Rogier De Langhe

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Rogier De Langhe

Rogier De Langhe

@_roedel

Economics | Complexity | Systems Theory | Using X to think out loud

가입일 Aralık 2010
758 팔로잉2.4K 팔로워
Spencer Hakimian
Spencer Hakimian@SpencerHakimian·
"On the Moody's downgrade, who cares? Qatar doesn't. Saudi doesn't. UAE doesn't." - Scott Bessent What a bizarre comment from the Treasury Secretary of the United States of America. A credit downgrade doesn’t matter? To the issuer of Treasuries?
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Alec Stapp
Alec Stapp@AlecStapp·
This is the best one-paragraph explanation for what's gone wrong with our institutions:
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Rogier De Langhe
Rogier De Langhe@_roedel·
@michaeljmcnair Why do you think the dollar standard is unwinding? Isn't the whole point of addressing these imbalances to make dollar dominance more robust going forward? Like with the Plaza Accord, devaluation of the dollar needn't undermine reserve status.
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Michael McNair
Michael McNair@michaeljmcnair·
History is unambiguous that transitions between global monetary systems are inherently chaotic. During the interwar period, there were repeated failed attempts to restore global economic order, but countries couldn't even agree on what caused the problems. We had the 1920 Brussels Conference which achieved little more than vague recommendations because countries fundamentally disagreed about war reparations and debt forgiveness. The 1922 Genoa Conference attempted to restore the gold standard but failed bc countries couldn't agree on exchange rates or how to handle Germany's debt. Then the 1927 World Economic Conference in Geneva was a failure and no one could agree on tariff reductions. The 1933 London Economic Conference collapsed spectacularly when Roosevelt withdrew support for currency stabilization. The 1936 Tripartite Agreement was celebrated as the biggest achievement during the interwar period even though it was just a short term agreement to stop competitive devaluations. When simply agreeing not to actively harm each other is seen as a breakthrough, it shows just how low international cooperation had fallen. And the reason they couldn’t cooperate is that countries had fundamental disagreements about the nature of the problems themselves. Some countries blamed rigid exchange rates, others blamed insufficient gold reserves, while others blamed war debts or trade barriers. Just like today, when some countries view trade imbalances as America's problem to solve while others see them as a structural issue requiring global adjustments, these fundamental disagreements about diagnosis make coordinated solutions nearly impossible. And this pattern of failed cooperation, fundamental disagreements, and prioritizing national interests over global stability is exactly what we should expect to see again as the dollar standard unwinds.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ Countries built their entire economic models around exporting to the US while the dollar standard enabled America to run persistent deficits. Now they'll be competing for limited surpluses among themselves. I genuinely hope I'm wrong, but history has played out this scenario repeatedly, and cooperation only emerges after a painful period of disorder.
Michael McNair@michaeljmcnair

Just as it was with the end of the gold standard, so it is with the end of the dollar standard. It’s the inner war period all over again. It was 20yrs bw the end of the gold std and Bretton Woods. We’re in the 1st inning. The breakdown in global coordination and increase in trade tensions will grow exponentially (from everyone) from here.

