The Secret Muslim Banker

3.5K posts

The Secret Muslim Banker banner
The Secret Muslim Banker

The Secret Muslim Banker

@SecMuslimBanker

Managing a $100m investment fund. Breaking down macroeconomics with Islamic finance. Sharing my journey and insights on creating a riba-free economy.

Subscribe to my newsletter: Присоединился Nisan 2023
833 Подписки3.8K Подписчики
Закреплённый твит
The Secret Muslim Banker
The Secret Muslim Banker@SecMuslimBanker·
It's been a while but here's a new article on sukuks. I learned a lot thanks to @SafdarAlam 's book and I wanted to share it with you all. The sukuk market, predicted to grow to more than $1trn this year, isn't so different from conventional bonds. secretmuslimbanker.com/content/sukuks…
English
5
9
54
11.7K
Fink | Markets Talk, We Translate
The multi trillion dollar grid fiasco (the best investing opportunity for the next 10 years). If you put a gun to my head and asked me where to park capital for the next ten years with total conviction, i wouldn’t point you towards some speculative biotech or the latest ai software play. There’s really only one answer: global grid infrastructure. The world is currently obsessed with sexy. Everyone is tripping over themselves to talk about generative ai, silicon chips, or fucking memory. And don't get me wrong, that stuff is great to invest in. It works. But the market has a massive, fucking catastrophic blind spot. It is completely ignoring the brutal, physical reality required to actually make those things happen. The reality is this... the global power grid is broken. It is an ageing, wheezing, pathetic mess that was built for the 1970s and is now being asked to carry the weight of a digital revolution. You can’t run a gpt-5 cluster without a massive power grid. You cannot transition to green energy without a complete overhaul of the copper and electrical hardware that keeps the lights on. The grid is the ultimate bottleneck. And because it is a bottleneck, the people who own the solutions are going to make a disgusting amount of money. real numbers vs political fantasy I don't just look at spreadsheets to understand this. I am currently involved in a massive solar, hydrogen, and battery project in Portugal. We are right in the thick of it, and let me tell you, the numbers are staggering. When you are on the ground trying to actually build the future, you realise that the gap between political ambition and physical reality is a fucking canyon. We have the solar potential, we have the hydrogen tech, and we have the battery blueprints. But getting that energy from a field in Portugal into the wider European system is where the fantasy hits the wall. The scope of what is required to modernise the connection points and handle the load of green hydrogen production is beyond what most analysts can even fathom. We are out here looking for funding to bridge that gap (pre approved grants before construction is even done, that's how desperate they are), and it highlights the precise problem... everyone wants the green energy result, but nobody wants to talk about the trillions of euros in unsexy hardware needed to make it viable. This isn't a theoretical problem for me at the moment. It is a daily, multi-billion euro headache. Batteries are the prize... stop falling for the green tech crap The biggest mistake investors make is conflating green tech with the actual investment opportunity. Green tech, the solar panels and wind turbines, is becoming a commodity. It is just an input. The real opportunity, the one with the fatter margins and the massive bottleneck, is batteries. This is why solar in the UK is a joke. Investing in UK solar is like trying to run a marathon in a swimming pool, the environment just isn't built for it. The irradiance levels are pathetic. But when you move that same equipment to a high-yield region like Portugal, where you have the sun to actually charge the system properly, it becomes a no-brainer win-win. The solar panel is just the pump. The battery is the tank. Without the tank, the pump is useless because the grid can’t handle the pressure. The green part of the equation is only a win when you have the storage capacity to decouple generation from consumption. In the UK, you’re pumping into a leaky bucket on a cloudy day. In Portugal you're creating grid smoothness. The state-backed retainer: how to get paid for doing nothing The real money in batteries isn't just from buying low and selling high. It is in the Reserve Market. This is where the grid operator pays you just to sit there and be ready to save the system from a total blackout. Grid operators are terrified of frequency deviations. If the frequency drops below 50Hz (or 60Hz in the US), the whole system can trip. Batteries are the only assets fast enough to respond in milliseconds. Because of this, governments are now subsidising the very act of keeping your batteries charged. Through schemes like the Cap and Floor models in the UK or the Capacity Markets in Europe, the government essentially guarantees a minimum revenue for battery operators. They subsidise your charging during periods of excess renewable generation, sometimes even paying you to take the power, and then allow you to discharge at a higher rate and a massive premium the moment the grid enters a stress event. You are effectively being paid a retainer by the state to act as the grid's emergency lung. In mature markets like the UK, these ancillary services and frequency response contracts have historically earned over £110,000 per MW per year. Even as these markets saturate, the shift towards wholesale trading and the balancing mechanism ensures that if you have the storage, you have the leverage. The grid is absolutely fucked For the last thirty years, electricity demand in developed nations was basically flat. We got better at making lightbulbs and fridges, so we didn't need more juice. But that era is dead. We are now hitting a perfect storm of demand that the current system simply cannot handle. 1. The ai power hunger A single ai search consumes ten times more power than a standard Google search. We are looking at a paradigm shift where global data centre electricity consumption is projected to double by 2030, hitting over 1,000 terawatt-hours (twh). In the us alone, data centre demand is set to skyrocket from 17 gw in 2022 to an estimated 130 gw by 2030. That is roughly 12% of the entire country's annual demand. If you think a 1970s grid can just absorb 113 gw of new, high-density load without a total meltdown, you are delusional. 2. the 2,500 gw queue We are building wind farms and solar parks at a record pace, but we have nowhere to plug them in. There are currently over 3,000 gigawatts of renewable energy and storage projects sitting in interconnection queues globally. To put that in perspective, that is more than the total power capacity of the us and europe combined. In the us alone, the queue has ballooned to over 2,600 gw, with average wait times for a connection approaching five years. Developers are paying through the nose just to get a study done, with interconnection costs now representing 30 to 37% of total project budgets. It is a clusterfuck of epic proportions. 3. ageing as a national security risk The average transformer in the us is over 40 years old. The grid was designed for a world where power flowed one way, from a big coal plant to your house. Now, we need it to flow every which way, balancing ev chargers, solar roofs, and massive server farms. the grids missing stomach This is the part that people really don't get. You can build all the solar panels in the world, but if the sun goes down and you don't have a way to store that energy, the grid collapses. Renewables are intermittent and unreliable. They are a nightmare for grid operators who have to balance supply and demand in real-time. The only way to make a green grid work, and the only way to keep data centres running 24/7 without burning coal, is massive, utility-scale battery storage (BESS). The us added a record 57.6 gigawatt-hours (gwh) of battery storage in 2025 alone. Forecasts now suggest we will need 600 gwh of total capacity by 2030 to keep the lights on. We are talking about moving from 40 gw of total storage today to a world where we add 35 gw per year by 2026. This is the missing stomach of the grid, and without it, the whole system shits the bed. Desperate governments and the stickiest money on earth This isn't a problem that might get fixed. It is a problem that must be fixed, or the entire global economy grinds to a halt. In the age of electricity, power is the new oil. That makes the revenue in this sector essentially bulletproof. When a government or a utility provider realises their grid is failing, they don't look for the cheapest option. They look for the only option that works. This creates the government floor, massive direct spending, federal grants, and must-pass legislation. In the us, the IIJA still has hundreds of billions of dollars waiting to be deployed, and the iea says annual grid investment needs to rise by 50% by 2030 just to keep pace. When the customer is a desperate government with a printing press, the revenue is large, it’s inflated by necessity, and it’s essentially guaranteed. It is the stickiest, most recession-proof money on the planet. The firms owning the mess To build a concentrated portfolio for this bottleneck, you need firms that own the physical reality of the grid and the storage that makes it viable. Here are the five pillars. 