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فسيلة - transplant
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Transcript
00:00Oh my God!
00:30performance?
00:31Who is it, Fand?
00:32Global stock market performance
00:33But no one can rely on this.
00:35Just like that?
00:36What on earth are the masters doing?
00:37They put their money in the stock market
00:39Hmm.
00:40You really did turn out to be a fraud, just like they say.
00:42Fasha.
00:42Wait with the caller you love
00:45tattoo
00:46Hazem, my love, I missed you so much
00:47That's the voice of my father, may God have mercy on him.
00:53Dad, I'll put my money in Qbal, not Nvidia, nor the Sousse Cini.
00:56Oh, so you're not going to ask me about the inheritance?
00:59Or the secret I've been hiding from you all your life?
01:02Is this the secret that relates to Zoom in on the closet?
01:04What kind of burning is this?
01:05I'm not ready for these questions at all.
01:08What do you say to him, my master?
01:10I'll get it straight to him.
01:12Look there
01:20My father, may God have mercy on him
01:22Thank God for my father's safety
01:24Does the federal government's policy mean profit or not?
01:25My love, I'm not a Morgan.
01:29The esterate
01:34Welcome to a new episode of the show "Al-Nadahih"
01:38Remove the beautiful scenes, you are your relationship from your hands
01:58Investors who own the largest quantity of shares in these companies
02:01There are always three stocks that haven't changed.
02:03BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Streak
02:05Names that are established and always present on the list of the largest shareholders
02:09Even my dear stocks breathe.
02:11It usually means they own a day
02:12Microsoft and Apple together
02:14Tadaib invested in Disney and Netflix
02:15Pfizer and Johnson on Johnson
02:17These countries support the Premier League every
02:18The winner receives them as a reward.
02:19Their reach extends into every economic sector imaginable.
02:22Technology, real estate, energy, everything and anything
02:24This phenomenon will lead to a shortage of economists, politicians, and the general public.
02:28Dr. Mahmoud Salah Khbeil Al-Mouriyat
02:30If those three countries heard, they'd turn into lizards.
02:32And the proof is my dear idea that anyone who owns a certain number of shares
02:35In a particular company listed on the stock exchange
02:37He has, along with his shares, the right to vote on decisions.
02:40Those who discuss this in the university of public companies
02:43This person has the right to refuse certain things.
02:46And it is due to certain needs
02:47And here's the question
02:48How do these three companies own all the shares?
02:51What did these companies do to become so rich?
02:54She owns a large share of great and important companies.
02:57Like Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, and all those companies
03:00What did they do to become the subject of conspiracy theories?
03:03Those who will spread around them
03:04Some also say that these are just a facade
03:06Countries are a destination for the council and behind them
03:08Living angels of the global economy
03:10Countries ruled by tyrants who manipulate the game from the beginning and make the decisions
03:13What will these companies do and what won't they do?
03:15Come on, my dear, like most conspiracy glasses
03:17This statement contains a grain of truth, along with a great deal of content creation and embellishment.
03:21The truth, my dear, is that the habit will be much more complicated than we imagine.
03:26Come, my dear, let me take you to the scenario, imagine it
03:29Come in, my dear, if you have a million dollars
03:31Yes, may God bless you, and not only that
03:33Countries with a million dollars more than your share
03:35I, Abu Ahmad, told you, may God bless you.
03:37Abu Ahmed, I want to tell you that I'm continuing to insult you, I'm tired of insults.
03:39Now, my dear, you are an investor
03:41And you, instead of Markan, my money will go to speculating in the stock market, my dear.
03:44I know you're congratulating yourself because you have no experience.
03:46You don't have any theory or strategy; you're finished in the stock market.
03:48They'll all tell you
03:50Trading experts and those YouTube ads
03:52Achieving significant gains over a long and continuous period
03:55Something like the stock market is very easy.
03:57The first rule you need to adhere to is that you put all your eggs in her.
04:00In one basket
04:01It's not advisable if you're not an expert to spend all your money buying shares in a specific company.
04:05Hey, my friend, you put all your money into Tesla.
04:07In Tesla, Elon Musk is the owner of the American president.
04:09The stock is on the rise
04:11Then, after a while, you wake up in the morning, Moment.
04:13No way! Mask isn't following the US president.
04:15The problem is that the American president, and he is voila
04:17Not an obstacle for Elon Musk
04:18So you'll find your money falling apart and your assets disappearing.
04:20Triste Tesla Elon Musk, the owner of the American president
04:23Even if you're violent, your money will run away.
04:25Also, my dear, like the vue, you can't put all your money in
04:27It's all in one specific company; you also can't put your money into a specific sector or even sectors that are close to each other.
04:33If a chair were to be found here, you would hear about those around him.
04:35Imagine you put all your money into the financial system in 2007
04:39In 2008, people were happy to get their money, and you were a witness.
04:42The point here is that you shouldn't put your money into things that do the same activity or activities that are very similar.
04:46For example, you put your money in a travel agency and the other half in a Tehran company.
04:49Because if something happens to the tourism sector, the market will shut down, and vice versa. Life depends on diversifying investments, choosing stocks wisely, and building an investment portfolio that can generate returns.
04:57This is science, my friend. It's science that requires study and research, and it also requires a huge amount of money that allows you to distribute your investments among more than one thing.
05:05I feel that if the field is affected, you have other investments, and this is where what is called an investment fund comes in.
05:11This is a very important thing. The idea is simply that the company specializes in opening a specific fund, and investors put their money into this fund.
05:18This company hires a group of experts to manage these funds on their behalf in exchange for annual fees.
05:24This is called Manage Fund Active Investment
05:26Each fund will specialize in a specific type of investment: real estate, bonds, and so on.
05:32The basic idea is that the large amount of money being put into the fund will allow for diversity and complex strategies.
05:37This kind of diversity is impossible; every investor who put in their money can do it alone.
05:41This is particularly evident in the case of a fund that is specifically allocated to investing in stocks.
05:45Because when an investor puts their money into the fund, they are not necessarily owning shares in one or two companies.
05:49He doesn't retain a percentage of the fund as a whole.
05:52The fund, because it contains hundreds and thousands of investors, all of whom were amazed by its money and put it inside.
05:57Here, the fund can buy shares in hundreds of companies.
05:59When the investor feels safer, then no one in the countries will profit.
06:02So, if you're an investor and you put in one hundred dollars, and this fund invests in one hundred companies
06:06You have a dollar in every company
06:08The bond industry that invested in the American stock exchange is over a hundred years old.
