In this issue:
- AI scheduled task example
- A rare, honest trading post-mortem
- Sorting through the bluster of the SpaceX IPO controversy
Friends,
⏰Claude can now run scheduled tasks | 3 min read
Khe explains how laypeople can easily schedule cron jobs. Put your “daemons” to work.
I used the scheduler to create a morning brief from my emails. For the past several years, I’ve been using autofilters in gmail that star (⭐) and apply a “Newsletter Subscriptions” label to senders I sub to.
At 6:30 am, I have a new gmail draft (Claude is not authorized to send emails so it’s stored as a draft):

By the way, anyone else notice that AI means we work even more? I think there’s something to that and it’s underdiscussed relative to the clickbait extremes of “post scarcity” utopia and a Skynet uprising.
The “something to that” is a mix of 3 things:
- fomo
- being busy “paying off our intention debt”
- something we can’t see yet
I suspect both #1 and #2 are temporary and characteristic of a transition period on a compressed timeline.
#3 is a force that is probably positive and appears once our intention debts are paid. Which means the place to look for answers regarding #3 is young people embracing AI (although not in a Cluely, hollow your humanity, spirit). Young people have less intention debt, less to “renovate”, less to backfill, and a smaller corpus to consolidate. More of their use should be moving forward.
I like watching people like Nat use AI because they are plugged into the right layer of abstraction. The layer of recursion where every action is coupled with instructions to learn from the action so next time the action is improved. Infinite loop until you find a limit of perfection that would satisfy Zeno himself.
[My mathematical metaphor would be doing a Newton search, a common technique for estimating implied volatility, except the ε tolerance term isn’t predefined but shrinks as the calculation itself gets more efficient.]
In contrast, when I use AI, I feel like I’m living during the debut of the automobile and thinking, “Wow, I could drive that to the granary to buy food for my horse.”

I’m doing old things faster which is now par, but if you stop there it’s a failure of imagination.
Anyway, as I keep an eye on Nat’s quest, I’m curious how he breaks through this plateau.

Money Angle
📺”Ben Lost Everything”| 15 min
A few issues ago, I pointed out Ben’s YT channel, which is equal parts educational and hilarious. My wife is even working through the catalog. She and I were both very impressed with his most recent video, which continues to teach despite a brutal context. Ben blew his account up.
The post-mortem, reflection and honesty on display is rare. Given what I’ve seen from him, I expect him to bounce back stronger and wish him the best.
The follow-up to building an option chain in your head
🔗A Deeper Understanding of Vertical Spreads | 12 min read

