! 🔔 SUBSCRIBE with "all" notifications to know when we're on ✅ CONNECT on IG, FB & Twitter @DumbMoneyTV 💬 JOIN our Discord https://DumbMoney.tv/discord 🐦 TWEET @ChrisCamillo @DaveHanson and @Jordan_Mclain 🎧 LISTEN to our podcast https://DumbMoney.tv/podcast 👕 BUY stuff with our logo https://DumbMoney.tv/merch — Our videos contain personal views and opinions and are intended strictly for information, education & entertainment purposes. We do not provide investment advice or investment strategy. #trading #investing #ai #artificialintelligence I believe that this company is perfectly suited to now massively ramp up manufacturing because they have distribution. Demand has started to accelerate, unlike really anything I've seen in a long time. This is the perfect storm scenario, and the product is very simple. The product is extraordinarily high margin. And if you want to know how high margin the product is, you can simply go on, I don't know, Temu or wherever, and see how much it costs you yourself to make a million of these things. They're not expensive. They cost like $4 to $7 to purchase retail. And I can't even imagine how cheap they are to make. It is the perfect storm. It's what we look for. So the big question is, you know, how quickly can the company actually ramp up manufacturing? Because it's not about one product. It's about various SKUs that they continue to modify and change different textures. Some have glitter, different shapes, different firmness levels. My assumption is that the company has a number of new products that they're preparing that will continue to be released every few weeks for the rest of the year. And this is a product that potentially, if you look at past trends, like the fidget spinner, the Silly Bands, they tend to trend for many, many, many months. They don't just trend for a few weeks. So this is a trend that could theoretically have legs on it and last long enough to be really, really impactful for this small company. So let's get to the trade. The name of the product is Neato. The name of the company that makes Neato, I should have had this prepared for the episode. What's the name of the company? Schilling, yes. And the name of the holding corporation that's publicly traded that owns Schilling is Gladstone Investment Corporation,GAIN. Now, I really, really warn against going out and just like buying this stock if it's popping because we're talking about it, which I'm sure it is. You've got to be really careful here. It's really difficult to assess a holding company and the degree to which one of 24, 25 of their portfolio companies has the ability to meaningfully move the needle. Invest at your own risk, guys. Full transparency. You know, I'm long the stock. I won't be selling into any of this in the next few days. If you read the most recent earnings transcript of Gladstone Investment Corporation, first of all, it's really confusing. A company like this generates revenue through basically debt interest payments that they get from some of the portfolio companies, as well as equity dividends that they get from companies that they outright own. This happens to be a company based on my research that they outright own. They appear to own the majority of this company, if not potentially the entire company. It was really difficult for me to to fully assess that. So they get dividend payments based on the amount of profits that this company makes. Now, they also generate income when they flip a company. So it is possible that a company like this could even get sold. This company appears to be doing tens of millions to a hundred million ish in revenue annualized. I believe that a trend like this is strong enough that they could see their revenue double, triple, quadruple over the course of a year. That's how big of a deal this is. Because if you look at the company that makes Neato, their products are so junky. They've I don't think they've ever had anything like this before. So this is a true anomaly. But the most interesting thing that I found was when I read the earnings transcript that came out in early February for Gladstone, this was only one of two companies that they own that they specifically mentioned as driving earnings last quarter. And last quarter, this product was barely trending. It was trending, but not nearly to the extent that it's trending this quarter. Do you know what this reminds me of, guys? This reminds me of the Newell Brands trade I did many years ago with Slime when it first came out on Elmer's Glue, which was the key ingredient in Slime. They had mentioned that Elmer's Glue sales were up because of the Slime trade, and then the Slime trade ended up accelerating 5x to 10x more the following quarter. And that's when I placed my trade. So I already knew that it was a needle mover for the company from the prior earnings transcript. I made the investment, and it was that next quarter when it really popped. This is following a similar trajectory, where I now have validation that it is a needle mover already for the holding company, and now the product is trending meaningfully more than it was when they had made that comment in early February. So I'm kind of excited about this trade, guys. It's as old school social arb as it gets. There's a couple negatives here. One, believe it or not, this stupid war that we're in right now with Iran that's driving oil prices up, impartial screwing my Amazon trade, partially screw it because, you know, high oil prices is terrible for Amazon due to their shippi