06:12The industry began approximately tens of thousands of years ago, and most of it consisted of closed warehouses.
06:16The company says, "We're going to create a new fund, everyone."
06:19This trip, guys, needs one hundred million dollars.
06:21And they went back to collecting fees from investors.
06:22Come on, everyone, one hundred together, three
06:24You get ten, you get five
06:26We collect the fees, and as soon as we reach one hundred million dollars, we collect them.
06:29We say thank you to the people, the issue is complete, go ahead and invest in your business.
06:32What happened in the fifties
06:33In the city of Busto, Besdar and Basdar, there are companies that rely on open trusts.
06:38We're not committed to a specific amount; once we reach it, we'll download it.
06:41No, we have flexibility based on the amount of money coming in or going out.
06:44This, my dear, opens up opportunities for people who don't necessarily have millions.
06:48Ordinary people can now access and benefit from the services of professional managers with investment experience.
06:54These companies continued to grow and compete in attracting investors.
06:57Until 1974
06:59When the American economist and Nobel laureate in economics, Paul Samuelson, learned
07:03He writes an article evaluating the performance of this fund.
07:06And he assures the people who doubted him, "I'll go out, my dear, and come back complete."
07:09Why are people suspicious of Mohamed Sandiq?
07:11I'll go out and come back complete
07:13Paul will say that over the years
07:15Performance of investment fund managers in the stock exchange
07:18And the expert people who understand the teachers who studied the job
07:22People run after them and say, "Please, Mr. Professor!"
07:25Take my money with you, expert.
07:27You see, my dear Khawabeer
07:29What? I praise the one who isolates me, a million dollars, in obedience to the one who wrote two lines in the previous single day.
07:32What? My dear, wait a little while.
07:34Their basin is for individuals again and you will gain support
07:36A million dollars? What are you talking about, son? That's just nonsense to me.
07:38You're saying the box will be worth 100?
07:40The man will show us with irrefutable evidence that these experts' performance is not the best.
07:44Especially in the long term, these expert people, if you compare their level to the level of the average market
07:49In the regular market, you'll find they're not very skilled.
07:51What does this mean, Abu Hamad? Does it mean these investors are failures?
07:53What does this mean, Abu Hamad?
07:54In the stock market, my friend, we can compare the annual performance of any company's stock by comparing its price at the beginning of the year and at the end of the year.
08:00If the share price at the beginning of the year is $100 and at the end it is $130
08:03So this stock increased by 30%
08:05If the stock stays at $96, then our stock has decreased by 4%.
08:08So what should we do if we want to assess the size of the entire stock market?
08:11The performance of the entire stock market is not just that of one or two companies.
08:13Here we look at the indicators
08:15Indexes
08:16This is a way to evaluate all these companies together.
08:20A method of summarization
08:22If you want to judge the performance of the Egyptian stock exchange, for example
08:24We can look at the EGX100 index.
08:26This measures the performance of the top 100 companies listed on the Egyptian Stock Exchange.
08:30So, CIP, El Sewedy, and Talaat Moustafa, may God increase their numbers.
08:35If you want to measure the London Stock Exchange, you'll find 1900
08:38This is an index of the 100 largest companies on the London Stock Exchange.
08:41And so and so and so on
08:42In the US stock market, the most important index is the S&P 500.
08:45This measures the performance of 500 of the largest publicly traded companies in America.
08:48For example, a fund that invests in the American stock market must do so every year
08:51So that he knows whether he did a good job or a bad one.
08:53He compares himself to the SP500
08:55Compared to the determination of the success or failure of this fund
09:00I lost 7% in one year, and an investment fund that manages your money in the stock market also lost money in the same year.
09:04I lost 3%
09:05So this is a respectable box, most likely the SP500.
09:08This is smart, this is a smart box
09:10Despite the circumstances, he is destined to lose less
09:12But that's only if the S&P 500 index is up 15%.
09:15The manager fund is making a 10% profit.
09:17Here, the box is not working well.
09:19Because I could have put my money into the regular basic index and earned more.
09:23Of course, the ideal fund is one that remains profitable, outperforming the entire market as it rises.
09:28When a fund achieves a higher profit than the SP500, it has truly justified its money and its work has been profitable.
09:32Your work is profitable; I wouldn't have known how to do it without it.
09:34According to De Paul Samuelson
09:36If you look at each box, you'll find it's one year high and one year low.
09:39But in the long run, you'll find the SP500 outperforming them on the Longran scale.
09:44In other words, if you invest your money in the market for the long term, you will profit, according to experts.
09:50Oh my God, Abu Hamad, this is serious talk!
09:52This statement is made on my own responsibility, or rather, on the responsibility of the Nobel Prize-winning economist.
09:55Here Paul Samuelson proposes the idea of ​​"Ya Goh Al-Namiya" (a term referring to a specific type of development).
09:58An idea that will change our perception of investing in the American stock market for our children.
10:01The man will simply admit that he is thinking outside the box.
10:04The idea was promising in the long term.
10:06This year's performance is no better than the S500 index.
10:09We are creating a fund whose primary goal is not to outperform the S&P 500 index.
10:13But the goal is to mimic this indicator exactly.
10:16This means we'll create a fund and collect money for it from the initial bad debts of companies.
10:20Until your frustrated friend who's entered the stock market with a migrating penis, he tries
10:22Open box, let's collect all this money
10:25Instead of giving it to experts, portfolio managers, experienced people, and intelligent people
10:30The people who tell us what to sell and what to buy are the ones who are being creative.
10:33No, we're going to do something called Qasif Fan.
10:36An inactive fund without managers or experts will become a tail for the index.
10:40The SP500 tells us right, we go right; it tells us left, we go left.
10:44Dear Aziz, the theory of intestinal stasis—I've kept quiet about it, I call it the intestinal box.
10:47The fund is moving or the index
10:48We'll look at the index and buy everything on it.
10:51We will acquire shares in 500 companies at a time.
10:53This way, investors will be able to achieve genuine diversification.
10:56Low risk and reasonable profits
10:58This is because their money is now distributed among very large companies.
11:01Companies spread across all sectors
11:03Of course, my dear, the topic is like most topics, unfortunately.
11:06Unfortunately, it's not a simple insult, my dear.
11:07It's regret, and also bad luck.
11:09Because I work with accredited sources, the topics aren't simple, so I came up with the simplest one.
11:12But it's not that simple, so I don't need it anymore.
11:14So you want me, but you don't need me.
