2 published verifications about stock market stock market ×
“In the United States, a birth certificate is a bond worth millions that is traded on the stock market as collateral for the U.S. national debt.”
The claim is not supported by any credible evidence and is directly contradicted by U.S. financial authorities. Official sources describe “birth certificate bonds” and related secret-account stories as fictitious instruments used in fraud schemes. U.S. national debt is financed through Treasury securities, not by trading birth certificates as collateral on any stock market.
“It is possible to use artificial intelligence to develop an investment strategy that consistently outperforms the stock market.”
The claim that AI can "consistently" outperform the stock market is not supported by the available evidence. While AI-driven strategies have shown impressive results in specific contexts — competition rankings, single strong years, and research frameworks — no source demonstrates durable, net-of-fees outperformance across multiple market regimes. Academic research and institutional analysis indicate that as AI adoption spreads, the very edges it exploits tend to erode through increased market efficiency, transaction costs, and crowding effects.