1. Caterpillar Inc. (Cat) Caterpillar is the king of the grid's emergency room. While most investors focus on their construction equipment, the real story is in their power and energy segment. In 2025, cat reported record-breaking revenue of $67.6 billion. Their power and energy division exploded, with sales to users in north america up 30% in q4 2025 alone. Data centres and utilities are desperate for cat’s massive reciprocating engines and turbines to provide backup power and grid stabilisation. When the grid fluctuates because a cloud blocked the sun, cat’s hardware keeps the system from crashing. Cat is signing 20-year service and maintenance contracts on this hardware. They ended 2025 with $11.7 billion in enterprise operating cash flow and a record backlog. They are selling the guaranteed uptime of the global economy. 2. Tesla Inc. (Tsla) Tesla energy is now the primary margin driver for the firm. While the media remains obsessed with vehicle deliveries, the generation and storage division is quietly dominating the utility market. In 2025, tesla energy revenue reached $12.8 billion. Energy generation and storage gross margins hit a record 29.8% in q4 2025, significantly outperforming their automotive segments. They deployed 46.7 gwh of storage for the full year 2025, a 49% surge year-over-year. The megapack is the industry standard for utility-scale storage. With factories in lathrop and shanghai ramping to 40 gwh of capacity each, and a new megapack 3 facility near houston targeting 50 gwh, tesla provides the grid's stomach. Major utilities and hyperscale data centres looking to bypass the grid queue are deploying tesla hardware as a primary infrastructure asset. 3. Fluence Energy (Flnc) (I don't like their financials yet though) Fluence is the global leader in utility-scale energy storage and optimisation software. The growth is mental. Fluence reported 2025 revenue of $2.3 billion, but their pipeline has grown to a staggering $30 billion. They signed over $750 million in new orders in q1 2026 alone, bringing their record backlog to $5.5 billion. For fiscal year 2026, they are forecasting revenue of up to $3.6 billion, with their annual recurring revenue (arr) from high-margin software hitting $180 million. As data centres move towards 800-volt dc architectures and look for behind-the-meter storage to bypass the five-year grid queue, fluence is the primary beneficiary. 4. Prysmian Group (Pry) (insane chart) Fixing the grid requires miles of high-voltage, subsea, and underground cable. Prysmian is the billy big bollocks of this space, laying the nervous system of the new global economy. Prysmian closed 2025 with their highest-ever adjusted ebitda of €2.4 billion and a massive €17 billion backlog. Their transmission segment saw organic growth of 28.7% in 2025. Their transmission margins hit 18.3%, and in q4 2025, they reached a best-in-class 20.9%. With the acquisition of Encore Wire, they have a stranglehold on the north American market. You cannot build a factory, a data centre, or a wind farm without prysmian’s copper. They are the literal threads holding the modern digital and power world together. 5. Schneider Electric (Sndr) Schneider is the brain that allows the ageing grid to survive in Europe. They provide the digital switchgear, the automation, and the software that manages power flow. In 2025, schneider crossed €40 billion in revenue for the first time, with organic growth of 9%. Their data centre and networks segment now represents 30% of their total market exposure. They provide the 800 volt dc architectures and the Ecostruxure platform that helps data centres manage their massive power loads. Their moat is built on switching costs. Once a utility or a data centre uses schneider’s software and hardware, they are locked in for life. They are forecasting organic revenue growth of 7 to 10% through 2026, but with the speed to power race accelerating, schneider is the primary beneficiary. The massive shifts nobody can ignore Why now? Why is this the trade of the decade? The speed to power race For the last ten years, data centre developers cared about latency. Now, they only care about power. In markets like northern virginia or dublin, the wait time to get a new connection to the grid can be five to seven years. That is a fucking eternity. Companies are now building their own micro-grids and substations just to bypass the queue. This is a massive, unplanned capital expenditure boom that goes straight into the pockets of the foundation firms. The grid as a national security mandate We are in a new era of geopolitical tension. Having an ageing grid isn't some minor inconvenience, it is a massive fucking hole in our national security. Between cyber threats and extreme weather events, which now cost the us over $1 billion per event, the mandate to harden the grid is no longer optional. This ensures that the capex from utilities will remain at record highs regardless of what happens to the broader market. The re-shoring of industry Near-shoring and re-shoring are the new mantras. Building semiconductor fabs and battery plants in the midwest requires massive amounts of earth-moving, electrical engineering, and raw materials. You can't build a $20 billion chip plant on a 1970s power line. It is fucking impossible. So there you go. My view on the most important change over the next decade.
English
17
18
163
28.4K
The Secret Muslim Banker ретвитнул
Michael Hla
Michael Hla@hla_michael·
I trained an LLM from scratch on pre-1900 text to see if it could come up with quantum mechanics and relativity. While the model is too small to do meaningful reasoning, it has glimpses of intuition. When given observations from past landmark experiments, the model can declare that “light is made up of definite quantities of energy” and even suggest that gravity and acceleration are locally equivalent. I’m releasing the dataset + models and leave this as an open problem to the research community. I also include what this project has taught me about intelligence in a mini essay linked below. 🧵(1/n)
English
116
260
2K
305.8K
The Secret Muslim Banker
The Secret Muslim Banker@SecMuslimBanker·
@alifnomad Erasure won’t happen. Iran still needs to sell oil so market will stabilise somehow, maybe at a higher price. And GCC can’t sit idle so eventually a deal will have to take place on how the strait of Hormuz is managed.
English
0
0
1
51
Alif
Alif@alifnomad·
@SecMuslimBanker This also means, US can erase Iranian oil industry and to some extent even if GCC is severely crippled, it benefits US
English
1
0
0
50
The Secret Muslim Banker
The Secret Muslim Banker@SecMuslimBanker·
Interesting sequence of events. If China’s trading partners run out of fuel then it greatly affects the Chinese economy. By now buying US oil and gas, and exporting it to them, China can keep the economy stable, for now. What’s worrying for them is having to rely on US for this new source of energy.
John Spencer@SpencerGuard

China imports US oil for Asian fuel markets amid Hormuz crisis @asiatimesonline asiatimes.com/2026/04/china-… China is moving to resume large-scale purchases of United States liquefied natural gas (LNG) and crude oil, as supply disruptions in the Middle East and tightening fuel markets across Asia force Beijing to recalibrate its energy strategy. In return, China will have sufficient fuel supply to resume gasoline exports to Asian countries, helping it maintain market share and increase political influence in the region amid tightening fuel supplies. On March 11, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) ordered a halt to exports of gasoline, diesel and aviation fuel. The resumption of China's purchases of US crude oil and LNG appears to reflect limited strategic flexibility for Beijing, as disruptions to supplies from Venezuela and the Middle East constrain its options. He adds that China’s decision to resume large-scale energy purchases from the US comes ahead of a planned leaders’ meeting between Beijing and Washington in May, and that the deal helps create a more constructive atmosphere for high-level dialogue.

English
1
0
0
496
The Secret Muslim Banker
The Secret Muslim Banker@SecMuslimBanker·
All the important passages for maritime trade.
