To: TobagoJack who wrote (217220 ) 11/19/2025 10:00:19 PM From: carranza2 Respond to of 220043 Lololololissimo! Maximum lolz! Over longer horizons (e.g., 10+ years), certainly longer than the one year span commencing in 10.24, NVDA has vastly, hugely, massively, indisputably outperformed gold, with cumulative returns exceeding 10,000% since 2015 compared to gold’s circa 150%. Letting your son sell NVDA is tantamount to child abuse. Well, maybe not that bad, but certainly makes one wonder re: the kind of Kool-Aid being imbibed in HK. The NVDA sweet spot is not even here yet. Hope you exit that silly short. Oh, well, stuff happens when distorting political, ideological, and cultural goggles are allowed to govern investment decisions. If one year is the measure, why not one day, or one week? Don’t you claim that your vision goes into the 2040s? Stunningly ridiculous. Let’s take USD out of the picture, and use CHF as the measuring stick for NVDA and gold for the past 10 years. This is the result per Grok4. Perhaps there is some crazy currency out there (the Tongan this or the Zimbabwe whatever) that might show gold outpacing NVDA in a ten year span, but I’m not looking for it. Over the last 10 years (from November 19, 2015, to November 19, 2025), Nvidia (NVDA) stock has dramatically outperformed gold when measured in Swiss francs (CHF), based on price appreciation alone (excluding NVDA’s modest dividends). This period captures a bull market in tech driven by AI, gaming, and data centers, contrasted with gold’s role as a more conservative inflation hedge amid economic shifts, geopolitical events, and currency fluctuations. Key Performance Metrics in CHF • NVDA Total Return: Approximately +18,951% • Starting price (adjusted for splits): ~0.79 CHF per share • Ending price: ~150.23 CHF per share • Gold Total Return: Approximately +201% • Starting price: ~1,096.63 CHF per ounce • Ending price: ~3,305.06 CHF per ounce NVDA’s explosive growth in CHF terms reflects its USD-denominated gains amplified by a weakening CHF against the USD over parts of the decade (though forex volatility cut both ways). Gold’s more modest advance was supported by central bank demand, inflation concerns, and safe-haven flows, but it lagged far behind NVDA’s tech-fueled rally. On an annualized basis, this equates to roughly +52% per year for NVDA versus +12% for gold, highlighting NVDA as the superior investment for growth-oriented portfolios in this timeframe. You just don’t quit, do you, Jay?