Clint O'Brien

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Clint O'Brien

Clint O'Brien

@ClintOBrien

CEO @ SA Bullion, Physical Gold & Precious Metals Market & Investment Solutions. Market Watcher, Monetarist.

Cape Town, South Africa Beigetreten Temmuz 2009
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Clint O'Brien
Clint O'Brien@ClintOBrien·
A huge thank you to @Investec and Metcon, for hosting an outstanding event on the 19th November. From everyone at SA Bullion – thank you for the invitation and for creating such a meaningful platform. Here’s to more conversations that matter. Video available here: youtu.be/4j3sUarBoZM?si…
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SA Bullion@SA_Bullion

Our CEO, Clint O'Brien, shared the stage with James Wellsted from Sibanye-Stillwater, with the conversation brilliantly moderated by Campbell Parry from Investec. Thoughtful, insightful, and packed with perspective on the fundamentals and opportunities shaping the world of physical precious metals. Here’s to more conversations that matter. Video available here: youtu.be/4j3sUarBoZM?si…

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Bojan Radojicic
Bojan Radojicic@BojanRadojici10·
Most finance teams are only using 10% of Claude’s actual potential, that’s why I created this guide for you. What’s inside? We dive deep into the four essential Claude entry points: • Claude Web - For high-level strategic analysis and document synthesis • Claude in Excel - To automate formulas and data cleaning where you live. • Claude Cowork - For seamless team collaboration on financial projects. • Claude Code - For advanced automation and technical finance workflows. Who is this for? • FP&A Analysts: Streamline your reporting and variance analysis. • Finance Managers: Speed up consolidation and team reviews. • CFOs / VPs of Finance: Enhance strategic decision-making with rapid scenario modeling. The Essentials: → 25 Detailed, Easy-to-Use Prompts: Copy-paste solutions for real-world finance tasks. → AI Safety for Finance Professionals: A dedicated section on maintaining data privacy and security. → From Analyst to CFO: Tailored workflows for every level of the finance hierarchy. Here is what you can expect inside: • Chapter 1: How to Use This Book • Chapter 2: Getting Started — What You Need • Chapter 3: AI Safety for Finance • Chapter 4: Claude Web: Analysis & Narratives • Chapter 5: Variance Analysis • Chapter 6: Claude in Excel: Model Workflows • Chapter 7: Reporting & Board Packs • Chapter 8: Claude Cowork: Multi-File Automation • Chapter 9: Building a CFO Agent with Claude Code • Chapter 10: Implementing AI in Your FP&A Team • Chapter 11: What Comes Next The future of finance is "AI-augmented." Don't get left behind. If you want this e-book, just drop a comment and I’ll send it to you. (Important: follow me so I can DM you!)
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Vinodsrinivasan
Vinodsrinivasan@vinodsrinivasan·
Gold just dropped 5% in a single day. Silver down 10%. Mining stocks down 8 to 12%. Before you panic, understand what is actually happening here.
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Johann Biermann 🇿🇦
Johann Biermann 🇿🇦@JohannBiermann1·
Gold at $5,000 Silver at $109 Commodities absolutely pumping! Do you have enough precious metal exposure? Waiting for a pull back or seeing this as a bubble?
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Santiago Capital
Santiago Capital@SantiagoAuFund·
We have 5,000 ounces of physical silver for sale. Kilo bars. Located in Florida. Current dealer is not buying at this time. If any nearby dealers happen to see this and are interested please let me know. Thanks.
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Clint O'Brien
Clint O'Brien@ClintOBrien·
Where is the @grok response? The Rand is stronger by 13% YoY. We have a tailwind on commodities prices. If it stays this strong, agri exporters will suffer, and Agriemployment. But that’s the swings of fate of a commodity currency. Tarrifs, AGOA -> threats mostly. Little change kr enforcwent. Plus, decade low oil proces. Along with a new inflation range that is way lower, and GDP growth forecasted , into minerals and metals strength. Doubt you’re going to get the response you’re hoping for here.
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Roland Schoeman
Roland Schoeman@Rolandschoeman·
** Hey @grok, give the shortest, harshest summary of how US tariffs (30% on SA exports, AGOA gone 2025/26) hurt ordinary Black South Africans daily. Short sentences. No fluff. Hit: job losses (factories, farms, cars, citrus), unemployment already 33%+, weaker rand → pricier food/fuel/paraffin/imports, squeezed grants & services, township/youth struggle. Make denial impossible.. Use the hardest numbers.
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Clint O'Brien retweetet
SA Bullion
SA Bullion@SA_Bullion·
Our CEO, Clint O'Brien, shared the stage with James Wellsted from Sibanye-Stillwater, with the conversation brilliantly moderated by Campbell Parry from Investec. Thoughtful, insightful, and packed with perspective on the fundamentals and opportunities shaping the world of physical precious metals. Here’s to more conversations that matter. Video available here: youtu.be/4j3sUarBoZM?si…