The Secret Muslim Banker tweet media
English
0
0
1
224
The Secret Muslim Banker ретвитнул
JH
JH@CRUDEOIL231·
I think way too many ppl are delusional about this idea of letting Iran control the SoH, having the US pull out, and just letting Iran set up a toll booth. Where does Saudi’s power actually come from? It’s not just because they’re rich. Their entire influence comes from being the world’s only swing Producer. We need oil, and Saudi controls that market. If Iran takes over the SoH, they become the most powerful, one of a kind Global Swing Producer in history. If they don’t like the oil price? They can just "adjust" the traffic in a strait that handles ~20mb/d to swing prices however they want. If the UAE gets on Iran’s bad side? "No passage for UAE tankers." If Kuwait tries to build a bypass? "Fine, the SoH is closed starting today. Let’s see if you can finish that bypass—which takes years—without making a single dime." By letting Iran control that flow, the US is effectively making Iran the ultimate energy gatekeeper. The entire regional hegemony shifts to Iran. Saudi and the UAE lose everything. Think about it—if you were MBS, would you let this happen? Let’s say the US pulls out this week. The US started this mess, and now the GCC has to just sit there and watch their power handed over to Iran? Let me give you a reality check for Americans: Imagine Mexico now controls the North American continent. "Want to fly to the UK? Get Mexico’s permission. Want to import jet fuel from Asia? Pay Mexico a toll and take the route they tell you to. Did you dare to criticize Mexico? Now, no container ships can enter your waters. You can’t say a word against the great President of Mexico." It sounds like a fantasy, but that’s the reality for the GCC. If the US tries to run away? If I were the GCC, I wouldn’t let them leave. I’d grab them by the hair and drag them back to clean up the mess they made. I’ve said before that this is an existential issue for Iran and Israel. Well, Iranian control of the SoH is an existential issue for every other GCC nation. And the GCC has leverage. They have massive wealth invested in the West, huge U.S. asset holdings, decades of lobbying networks, and they are the biggest donors for Trump’s terms. And of course they have oil. Do you really think Brent would stay below $100/bbl if the GCC teamed up and cut just 3mb/d for six months? Even the most optimistic guy knows the answer is zero chance. They don't even need a fancy excuse: "Oh, since the US gave up on us and Iran owns the SoH, it's not safe. We have to cut production. Sorry!" Within months, the US would be begging to come back. It’s just pushing the Middle East into an even bigger pit of fire. Thanks for listening to my TED Talk :) #oott #iran
English
438
670
5.3K
1.5M
The Secret Muslim Banker
The Secret Muslim Banker@SecMuslimBanker·
this is the best thing you will read today "Schopenhauer wrote that humans are not rational beings who occasionally feel emotions. we are emotional beings who occasionally think rationally. the rationality is the exception. the feeling is the baseline. every framework we build in finance and in business and in life is an attempt to impose order on a brain that is fundamentally running on fear and desire and the need to be seen as competent by other people who are also running on fear and desire"
moneyfetishist@moneyfetishist

spent the last few hours answering questions from strangers on the internet while sitting on a plane and the thing that keeps striking me is how similar every question sounds once you strip away the context the BB analyst making $200K wants to know if his life has meaning. the 20-year-old in a frat wants to know if he is on the right path. the guy running a $15M environmental services company cannot sleep because his leverage ratio scares him even though his covenants are fine. the first-year law student wants someone to tell him the career pivot will work out. the immigrant who got laid off wants to know he is not falling behind permanently the details are different. the feeling underneath is identical. am I going to be okay we pretend that money and status and titles fix this. they do not. I sit in rooms with people who control nine-figure portfolios and they are nervous about the same things as everyone else. they just have more expensive language for it. the fund manager calls it "risk management." the analyst calls it "career strategy." the 20-year-old calls it "figuring out my path." same anxiety wearing different suits I watched a grown man worth more than most people will earn in ten lifetimes throw a tantrum in a conference room because someone questioned his assumption in a model. not his competence. not his track record. an assumption in a spreadsheet. a cell in Excel. he turned red and raised his voice because for 15 seconds he felt like he might be wrong about something and his entire identity could not absorb that possibility that is not a professional disagreement. that is a kid on a playground who got told he is not the fastest runner Schopenhauer wrote that humans are not rational beings who occasionally feel emotions. we are emotional beings who occasionally think rationally. the rationality is the exception. the feeling is the baseline. every framework we build in finance and in business and in life is an attempt to impose order on a brain that is fundamentally running on fear and desire and the need to be seen as competent by other people who are also running on fear and desire the most dangerous version of this is the person who thinks they have outgrown it. the one who believes that enough success or enough money or enough status has made them rational. that person is not more rational. they are less accountable. nobody around them pushes back anymore so the irrational impulses go unchecked and get rebranded as conviction and vision and leadership the best operators I know are the ones who understand that they are still unreasonable kids underneath everything. they lose their temper over small things. they take criticism personally even when it is constructive. they make emotional decisions and reverse-engineer a logical justification after the fact. the difference is they know they do this. they have systems to catch it. they hire people who are allowed to tell them when they are being stupid. they build in a 24-hour delay before any decision made while angry the worst operators are the ones who think they have evolved past it. they confuse pattern recognition with wisdom. they confuse wealth with emotional maturity. they confuse the silence of the people around them with agreement when it is actually just fear Nietzsche said that the most common form of human stupidity is forgetting what one is trying to do. I think the more common form is forgetting what one is. which is a complicated animal that learned to use spreadsheets but never stopped being afraid of the dark none of us outgrow being unreasonable. the question is whether we build a life that accounts for it or one that pretends it does not exist thanks for the questions today. you are all going to be fine. even the ones who do not feel like it right now

English
1
0
5
391
The Secret Muslim Banker ретвитнул
De Prof™
De Prof™@rahmandeprof·
I was just revising my notes and I came across this profound concept Al-Imām Ibnul Qayyim wrote about that destroys the lazy fatalism people hide behind: you fight qadar (destiny) with qadar. Meaning, if something is decreed against you, you fight it with action that is also decreed (and is in your control). Sickness is destiny—so is medicine. Poverty is destiny—so is work. Failure is destiny—so is striving again. To sit back and say “if it's meant to happen, it'll happen” isn't the tawakkul we think it is. It is more negligence a lot of times than the tawakkul we try to label it. The Prophet SAW said: “Strive for what benefits you, ask for Allah's help (in attaining it), and do not give up.” Allah has written your provision, yes, but He's also written the means by which it reaches you—and often, you are the means. Your effort is part of the decree. And this is where people get it backwards. They think because the outcome is already known to Allah, the effort is pointless. But the effort was never separate from the outcome. It's woven into it. You were always going to try, and the result was always going to be what it is, but your striving is what activates the mercy, the growth, the reward embedded in the process. Even if it doesn't work out the way you hoped, it wasn't wasted. You became someone different through the attempt. You gained strength, resilience, knowledge and experience. And then you go again. That's the mentality. “and that each person will only have what they endeavoured towards, and that (the outcome of) their endeavours will be seen (in their record)”
English
12
319
877
25.8K
The Secret Muslim Banker ретвитнул
Felix Prehn 🐶
Felix Prehn 🐶@felixprehn·
Investors don’t realize gold ALWAYS crashes during an oil-driven crisis. It happened in all major oil shock in the last 50 years - 1973, 1979, 1991, 2001, and 2022. In this thread, I'll break down exactly why it happens and what institutions expect happens next:
English
71
527
3.6K
510.4K
The Secret Muslim Banker
The Secret Muslim Banker@SecMuslimBanker·
A comprehensive read to understand the status of the current dollar regime. I couldn’t have explained it better myself.