11:15She won't die without me, but she'll enjoy it.
11:17So, it's supposed to be right?
11:18This, my dear
11:20The index does not represent all 500 companies equally.
11:23And that's to accurately reflect the market situation.
11:25It gives me more weight for large companies.
11:27And a lower weight for companies in the Deal in the 500 range
11:30The index recalculates periodically.
11:32If the company grows, its influence increases.
11:34If the company gets smaller, its influence decreases.
11:36Companies that decline in the rankings fall
11:38And the oppressed who ignited themselves are happy with the excellent and they play
11:40The situation is that we are in this new box
11:42We look at the indicator and do exactly the same thing.
11:44We will distribute the fund's money using a method that competes with the index.
11:47Without any increase or decrease percentage
11:49With the halo, no, not all of it is with the halo.
11:50If they remove a company from the index, we'll sell Sona.
11:52They added a company that we'll buy immediately.
11:54Complete collapse of the index
11:55Two illusions from the tidbite, we will ask a question
11:57This indicator is normal
11:58In companies that breathe some
11:59We're going to play blindly.
12:00Who should we put our money with?
12:01Here, my dear, the matter is easy.
12:02We're not going to do what they did this year.
12:04And we prefer the best of them
12:05Will Google's Android remain?
12:07Not Apple iOS
12:08No, that's not true.
12:09We'll look at the indicator.
12:10Seferis all
12:11Obro, Lift, and Wesefel are all with us.
12:14We'll see how much weight the index gives to each company.
12:17We even buy shares in competing companies.
12:19The same people as the box
12:20As Di said, my dear, the first thing he'll read is
12:22Investor John Bogle-Hagery in his office
12:24Bogle is in his office and he says, "I'm right, I'm right."
12:27This professional investor
12:28He had believed in this idea for more than twenty years.
12:30And whoever Bogle does next is the one who will lay the foundation stone.
12:33In the corporate empire of smoothness
12:34Now focus, my dear.
12:36Do you know what Faraj does for a living?
12:37To make your swart
12:39Bogle was a lifelong high-achieving student
12:41He entered Princeton University on a scholarship and specialized in rape.
12:44He preferred to work on his graduation research for a year and a half.
12:46By the way, Sandal Al-Sammar
12:48And its role in the stock exchange
12:49His research will lead him to the same idea as Paul.
12:51The one you're talking about
12:52O brothers
12:53O brothers
12:54The harmful performance of the sandal
12:56Not better than the index's long-term performance
12:59They are full of empty boasting.
13:01Follow the indicator
13:02Bogle graduated in 1851 with honors.
13:05He was immediately appointed to the Wellington Fund Company
13:07One of the most successful sandal management companies in Boster
13:11It is considered the center of the sandal industry in America.
13:13Even to this day
13:15Bogle will start to rise through the ranks until he becomes chairman of the board.
13:18But over time he will start to feel pressure
13:20The problem, my dear, is that Bogle was a bit of a conservative man.
13:22Governorate investments
13:23We don't want you to earn too much
13:24So that we don't lose all our money
13:25The problem, my friend, is the board of directors.
13:27They didn't find fault with this statement.
13:28He sees people as a source of profit.
13:29He also wants to win
13:30Norsk Norfen ya Bey
13:31The clever response
13:32Yes, my dear, enough of good and evil.
13:34My dear, disagreements begin to escalate.
13:35Until Wellington fired him after more than 23 years of service.
13:39Here, Bogle will decide that he will start over.
13:41And this time he will have a greater determination to follow his own mindset.
13:44He will start convincing some of those who were under Wellington's management this year
13:46If they separate and come to work under his new company's management
13:49Just like the barber did, he should open a shop next to the barbershop.
13:51And he begins to answer our customers
13:52The same craftsman said, "The chair is the only thing that's changed."
13:54And with your money, you won't get away with it, you greedy person.
13:56And when he reads the stories of Paul Samson about her
13:58His anger within himself is very strong, and he will find that this is a sign and an indication.
14:01If he thinks correctly
14:02You don't know, my dear, that Wellington Company
14:04Timon calls him the Duke of Wellington
14:06General Arthur Wellesley
14:07The man who defeated Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo
14:10Bogle will hear about a story and won't decide to create it himself.
14:12He tells you, "I'm going to name my company the same way."
14:14His life lessons are based on print indicators, so he names his new company Vanguard.
14:17Named after the Admiral Nerson ship
14:19He is one of the senior commanders of the British Navy
14:21During the same historical period in which the Duke of Wellington
14:24Follower Index, December 31, 1975
14:27Vanguard closes on the first passive index fund in US history
14:31In American history
14:33Mrs. Arsa Ahmed says, "Do Khmal"
14:35This, my dear, is a fund without managers.
14:38And he's working, Kwas, look, Ahmed
14:40A personalityless fund is tracking the 550 index.
14:43Without any argument or discussion
14:45And in order to convince investors of the fund's concept
14:47Investors are falling into the same trap you were in in the first episode.
14:50Imagine you have a million dollars and want to invest them.
14:52But of course, your investors had a million dollars.
14:54They need to imagine them
14:55Imagine yourself as this investor, having put in one million dollars in 1955.
14:59And they will be included in the US stock market index.
15:01Six of them are 30 years old
15:03I found their friends in 1955
15:05The year he was trying to convince them of the idea
15:07Look at how your money looks after 30 years
15:09The one who put his money in the Manajid fund is positive
15:11The one who has the money to reach an expert
15:13He will have with him approximately $16 million.
15:15$16 million
15:16God is greater, O Muhammad
15:17That's an excellent number.
15:18But come on, my dear, let's see the idiot
15:20What did the follower do?
15:21The man who left his money in an idle box
15:24Wasab himself raised the index
15:26You'll find he's made approximately $25 million
15:28The million dollars was returned to him on the 25th
15:31That means that almost every year, a million people will receive another million.
15:34That's it, my dear Active Fund Management
15:37Which is managed by experts
15:39You have to pay them money
15:40The experts are not doing their jobs, they are a disaster.
15:42There are annual fees for lab technicians to hire them.
15:44But in the idle box there are almost no fees
15:46She just copied.
15:47This is because they don't have the same number of employees.
15:49And there are no experts we can appoint
15:50Bogle turned to investors
15:52He presented the advantages of investing in an passive fund.
15:55He was collecting, my love, from 50
15:57A million-dollar house
15:58That's right, but the fund should start with them; maybe God will bless it.