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Rogier De Langhe 리트윗함
John B. Holbein
John B. Holbein@JohnHolbein1·
Studying economics and business in college makes students become much more conservative.
John B. Holbein tweet mediaJohn B. Holbein tweet mediaJohn B. Holbein tweet mediaJohn B. Holbein tweet media
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Santiago Capital
Santiago Capital@SantiagoAuFund·
The only $ "Base Money" (which whole global monetary system is levered off of) that exists in eurodollar mkt is physical currency/coins located in non US geographic jurisdiction. If US ever wanted to bring those reserves home they could just say those serial #s expire on X date.
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Rogier De Langhe
Rogier De Langhe@_roedel·
@onechancefreedm Tariffs have put pressure on the USDCNH peg, but so far no accidents happened because Trump was talking the dollar down in tandem. US waiting for signs of stress on the peg to go for the jugular. Right when PBOC starts struggling to match USD, talk up USD = game over for PBOC
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EndGame Macro
EndGame Macro@onechancefreedm·
The Bond Market Isn’t Easing It’s Bracing for Impact ⸻ What Looks Like a Rally Is Actually a Distress Signal. Global sovereign bond yields collapsed today across the curve from the U.S. and EU to Asia-Pacific. But this isn’t a coordinated rate-cut narrative. It’s a volatility regime transition masquerading as monetary optimism. Underneath the surface, capital is fleeing FX instability, liquidity fragmentation, and geopolitical escalation. ⸻ 1. Yield Compression Isn’t About Growth It’s About Fragility •U.S. 10-Year Yield: Down 2.1 bps to 4.15% •German 10-Year Yield: Down 3.1 bps to 2.46% •UK 30-Year Yield: Down a staggering 5.1 bps to 5.19% •Swiss 30-Year Yield: Down 5.5 bps now barely above zero Bond markets across the developed world are screaming “something’s breaking.” This isn’t a normal rally it’s a rotation out of risk and into sovereign collateral as a safe haven. The sharpest declines are in the long end of the curve, signaling either a derivatives unwind, forced rebalancing, or defensive positioning ahead of anticipated macro shock. ⸻ 2. The China Catalyst: Suppressed Yields, Suppressed Reality China’s entire sovereign curve remains artificially pinned, with little movement despite rising global stress. This isn’t calm it’s control. The CCP is likely managing both onshore capital flight risk and external FX expectations as it prepares for what many now believe is an inevitable RMB devaluation to stave off domestic debt collapse. But here’s the twist: the U.S. knows this is coming and it’s preparing to weaponize it. ⸻ 3. Strategic U.S. Response: Devaluation as a Pretext for Escalation If China devalues, the U.S. isn’t going to accommodate. Instead, it will: •Accuse China of currency manipulation •Escalate tariffs and trade restrictions •Tighten capital flow and tech access •Trigger a rally into long-dated U.S. Treasuries as global capital seeks dollar-denominated security This is not monetary policy it’s geoeconomic warfare disguised as financial normalization. The U.S. is positioning itself to attract the capital fleeing the RMB system while politically framing China as the aggressor. ⸻ 4. Emerging Markets: Caught in the Crossfire •Brazil 2-Year Yield: Spiked +3.6 bps •Argentina 5-Year Yield: Exploded +3.2 bps •Mexico Front-End: Mixed but showing instability These yield spikes in key EMs signal capital flight and FX pressure as global investors retreat from vulnerable carry trades. This is pre-contagion pricing. If the RMB breaks, commodity-exporting EMs will face a dual shock: stronger USD and collapsing external demand. ⸻ 5. The Real Story: Duration Isn’t the Trade It’s the Shield Across Europe, bond yields are collapsing not because of growth optimism or ECB easing bets, but because capital is desperately reallocating into anything with perceived sovereign guarantee. The Swiss curve, the German bunds, and U.S. long bonds are absorbing silent panic. This is a defense against: •RMB devaluation fallout •Synthetic USD liquidity drain •Interbank swap spread divergence •Geopolitical volatility tail risk (China/U.S., BRICS bifurcation, Gulf energy flashpoints) ⸻ Conclusion: The Market Is Not Front-Running Rate Cuts It’s Front-Running Crisis Response This isn’t about the Fed, the ECB, or inflation cooling. It’s about capital flows reorienting around fragility, not growth. The next move isn’t a policy announcement it’s a forced reaction. Watch for: •Rising FX volatility (especially USD/CNH and EM crosses) •U.S. tariffs or capital restrictions triggered by RMB weakness •BIS or Fed interventions via swap lines or repo facilities •Synthetic dollar short-squeeze as collateral disappears in the long end ⸻ Bottom Line: The sovereign bond market is flashing its highest conviction signal yet not about inflation, but about systemic fragility and imminent geopolitical liquidity stress.
GIF
Jens Nordvig@jnordvig

A lot of green in global rates...