The index measures the performance of this Dynamic Buffer Strategy based on the S&P 500 Index using a long position in the S&P 500 Index along with three different S&P 500 Index o…
This Product Is Sold Out Everywhere A simple squishy toy just became the #1 product on Amazon — and there’s a public stock behind it that most people don’t even know exists. This is a classic “social arbitrage” setup where a viral product could translate directly into revenue and market movement. In this video, we break down the trend, the company behind it, and why this kind of opportunity shows up more often than people think. — 👍 LIKE what we're doing? Smash the thumbs up! 🔔 SUBSCRIBE with "all" notifications to know when we're on ✅ CONNECT on IG, FB & Twitter @DumbMoneyTV 💬 JOIN our Discord https://DumbMoney.tv/discord 🐦 TWEET @ChrisCamillo @DaveHanson and @Jordan_Mclain 🎧 LISTEN to our podcast https://DumbMoney.tv/podcast 👕 BUY stuff with our logo https://DumbMoney.tv/merch — Our videos contain personal views and opinions and are intended strictly for information, education & entertainment purposes. We do not provide investment advice or investment strategy. #trading #investing #ai #artificialintelligence I believe that this company is perfectly suited to now massively ramp up manufacturing because they have distribution. Demand has started to accelerate, unlike really anything I've seen in a long time. This is the perfect storm scenario, and the product is very simple. The product is extraordinarily high margin. And if you want to know how high margin the product is, you can simply go on, I don't know, Temu or wherever, and see how much it costs you yourself to make a million of these things. They're not expensive. They cost like $4 to $7 to purchase retail. And I can't even imagine how cheap they are to make. It is the perfect storm. It's what we look for. So the big question is, you know, how quickly can the company actually ramp up manufacturing? Because it's not about one product. It's about various SKUs that they continue to modify and change different textures. Some have glitter, different shapes, different firmness levels. My assumption is that the company has a number of new products that they're preparing that will continue to be released every few weeks for the rest of the year. And this is a product that potentially, if you look at past trends, like the fidget spinner, the Silly Bands, they tend to trend for many, many, many months. They don't just trend for a few weeks. So this is a trend that could theoretically have legs on it and last long enough to be really, really impactful for this small company. So let's get to the trade. The name of the product is Neato. The name of the company that makes Neato, I should have had this prepared for the episode. What's the name of the company? Schilling, yes. And the name of the holding corporation that's publicly traded that owns Schilling is Gladstone Investment Corporation,GAIN. Now, I really, really warn against going out and just like buying this stock if it's popping because we're talking about it, which I'm sure it is. You've got to be really careful here. It's really difficult to assess a holding company and the degree to which one of 24, 25 of their portfolio companies has the ability to meaningfully move the needle. Invest at your own risk, guys. Full transparency. You know, I'm long the stock. I won't be selling into any of this in the next few days. If you read the most recent earnings transcript of Gladstone Investment Corporation, first of all, it's really confusing. A company like this generates revenue through basically debt interest payments that they get from some of the portfolio companies, as well as equity dividends that they get from companies that they outright own. This happens to be a company based on my research that they outright own. They appear to own the majority of this company, if not potentially the entire company. It was really difficult for me to to fully assess that. So they get dividend payments based on the amount of profits that this company makes. Now, they also generate income when they flip a company. So it is possible that a company like this could even get sold. This company appears to be doing tens of millions to a hundred million ish in revenue annualized. I believe that a trend like this is strong enough that they could see their revenue double, triple, quadruple over the course of a year. That's how big of a deal this is. Because if you look at the company that makes Neato, their