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Russia claims US intelligence is secretly moving ISIS terrorists from prisons in Syria into Iraq to prepare an attack on Iran. The report Russia cites says Western spy agencies plan to use Syrian militants as a proxy force against Iran, framing this as part of a broader effort to manipulate militant groups. Colonel Douglas McGregor says this kind of tactic has “been going on forever” in the region, pointing to past US and allied support for groups designated as terrorist organizations and to similar historical patterns of arming proxy forces. He argues Iran is “eminently well-equipped” to deal with such threats, including recalling an earlier incident in which a Turkish-backed group of Azari Turks and Kurds was stopped after warnings reached Iranian authorities. He says the larger effect is to reinforce Tehran’s belief that any agreement with the US is worthless because the US cannot be trusted. The discussion also centers on an alleged “final draft” of a US-Iran peace memorandum obtained by Al Arabiya. The transcript describes it as a “laundry list” of US demands that Iran likely will not accept, including: reopening the Strait of Hormuz to international navigation without fees or tolls; slowly removing sanctions on Iranian oil in phases over many years; ending Iranian military operations, including assisting Lebanon; and stopping Israeli bombing of southern Lebanon, with an asserted Israeli component in expected outcomes. McGregor says such elements are difficult to keep concealed and argues they reduce the likelihood of a lasting agreement. A key dispute involves Strait of Hormuz control and sanctions. The transcript states President Trump said the strait would be open to everyone, not controlled by any country under any Iran deal, and that there would be no discussions about easing sanctions. Iran is also said to have stated it would strike back after recent attacks over the weekend, with McGregor arguing there is no coherent strategy apparent and that policy changes occur “tweet to tweet.” He criticizes the claim that Iran would not control the strait by describing prior international arrangements (the Montreux Convention) as a reason to expect a Turkish framework and “de facto” Iranian control due to Iran’s coastline and incentives to keep shipping and trade flowing. McGregor identifies two major obstacles: Israel’s influence over US decisions via Netanyahu’s demands to Iran, and Trump’s personal political constraints about escaping a failed approach without appearing weak. He also claims that withholding or reducing protection and exerting political pressure would keep US actions aligned with those demands. The transcript shifts to economic concerns, linking the Iran crisis to potential financial instability. McGregor cites inflation rising from 3.2% to 3.8% and suggests possible acceleration to 6%, arguing that raising interest rates to match inflation could collapse the financial system. He also says Trump sold about 17.8 million barrels of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to keep prices below $110 per barrel, warning the reserve could be exhausted by late July or early August, especially if sales occur below market price. He predicts wider economic harm, including a potential 36% reduction in global economic size, and compares current conditions to the Great Depression. He argues wealth and spending concentration make collapse-driven social change likely, describing the US as on an “unsustainable” path with debt and market distortions such as long-term mortgages and market manipulation benefiting the wealthy. He concludes that Trump’s decision to go to war with Iran accelerates the process and that a reckoning will eventually occur, though he does not specify timing.

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The first speaker warns of an international disaster and a potential World War III scenario, explaining that national gasoline could move toward roughly $3.50 to $3.70 a gallon if disruptions persist over the next week. They frame this as how the war starts showing up in family budgets and note that Box News reports the US economy lost 92,000 jobs in February. The second speaker introduces a Box News Alert: the US economy did not add jobs in February; it lost 92,000 jobs, with unemployment ticking up to 4.4%. The first speaker says the Labor Department tried to soften the data by pointing to strike activity, winter weather, seasonal factors, and post-Christmas effects, but argues those factors aren’t enough. They contend the real problem is the timing: a weaker labor market paired with a war-driven energy shock, which could revive stagflation fears and prompt markets to reassess. They point to one of the worst weeks in months for global bond markets and say traders worry the energy-driven inflation crisis will keep central banks more hawkish for longer. They reference the Cleveland Fed president suggesting a policy shift toward holding rates longer, with future rate cuts already sliding as markets brace for energy costs to feed into inflation data. The first speaker emphasizes that energy is central because higher oil affects more than oil itself: it flows into trucking, food, airfare, home building and real estate, appliances, freight, fertilizer, utility bills, and everything related to growing, moving, cooling, heating, packaging, and delivering goods. They claim it’s not theoretical and note that companies are already warning about rising costs across supply chains. They state that air and sea corridors through the Gulf have been dramatically disrupted. The speakers highlight an underreported angle: a viral Fox News Weekend segment in which hosts asserted that they have already beaten Iran, listing claims of how they are winning.