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Rogier De Langhe
Rogier De Langhe@_roedel·
@OopsGuess Just goes to show the only way to keep Chinese society from falling apart is to keep factories running, no matter what
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𝘊𝘰𝘳𝘳𝘪𝘯𝘦
🇨🇳🇺🇸 CBS reporter Anna Coren took a drone to visit Chinese factories under tariffs, and she realized that China shows its economy is moving on without the U.S. But faced with the uncomfortable truth that China is a modern, high-tech society, CBS still had to add this disclaimer: “But keep in mind, Anna Coren was shown what the Chinese Communist Party wanted her and the American public to see.” When reality doesn’t fit the narrative, slap on a warning label.
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Rogier De Langhe
Rogier De Langhe@_roedel·
@LukeGromen Miran's Gold-to-FX swap in action? Miran's plan was to buy gold + FX forwards, and then sell the gold to fulfill the contracts. Would also explain diverging spot and forward rates x.com/michaeljmcnair…
Michael McNair@michaeljmcnair

Is Treasury Quietly Executing Miran’s Gold-to-FX Playbook? We have compelling evidence of stealthy US FX reserve accumulation – using gold. Stephen Miran’s 2023 “User’s Guide” detailed how Treasury could convert gold into foreign reserves without congressional approval. Current market fingerprints suggest Miran’s playbook may already be active. How Miran’s Strategy Works: 1. Buy unlimited gold: Treasury, under 31 U.S.C. § 5116, can acquire bullion freely without new appropriations, typically financing via short-term T-bills. Gold is the only asset Treasury can later “monetize” into foreign cash without new appropriations. 2. Monetize gold later: The Gold Reserve Act requires proceeds from gold sales to retire Treasury debt. 3. Create a debt liability first: ESF sells dollars forward (ex. agreeing to deliver USD in six months for euros). 4. Settle using gold: Just before settlement, Treasury sells gold, immediately using dollars raised to retire the forward liability, satisfying statutory debt reduction. Result: Treasury swapped idle bullion for interest-bearing FX reserves, all within existing law…no congressional vote, no hit to headline debt, no directional bet on gold. That’s the whole playbook: buy gold freely and use it as collateral to flip into euros or yen via a forward sale of dollars. Evidence Its Live: 1. 2000+ tonnes of gold shipped to New York since December, the largest inflow ever. 2. EUR fwd rate - essentially the 1yr fwd discount vs. spot EUR/USD - normally tracks spot closely but recently has diverged sharply (see chart). This indicates someone, who is rate-insensitive, is supplying dollars (or demanding euros) in the forward market strongly enough to flatten the curve even as the cash market pushes spot higher. That is precisely the footprint you would expect if a large player were selling USD fwd in size while simultaneously accumulating euros: the forward supply leans on basis/forward points, but the spot legs of those trades, whether outright EUR buys or the mirror leg of a gold swap, push spot up. In other words, the correlation break is further circumstantial evidence that the fwd leg is being used to fund something structural, not a speculative punt. 3. Last week, Treasury abruptly raised its Q2 borrowing estimate by $390 billion, primarily in short-dated bills, precisely how you'd prefund a substantial fwd settlement requiring cash delivery. Alternative Explanations (partial): Admittedly, this theory could partially be explained by other factors: 1. European institutional investors have sold large unhedged USD asset holdings, pressuring spot EUR/USD upward. 2. The massive bullion inflows to COMEX were partly driven by tariff fears, creating a profitable arb and prompting dealers to deliver gold against COMEX futures. 3. The extra bills issuance could merely be “catch-up” financing to get the TGA back to $850 bn once the debt ceiling is lifted. But if Treasury were also buying bullion for a forthcoming FX swap, the mechanics would look identical on headline borrowing data: issue bills now (shows up as higher net borrowing), pay bullion suppliers (cash outflow eats into the TGA), sell the gold for dollars at forward settlement. It also doesn’t fully explain why the EUR/USD fwd curve has flattened steadily across longer maturities, nor why the forward vs spot correlation would break so decisively, nor the curious alignment with Treasury’s sudden borrowing spike, and why COMEX stocks would remain persistently high after the tariff exemption - only bled ~1.5 mn oz...small vs the inflow. Why isn’t the metal racing back to London now that the arb is gone? Also, important to note that public ledgers still show flat official FX assets. That means either: dealer banks are warehousing the euro and yen leg until forward settlement - perfectly consistent with Miran’s structure; or we’re still “testing the plumbing” with modest ticket sizes. We should know for certain in short order, as Treasury must publish Sovereign Wealth Fund details by Sunday, May 4 and Thursday’s H.4.1 release and upcoming TIC banking data will confirm whether we're witnessing the first genuine US fx reserve build in decades, or if it’s simply an improbable set of coincidences that just happen to perfectly align with the mechanics of Miran’s gold-reserve accumulation strategy.

