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Conviction Bet

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About Conviction Bet

You already know patience matters. What nobody tells you is that patience without courage is just hesitation. Conviction Bet is the investing show for people who are building chips now so they can act decisively when the rare opportunity arrives. We talk about companies — financials, opportunities, risks — and occasionally the investment philosophies that separate serious wealth builders from everyone else. Clear thinking. Honest analysis. And always the same question underneath it all — is this worth betting big on?

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7 episodes

episode The Ouroboros Quarter artwork

The Ouroboros Quarter

In most earnings seasons, the profit reported is the profit earned. Q1 2026 was different. The most important number in Alphabet's results was not on the revenue line, not in the cloud segment, and not in operating income. It was in a footnote — and it accounted for an estimated 46% of the company's headline net income. The market celebrated the headline. Almost no one read the footnote. In this episode: * Why Q1 2026 was the most circular earnings season in Big Tech history — and how a GAAP accounting rule (ASU 2016-01) allows unrealized private equity markups to flow directly through the income statement, turning a funding round valuation into reported corporate profit before a single dollar of cash changes hands * The ouroboros mechanism in full: Alphabet invests in Anthropic, Anthropic trains on Google Cloud, Google Cloud revenue supports Anthropic's valuation, Anthropic's valuation flows back through Alphabet's income statement as reported net income, and that net income justifies more investment — every link GAAP-compliant, the loop entirely circular. Amazon runs the same structure. The estimated after-tax contribution from unrealized equity gains accounts for a significant portion of both companies' headline Q1 numbers. * Why Nvidia's $48.6 billion of company-level free cash flow is categorically different from what Alphabet and Amazon reported — and what $91 billion of Q2 company-level revenue guidance, with China data-center compute excluded from the calculation, actually tells you about the state of global AI demand outside the world's second-largest economy * The Federal Reserve transition most investors are reading wrong: the real question is not whether Kevin Warsh cuts rates, but whether he changes which inflation gauge the Fed uses to decide — and why a 70-basis-point gap between Core PCE at 3.2% and Dallas trimmed mean PCE at 2.4% is a policy lever, not a measurement dispute. Core PCE already excludes food and energy. The gap is explained by shelter and services — which is also why the new framework carries the risks it does. * The Cisco counter-case: in March 2000, Cisco had real orders, real revenue growing at 50% annually, a backlog booked two years forward, and a market cap above $500 billion. The stock fell nearly 90% by late 2002. Not because the internet was fake — because the valuation had been pulled further into the future than genuine demand could reach before monetary conditions tightened. The case for why real underlying demand does not protect against valuation reset. * CoreWeave on May 7: $2.08 billion in Q1 revenue, up 112% year-over-year, stock falling after hours as soft Q2 guidance and capex intensity unsettled investors — and what a triple-digit growth company declining on an earnings beat tells you about what this market is actually pricing * The Buffett Indicator at roughly 229%–235% depending on methodology, Amazon's trailing twelve-month free cash flow down 95% to $1.2 billion, and why the bull case and the bear case for this market are not opposites — they are the same thesis at different time horizons. The question is not whether bubble-like conditions exist. The question is where you are inside them, and what the monetary hinge looks like when it moves. Read the written version — with the full accounting breakdown, the sourced data, and the card layouts that don't translate to audio — at quietvelocity1.substack.com, the companion Substack to Conviction Bet. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or Amazon Music. Conviction Bet is independent investment commentary. Nothing in this episode is investment advice.

21 May 2026 - 29 min
episode Fluent in Money, Illiterate in Wealth artwork

Fluent in Money, Illiterate in Wealth

In most languages, the word for wealth still carries traces of its origin — wellbeing, capability, the conditions of a good life. In English, that meaning was stripped out somewhere between the Champagne Fairs and the Industrial Revolution. What remained was net worth. The vocabulary change was not neutral. It was a cognitive trap — and almost every personal finance mistake you can make flows directly from it. In this episode: * Why the word "wealth" has already corrupted your financial decision-making — and why Latin, German, and Scandinavian speakers are working from a less broken map than their English-speaking counterparts * Pierre Bourdieu's 1986 framework: economic, cultural, social, and symbolic capital — why the person who understands the conversion rules between them holds a structural advantage over the person who only tracks one column, and what the data on education premiums, referral hiring, and superstar CEO compensation actually shows about how capital moves * The 2020–2025 American monetary cycle as a masterclass in wealth as flow: three phases, three completely different winning asset classes, and why the common variable in every case was not the asset — it was understanding where the credit was going before it arrived * The subprime counter-case: how $19 trillion in household net worth evaporated not because houses changed, but because the flow of credit around them reversed — and what that means for every asset you currently treat as permanent * Four wealth traps that recur across income levels and generations: the signifier fallacy, financial FOMO (57% of Americans have made a financial decision after seeing someone else's lifestyle online), the experience economy, and the relative comparison trap that explains why a country with one of the highest GDP per capita levels among large advanced economies ranked 24th in the 2025 World Happiness Report * The Rockefeller versus Vanderbilt case: why one of the greatest fortunes in American history was gone within two generations while the other is still distributing income to 170 heirs across six — and why the difference had nothing to do with the original amount * The mathematics of freedom: why cutting $10,000 in annual spending has the same effect on financial independence as accumulating $250,000 in capital, and why temporal sovereignty — the capacity to control your own time — may be the only form of wealth that cannot be manufactured, borrowed, or stored Read the written version — with the data, the Bourdieu framework laid out in full, and the card layouts that don't translate to audio — at quietvelocity1.substack.com, the companion Substack to Conviction Bet. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or Amazon Music. Conviction Bet is independent investment commentary. Nothing in this episode is investment advice.

