BRN Discussion Ongoing

I know what you mean however I have listened several times and it sounds like he says were working with brn.
Could be wrong tho.
 
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Flenton

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Has anyone noticed the increase in volume over the past couple of weeks on the OTC market (BRCHF)?
This is usually a good thing... isn't it?
 
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Has anyone noticed the increase in volume over the past couple of weeks on the OTC market (BRCHF)?
This is usually a good thing... isn't it?
Who Cares Pop Up GIF by Offline Granny!
 

charles2

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Has anyone noticed the increase in volume over the past couple of weeks on the OTC market (BRCHF)?
This is usually a good thing... isn't it?
Yes and especially BCHPY. Two recent days with >1.2m regular BRN shares (accounting for 40:1 ratio).
However demand is frequently met by a large ask (for BRCHF) which over the trading day is gradually ratcheted down.....as if to stymie price increase.
To my mind this could be a large buyer trying to accumulate shares without raising the share price. Basically a sophisticated technique.

Or am I just putting a good spin on it??
 
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Flenton

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If you don't like what I have to say then just put me on ignore instead of being a big man and belittling people.
 
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Bravo

If ARM was an arm, BRN would be its biceps💪!
Rami Sinno worked at Arm before joining Amazon, giving him experience in processor architecture and IP-driven design.






Reuters

Exclusive-Arm hires Amazon AI exec to boost plans to build its own chips​

4553a8ea9cbd1200792a733c36bd409c

Amazon artificial intelligence processors in a lab in Austin · Reuters



Max A Cherney
Tue, 19 August 2025 at 6:29 am GMT+10 2 min read

In this article:​


By Max A. Cherney
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -Arm Holdings has hired Amazon.com artificial intelligence chip director Rami Sinno to bolster its plans to develop its own complete chips, a person familiar with the matter said on Monday.
Sinno was responsible for helping to develop Amazon's homegrown AI chips called Trainium and Inferentia that are designed to help build and run large AI applications.

Until now, Arm has not built its own chips. Instead, it designs the core architecture and instruction set for processors that it sells to customers. Chip designers like Apple and Nvidia use Arm technology in their chips.
In July, Arm disclosed plans to invest a portion of its profit into building its own chips and other components. CEO Rene Haas discussed the possibility of moving beyond designs and building chiplets - smaller, function-specific versions of a chip that are stitched together - and complete systems.

The company, which is majority-owned by the SoftBank Group, collects royalty payments on the chips its customers sell. Arm-based devices power nearly every smartphone in the world and server chips based on its intellectual property have made significant inroads in the data center market long dominated by Advanced Micro Devices and Intel.
As part of a broad plan to increase its business, Arm has sought to expand beyond supplying crucial chip intellectual property to building its own complete designs.

Reuters first reported on the company's plans outlined in sealed exhibits from a December trial, and its effort to hire executives from rivals in February.
In recent years, Arm has sought to bolster its teams focused on building complete chips and systems. The company has hired Nicolas Dube, an executive from HPE with large-scale systems design experience, and Steve Halter, a chip engineer from Intel and Qualcomm, as part of the effort, the person familiar with the matter said.
Sinno's effort at Amazon was part of the company's effort to design chips that would be cheaper and offer superior performance to Nvidia's graphics processors used for AI work.

 
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miaeffect

Oat latte lover
If you don't like what I have to say then just put me on ignore instead of being a big man and belittling people.
images (67).jpeg

Chill.. it's just a German joke
 
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If you don't like what I have to say then just put me on ignore instead of being a big man and belittling people.

The problem with this kind of thinking is that you really shouldn’t try to orient yourself based on OTC movements. The home exchange is in Australia ..and that’s what counts.

There have often been wrong assumptions that “something big is coming” just because the rocket launched on the OTC market. Sure, maybe someone bought in heavily there… maybe someone who just discovered BrainChip and sees potential. But to immediately spin major events out of that seems far-fetched to me.

So what exactly are you trying to say with your post?


Stay grounded and take it with a bit of humor… some people really do seem to need a break from the stock market … or maybe just from the internet.
 
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Rami Sinno worked at Arm before joining Amazon, giving him experience in processor architecture and IP-driven design.







Reuters

Exclusive-Arm hires Amazon AI exec to boost plans to build its own chips​

4553a8ea9cbd1200792a733c36bd409c

Amazon artificial intelligence processors in a lab in Austin · Reuters



Max A Cherney
Tue, 19 August 2025 at 6:29 am GMT+10 2 min read

In this article:​


By Max A. Cherney
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -Arm Holdings has hired Amazon.com artificial intelligence chip director Rami Sinno to bolster its plans to develop its own complete chips, a person familiar with the matter said on Monday.
Sinno was responsible for helping to develop Amazon's homegrown AI chips called Trainium and Inferentia that are designed to help build and run large AI applications.