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Luke Gromen
Luke Gromen@LukeGromen·
The unallocated gold market in London has ALWAYS been the Achilles Heel of the post-1971 USD centric system, so when “someone” begins to drain it and is NOT tapped on the shoulder & told to stop, or the rules aren’t changed (as in 2020), there is significant informational value:
Ed Conway@EdConwaySky

Here's a 👀 datapoint. In January a whopping 67% of ALL UK exports to America were gold bars. Ponder that for a moment. 67% of EVERY PHYSICAL THING the UK exported to the US (by value) Totally unprecedented. Further evidence of the scale of gold outflows from Britain to America

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Rogier De Langhe
Rogier De Langhe@_roedel·
@SuitablePolitic Miran's Gold-to-FX swap underway? Treasury Dept. can only sell gold to service national debt. Seems like the Treasury has been buying tons of gold + forward FX contracts before April 20th, and has been selling gold to fulfill the contracts since x.com/michaeljmcnair…
Michael McNair@michaeljmcnair

Is Treasury Quietly Executing Miran’s Gold-to-FX Playbook? We have compelling evidence of stealthy US FX reserve accumulation – using gold. Stephen Miran’s 2023 “User’s Guide” detailed how Treasury could convert gold into foreign reserves without congressional approval. Current market fingerprints suggest Miran’s playbook may already be active. How Miran’s Strategy Works: 1. Buy unlimited gold: Treasury, under 31 U.S.C. § 5116, can acquire bullion freely without new appropriations, typically financing via short-term T-bills. Gold is the only asset Treasury can later “monetize” into foreign cash without new appropriations. 2. Monetize gold later: The Gold Reserve Act requires proceeds from gold sales to retire Treasury debt. 3. Create a debt liability first: ESF sells dollars forward (ex. agreeing to deliver USD in six months for euros). 4. Settle using gold: Just before settlement, Treasury sells gold, immediately using dollars raised to retire the forward liability, satisfying statutory debt reduction. Result: Treasury swapped idle bullion for interest-bearing FX reserves, all within existing law…no congressional vote, no hit to headline debt, no directional bet on gold. That’s the whole playbook: buy gold freely and use it as collateral to flip into euros or yen via a forward sale of dollars. Evidence Its Live: 1. 2000+ tonnes of gold shipped to New York since December, the largest inflow ever. 2. EUR fwd rate - essentially the 1yr fwd discount vs. spot EUR/USD - normally tracks spot closely but recently has diverged sharply (see chart). This indicates someone, who is rate-insensitive, is supplying dollars (or demanding euros) in the forward market strongly enough to flatten the curve even as the cash market pushes spot higher. That is precisely the footprint you would expect if a large player were selling USD fwd in size while simultaneously accumulating euros: the forward supply leans on basis/forward points, but the spot legs of those trades, whether outright EUR buys or the mirror leg of a gold swap, push spot up. In other words, the correlation break is further circumstantial evidence that the fwd leg is being used to fund something structural, not a speculative punt. 3. Last week, Treasury abruptly raised its Q2 borrowing estimate by $390 billion, primarily in short-dated bills, precisely how you'd prefund a substantial fwd settlement requiring cash delivery. Alternative Explanations (partial): Admittedly, this theory could partially be explained by other factors: 1. European institutional investors have sold large unhedged USD asset holdings, pressuring spot EUR/USD upward. 2. The massive bullion inflows to COMEX were partly driven by tariff fears, creating a profitable arb and prompting dealers to deliver gold against COMEX futures. 3. The extra bills issuance could merely be “catch-up” financing to get the TGA back to $850 bn once the debt ceiling is lifted. But if Treasury were also buying bullion for a forthcoming FX swap, the mechanics would look identical on headline borrowing data: issue bills now (shows up as higher net borrowing), pay bullion suppliers (cash outflow eats into the TGA), sell the gold for dollars at forward settlement. It also doesn’t fully explain why the EUR/USD fwd curve has flattened steadily across longer maturities, nor why the forward vs spot correlation would break so decisively, nor the curious alignment with Treasury’s sudden borrowing spike, and why COMEX stocks would remain persistently high after the tariff exemption - only bled ~1.5 mn oz...small vs the inflow. Why isn’t the metal racing back to London now that the arb is gone? Also, important to note that public ledgers still show flat official FX assets. That means either: dealer banks are warehousing the euro and yen leg until forward settlement - perfectly consistent with Miran’s structure; or we’re still “testing the plumbing” with modest ticket sizes. We should know for certain in short order, as Treasury must publish Sovereign Wealth Fund details by Sunday, May 4 and Thursday’s H.4.1 release and upcoming TIC banking data will confirm whether we're witnessing the first genuine US fx reserve build in decades, or if it’s simply an improbable set of coincidences that just happen to perfectly align with the mechanics of Miran’s gold-reserve accumulation strategy.

