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I'm Leveraged to the Tits in a Stock Market Bubble

An investor describes a high-conviction, high-risk approach: large allocation to long-dated call options (LEAPS) and leveraged ETF exposure in a market the author calls a bubble. The commentary is promotional in tone, includes platform affiliate links and copy-portfolio offers, and mixes personal health updates with investing rhetoric rather than providing systematic trade rationale.

Confidence
60 / 100
Assets
1
Authors
1
Outcome
open

Linked assets

TQQQ — ProShares UltraPro QQQ: a 3x leveraged ETF that seeks to deliver three times the daily performance of the Nasdaq-100 Index. The author's stated exposure includes multiple long-dated call options and leveraged ETF positions as part of a speculative, high-risk portfolio.

TQQQProShares UltraPro QQQsellopen

ProShares UltraPro QQQ (TQQQ) is a leveraged exchange-traded fund seeking three times the daily performance of the Nasdaq-100 Index.

Confidence: 60 / 100

I'm Leveraged to the Tits in a Stock Market Bubble 🚀 Copy My Portfolios Automatically → https://marketplace.joinautopilot.com/landing/1218/542069 ( Earn $20 in the stock and a 30% discount on Autopilot when you join using Public. Most... Hey guys, it's In The Money. You know, one of the greatest pieces of advice touted by the investing community comes from the crusty mouth of one of the most influential investors of all time, the Oracle of Omaha, Warren Buffett. He said something that should stick in every investor's mind, like that one time you didn't take profits. It's be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful. But here's the deal. He got it wrong. You see, last night I was watching The Big Short for the 14th time, and that's been conservative. And as nice as it is to see Margot Robbie in a bubble bath explain something she herself clearly does not understand, what really stood out to me is what Michael Burry said in the film. He said, Watch, we'll pay. I may have been early, but I'm not wrong. This was quickly retorted by some angry man in a suit saying, It's the same thing. It's the same thing, Mike. Point being, they aren't the same thing. You can be early and be right, hence the whole movie. But the whole time you're early, you could have been holding those mortgage bonds for some juicy returns until the adjustable rates kicked in in 07, and then shorted the housing market. Right when everyone defaulted on their home loans, the mortgage bonds went belly up, therefore the CDOs, synthetic CDOs, and the world economy exploded. I say all of this to say one thing. If you're in a bubble, if people are being greedy, you ride that fucking greed. And when they panic, when things suddenly go south, you dump your bags on those losers and you buy the dip. This is a very roundabout justification for this monstrosity, which I assume is behind me now. My Roth IRA. What's your exposure, $3 billion? Please don't tell me it's more than $4 billion. I can't answer that. While everyone is screaming AI bubble, I kind of like bubbles. Margot Robbie and I have more in common than you might think. So 20 options, leap options in particular, across a variety of underlyings and strikes, over half of my portfolio. Some were grossly out of the money, but I sold those for a profit and reined it in a little. Still plenty are out of the money because, God bless him and his little home in Omaha, I ride the bubble like the Wizard of Oz witch until it pops. By the way, this bubble is bubble-ish. Before the dot-com bubble, or at least leading up to it bursting, Amazon was trading at $9 in 1998 and had achieved a 2,600% return since its IPO the prior year with an expected return of 300%, so that's 4,300%, over the next 18 months projected by a daring analyst named Henry Blodgett. Now I hate analysts. There's a reason the word anal is in the word analyst. It's because they have their heads so far up their asses they can't smell a trend from a turd. Amazon was actively losing money at the time with a $17 billion market cap. So why the hell am I doing this but not YOLOing my full portfolio into TQQQ on autopilot? Well, firstly, believe it or not, I have a sense of fiduciary responsibility to others. What can I say? I'm a good guy. Secondly, I know how to manage losing leap options quite well, especially with half of my portfolio being in really boring stocks and ETFs. If my leaps eat shit, I can recycle what's left and use some of the equity to refresh my leaps and do this a couple rounds over. They expire over two years from now, so I can do this for multiple cycles. I can feed the engine for years, but the risk is, of course, I eventually run out of coal and the gains train does eventually roll to a stop. This quote-unquote strategy is appropriate for only a very few amount of people. I do not recommend it as I'm not using it to secure retirement like most people would do with a Roth. If I wanted that, I would throw it into a managed account already and be happy to end with $2 to $4 million by the time I'm 59. Quite the contrary, I am actually hedging against salt death, first of all, because there's no guarantee I'll make it to 59, but secondly, I'm going for a fucking home run so hard it would take down salt all over again. If I ended with $2 to $4 million of tax-free returns, great. If I end with $50 million, there's something I have really specific in mind, and you'll have to bear with me. I know you guys are sick of hearing it and just want to know what the stock to buy, but my brain got destroyed by encephalitis. Very casual. I'm much better, and from your perspective, I might seem actually perfectly capable. I would actually consider myself disabled. I could list the ways in which I feel disabled, and it might make sense to you because I just put half my Roth into call options, but this is not a sob story. My hope, my goal, my ride of this too-early part of this frothy, overvalued, bubble-ish market is to hit 59 with an unfathomable amount of tax-free returns in combination with great advancement in medical technology that I might be able to blow it all on niche, advanced treatment to patch my brain up, I don't know, 50%, so I can live the