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Clint O'Brien
Clint O'Brien@ClintOBrien·
@BizNewsCOM Why not share Michael’s X handle? He clearly deserves to have an open platform of support and views. If he message you on X. Give him the platform.
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BizNews.com
BizNews.com@BizNewsCOM·
Mantengu CEO Michael Miller accuses Paul O’Sullivan and Zunaid Moti of manipulating shares and weaponising the JSE amid mounting threats and legal battles. biznews.com/interviews/osu…
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Clint O'Brien
Clint O'Brien@ClintOBrien·
@grok is it not true that the Fed can only control the short end of rates and have very little control over longer term rates which are set by the bond market. If the bond market sees higher inflation, bond yields on ten or twenty year treasuries may rise. And this would help the US with its lending costs to roll over its bond maturities. If the US issues shorter duration debt they could achieve lower rates in the short run. But they would also dislocate capital Markets entirely. Do you have further insights on this conundrum?
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The Kobeissi Letter
The Kobeissi Letter@KobeissiLetter·
You can’t make this up: President Trump just issued a handwritten note to Fed Chair Powell. The note calls Powell “too late” and shows how US rates “should be here,” pointing at other countries’ rates. Trump says “we should be paying 1% interest, or better.” Are 1% rates coming?
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Gabriel Osorio-Mazzilli
Gabriel Osorio-Mazzilli@InvestiBrew·
@ClintOBrien @Briansurf499935 Great thinking here I'm not just saying this, but I think you would really enjoy our newsletter, we go deeper into topics like these and some portfolio ideas to play off them No strings attached, link in bio ☕️
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Gabriel Osorio-Mazzilli
Gabriel Osorio-Mazzilli@InvestiBrew·
Trump is once again calling for lower interest rates Saying we have a stupid person (Powell) at the Fed... Whether you agree or not, I think that $TLT $TNX bonds have some of the best risk/reward ratios in the global macro today $DXY is already beaten down Believe it or not though, rate cuts would send $SPY $QQQ $IWM much lower from here ☕️
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Clint O'Brien
Clint O'Brien@ClintOBrien·
Noted. I’ve added that spread to my watchlist thank you. Agree it’s time to rotate into value over growth, and I think the dollar short trade is overcrowded and it’s just a matter of time before the squeeze. Only exception is this time I don’t expect Gold weakness to accompany the dollar squeeze (as much.) There’s a fundamental shift now accelerating toward hard assets. Buy the dip environment for precious metals is underway long run. We’ll know, when the VIX does I guess.
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Gabriel Osorio-Mazzilli
Gabriel Osorio-Mazzilli@InvestiBrew·
Exactly, which is where one of the best trade rotations is about to take place in the market $IVE / $IVW spreads show you exactly where that rotation will pay off Been working up a model portfolio for our global macro positioning, which has been mostly short $DXY long $EURUSD since November 2024 ☕️
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Clint O'Brien
Clint O'Brien@ClintOBrien·
@Briansurf499935 @InvestiBrew Weak dollar supports higher corporate earnings for US firms that have global markets. Each Coca Cola sold at the same sticker price in Europe equates to her gross margins back in the US. DXY down, US profits up.
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Clint O'Brien
Clint O'Brien@ClintOBrien·
Thank you. If consumer spending is the lifeblood of the US economy, which is slowing, and tarrifs drive prices further into the discomfort zone and confidence wanes, the sentiment may carry the day into a bearish trend finally. The big beautiful bill is Trumps Hail Mary, as well as his special interest lobbies. If it passes, and Powell holds the line. We may see hikes. Trump is trying to jawbone cuts while directly creating inflation by way of tarrifs and debt spending. The only people that win in this scenario are the rich. MAGA much?
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Gabriel Osorio-Mazzilli
Gabriel Osorio-Mazzilli@InvestiBrew·
There are many cases where cuts are actually good for valuations But nobody will be paying attention to that, mass psychology will focus on "Why are they cutting, are we in trouble" Also, stocks being this high and money becoming cheaper is not going to help slow consumer spending at all (inflation) ☕️
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Clint O'Brien
Clint O'Brien@ClintOBrien·
This is the truth. The US has upended all capital coordination, capital will retreat and everyone will suffer.
Shay Boloor@StockSavvyShay