products are so junky. They've I don't think they've ever had anything like this before. So this is a true anomaly. But the most interesting thing that I found was when I read the earnings transcript that came out in early February for Gladstone, this was only one of two companies that they own that they specifically mentioned as driving earnings last quarter. And last quarter, this product was barely trending. It was trending, but not nearly to the extent that it's trending this quarter. Do you know what this reminds me of, guys? This reminds me of the Newell Brands trade I did many years ago with Slime when it first came out on Elmer's Glue, which was the key ingredient in Slime. They had mentioned that Elmer's Glue sales were up because of the Slime trade, and then the Slime trade ended up accelerating 5x to 10x more the following quarter. And that's when I placed my trade. So I already knew that it was a needle mover for the company from the prior earnings transcript. I made the investment, and it was that next quarter when it really popped. This is following a similar trajectory, where I now have validation that it is a needle mover already for the holding company, and now the product is trending meaningfully more than it was when they had made that comment in early February. So I'm kind of excited about this trade, guys. It's as old school social arb as it gets. There's a couple negatives here. One, believe it or not, this stupid war that we're in right now with Iran that's driving oil prices up, impartial screwing my Amazon trade, partially screw it because, you know, high oil prices is terrible for Amazon due to their shippi
Source proof
Conversation riffs on paying $70–$100 for boxer briefs and turns it into a broader “premium everyday essentials”/brand-loyalty thesis; the only explicitly mentioned brand is Under Armour boxer briefs arriving routinely (habit/subscription-like replenishment). No concrete corporate news or near-term catalyst is provided.
The entry is a commentary about an “obscure AI stock” in Japan. The speaker references prior coverage of a Japanese company called “Nitobo/Nittobo,” described as making critical materials used in AI chips, and notes the stock has since doubled. A LinkedIn link is cited as “Jianshu Dong’s Rigaku Investment Thesis,” but no clear, tradable listed ticker for Rigaku is provided in the text. Overall it’s a momentum/awareness note rather than a concrete new catalyst.
Video/promo commentary suggesting “something feels off” about Tesla (narrative shifts, rising AI competition) and implying there are “cleaner” ways to get AI exposure, but it does not name the alternative trade/tickers or provide concrete catalysts, data, or timing.
Video-style post claiming a creator’s “biggest bet” remains intact despite market volatility tied to war/oil/uncertainty. The bet is described as high-stakes and centered around Amazon and AI with a long-term positioning mindset, but no specific entry/exit levels, catalysts, sizing, or timing details are provided in the text.
The source is a high-level framework piece (video promo) about how to trade war-driven volatility, emphasizing two distinct approaches: (1) fast, headline-driven moves and (2) slower macro/positioning setups. It does not cite a specific conflict catalyst, timing, or any named tickers—so it’s more an educational framing than a concrete trade signal.
The Iran war narrative is causing market volatility and impacting positions like TAC and AS, with investors facing decisions on whether to panic or stay committed to their strategies.
The article discusses how fear in the market can be a strong signal for long-term opportunities, particularly in AI and tech, despite short-term volatility caused by factors like war and oil shocks.
A simple squishy toy just became the #1 product on Amazon — and there’s a public stock behind it that most people don’t even know exists. This is a classic “social arbitrage” setup where a viral product could translate directly into revenue and market movement. In this video, we break down the trend, the company behind it, and why this kind of opportunity shows up more often than people think. — 👍 LIKE what we're doing? Smash the thumbs up! 🔔 SUBSCRIBE with "all" notifications to know when we're on ✅ CONNECT on IG, FB & Twitter @DumbMoneyTV 💬 JOIN our Discord https://DumbMoney.tv/discord 🐦 TWEET @ChrisCamillo @DaveHanson and @Jordan_Mclain 🎧 LISTEN to our podcast https://DumbMoney.tv/podcast 👕 BUY stuff with our logo https://DumbMoney.tv/merch — Our videos contain personal views and opinions and are intended strictly for information, education & entertainment purposes. We do not provide investment advice or investment strategy. #trading #investing #ai #artificialintelligence I believe that this company is perfectly suited to now massively ramp up manufacturing because they have distribution. Demand has started to accelerate, unlike really anything I've seen in a long time. This is
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