16:00But after this, we won't see anything from the wrap.
16:02In Plozention, going and coming
16:04He barely managed to raise $11 million.
16:06The amount isn't even enough for him to build his strategy in the first place.
16:08To the point that those around him were subtracted
16:10He's the one who's going to return this money to the investors.
16:12Herein lies a clear reason for failure.
16:14Because the difference between the two methods, whether it's active investment
16:16Or passive or active
16:18This difference has been evident over a very long period of time.
16:20While many people invest their money in the stock market
16:22Then she dreamed of a swift conflict
16:24The strike that brings in money, but I'm still waiting.
16:26Thirty years and I see what I've gained
16:28What did I lose? What am I supposed to do with the money then?
16:30Be careful of something else, my dear, that is what is being comforted by fear.
16:32Declaration of a secret war
16:34On the experts in business
16:36The second model, the man is being treated
16:38Battle of Pishon Haram
16:40On every manager
16:42Different boxes in one
16:44He stopped and said to them, "You guys..."
16:46What are you? Of course, my dear.
16:48The Sandig Mask Titch
16:50And they preferred to boast about him
16:52The man became a subject of ridicule and mockery.
16:54So much so that they called his box "The Bogle"
16:56I mean, the stupid idea of ​​the boogeyman
16:58What's the news about investment? Think about it simply like that?
17:00You're a sick man, Maryam, go to a doctor.
17:02If you have a difficult load, go to a medium loader.
17:04So, if you invest your money
17:06So, Tom, are you still going to me?
17:08He alone promises you that he is in the best of circumstances
17:10It will give you the market average.
17:12No, you have to go to someone who's threatening you.
17:14The highest possible return remained
17:16The issue has reached the point where companies are distributing leaflets
17:18In the streets of Wall Street, it is said
17:20Prevent it from using index funds.
17:22They considered the passive investment approach
17:24Anti-capitalist need
17:26What is capital?
17:28The new world order that prevails
17:30The one who triumphed over the Soviet Union
17:32The system that encourages competition
17:34Achieving the greatest gains and experts
17:36Those who understand, those who have studied, those who focus
17:38They choose stocks carefully.
17:40They deserve your money more, so now we're going to bleed you dry.
17:42The one who plays the game of "Haftoha" and high pressure
17:44And you go and sign on Abdel-Aali's behalf so that he guarantees you a point.
17:46In the match, don't try to mediate, it's not in line with your thinking.
17:48Average thinking, elevate the topic, don't stop.
17:50Up to this point, these countries were also considered a support.
17:52Indicators promoting communism became apparent when
17:54You go and buy all the competitors without differentiating between them
17:56By the way, Karl Marx also wrote, but you are sure to be
17:58More dangerous to the American capitalist system
18:00From the political office of the Al-Hazm Al-Suyu’ Al-Subayti
18:02But Mr. Boogie decided to use his head.
18:04And it starts with the next arrow
18:06And what's wrong with you, Aziz, if we're in the victorious seventies?
18:08The worst American money crawls on its belly
18:10We are in our worst state; we are coming out of a big Kasab.
18:1273 and the province, two years
18:14Oil prices are skyrocketing.
18:16My dear American consumer, it's not chaos.
18:18This collapse had many causes
18:20For example, the announcement of the decoupling of the dollar from gold.
18:22And as I told you, the 1979 war was only two years ago.
18:24The crisis of high oil prices
18:26She was still working
18:28The S&P 500 index was your hand and the ground
18:30What happened, my dear, is that after a while...
18:32But the world has calmed down like this, and the investors
18:34They started to fear and buy their share again
18:36And the American economy begins to recover
18:38Then you will find the indicator after your hand was on it and the ground
18:40He began to feel weak and his stomach was thriving.
18:42This recovery quickly became apparent on the index.
18:44After the recession of the seventies, in the ten years that followed
18:46And up to the eighties, the S&P index
18:48In Vandelt, he looked like a fool
18:50Gains exceeding 240%
18:52Ten years of gains
18:54Here are the people who invested with John Bogle Kizim and made good profits
18:56Sweet profits, unexpected gains
18:58These ten years of gains led to Vanguard
19:00And her box is an important name in the market.
19:02And he started to make her grow up to be Sindhi.
19:04With different support strategies to suit
19:06Each investor needs some kind of support
19:08Sindhi was a traditionalist, Haim, by idea
19:10Yes, there are experts who take excerpts
19:12And they're buying? Why did Abu Hamid do that? Why didn't he just keep walking?
19:14With this longitudinal indicator, because, my dear, the base
19:16And the box of trouble that I told you about at the beginning
19:18If you don't put all your eggs in one basket
19:20Including those outside, if you don't put all your eggs in one basket
19:22He doesn't want to ruin NA simp
19:24The Sindiya man disappeared
19:26After the second box
19:28It continued to serve a specific type of investor.
19:30Like, for example, Sindiya Taqa'am
19:32But most of the money is taken
19:34From my original appeals, Bujal
19:36Low-risk, low-intensity investment
19:38Long-term perspective
19:40We all have confidence in the future of abbreviation.
19:42Dear, she started and under her control a fund containing about one and a half billion dollars
19:47So that by 1991 they would have $77 billion under their control.
19:52The money flowing into the S&P fund is increasing day by day.
19:55This means that the percentage of its ownership in large companies has also started to increase day by day.
20:00Vanguard shares increase everywhere it invests.
20:02My dear, I promise her that when Namouzek starts to succeed like this and people see billions
20:06Then the competitors start saying "ta ta ta" to you.
20:07No toy bike, he understands, we're lighter, Fahd is here now.
20:09People began to acknowledge his genius and they also started to create an index fund.
20:13Until 1993, a major shift occurred.
20:16He enters the competition to play the second of the three.
20:18One of the oldest financial institutions in America
20:20Which dates back to 1792
20:23The competitor will establish his advantage
20:25When he accepted the important idea of ​​1993 with trepidation, he himself had rejected it.
20:29Oh, Ahmed, this idea is the last one left for you.
20:30The precious investment is needed for survival.
20:32This is the first thing he teaches you through dramatic truth.
20:35Early morning in 1992
20:38Bogle received a man named Nithan of Egypt
20:40He is one of the top officials at the American Stock Exchange
20:42This guy presented him with a normal idea
20:44This will increase people's interest in her investing in the stock market.
20:47Oh my God, we're shaking up ordinary people!
20:49She's excited to join us in this game.
20:50What do you think about us providing these ordinary investors?
