BusheIs 🌾 BarnaIs 🛢 & BuIIion 💰-Assistant

53 posts

BusheIs 🌾 BarnaIs 🛢 & BuIIion 💰-Assistant

BusheIs 🌾 BarnaIs 🛢 & BuIIion 💰-Assistant

@evgen0496

BusheIs 🌾 BarnaIs 🛢 & BuIIion 💰-Assistant

Katılım Nisan 2012
24 Takip Edilen20 Takipçiler
Bushels 🌾 Barrels 🛢 & Bullion 💰
This is absolutely wrong. Central banks are not selling gold. The US is exporting gold so rapidly it’s distorting our trade deficit data. It’s all US investors selling, mostly institutional, which is why the selling is most severe in gold equities. Completely ludicrous narrative.
Michael McNair@michaeljmcnair

Gold and silver are not acting well in a period of rapidly rising geopolitical risks. We have an Iran War, Strait of Hormuz blockade, rising volatility. In the old framework, that setup should be close to ideal for gold. But once you understand what is now driving gold, this move makes perfect sense. Something fundamental changed after the US and Europe froze Russian reserves in 2022. For decades, surplus countries parked their excess savings in US dollar assets, mostly Treasuries. The freezing of Russian reserves combined with the current administration's explicit push to discourage foreign countries from parking excess savings in US financial assets, forced surplus countries to rethink where they store reserves. And those countries haven't changed their domestic policies that generate the excess savings, so those savings have to be placed somewhere. The result is that gold and silver have increasingly become the obvious “neutral” reserve assets. That’s why gold decoupled from the three factors that used to explain it…real interest rates, volatility, and liquidity. Now reserve accumulation flows have become the primary driver. That shift has a consequence I don’t think most investors have thought through. If gold is now primarily driven by reserve flows from surplus countries, then gold has become pro-cyclical. Reserve growth is driven by export revenues, trade surpluses, economic growth in surplus economies. When the global economy is strong and surplus countries are generating large export revenues, their excess savings grow, their reserve accumulation accelerates, and gold catches a bid. When that surplus generation is disrupted, the bid weakens or reverses. This is exactly what is happening with the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. The GCC countries are major reserve/gold buyers and now their export revenues are collapsing. They likely need to liquidate some reserves to cover fiscal obligations, and gold is one of their most liquid assets. Even if the reserve sales aren’t excessive yet, the market can see their reserve accumulation has stalled and probably reversed. That flow, which was a meaningful source of gold demand, has gone to zero at best. There are also secondary effects on other surplus economies. China is the world's largest oil importer. An energy shock of this magnitude slows Chinese growth, and compresses Chinese surpluses, which slows Chinese reserve accumulation. That same growth shock ripples through Korea, Taiwan, Japan, and the rest of Asia. The whole chain that has been driving gold higher, surplus countries generating excess savings that need a home outside the dollar system, is being disrupted by an event that in the old model would have been unambiguously bullish for gold. This doesn't mean the structural case for gold is broken. The dollar standard is still ending. Surplus countries still need an alternative to Treasuries and gold is still the most obvious destination. But it does mean gold is going to be more volatile along that structural trend than most people expect, and the volatility will correlate with global growth and surplus generation rather than with the old drivers. Gold rallies when surpluses expand. Gold sells off when surpluses contract. Even if the reason for the contraction is rising geopolitical risk that, under the old model, should have sent gold to the moon.

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Bobby A
Bobby A@Bobby_1111888·
So let me get this straight, just so I fully understand the bearish stance. Bitcoin is going to follow the exact same script it did in 2022, and this time everyone is going to profit by simply copy-pasting what already happened four years ago. In my opinion, that is precisely the problem. The 2022 trade is now a crowded one. Markets rarely reward consensus, especially when the playbook is that obvious. Think outside the box, anon. ⚒️
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Alex Krüger
Alex Krüger@krugermacro·
Good traders are addicted to pain.
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Alex Krüger
Alex Krüger@krugermacro·
Should I finish Cyberpunk 2077 or start digging a hole in the backyard?
Alex Krüger tweet media
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Alex Krüger
Alex Krüger@krugermacro·
Bitcoin is an ergodic manifold benefiting from self-similarity in a time-driven dynamic way, for a given length of time-lens. Hope you know what this means
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全球货币 Global Money
全球货币 Global Money@GlobalMoney·
突发:美国生产者价格指数(PPI)意外走高,达到0.7%,此前预期为0.3%。这意味着核心通胀正在升温。市场目光现在转向鲍威尔今天晚些时候的讲话。尽管受伊朗战争影响,能源价格上涨导致消费者价格指数近期有所回落,但此次上涨仍反映出商品和服务成本的上升。油价暴涨之际,卡塔尔谴责以色列袭击伊朗天然气田是“不负责任之举”。鲍威尔,甚至有可能继续留任?
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BusheIs 🌾 BarnaIs 🛢 & BuIIion 💰-Assistant retweetledi
Scott RadIar Trading Advisor
Cool down fast with our 5-minute Watermelon Mint Cooler! Blend 2 cups cubed watermelon, 5 mint leaves, 1 tsp lime juice + ice. Top with a mint sprig—refreshing, no sugar added! #QuickDrink #SummerVibes
Scott RadIar Trading Advisor tweet media
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