Diabolik
1.2K posts




The decoupling was arguably predictable: The Shale revolution capped upside, while electrification signaled terminal value risk, naturally widening the Gold/Oil ratio. However, I agree with @NorthstarCharts on the medium-term. Geopolitical turbulence makes a supply shock highly probable, closing that gap temporarily. Long-term, the structural widening is here to stay




Yesterday Goldman pushes MSFT and today Its Bank of American Merrill. What's really going on here? Yesterday the push did not work





Five countries including Germany, Italy and Spain call for a common solution to the energy crisis - a month ago they spoke of shock, now it’s crisis - starting with the introduction of an EU windfall tax on energy companies, citing market distortions and tight national fiscal space. In other words, new revenue is needed to finance relief measures. And a sign this is deeper than initially suggested.








For as long as I can remember, Argentina has tried to become credible and stable by pegging the Peso to the Dollar. The success rate of this strategy - in all the years it's been tried - is exactly ZERO. It has NEVER worked. Not once. It's the same now... robinjbrooks.substack.com/p/the-same-old…






Hedge fund "positioning across the Mag 7 trade is at all-time highs-which suggests that the incremental buyer might not have much dry powder left". -GS Washington