20:53An easy and simple way for them to invest it
20:56This year, the indicators show that time and effort have been invested.
20:58And the fees are possible
21:00Bogle will say to him, "My love."
21:01That's exactly what we're doing at Vanguard.
21:03This is my job, this is how I make a living
21:04The man will tell him it's not enough
21:05Because an investor wants to buy something in the Vanguard fund
21:09He needs to go to the company and meet so-and-so, and there's still time.
21:12He meets Madam So-and-so and takes another wife and knows
21:14If you want to think outside the box, you still have a long way to go, paperwork, and stamps to do.
21:19Okay, Bogle, why don't you take the index fund itself?
21:22He personally puts it on the stock exchange.
21:24That means you take a passive index fund, just like Vanguard's.
21:26And people try to buy and sell them.
21:29Without you having to count on her at all
21:30Meaning, when he spoke to the broker
21:32Instead of saying, "Buy me this stock and buy me that stock"
21:34I won't buy the stock.
21:36Vanguard's box
21:37I don't want to go to Vanguard myself anymore.
21:39And do the order
21:40Why would it help me after all this delay, especially since the food just left my door?
21:42He's coming to you right now
21:43Want to join us? We don't want to go to a branch.
21:45Buy shares in our fund
21:47If you want to leave us, you'll go sell your friends.
21:49So here we have an exchange-traded fund (ETF).
21:51ETF
21:52exchange traded fund
21:54The truth, my dear, is that Bogle, instead of listening to this,
21:57He says, "Wow, that's a brilliant idea!"
21:58Bojal heard this and was absolutely amazed
22:00You'll be collecting it penny by penny
22:02That's going to make people keep looking at their wallets.
22:05Please take a look at what this is
22:06It came out like a box
22:07What's this? The box has been lowered
22:08Then she starts to get nervous
22:09Hey world, maybe you can sell
22:10And that's just like I told you, Beit
22:11long-term investment
22:13You're going to encourage investors to revert to their bad habits.
22:15The world remains and disappears
22:16And as for the rest, my dear, theorizing is the easiest thing in the world.
22:18Words from our place remain easy
22:19Those on land are swimmers
22:20But when you stay in the heart of the market
22:22And I see shares of companies that are rising
22:24And he contributed by shaving and going up
22:25At that point, people forget the rules of investment and the basket of options.
22:28He tells you, "What's this? I keep going up and counting like this."
22:30And look how high this stock has risen
22:31Everyone is withdrawing their money from the depository.
22:33He goes and bets on the stocks that will rise
22:35During a downturn, they withdraw their money even if it's at a loss.
22:38And they put them under the slab
22:39Although the best time for Sasmar is during the descent
22:42Bogle wanted everyone to put their money into the index.
22:44And forget about it
22:45Bogle felt that this facilitation was not in the best interest of the idea.
22:47A person will tell him, "Whatever you want."
22:48And then the flag day for State Street
22:50Under what he developed his idea
22:51He will present it to them and they will be very excited.
22:53Indeed, in 1993
22:55State Street will launch its first exchange-traded fund (ETF).
22:58It mimics the performance of the SP500
23:00A fund called SPDR
23:02Which will be known in the market as Riosh
23:04Spider
23:04Hello, my dear ordinary man on the street
23:06Suddenly, an arrow was in front of him.
23:07This stock allows him to participate in a large investment fund.
23:10At a cost of less than $50
23:12$50 and owns a share
23:13In the top 500 companies in the United States of America
23:168-6 Spider Box transforms into one of the biggest boxes
23:20Those who invest in the stock market
23:21Weststreet is starting to create different and varied syndicates.
23:23All of this is under the Spider brand, about the hood.
23:25And all of this, my dear, is the first thing that happens when an idea succeeds.
23:27Everyone is rushing to imitate her
23:29The stock exchange is filled with ETF shares.
23:31You'll find whatever shape or style you're looking for.
23:33Even the Active Managed Trust
23:35Many of them have also started to make themselves available for trading.
23:38My dear, the situation remains as it is.
23:39Until the year 2000
23:40And the famous Barclays Bank
23:42Those who decided to enter the game
23:43It carries a new brand called iShares
23:45And under iShares, we'll open the door to the sea.
23:47The dark-skinned one illuminates
23:49Barclays announces the launch of 47 investment funds
23:53For trading on the stock exchange
23:5347 attribute every strategy you can think of to them
23:57Power over everything you want
23:58One of the funds is a fund that tracks our favorite index.
24:01The SP500
24:02The second fund is monitoring different indicators.
24:04For example, the Dow Jones index
24:05This is an index that tracks 30 of the largest American companies.
24:09Russell 2000 Index
24:10Those who monitor the performance of 2000 relatively small companies
24:14Those who are also listed on the American stock exchange
24:15Over time, competition arose between fund management companies.
24:18In that it sees the different indicators
24:19Or even invent indicators from her brain
24:21Hatlibni Index of pharmaceutical companies
24:23Hitlebni Arms Companies Index
24:25Hitlebni Real Estate Investment Companies Index
24:28The abundance of indicators and the number of funds has become a mess.
24:31On the other hand, Bogle had already secured his place in the job.
24:34This investor is such an expert; everyone looks up to him with respect.
24:37Specialized economic magazines will be published by the mid-nineties
24:40Its titles and slogans say Bogle Winz
24:42The man proved his worth and made people acknowledge him.
24:45All of it was acknowledged without question.
24:46The idea of ​​passive investment is a joke.
24:48This is an idea that needs to be built upon and become an essential part of the investment portfolio.
24:52Anyone with money should throw away their money for a year
24:53But Bogle reassured the skeptic that he was putting his fund on the stock exchange.
24:56He still hasn't grasped the ETF concept.
24:58No, he also considered what was happening
25:00Abioz for his idea
25:01And investors just see the word "index"
25:03He tells you, "Yes, that's definitely something safe."
25:04This is a balanced thing with low risks.
25:06diversified
25:07Although again, my dear
25:08Not all indicators are equal.
25:10You can't let a large index like the SMP 500 decide for me.
25:12With indicators, any talk can feed it any fund manager
25:15But my dear, in the year 2001
25:16Vanguard is subject to the market
25:18It is also subject to high demand for traded securities.
25:21And it is decided that it will compete with the State Street Syndicate
25:23Smaider
25:24You're going to create a new brand, my friend.
25:25And as I told you, my dear, I'm not afraid of names, not creatine.
25:27No, people succeeded because Smaider's work is fiber.