Bushels 🌾 Barrels 🛢 & Bullion 💰@BuBarrelBull

America Celebrates 250 years (and the end of Pax Americana) This note is about the US and the implications of another war in the Middle East, but first, some history: In 1956, Britain and France conspired with Israel to seize the Suez Canal from Egypt’s Nasser. It was a classic imperial move, the kind that had worked for a century. Except this time, Eisenhower said no. He threatened to dump U.S. holdings of sterling on the open market, which would have collapsed the pound overnight. Britain folded within days. France folded with it. That moment, more than any other, marks the true end of British imperial primacy. Not the World Wars, not the independence movements, not the Commonwealth. The moment a U.S. president made a phone call and the pound buckled. Reserve currency status doesn’t just reflect economic power. It is economic power, and when it goes, everything goes with it. It is also worth noting the bitter irony that in 1956 it was Israel’s adventurism that helped expose the limits of British power and accelerate the pound’s decline. History has a way of rhyming. The pound’s vulnerability at Suez didn’t emerge overnight. It had been building for decades, through two world wars that bled Britain fiscally dry, through the steady accumulation of the world’s gold by the United States, and through the slow recognition that the guarantor of global trade had changed addresses. Bretton Woods in 1944 formalized what was already true: the dollar was now the anchor of the global monetary system, convertible to gold at $35 an ounce, with every other currency pegged to it. It was an elegant system. It was also a system that required the United States to run perpetual trade surpluses and maintain fiscal discipline, neither of which proved politically sustainable. By the late 1960s the U.S. was spending heavily on Vietnam and the Great Society simultaneously, and foreign central banks, led by a deeply skeptical De Gaulle, began converting their dollar reserves into gold at an accelerating pace. France literally sent warships to New York to bring gold home. On August 15, 1971, Nixon closed the gold window. The dollar would no longer be convertible. Bretton Woods was dead. What replaced it was Kissinger’s deal: the petrodollar. The deal struck with Saudi Arabia in 1973 and 1974 was simple and profound. Oil would be priced exclusively in dollars. In exchange, the U.S. would provide security guarantees to the Gulf monarchies. You want energy, you need dollars. You need dollars, you hold Treasuries. You hold Treasuries, you finance American deficits. The gold standard was replaced not with nothing, but with oil and aircraft carriers. It worked because it rested on one non-negotiable guarantee: America would secure global trade routes, keep the sea lanes open, and ensure the free flow of energy to allies and adversaries alike. The Strait of Hormuz. The South China Sea. The Red Sea. These were never just geography. They were the load-bearing walls of the entire dollar architecture. And this is the thing people consistently fail to appreciate: commodities and geopolitics have always been linked. Most wars throughout history are, at their core, about securing access to resources. Energy. Grain. Metals. The players change. The underlying logic never does. Fast-forward to February 2022. Russia invades Ukraine. The U.S. and Europe respond by freezing $300 billion in Russian sovereign reserves. Swift expulsion and asset seizures. Just like that, we answered a question every central bank on earth had been too polite to ask out loud: what happens if America decides your dollar reserves are no longer yours? Biden gave them the answer. Loudly. This was not just a sanctions regime. This was a fundamental break in the trust architecture that underpins reserve currency status. The dollar’s value as a reserve asset was always partly about neutrality, the assumption that it was beyond politics. We torched that assumption. Every non-Western central bank quietly updated its threat model that week. If it can happen to Russia, it can happen to anyone who finds themselves on the wrong side of Washington. Subsequent uses of financial sanctions against various actors only compounded the damage, each one further eroding the perception that the dollar was a neutral settlement medium rather than a political weapon. The de-dollarization trend and the de-globalization trend are not separate stories. They are the same story. When the guarantee of free trade breaks down, countries retrench. When the reserve currency gets weaponized, countries diversify. When the hegemon’s will to enforce the rules-based order wavers, everyone starts making contingency plans. We are now deep inside that dynamic. The Houthis have been attacking commercial shipping in the Red Sea for over a year. Iranian proxies armed with Iranian-supplied missiles. The U.S. response has been airstrikes that changed nothing. Global shipping rerouted around the Cape of Good Hope, adding weeks and billions in costs. The Strait of Hormuz carries roughly 1/5 of the world’s petroleum liquids and it is now de facto under the control of the IRGC. When asked about it, the current U.S. administration has been explicit: that’s other countries’ problem. Let that sink in. The Strait of Hormuz, the single most important chokepoint in the entire petrodollar architecture, the physical artery through which the dollar’s claim to reserve status is literally pumped, and the position of the United States government is a shrug. If the U.S. cannot credibly guarantee the Strait stays open, the petrodollar system loses its central physical premise. You cannot price oil in dollars if you cannot guarantee the oil moves. At the same time, Trump has made clear he wants to withdraw from NATO commitments, remove troops from Germany, and generally signal that the American security umbrella is no longer a given but a transaction. NATO without credible U.S. commitment is just a bureaucracy. U.S. troops in Germany are not just a tripwire against Russian aggression, they are the physical embodiment of the guarantee that underwrites European confidence in dollar-denominated trade and finance. Remove them and you don’t just weaken European security. You weaken the entire signaling architecture that tells the world the American system is worth buying into. Meanwhile in the Pacific, the U.S. has drawn down defensive assets across Southeast Asia, leaving Taiwan and Japan increasingly exposed at precisely the moment China is conducting its most aggressive military posturing in decades. Every ally in the region is asking the same question Europe is asking: is the guarantee real? And they are all beginning to arrive at the same uncomfortable answer. Meanwhile we are signaling to Europe and to Ukraine that support has a political price and an expiration date. Every one of those signals is read by every finance ministry and central bank on the planet. The question they are all asking is whether the guarantee is real. The answer is becoming less clear by the month. Here is what makes this moment uniquely dangerous and what most mainstream commentary refuses to confront directly. The United States government has, to a degree without modern precedent, allowed its foreign policy in the Middle East to be effectively captured by a foreign government. The unconditional support for Israel, regardless of the conduct of its military operations, regardless of the cost in American credibility, regardless of the alienation of Arab partners whose cooperation the petrodollar system literally depends upon, has gutted America’s ability to act as a neutral and trusted arbiter of global order. And, to be clear, I am not arguing that American interventionism is the right path forward. But unconditional support of Israel, executed recklessly, is absolutely disastrous. Eisenhower could call Britain and France off Suez in 1956 because the world believed America was acting in the interest of global stability rather than a particular ally. That credibility is gone. When the U.S. vetoes ceasefire resolutions at the UN while simultaneously claiming to be the guarantor of a rules-based international order, the cognitive dissonance is not lost on the Global South, on Arab oil producers, or on the central banks quietly reducing their Treasury holdings. A hegemon that cannot be trusted to act with even a semblance of neutrality is not a hegemon. It is an Israeli puppet. And puppets do not get to set the terms of global finance. So what fills the void? Not the yuan. Not yet, anyways. China’s capital account is closed. There is no deep, liquid, freely convertible yuan bond market for the world to park reserves in. The yuan cannot replace the dollar for the same reasons the dollar couldn’t have replaced the pound in 1930, the institutional architecture doesn’t exist yet, and China is not trusted. You don’t replace a weaponized reserve currency with someone else’s weaponized reserve currency. But here is where it gets interesting: countries that want to transact with each other in oil, in commodities, in bilateral trade, don’t need a reserve currency. They need a settlement medium. And gold, the asset with no counterparty, no issuer, no sanctions risk, is reemerging as exactly that. Central bank gold demand has hit multi-decade highs three years running. Russia and China conduct the overwhelming majority of their bilateral trade in national currencies supplemented by gold reserves. The BRICS have advanced a hybrid digital settlement mechanism backed by physical gold, now in pilot phases for cross-border transactions. India, the Gulf states, and much of the Global South have followed suit in various degrees. This is not theoretical. It is happening. Gold makes structural sense in a fragmented world because it cannot be frozen, it cannot be sanctioned, and it has no political allegiance. It is the asset that sits outside the system, which is precisely why every nation building a parallel financial architecture is accumulating it. The 1970s swap of gold for oil as the dollar’s backing was always a political arrangement. We are watching its reversal in slow motion. Here is the strategic reality the West refuses to say out loud: Russia, China, and Iran understand supply chain vulnerabilities in ways that Western governments, captured by short-term political cycles and decades of globalization orthodoxy, have consistently failed to. China has spent 20 years building commodity self-sufficiency. Domestic rare earth processing. Long-term oil contracts with Russia, Iran, and Saudi Arabia priced outside the dollar. Port infrastructure from Djibouti to Pakistan to Sri Lanka. Control over the processing of the critical minerals, lithium, cobalt, rare earths, that every advanced weapons system and clean energy technology depends upon. The Belt and Road