MY OPEN LETTER TO PRESIDENT TRUMP The frustrating part is that I was on board for a reset. Truly. I’ve said it publicly. I’ve written about it in this very feed. I understood the need for a detox. For decades, the U.S. economy played the part of the rich guy at the table -- picking up the check for a global order that no longer worked in our favor. We hollowed out our industrial base. We enabled unfair trade imbalances under the illusion of diplomacy. We subsidized demand for cheap imports while outsourcing the hard questions about how our domestic workforce would adapt. Eventually, that had to stop. It was unsustainable -- financially, politically, and morally. We couldn’t keep pretending that a consumption-led economy held together by zero-interest rates and global fragility was a long-term solution. I wanted a rebalancing. I welcomed the idea of a harder, smarter America-first policy that pushed for fair treatment, reciprocal agreements, and a real industrial strategy rooted in technological superiority, national security, and capital formation. That would’ve been leadership. But that’s not what this is. What you’ve rolled out isn’t detox -- it’s whiplash. This isn’t strategic decoupling. It’s scattershot retaliation dressed up as reform. There’s no roadmap. No operational playbook. No clear articulation of where this ends or what the metrics of success even are. It’s not an attempt to responsibly unwind America’s role as the global shock absorber -- it’s a brute-force attempt to disorder the existing system with no viable alternative in place. You can’t replace a fragile supply chain with chaos and call it resilience. You can’t build American industry by torching the scaffolding that underpins capital flows, labor mobility, and global coordination -- especially when the U.S. itself no longer has the domestic capacity to meet its own industrial needs. You talk about bringing jobs home, but the U.S. doesn’t have the labor force, permitting structure, or wage flexibility to stand up full-scale manufacturing at speed. And now -- after years of deportation policies and underinvestment in vocational training -- you’ve made the labor gap even wider. Capital isn’t going to rush to fill that void just because you raised tariffs. It’s going to wait. It’s going to sit on the sidelines and preserve optionality. Because right now, no CEO can confidently model a five-year capex plan. No board can greenlight supply chain onshoring when they don’t know whether a tariff rate will double next quarter based on your Twitter account or some arbitrary trade deficit formula. That’s the issue. This wasn’t rolled out as part of a comprehensive American renewal strategy. It wasn’t coordinated with the Fed. It wasn’t communicated clearly to Treasury. It wasn’t backed by a labor reskilling program or any form of public-private manufacturing incentive beyond empty slogans. It was dropped like a bomb -- seemingly designed more to shock than to build. And in the absence of credible structure, capital is retreating -- not realigning. I was ready to endure the pain of a thoughtful, structured reset. Most long-term investors were. We’ve lived through tightening cycles. We understood that globalization, as it stood, had reached a breaking point. But this isn’t a correction of imbalances. This is a rupture without scaffolding. What you’ve created isn’t reindustrialization. It’s an intentional sabotage of capital planning. No executive is going to build a factory with four-year political horizon risk, a floating tariff regime, and no labor certainty. No investor is going to fund expansion in a market where the basic cost of imports can change weekly based on what country has a current account surplus that week. The system you’ve launched isn’t designed for certainty. It’s designed for control. And the irony is -- we’re not even punishing bad actors. We’re punishing everyone. Allies. Poor countries. Longstanding partners. Israel gets slapped with 17% tariffs while dismantling their own to support American imports. Vietnam gets hit with 46% because it’s become too productive. Lesotho, one of the poorest countries on Earth, faces a 50% tariff because it doesn’t buy enough U.S. goods -- as if that were a sign of unfairness rather than poverty. It’s incoherent. It’s cruel. And it undermines any claim to moral high ground. You say this is about protecting American workers. But no worker is helped by policy so erratic that no employer wants to hire. No consumer is helped when import costs rise and domestic capacity doesn’t exist to replace them. No investor is helped when the cost of