25:30snake
25:30I'll let her insects in, I'll let her in too.
25:32Bogle, my dear, discovers later
25:34The name is a bit scary
25:35And that's pretty much what investors are afraid of, my friend.
25:38You are encouraging me to invest
25:39So, the need is named
25:40I still see investors are amazed by Spider.
25:42And here they will change the name and call it Vanguard ETF
25:44It seems from the way you're presenting this critique, it's not in it.
25:46I am an employee
25:47Here, my dear, we are entering a new era of stock market investment.
25:50An era with a huge number of investors
25:51Their age is the one who bought the stock of that particular company.
25:53But they prefer to invest this year.
25:55Whether it is passive, tracking indicators, or passive
25:57Or even positive ones, but experts are taking risks.
26:00And the party, my dear, is about to begin.
26:01And the stock market is rising
26:02The S&P 500 is falling
26:04And all of this makes money, that's rice.
26:06Of course, my dear, and you see me talking like this
26:08And if I raise my voice, you know what will happen next.
26:10disaster
26:10Of course, my dear, you are familiar with the jurisprudence of real estate.
26:21American
26:22The crisis that caused one of the biggest stock market crashes in history
26:26And the indicators are sinking to the ground
26:28The scene will be one where someone is observing the situation from a distance.
26:31We were confused about the treachery with the starling
26:33And the starlings were chasing us
26:34Who stopped to look at this darkness from afar?
26:36Ahmed's youth prevailed
26:37One, my dear, is very important up to our time.
26:39His name is Larivink
26:40Larvinc is a very important name that you know
26:42for him?
26:43Because he is the founder of Black Run Company
26:46In the third company
26:46The Big Boss
26:47He is a monster, my dear.
26:49The Three Empires
26:50Where is the long life of a successful investment manager?
26:52Stock management company education in Boston
26:54Big polished in the 1980s because of his work at a large company called Blackstone
26:57This company's focus is not on companies that are listed on the stock exchange.
27:01Not publicly traded companies
27:02They don't focus on stocks
27:03Their goal is to invest in private companies.
27:05Not listed on the stock exchange at all
27:07The
27:08They were focused on managing the work
27:10Acquisitions and mergers
27:13But this company's focus is not on stocks and publicly traded companies on the stock exchange.
27:17Rather, they were focused on what they had invested in private companies.
27:20Companies that are not listed on the stock exchange
27:21What is known by the
27:23Do you know, my dear friend, the one who made a hoodie and baby brand with 4 pieces this year?
27:26This is a private company
27:28Because it is not listed on the stock exchange
27:29Of course, there are private companies that are not publicly listed, such as SpaceX.
27:32Its value is estimated at $250 billion.
27:34This is a private company
27:35So, it means not just any company.
27:36But there are private companies, not public companies.
27:38These are public companies listed on the stock exchange that you can trade.
27:40Public offering of what remains of a private company
27:42She's now reserving a spot on the stock exchange.
27:43Blackstone was a company specializing in private companies.
27:46Companies that are not listed on the stock exchange
27:47And today this is a very large company
27:48The largest private equity company in the world
27:50The important thing is, where are you, the one who was there?
27:51He goes and starts BlackRock.
27:531988
27:54It is being established as a subsidiary of Angel Blackstone.
27:57And he's founding, my dear, a company called BlackRock.
27:59So, my dear, it's also clear that he's creative, just like Mr. Jack Bogle.
28:02The company is called Blackstone.
28:04It's a BlackRock operation
28:05By 1992, BlackRock had grown and become successful.
28:08Fink and Sarkah decide to buy Blackstone's stake.
28:11And they remain an independent company
28:12Because in 1999 BlackRock became one of the largest companies
28:16To manage the path in the world
28:18BlackRock is being listed on the stock exchange.
28:20In the early 2000s, Fink was following the topic of the circulating bonds.
28:24He thought she was beautiful and had a future.
28:25But his company specialized in other forms of investment.
28:28He saw, meaning, at least for a short period of time
28:30The one who leaves his home loses his worth
28:32He just assembled a new team, and who knows if he'll recognize the same people who are already in the market?
28:36It's been a long time
28:37This is Vanguard and State Street, folks, what's the deal?
28:39Hey, my dear, 2009 is a great opportunity!
28:41Barclays Bank is starting to falter after the global crisis.
28:44It became an agricultural rating bank
28:46And with Fink's experience in the field of acquisition
28:48Because this is the opportunity of a lifetime
28:49He goes to Barclays and offers them $13.5 billion.
28:53In exchange for Brand iShares and the box it contains
28:55At that time, the viruses that were in the circulating stock in America were all
28:59It doesn't exceed $700 billion.
29:01Many people felt that iShares didn't deserve such a large number.
29:04What's wrong with her, fluttering about in front of you?
29:05Why are you buying it at such a high price?
29:06But Fink was betting that this was the future.
29:09In the future, we will witness tremendous growth in this fund.
29:12And I'm telling you this after the crisis
29:13Investors will be eager to invest in the fund again.
29:16As a way to reduce the losses they might incur during a market crash
29:20And who, my dear, orchestrated BlackRock's acquisition of iShares?
29:23It is considered one of the most successful acquisitions in history.
29:27The defining feature that will make people point at Barclays and say
29:29They sold the best and most important thing they ever did.
29:32You have failed to do what is most important to you.
29:33And people will point to BlackRock and say they're the ones who made this deal.
29:36They wouldn't have achieved their current success.
29:39If I took you, my dear, in our current time
29:41Let me tell you, the numbers are terrifying.
29:43From the hour of the global crisis until mid-20225
29:46The S&P 500 index rose by 700 percent.
29:49any?
29:49700 and 200 percent for accuracy
29:51Do you realize, my dear, what time this happened?
29:53Which global crisis did we enter? Trump
29:55Hoba, we're wearing COVID, a devastating global pandemic.
29:58And then a European war involving the second largest qualitative force in the world.
30:03Russia-Ukraine war
30:04You'll find yourself dressed in Trump clothes too.
30:07This version is more ferocious and aggressive.
30:09All this, and the indicator is almost 700%
30:11Despite all the hardships and collapses every time
30:13The indicator was rising more than before.
30:16He will respond to all those who doubted him.
30:18The US stock exchange still has approximately 4,000 exchange-traded funds (ETFs).
30:21They write about all kinds of strategies, both possible and impossible.