Until now, Arm has not built its own chips. Instead, it designs the core architecture and instruction set for processors that it sells to customers. Chip designers like Apple and Nvidia use Arm technology in their chips.
In July, Arm disclosed plans to invest a portion of its profit into building its own chips and other components. CEO Rene Haas discussed the possibility of moving beyond designs and building chiplets - smaller, function-specific versions of a chip that are stitched together - and complete systems.

The company, which is majority-owned by the SoftBank Group, collects royalty payments on the chips its customers sell. Arm-based devices power nearly every smartphone in the world and server chips based on its intellectual property have made significant inroads in the data center market long dominated by Advanced Micro Devices and Intel.
As part of a broad plan to increase its business, Arm has sought to expand beyond supplying crucial chip intellectual property to building its own complete designs.

Reuters first reported on the company's plans outlined in sealed exhibits from a December trial, and its effort to hire executives from rivals in February.
In recent years, Arm has sought to bolster its teams focused on building complete chips and systems. The company has hired Nicolas Dube, an executive from HPE with large-scale systems design experience, and Steve Halter, a chip engineer from Intel and Qualcomm, as part of the effort, the person familiar with the matter said.
Sinno's effort at Amazon was part of the company's effort to design chips that would be cheaper and offer superior performance to Nvidia's graphics processors used for AI work.

It's got to be good for Tenns.
 
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Flenton

Regular
The problem with this kind of thinking is that you really shouldn’t try to orient yourself based on OTC movements. The home exchange is in Australia ..and that’s what counts.

There have often been wrong assumptions that “something big is coming” just because the rocket launched on the OTC market. Sure, maybe someone bought in heavily there… maybe someone who just discovered BrainChip and sees potential. But to immediately spin major events out of that seems far-fetched to me.

So what exactly are you trying to say with your post?


Stay grounded and take it with a bit of humor… some people really do seem to need a break from the stock market … or maybe just from the internet.
I have no experience with overseas markets and their relationship to ours and started looking at both the German and US about 2 weeks ago. Seeing continual and consecutive days trading well above average got me curious.

I wasn't saying anything, I was more asking if it is a good thing that US trading has picked up.

I took offence to your post because I am genuinely interested if there is any correlation. I had no idea it was meant to be a joke.
 
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I have no experience with overseas markets and their relationship to ours and started looking at both the German and US about 2 weeks ago. Seeing continual and consecutive days trading well above average got me curious.

I wasn't saying anything, I was more asking if it is a good thing that US trading has picked up.

I took offence to your post because I am genuinely interested if there is any correlation. I had no idea it was meant to be a joke.

No problem…. Basically the only thing matters is the Australian market.

Sometimes of course it does happen that a company drops a blockbuster piece of news when the Australian market is already closed… then the stock simply opens high the next day, like back in Germany with Mercedes, etc. But normally, these kinds of moves have little meaning without actual news. That’s been my experience here over many years.
 
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Someone recently asked about how things are looking regarding short covering… since it seems we’ve actually hit the bottom, there should be some frustration building up by now. It’s one thing to make a profit by shorting, but another to be stuck with fluctuations in the $0.005 - 0,05 range. Who’s even making money with that? Does anyone here really know about shorting?

The holding costs must be going up as well, right?

Any shorter here who can help!? 👀
 
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So…. You all sold and left the chat? Or what?
 

JB49

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I have no experience with overseas markets and their relationship to ours and started looking at both the German and US about 2 weeks ago. Seeing continual and consecutive days trading well above average got me curious.

I wasn't saying anything, I was more asking if it is a good thing that US trading has picked up.

I took offence to your post because I am genuinely interested if there is any correlation. I had no idea it was meant to be a joke.
Could be something there. The increase seems to align with when Jonathan Tapson presented to Congress.

Maybe its Nancy Pelosi buying!
 
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The 20 is strong in this one

You Must Star Wars GIF by Regal
 
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CHIPS

Regular
I have no experience with overseas markets and their relationship to ours and started looking at both the German and US about 2 weeks ago. Seeing continual and consecutive days trading well above average got me curious.

I wasn't saying anything, I was more asking if it is a good thing that US trading has picked up.

I took offence to your post because I am genuinely interested if there is any correlation. I had no idea it was meant to be a joke.

Believe me ... I am German ... it was not a joke at all! We don't have such jokes in German. You are right about being upset about his reaction.
 
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TheDrooben

Pretty Pretty Pretty Pretty Good
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