Both the singer and the rapper got disrespectful about their exes, with the “Best Friend” hitmaker taking multiple shots. Brown claims he was intimate with Saweetie while she was still with Quavo. 

“You f##### my ex-hoe, that’s cool, I don’t give no f###, lil’ n####,” Breezy raps. “‘Cause I f##### your ex when you were still with her, b####, I’m up, lil’ n####.” 

Meanwhile, Quavo boasts, “I can take a model b#### and make a Saweetie, n####.”   

After joking she was hitting the studio after Chris Brown dropped last week, Saweetie reached for the receipts in response to Quavo. She took to social media, firing back at her ex, just hours after he released “Over Hoes & B#tches.”  

She posted a screenshot of her Instagram DMs from back in January 2014. An unread message from Quavo begins, “Damn. We used to mean af to eac…”  

Directly referencing Quavo’s “Over Hoes & B#tches” lyric, Saweetie wrote, “hopefully the model he turns into me replies.” 

Despite Quavo being in the DMs back in January, the former couple split in March 2021. Interestingly, his message to Saweetie arrived days before the rumors that she and YG split, ending their brief relationship.   

Chris Brown also shared his reaction to Quavo’s diss, and he was unimpressed.  

“Google raps,” he wrote on his IG Story alongside multiple crying-with-laughter emojis. “That s### is poooooooh.”  

Real-Transparency

Exchange-traded option markets, with live quotes and tradable prices, are more transparent than many related markets. This affords visibility into related markets that are more opaque, including securities lending, dividend forecasts, and credit markets.

Forward-Thinking

Options prices reflect forward-looking, market-based views of volatility, including the short term such as earnings announcements, and the long term such as company and sector forecasts and the anticipated fundamental credit worthiness of a firm.

The listed options markets are a rich source for market expectations. With their liquidity and transparency, the options markets provide a forward-looking measure of a number of market conditions – from borrowing costs and dividend expectations, to the relationship between equity and credit markets.

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Market Expectations

Options prices move quickly in response to participant expectations and behavior. For example, market makers in options must adjust pricing in response to borrow pricing they receive from the collateral markets, or they face arbitrage or hedging losses as they transact with other informed participants. Similarly, as expectations of future dividends change, it is quickly reflected in the options markets.