30:25The fund that contained about $7 trillion in 2009
30:28Does anyone know how much it is now? 1000 trillion dollars
30:30If you write them down by calculation, you'll forget them by the tenth zero.
30:33This is missing, my dear, if we look at the biggest of them.
30:36Whose eyes are these? (In the name of God)
30:37The three companies that started the trend early
30:39The largest box of all time is the Vanguard SP500.
30:43Its value is approximately $6 trillion.
30:46Don't call this a box, my dear.
30:47This is Mr. Box
30:48You locked it
30:48Then comes the Set Street fund, with approximately $600 billion.
30:52In third place is the iShares fund.
30:54approximately $5 trillion
30:56Abu Ahmed is a very poor man, he's in the middle of them.
30:58Oh my dear, I feel the same way about Sameh Swi Ras
31:00They also led their brothers in this way
31:01It's hard for me that he's the least successful member of the family in Forbes.
31:03But at least he can buy 130 from me, so their families...
31:06Dear friends, these are the top 3 companies on the US stock exchange.
31:08I don't need to remind you that each of these companies has many other subsidiaries.
31:11And this is in the stock exchange
31:12From here, it became clear how long these companies had.
31:14Owning the largest share in everything
31:16What happened was an inevitable result of the success of the passive investment strategy.
31:20And the big news about it every year, every month, and every day
31:23This fund receives billions upon billions
31:26They put it in large companies on behalf of investors.
31:29Naturally, with time and a well-known investment strategy
31:32It doesn't mean you can't prevent them from making unexpected choices.
31:34They will always drive at a slow speed.
31:36They will always maintain high ownership percentages in all large companies.
31:40And it's not just the valued companies that have noticed.
31:41In January 2024, a Bitcoin exchange-traded fund appeared in America.
31:45Sweep the words
31:46This is a fund that buys Bitcoin with investors' money.
31:49Has the Sanadiq fund collected more than $100 billion in the past year?
31:52She still had over 1.1 million Bitcoins
31:54And the Bitcoin that's with this fund is very suspicious.
31:56It will be more than what Satoshi Nakamoto himself has.
32:00Bitcoin founder Majal Huwiyya
32:01I don't need to tell you that the largest fund trading Bitcoin
32:03He's also from Blackrock
32:04One year, Abu Ahmed
32:05What branch of what are you talking about?
32:07About what he says
32:08Rothschild controls the world.
32:11All this talk is about Freemasonry.
32:12And the conspiracy theory you're mocking is a lie
32:15I just saw you on one of the pages
32:16From the Masonic Unity
32:18And it's made almost like this
32:19Eps
32:19And they say about the one who wears the badge, "This is inside you."
32:22And you believed them
32:22I feel like time is passing me by.
32:24Yes
32:24Honestly, my dear, I don't think it was that accurate.
32:27On paper, the rise of the three companies makes sense.
32:29This happened over many years
32:30The final result is that they are indeed involved in everything.
32:33The truth is that, naturally
32:35Telecommunications companies in countries that face frequent criticism
32:37They are about ten years old
32:38People from the democrats and liberals in America
32:40They say that these companies practice a form of contempt.
32:42Because they generate more than 20 trillion dollars
32:45Their size was very large and their walls extended deep into the ground.
32:48To the point that if one of them were to experience an earthquake or collapse
32:50It's very easy; she pulls the world's poetry along with her.
32:52Therefore, we must break them with anti-contempt laws.
32:55To make them bigger, they should be divided into smaller and smaller companies.
32:58Republicans and Democrats are the same
33:00The three are accused of influencing corporate political agendas.
33:03Republicans and Democrats are both eager to meet the need
33:05change
33:052020 American Economic Libertarians
33:09Frojikt deliberately chose Blackrock to vote against all proposals.
33:12Which offers environmentally friendly policies
33:14And in 2020, Republican Congressman Jim Gordon
33:17An investigation has been opened against Vanguard and Blackrock.
33:19They accuse them of the exact opposite, of imposing restrictions on companies.
33:21Liberal practices and environmentally friendly agendas
33:24Nobody owns the environment
33:25Every time these companies were opposed to these practices, they offered the same responses.
33:28Oh? We're really big companies.
33:29But you must remember something very important
33:31These large sums we have are not our money.
33:33This is the investors' money
33:34We are just people who appreciate them more than they appreciate themselves.
33:37Investors in the simplicity area can withdraw their money like this.
33:40Vanguard, for example, has more than 50 million investors.
33:43In America and overseas
33:44Some of them are very ordinary people who might have put in a thousand dollars
33:46Among them are sovereign wealth funds and government funds, according to their respective countries.
33:50For example, Blackrock is the world's largest asset management company.
33:53It manages approximately $11.5 trillion
33:56But its revenues last year in 2024
33:58Approximately 20 billion four hundred million dollars
34:01Oh Abu Hamad
34:02Oh dear one, listen to me
34:03Investors and asset companies are poor
34:05These are people who spend a secret dinner
34:07Of course, Aziz, a little bit of change is being spent on the trillions they're directing.
34:10If you people who criticize us remembered
34:12This money will make people realize that these companies aren't as big as people imagine.
34:15As for the idea that they rule the world
34:17Let me ask you one question, please answer it honestly.
34:20Is the world under control?
34:21This is a world view
34:22Is there anyone who controls it?
34:23This is an uncle who is at the forefront of the world in which Nassar has his hand
34:25Their time was given to the needy
34:26These are their times; they need our support, our donations, our help.
34:29No two countries know how to sit down for coffee together
34:30It is true that these three are the largest shareholders in these companies.
34:33But the term "largest shareholder" does not necessarily mean they have a majority stake in any company whatsoever.
34:37This means Vanguard could potentially sell the largest share of Apple stock.
34:40This roughly means that they end up owning 9% of Apple.
34:42We can't help the president of Vanguard pick up the phone and call Tim Cook and say sorry
34:46Fix the iPhone lens for me because it's not nice and people won't like it.
34:49No, no, the company is owned by other people.
34:51Don't accept, my dear
34:53Vanguard itself owns 8% of BlackRock's shares.
34:57Those who are their competitors
34:58But Vanguard didn't let BlackRock do anything he didn't want.
35:01Even though she is the competitor and even though she has a percentage
35:03But not controlling
35:04Not only that, my dear, in 2022 Morning Star is a company specializing in...
35:08With a financial sense, he monitored the voting of the three companies on one hundred resolutions.
35:11One hundred decisions related to the environment, governance, and sustainability.
35:14So, what do these companies say about the various companies in which they own shares?