isn’t an aid program. It’s a parallel trade and settlement architecture being built in plain sight. Russia, despite sanctions, has reoriented its entire commodity export infrastructure eastward and built payment systems that bypass Swift entirely. Iran has spent decades developing asymmetric capabilities specifically designed to threaten the chokepoints the petrodollar depends on. These are not accidents. These are strategies. Coherent, long-horizon, supply-chain-aware strategies pursued by adversaries who understood that the real battlefield was always logistics and monetary architecture, not just military hardware. And here is the painful corollary: the United States’ ability to respond militarily or industrially to a major conflict is far more constrained than the public appreciates. Decades of offshoring have hollowed out the defense industrial base. Shipbuilding capacity is a fraction of what it was in World War II. Ammunition production, exposed dramatically by the Ukraine war, is running well below what sustained high-intensity conflict would require. And critically, the United States is dependent on China for the processing of the rare earth minerals and critical materials that go into precision munitions, electronics, and advanced weapons platforms. We have, with remarkable lack of foresight, handed our primary strategic adversary leverage over our ability to rearm. If a serious conflict erupts in the Taiwan Strait or the Persian Gulf, the supply chain constraints on the U.S. military response would become visible very quickly, and that visibility itself would be destabilizing in ways that are difficult to fully model. Now layer on the fiscal reality. The United States is running deficits in excess of $1.8 trillion annually, carrying over $36 trillion in total debt, with interest payments now exceeding the entire defense budget. The Iraq War cost an estimated $2 to $3 trillion over two decades. A serious military confrontation in the Persian Gulf or Taiwan Strait, against a near-peer adversary with the capability to sink carrier groups and disrupt satellite communications, would cost multiples of that, and would need to be financed at interest rates far above the near-zero environment that made the post-2008 debt accumulation painless. There is no fiscal headroom for another generational war. The bond market knows this. Foreign central banks know this. And adversaries who have studied American fiscal trajectories know this too. The drive toward de-globalization flows from the same source as de-dollarization, as countries unwilling to depend on American guarantees that seem less ironclad than before race to onshore supply chains, secure friendly energy sources, and develop parallel payment rails. China and its partners embraced this with characteristic foresight. The West, still deeply integrated into just-in-time global networks and politically unable to have honest conversations about strategic dependency, is playing catch-up. We are way behind. And we are distracted. 2026 is the 250th anniversary of the United States. This moment may well be remembered not as a celebration of enduring liberty but as the year the long arc of American hegemony reached its visible inflection point. Previous reserve currency transitions followed a consistent pattern: military overextension, fiscal deterioration, loss of trade route control, erosion of allied trust, and the emergence of a credible alternative architecture. Check, check, check, check, and check. The American empire was always an empire of systems, financial, military, institutional. Its genius was making those systems feel like global public goods rather than instruments of U.S. power. Free trade. Dollar liquidity. Security guarantees. For a long time they were both. When you start weaponizing the systems, when you subordinate them to the interests of a single foreign ally, when you shrug at the Strait of Hormuz and pull troops from Germany and leave Taiwan exposed, you reveal the seams. And once seen, they cannot be unseen. The Strait of Hormuz is not a shipping lane. The Red Sea is not a regional conflict. Taiwan is not a sovereignty dispute. NATO is not a relic. They are all load-bearing elements of the same structure. The world is watching whether the guarantees are real. The dollar’s premium, the “exorbitant privilege”, is priced on the assumption that they are. If they’re not, that premium disappears, and with it the ability to run deficits, export inflation, and fund ourselves at the expense of everyone else. Course correction remains possible. First, the US must start divorce itself from Israel. That will require a regime change here, not overseas. Next comes strategic investment in domestic industrial capacity and critical mineral independence, through a foreign policy that can again be trusted to reflect something broader than the interests of a single lobbying apparatus. But the momentum toward self-reliance and alternative arrangements gathers strength with each passing disruption. The commodities markets, ever pragmatic, are already casting their votes. 250 years in, the American century may be ending not with invasion or defeat, but with the quiet, devastating withdrawal of trust. That’s how empires end.

English
0
0
2
582
The Secret Muslim Banker
The Secret Muslim Banker@SecMuslimBanker·
This was an incredible read. How do you foresee the transition? We can’t extrapolate using the transition experienced after WW2 from British Pound to the US Dollar given no alternative architecture is ready to replace the dollar system. Is it as simple as gold being a bigger part of central bank reserves?
English
1
1
20
9.9K
Bushels 🌾 Barrels 🛢 & Bullion 💰
America Celebrates 250 years (and the end of Pax Americana) This note is about the US and the implications of another war in the Middle East, but first, some history: In 1956, Britain and France conspired with Israel to seize the Suez Canal from Egypt’s Nasser. It was a classic imperial move, the kind that had worked for a century. Except this time, Eisenhower said no. He threatened to dump U.S. holdings of sterling on the open market, which would have collapsed the pound overnight. Britain folded within days. France folded with it. That moment, more than any other, marks the true end of British imperial primacy. Not the World Wars, not the independence movements, not the Commonwealth. The moment a U.S. president made a phone call and the pound buckled. Reserve currency status doesn’t just reflect economic power. It is economic power, and when it goes, everything goes with it. It is also worth noting the bitter irony that in 1956 it was Israel’s adventurism that helped expose the limits of British power and accelerate the pound’s decline. History has a way of rhyming. The pound’s vulnerability at Suez didn’t emerge overnight. It had been building for decades, through two world wars that bled Britain fiscally dry, through the steady accumulation of the world’s gold by the United States, and through the slow recognition that the guarantor of global trade had changed addresses. Bretton Woods in 1944 formalized what was already true: the dollar was now the anchor of the global monetary system, convertible to gold at $35 an ounce, with every other currency pegged to it. It was an elegant system. It was also a system that required the United States to run perpetual trade surpluses and maintain fiscal discipline, neither of which proved politically sustainable. By the late 1960s the U.S. was spending heavily on Vietnam and the Great Society simultaneously, and foreign central banks, led by a deeply skeptical De Gaulle, began converting their dollar reserves into gold at an accelerating pace. France literally sent warships to New York to bring gold home. On August 15, 1971, Nixon closed the gold window. The dollar would no longer be convertible. Bretton Woods was dead. What replaced it was Kissinger’s deal: the petrodollar. The deal struck with Saudi Arabia in 1973 and 1974 was simple and profound. Oil would be priced exclusively in dollars. In exchange, the U.S. would provide security guarantees to the Gulf monarchies. You want energy, you need dollars. You need dollars, you hold Treasuries. You hold Treasuries, you finance American deficits. The gold standard was replaced not with nothing, but with oil and aircraft carriers. It worked because it rested on one non-negotiable guarantee: America would secure global trade routes, keep the sea lanes open, and ensure the free flow of energy to allies and adversaries alike. The Strait of Hormuz. The South China Sea. The Red Sea. These were never just geography. They were the load-bearing walls of the entire dollar architecture. And this is the thing people consistently fail to appreciate: commodities and geopolitics have always been linked. Most wars throughout history are, at their core, about securing access to resources. Energy. Grain. Metals. The players change. The underlying logic never does. Fast-forward to February 2022. Russia invades Ukraine. The U.S. and Europe respond by freezing $300 billion in Russian sovereign reserves. Swift expulsion and asset seizures. Just like that, we answered a question every central bank on earth had been too polite to ask out loud: what happens if America decides your dollar reserves are no longer yours? Biden gave them the answer. Loudly. This was not just a sanctions regime. This was a fundamental break in the trust architecture that underpins reserve currency status. The dollar’s value as a reserve asset was always partly about neutrality, the assumption that it was beyond politics. We torched that assumption. Every non-Western central bank quietly updated its threat model that week. If it can happen to Russia, it can happen to anyone who finds themselves on the wrong side of Washington. Subsequent uses of financial sanctions against various actors only compounded the damage, each one further eroding the perception that the dollar was a neutral settlement medium rather than a political weapon. The de-dollarization trend and the de-globalization trend are not separate stories. They are the same story. When the guarantee of free trade breaks down, countries retrench. When the reserve currency gets weaponized, countries diversify. When the hegemon’s will to enforce the rules-based order wavers, everyone starts making contingency plans. We are now deep inside that dynamic. The Houthis have been attacking commercial shipping in the Red Sea for over a year. Iranian proxies armed with Iranian-supplied missiles. The U.S. response has been airstrikes that changed nothing. Global shipping rerouted around the Cape of Good Hope, adding weeks and billions in costs. The Strait of Hormuz carries roughly 1/5 of the world’s petroleum liquids and it is now de facto under the control of the IRGC. When asked about it, the current U.S. administration has been explicit: