
OK. Last time of asking... and please answer without directing me to pseudo complicated videos on the matter. What problem does #Bitcoin solve? How does it make the world better?
Will Miners
1.3K posts

@PoissonCapital
Aspiring Tony Bloom regen. Aston Villa fan.

OK. Last time of asking... and please answer without directing me to pseudo complicated videos on the matter. What problem does #Bitcoin solve? How does it make the world better?






Golden Boot Lotto Tickets that have steamed over the last few days. Up to 25 backs & 29 lays. Fun market







“I don’t ever give up” Congrats @elonmusk 🚀


Since the start of the war, gold has been negatively correlated to oil. Oil up, gold down. Why? Because the marginal gold buyer is not the West, it is EM Asia and Turkey. India alone is the world’s 2nd-largest gold buyer after China, across both central banks and retail. And the Rupee hates oil spikes, let alone an oil crisis like this. High oil intensity, limited crude storage, weak FX resilience. The mechanism is self-reinforcing: Higher oil → weaker growth -> weaker Rupee → even higher import costs (also for oil) → even weaker growth → weaker Rupee again -> repeat. That is precisely why Modi has moved to curb gold imports. He wants to support the Rupee (industry), not the consumer (gold is a hedge for a weaker Rupee). Well, not sure consumers will like it. So this will not last forever but I doubt it will stop before 2027. Turkey already went further and dumped reserves to support its FX. Other EM Asian countries may follow. Not just Asian, perhaps also ME countries? They are hardest hit by this crisis. Qatar & Kuwait come to mind. They have plenty of SWF reserves but the hit is big and the invoices keep coming. China offsets some of this through higher gold imports, but not enough, at least for now. Until the Strait of Hormuz situation stabilises, or EM Asia adjusts through demand destruction and policy responses, gold likely keeps bleeding, slowly, nothing dramatic, but bleeding. And no, I do not think there is a quick fix for the SoH crisis. The two sides are too far apart. Weak regimes can survive longer than people expect (they had little oil exports under Trump 1.0 and survived for years). Trump has midterms ahead & is unlikely to escalate materially without political support. Without regime change, the structural issue remains. So the oil market will likely solve this itself through painful adjustments into 2028: rerouted flows, new pipelines, permanent demand destruction, more coal, more efficiency. For now, China is doing the heavy lifting. Chinese crude imports in May were down 45% vs February. That single-handedly balances a large part of this mess. But not indefinitely. Once China decides to normalises imports closer to baseline, or Japanese SPR drawdowns fade, Brent likely reprices higher again, ceteris paribus. Korea is another big player in the puzzle to watch. Gold may stabilise before the full oil adjustment plays out. But I do not see much value in taking a rigid long-term view here. Too many moving parts. Mental flexibility remains key here. We have been risk-off since week one of the war, largely because we understand commodity transmission mechanisms. If this turns into a healthy correction in quality miners, I am certainly happy to buy it as the structural gold story remains largely unchanged. I explained it in 2023/24/25 on this channel. That is what I am watching.





BREAKING - 12:04 - *NASDAQ: IPO OF SPACEX TO BE ELIGIBLE FOR TRADING AT 10AM ET









Was a bit miffed watching the Nasdaq overtake my YTD ISA performance after being 20+ pp ahead at one point, but what an aquisition by #ENQ announced today. Been a brutal hold watching the ad-infinitem fake deal headlines... a delibarate strategy by the US administration I am sure