35:18They found that BlackRock had approved 55 decisions
35:21City Street approved 60 resolutions
35:23Bangard 28 Resolution
35:24The three have very different styles and strategies.
35:27They don't sit together in a dark room to agree on what they will do.
35:29At the end of each year, each of these companies issues a fully detailed report.
35:33With every decision they voted on
35:35The reason, justification, and logic behind each vote
35:38If you have patience, my dear, go down and look at the sources.
35:40Each report will be 70-80 pages long.
35:42And most of the things they vote on are procedural and boring.
35:46In more than 90% of cases, they vote in the affirmative.
35:48The management of each company commented.
35:50It means everyone can do the job however they want.
35:52I wish I could tell you, my dear, that there's a conspiracy, but unfortunately, the world is boring.
35:54This, by the way, could be their conspiracy.
35:56As long as Aziz's episode is out and we're watching it
35:58There's no conspiracy.
35:59Or they bribed me to say there was no conspiracy
36:01And you know, my dear, that I'm not a fetus-eater (Egyptian).
36:03Can we talk in pounds sterling?
36:04Barclays listener
36:05But my dear, all that I'm saying doesn't prevent the three companies
36:07And with them, asset management companies in general.
36:09They represent something of a strong front against any US government
36:12A child is trying to restrict her activity
36:14Or even increase oversight of them to reduce their expansion and spread.
36:17It's not like the liar has a ruler over every detail in the world.
36:19Nor are they a group of angels.
36:21They are companies
36:22Profit-seeking companies
36:24but
36:25In all cases, my dear, the three companies
36:27Every time they speak, they say that their only agenda
36:30Customer satisfaction
36:31They have one primary responsibility
36:32If they achieve the greatest profit for the investors who are with them
36:34This goal is more important to them than any agenda whatsoever.
36:37The truth is, my dear, no one harms anyone else with their own hands.
36:39To invest in SP5, he wasted
36:40In hundreds of investment funds built quickly
36:43Based on political and ethical principles
36:46For example, an investment fund
36:47Which takes into account the rules of Islamic Sharia
36:49And the fund that focuses on environmentally friendly companies
36:52And it contains a bond whose age is affected by the loss of a soft loan in subsidiary companies or a solution
36:56And it's impossible for Sindiq to put a cent into oil or fuel companies.
37:00On the other hand, you might find a weapons depot.
37:02This is a sandal, of course, during the wars that rattle
37:04Look, these days if she bought my shares in a dish that cost her money, what would you do?
37:07Oh, my dear Arjoub
37:08The idea of ​​these companies is truly being taken seriously.
37:10So, my dear, you're still funding your own assassination with your money.
37:13The list is long and the market is open.
37:15There are plenty of asset management companies.
37:17And they are nothing but customer feedback and the stock price.
37:19Count my heart, my thoughts, my everything—count anything you want to count.
37:22But my share price didn't exceed that.
37:23And the one who knows from my stock price did so
37:25If tomorrow Sobhi Aziza decides that she will not invest in a weapons company
37:28Asset management companies will take to the streets chanting for the sanctuary.
37:31If most investors decide that they will support
37:34Trump swindled asset management companies
37:35Asset management companies will wear British porcelain
37:38The real conspiracy is very collective.
37:40People are precious when they choose their partners.
37:42You make choices that serve the environment, justice, freedom, truth, beauty, and goodness.
37:47But either you choose with your money, or you think with your wallet.
37:49It won't matter to you, Kermin will win you more
37:51You won't care about anything but the aftermath.
37:52Look, Mojel, my dear, passed away in 2019.
37:54We are 89 years old
37:55Throughout his life he played a pivotal role
37:57Investing in the stock market is accessible to ordinary people.
38:00It provided millions of people with a massive investment opportunity.
38:02For a very small price, more than they could have dreamed of.
38:04And since Betcel E was the best investment advice for his young son
38:07He was saying that any young man should contribute whatever amount he can afford.
38:10In the SV500 index
38:11Then he tries to allocate a fixed amount
38:13Each month, this index drops
38:15And then, Ste Da Course
38:16Stay on the road
38:18A disaster happened, and the day was bad.
38:19Don't worry, it's okay
38:20Put down the money for each month
38:21Stay on the road
38:23The world exploded and people ran
38:24Nor is it the latest trend in crypto or AI.
38:26Stay steady on the road
38:27At the end of your life, this money won't make you a shameless thief.
38:30But you will have money that grows and becomes more beautiful
38:32And it allows you to live a decent life
38:34In the long run, the money will be much more.
38:36If you played the trading game
38:38And this isn't your field
38:39Of course, my dear, this is not investment advice.
38:41I am dear Ahmed Walid
38:42Satin robes and pajamas
38:44And he has Mobica
38:45I'm not going to tell you what to do with your money now.
38:46I am the son of...
38:47Carrier
38:48Tuk Tuk
38:48investors
38:49John Bogle says so
38:50Because I'm in you, he says that
38:51Worp Pavel says so
38:52But Ahmed Walid
38:53Don't you dare
38:54In the end, my dear
38:55Bogle's advice was a joke
38:56And it was completely beneficial in the past fifty years.
38:58And nobody knows the future
38:59So it doesn't mean that the American stock exchange
39:00It has been increasing over the past hundred years
39:02About 10% per year
39:03It will continue to increase by 10% per year.
39:06You see the shape of the world
39:07And we were blessed with the beautiful part of it.
39:08God knows best.
39:08As we present the episode
39:09We might have started to smell the planet's shoreline.
39:11Nuclear Styping
39:12Your trench, my dear
39:13Specifically, the day you put your money into the 500 espresso machine
39:15It's not unlikely that someone will go blind for a third time.
39:16The global order is collapsing
39:18pandemic
39:19A global explosion of superpower
39:21Big Bang felt like she wanted to do it again
39:23You don't know what will happen
39:24It's important, my dear, that God speeds things up for me or for you.
39:26And on your electronic storage
39:27Min and Helm
39:28I'm sure this will be helpful to you, God willing.
39:29I'm absolutely sure
39:30Look at the life that passed
39:31See what life holds next
39:32Go down and look at the sources
39:32And we, Ali, subscribe to the Arbo channel
39:34Do you know why, my dear Arab?
39:35Were they investors who were frozen in the stock market back then?
39:37No, Abu Ahmed
39:37Because they had onions
39:39Although everything that came to them contributed to throwing
39:41They are joking and laughing in a state of anger.
39:43You need to get checked out

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