capital spikes in the face of weaponized uncertainty. This is not a plan to make America stronger. It’s a gamble that markets and allies will blink first. It’s brinkmanship with no floor. And the most maddening part? There was a path. A real one. A version of this policy that could’ve worked -- not in headlines or soundbites, but in practice. A path that applied pressure with purpose, that aligned economic force with long-term national interest, that sent a clear message to adversaries and partners alike without destabilizing global commerce or blindsiding capital allocators. You could’ve gone after China -- hard -- and had the backing of nearly every serious investor and strategist on the Street. Not just because of trade deficits or currency suppression, but because China has been actively undermining our economy and our people. I would’ve supported a four-year plan to end all dependence on Chinese manufacturing unless they stopped stealing American IP (DeepSeek). No more games. Make it explicit: if they don’t comply, we’ll back Taiwanese independence and bring the entire global semiconductor economy with us. No ambiguity. No half-threats. As I see it, China is at war with us -- and our policy should reflect that. With the EU, you could’ve played it clean. Match auto tariffs percent-for-percent. That’s fair. And then leave the rest alone -- especially goods and services. We run a huge surplus on services with the EU. It props up some of our biggest competitive advantages -- enterprise software, consulting, cloud, defense tech, streaming, media IP. Tariffing the EU outside of autos would be like shooting your own foot for balance. We’re not in a trade war with Europe. We're in a competition for global enterprise dominance -- and right now, the U.S. is winning. That’s what real strength would’ve looked like. That’s what an America-first trade doctrine could’ve achieved. You’d be rebuilding the system from the inside out -- not just throwing bricks through the windows and calling it a redesign. Investors would’ve backed it. CEOs would’ve planned around it. Global partners would’ve respected it -- even if they didn’t like it. And capital would’ve flowed toward American resilience instead of retreating from American unpredictability. But instead of that, you went with chaos. And now, confidence is shattered. Not because the numbers are bad -- but because no one knows what the numbers mean anymore. That’s the cost of burning down the rules without building new ones. So no, this is not the detox we needed. It’s not strategic decoupling. It’s not a path to renewal. It’s a slow, loud dismantling of the very foundation that has allowed American capital, innovation, and enterprise to dominate for decades. And it didn’t have to be this way. But now we’re here. And the market is reacting accordingly -- not to the fundamentals, but to the sense that the future may no longer be modelable. That’s not a trade. That’s an exit. I don’t want this post to be hyper-political. This isn’t about red or blue. It’s not about the 2024 election cycle. It’s not about ideology. It’s about strategy. It’s about execution. It’s about understanding that when you're the United States -- when you sit at the helm of the global economic engine -- every policy you roll out reverberates through capital markets, supply chains, boardrooms, and governments. Words become signals. Signals become pricing. Pricing becomes pain -- or progress. And I hope -- for the sake of the markets, for the sake of businesses trying to plan, and for the future we’re all investing into -- that it’s not too late to recalibrate. Because we don’t need more noise. We need a plan.

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Clint O'Brien
Clint O'Brien@ClintOBrien·
@iamkoshiek Ultimate currency. Ain’t going anywhere. When you operate an exchange, as long as the volume changing hands. You’re delivering utility and create an efficient market.
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Koshiek Karan
Koshiek Karan@iamkoshiek·
tariffs explained in two minutes!! 📊📊 [thread]
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Clint O'Brien
Clint O'Brien@ClintOBrien·
@hajiyev_rashad Wrong again. The sell off will continue for a few days. Technical breakdown. Seasonal weakness window end Feb to early March
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Rashad Hajiyev
Rashad Hajiyev@hajiyev_rashad·
Golds’s yesterday sell-off extended a little beyond than I anticipated. As it is over, I believe, metals, particularly silver has a huge upside potential.
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