If you are interested in prediction markets, that post’s discussion of binary probability is fertile soil for cross-pollination. Enjoy.
Money Angle for Masochists
From at least make the conspiracy make sense, we acknowledge an enduring difficulty between information and infohazards. In that issue, I called out Zerohedge for a disenguous conclusion based on NVDA earnings. But chastizing Zerohedge might as well be a pro wrestling ref admonishing the Macho Man for grabbing a folding chair.
Even as you move up the chain of credibility, it can be hard to distinguish degrees of expertise. Hell, even the idea of expertise itself has been in retreat. Freddie deBoer’s recent post Overlearning ($) collects several examples where a justifiable backlash to putting too much faith in expertise has led to its own form of blindness:
Each of these examples of overlearning began with a real grievance and a defensible insight, and each got driven by the normal human hunger for clean conclusions one or two steps further than the evidence actually supported. The result was backlashes to backlashes. The trouble with overlearning is that it inoculates people against correction. Because the original observation was right, any challenge feels like an assault on hard-won clarity, like a regressive attack. The overlearner has usually endured some version of being fooled (by the audiophile YouTuber, by the diet industry, by institutions that failed them) and so they’re constitutionally committed to not being fooled again. That commitment becomes its own kind of blindness, arguably more intractable than ordinary ignorance because it comes armored with a legitimate grievance.
Today I have an example of famous professional investors touting viral views that seem to be more smoke than fire.
I’m not an expert on the topic at hand, but an important skill in a complex world is being able to identify who is.
Let’s start with the scene.
In February, Nasdaq opened a public consultation on changes to its Nasdaq 100 methodology. The subtext being SpaceX’s plan to IPO at a $1.75 trillion valuation. There were two proposed rule changes.
- a “fast entry” provision letting large new listings join the index after just 15 trading days
- a multiplier that inflates how low-float stocks are weighted
This struck observers as suspiciously tailored to the occasion.
Fund manager George Noble called it “the most SHAMELESS structural manipulation of a major index I’ve ever seen.” Michael Burry called Noble’s piece a “Must Read” and sent it to his >1 million followers. The posts went viral, sparking the latest outrage: Musk bends yet another institution to serve his interests, and your 401(k) is the exit liquidity.
I don’t know who Noble is, but apparently, he’s a famous investor with all the credentials and job history.
My perception of Burry is that he has that autistic cocktail of persistence, intelligence, and disinterest in norms that enabled him to make a fortune betting the Don’t Pass (and got lucky enough on the timing which famously bedeviled a wider pool of investors who saw the same thing but were early).
Since the GFC, it’s been a bear market for bear outlooks, and from what I can tell with some googling Burry has done just fine since securing his bag over 15 years ago, so I’m not throwing tomatoes here. In fact, that he is such a smart guy devoted to the craft of investing, but has not performed notably one way or the other since his big score, illuminates how difficult alpha is.
But the bar to say stuff is simply lower. Their outrage is the kind of message built to travel, while expertise and nuance are boring and, in this case, going to throw cold water on the outrage festival.
I happen to know that when it comes to anything related to the details of index constitution, from arbitrage to legal frameworks, you find out what the account I call the “sensei” has to say.
Sensei gave a masterclass on this topic on my X timeline, then decided to resurrect his sleeping substack to publish a full rebuttal to Noble and Burry.
This Is Not The NASDAQ 100 Consultation Fight You Are Looking For | 20 min read
This is sensei. His pushbacks in descending levels of importance from my point of view.
- Fast entry isn’t new. MSCI, FTSE, TOPIX, and most major global indices already have fast entry rules for large IPOs, some even faster than 15 days. It’s not a Nasdaq invention.
- The “up to a year” claim is wrong. Nasdaq 100 already allows entry with as little as 16 weeks of trading history under existing rules.
- The 5x multiplier actually lowers the index weight. Under current rules, a 10%-float stock is weighted at its full market cap. Under the proposed rule, it’s weighted at 50% of market cap. The math runs the opposite direction from what Noble and Keubiko claimed.
- Keubiko’s lockup-expiry conspiracy doesn’t calendar out. He argued Musk engineered the IPO so a 180-day lockup would expire at the December reconstitution. For that to work, the IPO would need to be in late May, not the mid-June date Keubiko himself cited.
- Noble misread S&P 500 methodology. He wrote that S&P weights a 5%-float stock at 5% of market cap. A stock with less than 10% float is simply ineligible for the S&P 500 entirely.
- They ignored the Russell consultation. Russell US Indices was running an identical consultation on fast entry and float rules at the exact same time. None of the three mentioned it.
- They complained after the window closed. Both Noble and Keubiko published their pieces weeks after the consultation period had already ended on February 27th, too late to actually influence the outcome.
Bau acknowledges the legitimate underlying grievance that Nasdaq uses total market cap weighting at all rather than free-float weighting like the S&P 500. But that objection predates this whole consultation.
You could take a consequentialist position that the ricochet effect of these folks’ rage-laundering brings a warranted, overdue wider awareness of Nasdaq’s weighting bugs, but I’m old-fashioned and think intentions do matter even if they sometimes backfire in effect. Let’s be clear, the intention here was to rile you up with a villain story, not emphasize Nasdaq or apparently many index providers’ methodologies.
I’m not one to strain to make an apology for Elon. But if you call fouls where there aren’t any, you lose credibility.
Baus exist. There’s credibility out there. But it often sounds like a whisper because it gets drowned out by what’s built to travel. Nuance is heavy and takes up lots of space. It’s the first thing to get thrown overboard when you want to get somewhere fast.
This Week In The Options Trench
Erik and I talk options earnings:
Stay groovy
☮️
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