that’s other countries’ problem. Let that sink in. The Strait of Hormuz, the single most important chokepoint in the entire petrodollar architecture, the physical artery through which the dollar’s claim to reserve status is literally pumped, and the position of the United States government is a shrug. If the U.S. cannot credibly guarantee the Strait stays open, the petrodollar system loses its central physical premise. You cannot price oil in dollars if you cannot guarantee the oil moves. At the same time, Trump has made clear he wants to withdraw from NATO commitments, remove troops from Germany, and generally signal that the American security umbrella is no longer a given but a transaction. NATO without credible U.S. commitment is just a bureaucracy. U.S. troops in Germany are not just a tripwire against Russian aggression, they are the physical embodiment of the guarantee that underwrites European confidence in dollar-denominated trade and finance. Remove them and you don’t just weaken European security. You weaken the entire signaling architecture that tells the world the American system is worth buying into. Meanwhile in the Pacific, the U.S. has drawn down defensive assets across Southeast Asia, leaving Taiwan and Japan increasingly exposed at precisely the moment China is conducting its most aggressive military posturing in decades. Every ally in the region is asking the same question Europe is asking: is the guarantee real? And they are all beginning to arrive at the same uncomfortable answer. Meanwhile we are signaling to Europe and to Ukraine that support has a political price and an expiration date. Every one of those signals is read by every finance ministry and central bank on the planet. The question they are all asking is whether the guarantee is real. The answer is becoming less clear by the month. Here is what makes this moment uniquely dangerous and what most mainstream commentary refuses to confront directly. The United States government has, to a degree without modern precedent, allowed its foreign policy in the Middle East to be effectively captured by a foreign government. The unconditional support for Israel, regardless of the conduct of its military operations, regardless of the cost in American credibility, regardless of the alienation of Arab partners whose cooperation the petrodollar system literally depends upon, has gutted America’s ability to act as a neutral and trusted arbiter of global order. And, to be clear, I am not arguing that American interventionism is the right path forward. But unconditional support of Israel, executed recklessly, is absolutely disastrous. Eisenhower could call Britain and France off Suez in 1956 because the world believed America was acting in the interest of global stability rather than a particular ally. That credibility is gone. When the U.S. vetoes ceasefire resolutions at the UN while simultaneously claiming to be the guarantor of a rules-based international order, the cognitive dissonance is not lost on the Global South, on Arab oil producers, or on the central banks quietly reducing their Treasury holdings. A hegemon that cannot be trusted to act with even a semblance of neutrality is not a hegemon. It is an Israeli puppet. And puppets do not get to set the terms of global finance. So what fills the void? Not the yuan. Not yet, anyways. China’s capital account is closed. There is no deep, liquid, freely convertible yuan bond market for the world to park reserves in. The yuan cannot replace the dollar for the same reasons the dollar couldn’t have replaced the pound in 1930, the institutional architecture doesn’t exist yet, and China is not trusted. You don’t replace a weaponized reserve currency with someone else’s weaponized reserve currency. But here is where it gets interesting: countries that want to transact with each other in oil, in commodities, in bilateral trade, don’t need a reserve currency. They need a settlement medium. And gold, the asset with no counterparty, no issuer, no sanctions risk, is reemerging as exactly that. Central bank gold demand has hit multi-decade highs three years running. Russia and China conduct the overwhelming majority of their bilateral trade in national currencies supplemented by gold reserves. The BRICS have advanced a hybrid digital settlement mechanism backed by physical gold, now in pilot phases for cross-border transactions. India, the Gulf states, and much of the Global South have followed suit in various degrees. This is not theoretical. It is happening. Gold makes structural sense in a fragmented world because it cannot be frozen, it cannot be sanctioned, and it has no political allegiance. It is the asset that sits outside the system, which is precisely why every nation building a parallel financial architecture is accumulating it. The 1970s swap of gold for oil as the dollar’s backing was always a political arrangement. We are watching its reversal in slow motion. Here is the strategic reality the West refuses to say out loud: Russia, China, and Iran understand supply chain vulnerabilities in ways that Western governments, captured by short-term political cycles and decades of globalization orthodoxy, have consistently failed to. China has spent 20 years building commodity self-sufficiency. Domestic rare earth processing. Long-term oil contracts with Russia, Iran, and Saudi Arabia priced outside the dollar. Port infrastructure from Djibouti to Pakistan to Sri Lanka. Control over the processing of the critical minerals, lithium, cobalt, rare earths, that every advanced weapons system and clean energy technology depends upon. The Belt and Road isn’t an aid program. It’s a parallel trade and settlement architecture being built in plain sight. Russia, despite sanctions, has reoriented its entire commodity export infrastructure eastward and built payment systems that bypass Swift entirely. Iran has spent decades developing asymmetric capabilities specifically designed to threaten the chokepoints the petrodollar depends on. These are not accidents. These are strategies. Coherent, long-horizon, supply-chain-aware strategies pursued by adversaries who understood that the real battlefield was always logistics and monetary architecture, not just military hardware. And here is the painful corollary: the United States’ ability to respond militarily or industrially to a major conflict is far more constrained than the public appreciates. Decades of offshoring have hollowed out the defense industrial base. Shipbuilding capacity is a fraction of what it was in World War II. Ammunition production, exposed dramatically by the Ukraine war, is running well below what sustained high-intensity conflict would require. And critically, the United States is dependent on China for the processing of the rare earth minerals and critical materials that go into precision munitions, electronics, and advanced weapons platforms. We have, with remarkable lack of foresight, handed our primary strategic adversary leverage over our ability to rearm. If a serious conflict erupts in the Taiwan Strait or the Persian Gulf, the supply chain constraints on the U.S. military response would become visible very quickly, and that visibility itself would be destabilizing in ways that are difficult to fully model. Now layer on the fiscal reality. The United States is running deficits in excess of $1.8 trillion annually, carrying over $36 trillion in total debt, with interest payments now exceeding the entire defense budget. The Iraq War cost an estimated $2 to $3 trillion over two decades. A serious military confrontation in the Persian Gulf or Taiwan Strait, against a near-peer adversary with the capability to sink carrier groups and disrupt satellite communications, would cost multiples of that, and would need to be financed at interest rates far above the near-zero environment that made the post-2008 debt accumulation painless. There is no fiscal headroom for another generational war. The bond market knows this. Foreign central banks know this. And adversaries who have studied American fiscal trajectories know this too. The drive toward de-globalization flows from the same source as de-dollarization, as countries unwilling to depend on American guarantees that seem less ironclad than before race to onshore supply chains, secure friendly energy sources, and develop parallel payment rails. China and its partners embraced this with characteristic foresight. The West, still deeply integrated into just-in-time global networks and politically unable to have honest conversations about strategic dependency, is playing catch-up. We are way behind. And we are distracted. 2026 is the 250th anniversary of the United States. This moment may well be remembered not as a celebration of enduring liberty but as the year the long arc of American hegemony reached its visible inflection point. Previous reserve currency transitions followed a consistent pattern: military overextension, fiscal deterioration, loss of trade route control, erosion of allied trust, and the emergence of a credible alternative architecture. Check, check, check, check, and check. The American empire was always an empire of systems, financial, military, institutional. Its genius was making those systems feel like global public goods rather than instruments of U.S. power. Free trade. Dollar liquidity. Security guarantees. For a long time they were both. When you start weaponizing the systems, when you subordinate them to the interests of a single foreign ally, when you shrug at the Strait of Hormuz and pull troops from Germany and leave Taiwan exposed, you reveal the seams. And once seen, they cannot be unseen. The Strait of Hormuz is not a shipping lane. The Red Sea is not a regional conflict. Taiwan is not a sovereignty dispute. NATO is not a relic. They are all load-bearing elements of the same structure. The world is watching whether the guarantees are real. The dollar’s premium, the “exorbitant privilege”, is priced on the assumption that they are. If they’re not, that premium disappears, and with it the ability to run deficits, export inflation, and fund ourselves at the expense of everyone else. Course correction remains possible. First, the US must start divorce itself from Israel. That will require a regime change here, not overseas. Next comes strategic investment in domestic industrial capacity and critical mineral independence, through a foreign policy that can again be trusted to reflect something broader than the interests of a single lobbying apparatus. But the momentum toward self-reliance and alternative arrangements gathers strength with each passing disruption. The commodities markets, ever pragmatic, are already casting their votes. 250 years in, the American century may be ending not with invasion or defeat, but with the quiet, devastating withdrawal of trust. That’s how empires end.