14 May 2026 - 31 min
episode Every Chip, Every Ride artwork

Every Chip, Every Ride

Here's the description with numbers converted: Missiles in the Persian Gulf. Oil at a hundred dollars a barrel. Consumer sentiment near its prior trough. And somehow, the Nasdaq closed the week at an all-time record — carried almost entirely by AI earnings. Two companies reported on the same day. One posted the best quarter in its 35-year history and got sold. The other missed its headline revenue number and rose sharply. Both are asking the same question in the same week: what happens when a toll collector starts driving on its own road? In this episode: * Why Arm's record quarter — $1.49 billion in revenue, 49% operating margins, data center royalties doubling for the 4th consecutive quarter — still produced a reversal after hours, and what the RPO miss actually means for a licensing business whose fastest-growing revenue line doesn't show up in backlog at all * What AGI actually stands for in "Arm AGI CPU" — it is not what you think — and why the chip that generated more than $2 billion in customer demand 6 weeks after announcement may be the product of a $6.5 billion acquisition made 4 months before anyone announced it * The revenue capture math that makes the silicon move significant: Arm's traditional licensing generates roughly $0.10 to $2.00 per chip; a complete data center CPU sells for thousands * Why Arm lost round one of its lawsuit against Qualcomm — and why Qualcomm's separate countersuit, which directly targets Arm's intent to compete in silicon, is the legal risk that actually matters for the long-term thesis * The optionality tension most analysts are not naming clearly: operationally, the AGI CPU is optionality on top of a royalty engine that already works — but at roughly 100x forward earnings, the valuation is not optional at all * Why Uber's 14.4% revenue growth was 9 percentage points lower than it would have been under prior accounting treatment, and why the $2.3 billion in free cash flow in a single quarter is the only number that actually matters * The AV data from the markets where autonomous vehicle competition is most advanced — what it says, why Deutsche Bank and MoffettNathanson read it in opposite directions, and what that disagreement tells you about where the thesis actually stands * The Morgan Stanley 2032 model: the most specific and uncomfortable version of the Uber bear case, stated fairly and answered directly Read the written version — with card breakdowns, segment data, and the sourcing that doesn't translate to audio — at quietvelocity1.substack.com [http://quietvelocity1.substack.com], the companion Substack to Conviction Bet. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or Amazon Music. Conviction Bet is independent investment commentary. Nothing in this episode is investment advice.

8 May 2026 - 30 min
episode Swim to the Far Shore artwork

Swim to the Far Shore

Swim to the Far Shore — Investing Psychology In 2024, the average equity investor trailed the S&P 500 by 848 basis points. Not because they had worse information. Not because they lacked a strategy. Many of them owned the same index funds, read the same research, and knew the same historical playbook. The gap had nothing to do with analysis. It never does. In this episode: * Why Peter Lynch's Magellan Fund — one of the greatest investment records in history — may have produced negative returns for the average investor who held it, and what that tells you about where the real bottleneck actually is * The hardware versus software framework: why stacking better models, frameworks, and research on top of a compromised operating system produces worse decisions, not better ones * What Kahneman and Tversky's Prospect Theory actually means in a portfolio context — and why the rational response to a drawdown requires overriding an asymmetric signal evolution spent tens of thousands of years making very loud * Five historical stress tests of this thesis: Templeton in 1939, Buffett in 2008, Munger through the tortures of hell, Marks sitting on ten point nine billion dollars while the world was ending, and Burry enduring two years of hostile investors before the trade paid * The LTCM counter-case: what two Nobel laureates and the most sophisticated risk models money could buy actually demonstrate about the relationship between intelligence and rationalization * The survivorship bias bear case — why fortitude without a valid thesis is just stubborn bag-holding — and the one practice that separates discipline from self-deception * Five things you can actually do, starting today, that have nothing to do with picking better stocks Read the written version — with data, case breakdowns, and the card layouts that don't translate to audio — at quietvelocity1.substack.com [http://quietvelocity1.substack.com], the companion Substack to Conviction Bet. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or Amazon Music. Conviction Bet is independent investment commentary. Nothing in this episode is investment advice.

5 May 2026 - 27 min
episode The Arms Dealer artwork

The Arms Dealer

The Arms Dealer — Amazon Q1 2026 Amazon just posted the highest operating margin in its history, beat EPS by seventy percent, and watched the stock fall. The market is reading a capex anxiety story. The real story is about a company that spent thirty years building the infrastructure no one else wanted — and is now the single most important arms dealer in the biggest technology capital cycle in history. In this episode: * Why the debate about Amazon's $44 billion quarterly capex is almost entirely the wrong debate — and what the $364 billion contracted backlog actually tells you about where this is going * The chip business hiding inside AWS that almost no analyst prices separately — with over $225 billion in committed orders and a cost advantage that compounds every quarter Nvidia isn't in the room * Why Amazon doesn't need to win the AI model war to be the biggest beneficiary of it — and why Claude, GPT, and Gemini all paying their cloud bill is a better outcome than picking one winner * The physical moat that no technology company built after Amazon would ever choose to build from scratch — one million robots, same-day grocery in 2,300 cities, and an autonomous vehicle fleet accumulating miles in Las Vegas and San Francisco * The single line item on Amazon's balance sheet — unmodeled, unpriced by consensus — that could be worth more than the market cap of most S&P 500 companies before this decade is out * The honest bear case: free cash flow down ninety-five percent, long-term debt nearly doubled, and what would actually have to happen for the thesis to break Read the written version — with data tables, valuation breakdowns, and the card layouts that don't translate to audio — at quietvelocity1.substack.com [http://quietvelocity1.substack.com], the companion Substack to Conviction Bet. New episodes weekly. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or Amazon Music. Conviction Bet is independent investment commentary. Nothing in this episode is investment advice.

1 May 2026 - 26 min
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