Weird experience in Tesco…
It was long day in the office, only 2 hours into my day. I embarked on a perilous quest to find an enchanted meal deal. Grabbing the classic Red Bull, Chicken trio and Kit Kat combo, I approached the hallowed self-check of the Tesco, a wizened old woman, who looked as if she had seen more bull markets and bear markets than Charles Icahn, greeted me with the sternness of a hedge fund manager in a market downturn.
"ID, please!" she barked, her voice echoing through the aisles like a derivative trader's relentless pursuit of alpha. I reached into my wallet and handed over my identification, which she examined with the scrutiny of a compliance officer conducting a KYC review.
"Good," she mumbled, her eyes narrowing like a forex chart during volatile trading hours. "You'll need this to get through the M&A banker day ahead. Now, tell me, what should I invest in?" She leaned in, her curiosity more intense than a day trader's caffeine buzz.
I pondered her question for a moment, contemplating whether to suggest she invest in avocado toast futures or cryptocurrency-themed breakfast cereals. But before I could respond, an MBA associate barged past, pushing a shopping cart filled with leveraged garlic bread and aggressive avocado spreads. He was as obnoxious as a Wall Street trader's braying laugh on a Friday afternoon.
"Move aside, peasants! I'm on a mission to calculate the optimal risk-adjusted returns of my lunch!" he proclaimed, his arrogance more inflated than a tech company's IPO valuation.
The old woman rolled her eyes, muttering, "Typical MBA associate, all flash and no substance. Now, tell me about those avocado futures."
I obliged, explaining how the avocado market had recently experienced a surge in demand due to millennials' obsession with brunch, and how investing in it was as hot as an overleveraged penny stock. She nodded, her wisdom as deep as a value investor's stock portfolio.
As I left the grocery shop, the old woman's voice echoed in my ears, her investment ambitions rivaling those of Citadels high-frequency trading algorithm. And I couldn't help but wonder if she would soon be the Oracle of Wall Street, guiding the financial world through the labyrinthine twists and turns of the market, one avocado at a time.
My guy just typed all that crap and felt all humorous. Try Reddit
Leave Reddit alone, this is barely better than a GCSE creative writing piece
Go take your anger out on ur ppt comments
I thought British people were supposed to be way more funny than this
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