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Derek. 🇺🇸
Derek. 🇺🇸@SuitablePolitic·
China keeps a lot of gold. It's one of the few things their citizenry is allowed to invest in that's not Yuan denominated. Gold has been on a rocket ship upwards for this reason. If gold were to suddenly crater, they'd be in big trouble.
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Rogier De Langhe
Rogier De Langhe@_roedel·
De Commissie heeft MiCA regels, maar hoe afdwingbaar zijn die zonder banken als intermediair?? ECB's Philip Lane: Als we onze financiële soevereiniteit willen verdedigen, zullen we met een eigen digitale € moeten komen, en snel! cryptodnes.bg/en/ecb-pushes-…
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Rogier De Langhe
Rogier De Langhe@_roedel·
Een munt is een standaard, die maar waarde krijgt via adoptie. Die adoptie was gegarandeerd via de banken: geld gebruiken in Euroland vereist € bij Europese bank. Digitale dollar ondermijnt die garantie en zou een vicieuze cirkel in gang kunnen zetten naar dollaradoptie
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Rogier De Langhe
Rogier De Langhe@_roedel·
De ECB vreest de digitale dollar Digitale vereist geen bankrekening bij een bank in die muntzone, waardoor Europese bankregulering wordt omzeild en de VS (itt het Eurodollarsysteem) de economische macht behoudt. Financiële kolonisatie? politico.eu/article/europe…
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Old man in the cave 💥
Old man in the cave 💥@optigrab1984·
I'm from the future, here's what happens. The existence of govt approved digital dollar coins enables people around the world to carry dollars in their phone that are just as accessible as their national currency. As they watch the dollar appreciate, more and more people choose to hold dollars rather than their home currency. Currencies around the world plummet, the dollar soars. People in Europe are transacting in dollar coins, people in Japan are transacting in dollar coins etc. As the dollar coins are backed by treasuries, US treasury yields plummet. All international attempts to stop the spread of dollar coins fail. The dollar eventually becomes the only remaining currency used worldwide. It takes many years, but it happens. It's the digital dollar milkshake theory.
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Rogier De Langhe
Rogier De Langhe@_roedel·
@michaeljmcnair April 20 was right at the height of Trump's attack on Powell. Maybe that was all just a show to pump the price of gold before Treasury started selling.
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Michael McNair
Michael McNair@michaeljmcnair·
Maybe just another coincidence
Michael McNair tweet mediaMichael McNair tweet media
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Michael McNair
Michael McNair@michaeljmcnair·
Is Treasury Quietly Executing Miran’s Gold-to-FX Playbook? We have compelling evidence of stealthy US FX reserve accumulation – using gold. Stephen Miran’s 2023 “User’s Guide” detailed how Treasury could convert gold into foreign reserves without congressional approval. Current market fingerprints suggest Miran’s playbook may already be active. How Miran’s Strategy Works: 1. Buy unlimited gold: Treasury, under 31 U.S.C. § 5116, can acquire bullion freely without new appropriations, typically financing via short-term T-bills. Gold is the only asset Treasury can later “monetize” into foreign cash without new appropriations. 2. Monetize gold later: The Gold Reserve Act requires proceeds from gold sales to retire Treasury debt. 3. Create a debt liability first: ESF sells dollars forward (ex. agreeing to deliver USD in six months for euros). 