English
45
226
947
358.4K
The Secret Muslim Banker ретвитнул
لولوة الخاطر Lolwah Alkhater
#The_Psychology_of_Crises #Middle_East   🔹 “O Muhājirīn! O Anṣār! How do we extinguish the fire of discord?”   This may be the first in a series of reflections in which I attempt to offer a calm and reflective reading of the present moment. My hope is that it helps us better understand the psychology of crises and how we engage with the collective mind in times of hardship.   This becomes all the more pressing today. We are living through a unique moment in human history, where every individual has become a media machine (independent or otherwise), and where countless actors and institutions drive agendas that bring no good to this region, or to humanity as a whole.   I begin with an incident from the Prophetic era, an era Muslims unanimously agree was the best of times. I use it here to highlight a human phenomenon that has always existed. I present the narration as found in the books of Hadith, followed by my commentary.     Jabir bin Abdullah (may Allah be pleased with him) said: “A man from the Muhajirin kicked a man from the Ansar. The man from the Muhajirin said: ‘O Muhajirin!’ the man from the Ansar said: ‘O Ansar!’ The Prophet heard that and said: ‘What is this evil call of Jahliyyah?’ They said: ‘A man from the Muhajirin kicked a man from the Ansar.’ So the Prophet said: ‘Leave that, for it is offensive.’ Abdullah bin Ubayy bin Salul heard that and said: ‘Did they really do that? By Allah! If we return to        Al-Madinah indeed the more honorable will expel therefrom the meaner.’ Umar said: ‘Allow me to chop off the head of this hypocrite, O Messenger of Allah!’ The Prophet said: ‘Leave him, I do not want the people to say that Muhammad kills his Companions.’”  -End of Narration-   🔹Reflection: The incident could have unfolded in many possible ways. A trial could have been held to determine who was right and who was wrong. Wouldn’t reason, and even the apparent demands or justice, call for such a course? The Companions could have refused compliance, and conflict might have erupted. The Prophet could have ordered the execution of Abdullah bin Ubayy to silence the instigator of discord. But that’s not what happened. Prophetic wisdom took a completely different path. Why?   It recognized that discord (fitnah) is not born of reason, but of emotional reaction. It feeds on buried grievances, charged past, and accumulated psychological residue. It is not, in its essence, driven by intellect, though it may cloak itself in logic, dress itself in evidence, and —even in our time— be carried by highly educated voices. Thus, the Prophetic method was both precise and profound: Cut off the oxygen;“Leave it, for it is rotten.” Do not engage it. Do not rationalize it. Do not entertain the arguments and evidence of each side. But why?   Because once ignited, no party will ever fail to produce evidence of its victimhood and grievances, nor proof of its virtue and superiority over others. Reality tells us that every human society -indeed, every nation- possesses two memories, a memory of connection, and a memory of rupture. Which one is activated depends on need, context, sentiment, and the prevailing -or deliberately shaped- public mood.   Take Rwanda as an example. If you go there today, you won’t hear people talk about the crimes committed by each group (the Tutsi and the Hutu) during one of the most horrific genocides of modern time in the 1990s. Instead, you’ll hear a shared story, one about coexistence, national unity, and a common future. But if you had asked the same people thirty years ago, during the civil war, they would have unsheathed the sword of hostility and revenge against their fellow citizens (the very same nation they now celebrate as strong in its diversity). This isn’t unique to Rwanda. It applies to every society, regardless of the nature of their social fractures: religious, ethnic, tribal, geographical, or otherwise.   ( tbc )
English
37
180
707
395.8K
The Secret Muslim Banker
The Secret Muslim Banker@SecMuslimBanker·
Must read for anyone with a public equity portfolio. For most shariah-compliant investors, integration bonds was out of the question although some of you may have sukuks. You can do without them. You’d definitely want to be long energy: - refineries - coal - oil & gas (read the report to understand why owning them from markets like Canada and Brazil may be better than US/europe)
Louis-Vincent Gave@gave_vincent

The financial architecture of the post WW2 world rested on three assumptions: - US is a benevolent hegemon with an embedded interest in maintaining global trading order - US controls the world’s sea lanes - US treasuries could always be transformed into commodities at a moment’s notice These assumptions are melting away faster than morals at a bachelor party. So how do we now position portfolios? I wrote the following last weekend and a number of clients asked me to unlock it, so here is the paper research.gavekal.com/article/shatte…

English
0
0
4
411
The Secret Muslim Banker ретвитнул
Izabella Kaminska
Izabella Kaminska@izakaminska·
🧵Interesting stories that aren’t circulating enough 1) sovereign shadow debt is a thing 👇 By my former colleague Joseph Cotterill who notes that Senegal has covertly borrowed hundreds of millions of dollars from international institutions that it has not publicly disclosed. He adds that other countries have also used the strategy. ft.com/content/fbd695…
English
5
23
62
7.5K
The Secret Muslim Banker
The Secret Muslim Banker@SecMuslimBanker·
@UnicusResearch It’s not about them accepting it or not. They know there’s a market to sell into, make a fee and not be directionally exposed. IBs will sell whatever investors will buy.
English
0
0
0
173
The Secret Muslim Banker
The Secret Muslim Banker@SecMuslimBanker·
Your inability to mention the atrocities that Israel has committed and your double standards criticising the Sudanese army, but not the genocidal RSF, proves that your words are worthless and your position is laughable. The essence of your message is as vapid as the cultural capital of your country.
