
HD25Plus
11.5K posts





Foreign investors are pouring record funds into Asian bonds, with Malaysia attracting $3.15 bil in May, its highest since 2014. Asian bonds, particularly in Malaysia, India, & Indonesia, are drawing record investments due to high yields, stable currencies, and expected rate cuts. 🧵1


Hey, do you like extra spicy noodles?

लाली गुरास ( Rhododendron ) - National flower of Nepal ✨


UK members of parliament have reportedly called for Andrew Tate to be extradited from HK, prompting the controversial manosphere influencer to taunt the British government to "come get" him. 🔗 In full: hongkongfp.com/2026/03/19/mps…


I’ll never forget this hidden paradise in Mabul Island, Malaysia 🏝️




I’ll never forget this hidden paradise in Mabul Island, Malaysia 🏝️


My theory of why gold cratered recently on bad Iran news: gold is something you hold when there are unknown unknowns. You have a spidey sense. Things are gonna be bad. But you don’t know precisely how who where or when exactly. You buy gold. You know it is something you can quickly liquidate for value in an emergency. Well guess what? For a lot of people, that emergency just arrive and they are selling their gold for the liquidity to buy stuff they actually need cuz nobody actually needs gold as gold: they need gold to convert to other stuff. Others may not be in a desperate straits but they have visibility now that a clear crisis has arrived what stuff is definitely going to be coming up short and will be highly valuable. That might also cause them to be out of gold. In short, my thesis is unknown unknowns are bullish for gold while an actual crisis draws down golds value at least for the short term.