4. Settle using gold: Just before settlement, Treasury sells gold, immediately using dollars raised to retire the forward liability, satisfying statutory debt reduction. Result: Treasury swapped idle bullion for interest-bearing FX reserves, all within existing law…no congressional vote, no hit to headline debt, no directional bet on gold. That’s the whole playbook: buy gold freely and use it as collateral to flip into euros or yen via a forward sale of dollars. Evidence Its Live: 1. 2000+ tonnes of gold shipped to New York since December, the largest inflow ever. 2. EUR fwd rate - essentially the 1yr fwd discount vs. spot EUR/USD - normally tracks spot closely but recently has diverged sharply (see chart). This indicates someone, who is rate-insensitive, is supplying dollars (or demanding euros) in the forward market strongly enough to flatten the curve even as the cash market pushes spot higher. That is precisely the footprint you would expect if a large player were selling USD fwd in size while simultaneously accumulating euros: the forward supply leans on basis/forward points, but the spot legs of those trades, whether outright EUR buys or the mirror leg of a gold swap, push spot up. In other words, the correlation break is further circumstantial evidence that the fwd leg is being used to fund something structural, not a speculative punt. 3. Last week, Treasury abruptly raised its Q2 borrowing estimate by $390 billion, primarily in short-dated bills, precisely how you'd prefund a substantial fwd settlement requiring cash delivery. Alternative Explanations (partial): Admittedly, this theory could partially be explained by other factors: 1. European institutional investors have sold large unhedged USD asset holdings, pressuring spot EUR/USD upward. 2. The massive bullion inflows to COMEX were partly driven by tariff fears, creating a profitable arb and prompting dealers to deliver gold against COMEX futures. 3. The extra bills issuance could merely be “catch-up” financing to get the TGA back to $850 bn once the debt ceiling is lifted. But if Treasury were also buying bullion for a forthcoming FX swap, the mechanics would look identical on headline borrowing data: issue bills now (shows up as higher net borrowing), pay bullion suppliers (cash outflow eats into the TGA), sell the gold for dollars at forward settlement. It also doesn’t fully explain why the EUR/USD fwd curve has flattened steadily across longer maturities, nor why the forward vs spot correlation would break so decisively, nor the curious alignment with Treasury’s sudden borrowing spike, and why COMEX stocks would remain persistently high after the tariff exemption - only bled ~1.5 mn oz...small vs the inflow. Why isn’t the metal racing back to London now that the arb is gone? Also, important to note that public ledgers still show flat official FX assets. That means either: dealer banks are warehousing the euro and yen leg until forward settlement - perfectly consistent with Miran’s structure; or we’re still “testing the plumbing” with modest ticket sizes. We should know for certain in short order, as Treasury must publish Sovereign Wealth Fund details by Sunday, May 4 and Thursday’s H.4.1 release and upcoming TIC banking data will confirm whether we're witnessing the first genuine US fx reserve build in decades, or if it’s simply an improbable set of coincidences that just happen to perfectly align with the mechanics of Miran’s gold-reserve accumulation strategy.
Michael McNair tweet media
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Rogier De Langhe
Rogier De Langhe@_roedel·
@michaeljmcnair Interesting! But if EUR forward rates are artificially suppressed, why doesn't the market arbitrage away the difference between forward and spot rates?
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Rogier De Langhe
Rogier De Langhe@_roedel·
Bessent: "the US will use stablecoins to help preserve the dollar’s role as the world’s reserve currency and in driving net new demand for US Treasury bills."
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