English
0
0
0
20
Abdulla M Alhamed
Abdulla M Alhamed@AMB_Alhamed·
The problem with some countries in the region is not that they fail to see the danger, but that they see it and then hesitate, understand it and then bargain over it, recognize its source and then choose to avoid naming it. For this reason, the region has not stumbled only because of its obvious enemies, but also because of the ambiguity of some who are presumed to stand on the side of stability, while in reality they open the door to chaos whenever they perceive a temporary interest or fleeting gain. Over the years, the same pattern has repeated itself: extremist forces, subversive projects, and transnational militias emerge-only for some to justify them, appease them, or recycle them politically and in the media, as though terrorism could become a respectable partner if circumstances change. Those who support the Sudanese army when weapons become entangled with chaos, who accommodate the Houthis despite their record of undermining the state, who allow Islamist groups to find a way back whenever memory fades, who normalize the Popular Mobilization Forces as if they were a natural reality, and who appease the Iranian regime despite its project of infiltration and destabilization—such actors have no right to speak of security and stability. Those who embrace the causes of destruction cannot later claim to be seeking construction. This is not political skill; it is political bankruptcy. A state that fails to clearly distinguish between those who build and those who destroy, between those who protect society and those who feed on its fragmentation, is merely postponing an explosion, not preventing it. Anyone who blurs the line between friend and foe, or attempts to stand in the grey zone between them, often ends up serving the enemy while believing they are maneuvering cleverly. In contrast, the United Arab Emirates has chosen a different path. It has not ridden the waves, nor shifted its positions with changing regional moods, nor traded in ambiguity. It set matters straight early on, clearly identifying who is a friend and who is an adversary. It has not confused pragmatism with concession, openness with naïveté, or dialogue with legitimizing the logic of chaos. This is why it has built a strong, modern, and cohesive state, while simultaneously forging partnerships and relations with the world-because it understands that genuine openness does not come at the expense of core principles, and that partnership does not mean leniency toward those who undermine stability. What is painful is that some who benefited from this approach-who benefited from the UAE’s positions, its support, and its commitment to stability-did not demonstrate the same stance when the UAE came under attack. In times of prosperity, words were abundant; in moments of testing, people disappeared. When clarity was required, there was silence, hesitation, or weak positions that neither honor relationships, repay goodwill, nor demonstrate loyalty. Here, the truth reveals itself plainly: not everyone who shakes your hand is a friend, and not everyone who praises you in calm will stand by you in the storm. More dangerous still, this failure does not merely confuse positions; it attempts to cloak itself in a media cover of falsehoods, distortion, and the inversion of facts. When some parties fail to justify their contradictions, they resort to demonizing the state that is clear-because its consistency exposes them. The UAE did not unsettle them by making mistakes, but by not falling into theirs. It did not trouble them by changing its compass, but by maintaining it while they faltered between one narrative and another, one ally and another, and between enemies who suddenly become friends when standards collapse. The result is before us: a grey path, a confused discourse, questionable relationships, and media falsehoods-followed by hollow talk of development and progress. The truth is that progress is not born from the womb of chaos, does not grow upon the justification of terrorism, and is not built by those who abandon their allies in times of hardship. Those who lack the courage to name the danger will lack the ability to confront it. Those who do not know their enemy will not know how to protect their homeland. And those who equate builders with destroyers have no place in any respectable vision for the future. This is why the UAE remains clearer in vision, firmer in stance, and more honest with itself and its surroundings than others-because it has not bargained over defining the enemy, has not compromised its security for the sake of appeasement, and has not allowed terrorism to return in a new guise. As for those who continue to oscillate between ambiguity, bargaining, and betrayal, they will not shape the region’s future; they will remain part of its crisis, no matter how much they invest in justification or amplify the noise.
English
85
87
203
241.7K
Abdulla M Alhamed
Abdulla M Alhamed@AMB_Alhamed·
ليست مشكلة بعض دول المنطقة أنها لا ترى الخطر، بل أنها تراه ثم تتردد، وتفهمه ثم تساوم عليه، وتعرف مصدره ثم تختار الهروب من تسميته. ولهذا لم تتعثر المنطقة فقط بسبب أعدائها الواضحين، بل أيضاً نتيجة ضبابية بعض من يفترض أنهم في صف الاستقرار، بينما هم في الحقيقة يفتحون الأبواب للفوضى كلما ظنوا أن في ذلك مصلحة مؤقتة أو مكسباً عابراً. على مدى سنوات، تكرر المشهد نفسه، قوى متطرفة ومشاريع تخريبية وميليشيات عابرة للدولة، ثم نجد من يبرر لها، أو يهادنها، أو يعيد تدويرها سياسياً وإعلامياً، وكأن الإرهاب يمكن أن يصبح شريكاً محترماً إذا تبدلت الظروف. من يدعم الجيش السوداني حين يختلط فيه السلاح بالفوضى، ومن يساير الحوثي رغم تاريخه في تقويض الدولة، ومن يترك للإخوانجية منفذاً يعودون منه كلما ضعفت الذاكرة، ومن يطبع مع الحشد الشعبي كأنه واقع طبيعي، ومن يجامل النظام الإيراني الإرهابي رغم مشروعه القائم على الاختراق والعبث، لا يملك حق الحديث عن الأمن والاستقرار، لأن من يحتضن أسباب الخراب لا يمكن أن يدعي لاحقاً أنه يبحث عن البناء. بالطبع كل هذا لا يمكن أن يكون براعة سياسية بل إفلاس سياسي، فالدولة التي لا تميز بوضوح بين من يبني ومن يهدم، ومن يحمي المجتمع ومن يتغذى على تفكيكه، هي دولة تؤجل الانفجار فقط، لا تمنعه. وكل من يخلط بين الصديق والعدو، أو يحاول أن يقف في المساحة الرمادية بينهما، ينتهي غالباً إلى خدمة العدو وهو يظن أنه يناور بذكاء. في المقابل، اختارت دولة الإمارات طريقاً مختلفاً، لم تركب موجة، ولم تبدل مواقفها مع تغير المزاج الإقليمي، ولم تتاجر بالضباب. وضعت النقاط على الحروف منذ وقت مبكر. عرفت من هو الصديق ومن هو العدو. لم تخلط بين الواقعية وبين التنازل، ولا بين الانفتاح وبين السذاجة، ولا بين الحوار وبين شرعنة منطق الفوضى. لهذا بنت دولة قوية وحديثة ومتماسكة، وفي الوقت نفسه بنت علاقات وشراكات مع العالم كله، لأنها فهمت أن الانفتاح الحقيقي لا يكون على حساب الثوابت، وأن الشراكة لا تعني التهاون مع من يهدم أسس الاستقرار. المؤلم أن بعض من استفادوا من هذا النهج، ومن مواقف الإمارات، ومن دعمها، ومن حرصها على الاستقرار، لم يظهروا الموقف نفسه عندما تعرضت الإمارات للهجوم. في أيام الرخاء كانت الكلمات كثيرة، وفي لحظة الاختبار اختفى الرجال. وحين احتاج الموقف إلى وضوح لا لبس فيه، سمعنا الصمت، أو شاهدنا التردد، أو رأينا مواقف باهتة لا تليق بعلاقة، ولا تحفظ جميلاً، ولا تثبت وفاءً. وهنا تنكشف الحقيقة كما هي. ليس كل من صافحك صديقاً، وليس كل من أثنى عليك في الهدوء سيقف معك في العاصفة. الأخطر أن هذا العجز لا يكتفي بإرباك المواقف، بل يحاول أن يصنع له غطاءً إعلامياً من الأكاذيب والتشويه وقلب الحقائق. وحين تعجز بعض الأطراف عن تبرير تناقضها، تلجأ إلى شيطنة الدولة الواضحة، لأنها تفضحهم بمجرد ثباتها. الإمارات لم تربكهم لأنها أخطأت، بل لأنها لم تتورط في أخطائهم. ولم تزعجهم لأنها غيرت بوصلتها، بل لأنها حافظت عليها بينما كانوا هم يتخبطون بين خطاب وآخر، وبين حليف وآخر، وبين عدو يتحول فجأة إلى صديق عندما تفلس المعايير. والنتيجة أمامنا. طريق رمادي، وخطاب مرتبك، وعلاقات مشبوهة، وأكاذيب إعلامية، ثم حديث فارغ عن التنمية والتقدم. والحقيقة أن التقدم لا يولد من حضن الفوضى، ولا ينمو فوق التبرير للإرهاب، ولا يُبنى بمن يخذلون أصدقاءهم ساعة الشدة. من لا يملك الشجاعة لتسمية الخطر، لن يملك القدرة على صده. ومن لا يعرف عدوه، لن يعرف كيف يحمي وطنه. ومن يساوي بين من يبني ومن يهدم، فلا مكان له في مشروع مستقبل محترم. لهذا بقيت الإمارات أوضح من غيرها رؤية، وأصلب من غيرها موقفاً، وأكثر صدقاً من غيرها مع نفسها ومع محيطها. لأنها لم تساوم على تعريف العدو، ولم تجامل على حساب أمنها، ولم تسمح للإرهاب أن يعود في ثوب جديد. أما الذين ما زالوا يتنقلون بين الغموض والمساومة والخذلان، فلن يصنعوا للمنطقة مستقبلاً، بل سيظلون جزءاً من أزمتها، مهما أنفقوا على التبرير، ومهما رفعوا من صوت الضجيج.
العربية
331
785
1.4K
623.6K