Source proof

Source proof: Strong source proof | 1 directional asset | 1 supporting author | headline-like title review

Primary source material consists mostly of promotional posts, legal/affiliate disclosures, how-to guides for a copy-trading service (Autopilot), and personal updates. Most posts do not contain independent market research, verifiable financial statements, or specific trading catalysts. One post references a Novo Nordisk legal action in headline only but provides no evidentiary detail in the body.

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The Space X IPO is NOT Chill - A Channel Update
InTheMoney · Jun 5, 2026, 11:22 AM EDT

The provided source contains only a title and repeats it in the body, with no additional details, data, timing, or claims. It mentions SpaceX and an IPO but provides no actionable information for trading or thesis construction.

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Why SoFi Ain’t It
InTheMoney · Jun 3, 2026, 4:02 PM EDT

The source is a largely incoherent rant centered on a bearish view of SoFi (SOFI), referencing short interest/shorting, and mentions buying puts and briefly buying the Vanguard Growth ETF (VUG). It lacks concrete catalysts, numbers, timing, or a clear repeatable setup beyond a general “short/puts” posture on SOFI.

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Why SoFi Ain’t It
InTheMoney · Jun 3, 2026, 12:37 PM EDT

Why SoFi Ain’t It subscriptions revenue top's going up earnings comes around and um we won't shorts and so they're going to you know find companies to short but if you look at the short interest it's like 15% cost you're buying into a stock where we legitimate and then the the stock moons then everyone drops a stock like it's getting [ __ ] like 10 calls in a row than get spam calls from somebody from a bubbles. SL AI on the banking. What who to short, but we don't know whether it's even looked, but you know, you get a CSV on my PC which literally just the other a power line and scorched my PSU which access to the CSV files of a closed know buying some puts this morning like you can make that yield by buying VG for calls from people trying to give me

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Good Afternoon.
InTheMoney · Apr 30, 2026, 9:50 PM EDT

The entry is almost entirely promotional text and legal disclaimers for a YouTube/X/Discord investing-related channel and Autopilot relationship disclosure. It contains no substantive market view, company-specific information, portfolio positions, industry intelligence, or trade rationale.

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How to Manage LEAPS - a MUST watch (previously private, making public)
InTheMoney · Apr 15, 2026, 8:00 PM EDT

Promotional post for a paid service/video about managing LEAPS (long-dated options), with links to try a product and copy portfolios. No specific market news, catalysts, positions, or tickers disclosed.

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im back (again fr fr i think)
InTheMoney · Apr 15, 2026, 8:00 PM EDT

Skipped non-finance YouTube video. The content does not contain a clear market or investable-stock discussion.

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Autopilot and Investing Soldiers: Sit Down and Listen Up, GI
InTheMoney · Mar 31, 2026, 8:42 AM EDT

Promotional/disclaimer post advertising an “Autopilot” copy-trading/portfolio mirroring platform and a paid membership/alerts service. Contains affiliate links and general investing-risk disclaimers, but no company-specific news, financial results, macro data, or actionable trading catalyst tied to any publicly traded ticker.

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Supporting authors

Content is attributable to a single creator who publishes on YouTube/X/Discord and promotes an Autopilot copy-trading service and paid membership offerings. Disclosures and affiliate links are common across the referenced posts.

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The author promotes copying their portfolios via Autopilot (affiliate link provided) and paid membership content; these promotions include disclaimers about risk but do not replace independent due diligence.