Direct indexing is WAY more valuable to US citizens living in the EU than US citizens living in the USA because of the painful intersection of MiFID II rules and US tax law (PFIC tax cancer makes buying EU domiciled funds a non-starter). Brokers will not sell US domiciled ETFs to US citizens living in the EU unless they can opt out of the consumer disclosure rules (e.g. by becoming an elective professional client of their broker under MiFID II rules). So these 2 million US expats have no choice but to manage a portfolio of individual stocks or pay exorbitant AUM fees. The first half-way decent direct indexing product that accepts US expats residing in the EU will make a killing!
Warning: This just fucked my 2k$ 4k LG display. I ran the website 15 minutes ago and quickly closed it after 15 seconds. My screen is still flickering in the portion of the screen where it used to be the webpage. I rebooted. Still happening
Jeez, I'm really sorry, I hadn't thought of that. It worked fine on all my screens without any issue (I tried it on 3 different ones). I just added a warning about this. Sorry again, I hope your screen recovers.
It did the same thing to my monitor, which is NOT the program's fault. That's terrible hardware/hardware design if software can break it forever, especially if a webpage can do it... Someone could be so malicious with that.
My monitor has a built-in "LCD conditioning" thing, which just slowly flips through various solid color screens. That "fixed" it. I suspect a YouTube video doing the same would also work.
Yeah I'd say unplug for sure it's amazing how many things can be solved by just unplugging something and letting any charge dissipate.
That was my go to trick when I was a slot tech at a casino. The old $50K/each slot machines often went crazy with errors some due to EEPROM "chip creep" other errors possibly static. So I just unplugged and waited ten minutes or so.