Recently, I’ve seen a few influencers aggressively hyping up stocks, with data so outrageous it makes you question reality.
A company with annual revenue of less than 10 billion suddenly, according to these influencers, lands a 45 billion order! And that’s not enough—they add another 5 billion on top!
It gets even crazier: they claim the company needs to build four new factories just to handle these orders. The company's market cap is only about 10 billion, but the order volume supposedly soars to 50 billion?
This kind of math wouldn’t even pass elementary school. When market cap and order size are this mismatched, is this just empty promises or a blatant attempt to scam retail investors?
Think for yourselves—don’t get fooled by these data games.
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Recently, I’ve seen a few influencers aggressively hyping up stocks, with data so outrageous it makes you question reality.
A company with annual revenue of less than 10 billion suddenly, according to these influencers, lands a 45 billion order! And that’s not enough—they add another 5 billion on top!
It gets even crazier: they claim the company needs to build four new factories just to handle these orders. The company's market cap is only about 10 billion, but the order volume supposedly soars to 50 billion?
This kind of math wouldn’t even pass elementary school. When market cap and order size are this mismatched, is this just empty promises or a blatant attempt to scam retail investors?
Think for yourselves—don’t get fooled by these data games.