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Speaker 1 describes the current situation as people living it: they are being squeezed from every angle, and it won’t stop until people say enough. The stock market’s record highs are contrasted with the destruction of the middle class from within. Currency devaluation, artificially suppressed rates, and vast debt expansion are cited as mechanisms, with war described as a means to pull dollars into the now. The speaker argues we are in a multiple crisis environment and that liquidity is drying up; without a new mechanism to pull more borrowed dollars into the present, a Mad Max scenario or worse could ensue as the system inflates into oblivion. The speaker asserts that currency devaluation fosters the greatest wealth transfer the world has seen, asking who benefits from a weaker dollar and lower rates. They claim politicians or bankers promoting a weaker dollar or lower rates are speaking to the 12% who should benefit, not to the general public. The stock market is owned by the one- and two-percenters, and artificially suppressed rates push cash into risk assets, benefiting the elite while the average person is left behind. The Cantelon effect is mentioned as a mechanism to describe how new money is created and distributed: those closest to the money—the entrepreneur class and lead class—receive cash first before it devalues and trickles down to the regular person, who loses purchasing power in the process. Speaker 0 acknowledges this perspective. Speakers discuss why low rates appear attractive on paper but, in practice, when prosperity exists with high rates and a stronger currency, the dynamic changes. The FED and the Fed-treasury complex are described as being assembled to be lenders and buyers of last resort, keeping rates artificially suppressed so cash can flow into risk assets, thereby benefiting the top percentiles and leaving others to be wiped out eventually. The solution offered is straightforward: say enough and fix the system from the bottom up, not from the top down. The elite class does not have the public’s best interest in mind. Rebuilding must start with returning purchasing power to the currency and to the people, which would require much higher rates than currently exist. This would dramatically depress stock prices, interfering with the wealth transfer to the 1–2 percenters. The core message is that broad public action is needed to reverse these dynamics, as politicians and bankers advocate for weaker dollars or lower rates that primarily benefit a small elite while the general population suffers.

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Sean Fu, a market analyst focused on China, says China is “done with US Treasuries,” citing that in the last month China “dumped around forty billion or forty-one billion,” and arguing China sees “no point in coupling their economies too tightly with the United States” going forward. He frames recent geopolitical events—including wars not only involving Russia but also Iran—as part of an effort that, in his view, helps contain China’s economy. He points to compromised oil flows from Hormuz to China, noting that China buys a lot of Iranian oil, while arguing it is less exposed because “ninety to ninety-five percent of” power generation is not from oil and gas, and many supply chains China controls itself. Fu also describes the Trump-Xi summit as failing to produce pressure on China, describing an intimidation attempt around Iran and Venezuela that “didn’t happen at all.” He claims the Trump administration did not push the Chinese on anything and accepted Chinese phrasing that they would “look into rare earths,” implying China would keep “their hands on the tap.” He reiterates that China will not “recouple” with the US, including by buying more Treasuries. Turning to the American side, Fu argues that higher US energy prices raise revenues for oil companies, but because oil is a global market, prices also rise for “everyday Americans.” He links rising energy prices to worsening inflation, saying inflation moved from “two point four percent” to “two point eight percent,” and is “around three point eight percent,” and argues that higher gas costs (said to be “between five hundred to maybe a thousand dollars more a year”) will eventually reduce consumption, with Americans cutting discretionary spending. He adds that bond yields are likely to stay high and contends that attempts to sustain an “AI economy” via financing and data-center buildouts are constrained by finite money and high interest rates. He characterizes US conditions as being driven by confusion around market-moving statements about war being “on” or “off,” and says the US cannot isolate itself. Fu then emphasizes the “chip wars,” arguing the strategy of cutting China off from American chips has backfired. He cites Huawei’s claim of a breakthrough and says that by “twenty thirty-one” Huawei chips could compete with Nvidia and TSMC, arguing that pushing China into a corner forces innovation. He describes Chinese workarounds, including creating lower-end versions and “string[ing] a bunch of chips together,” such as using “a thousand Huawei chips” instead of “a hundred Nvidia chips,” and he connects the feasibility of brute-force approaches to China’s lower energy costs, stating energy prices are “a quarter” of the US (and “at least fifty percent cheaper”). He says Nvidia leadership has indicated China is unlikely to import lower-end chips and that China may “leapfrog” the technology instead of inviting Nvidia market entry. Fu also asserts that during Trump’s visit to Beijing, an RTX Nvidia gaming chip was banned that some companies use for AI, and describes “ring fencing” of the market. He adds that Gulf investment behavior may be influenced by the Middle East war and points to Scott Bessent announcements about confiscating Iranian assets, including “around one billion dollars worth of illegal crypto.” Fu says this undermines the assumed anonymity of cryptocurrencies by asserting the US can trace funds on public blockchains, freeze them, and seize them. He argues Gulf states will respond with uncertainty, potentially diversifying into gold, and potentially “adversary economies of the US,” including China, to spread risk away from US assets. Fu links economic and military dynamics, saying the US has used up weapons in Ukraine and diverted systems from Europe and East Asia toward the Gulf, with Israel prioritized there, which he says signals that the US cannot protect everyone. He argues this will push allies toward rearmament financed by borrowing, predicting “money printing” and rising debt, and describing a “dangerous age” where currencies lose more value to fund weapon buildouts. Regarding financial stability, Fu says “true market financial stability is now More or less officially gone,” with low interest rates finished and rates “sticky” and rising. He argues the US is trapped: issuing more bonds raises yields and the national debt, while cutting rates increases inflation and leads to higher rates later. He says the Fed may need to buy bonds to flood the market with liquidity, describing scenarios including AI or semiconductor “bubble” implosions or confidence collapsing if the Iran war drags on. On solutions and China’s path forward, Fu says China and Russia are consolidating closer together and that China is slowly decoupling its financial economy from the US. He cites capital controls on mainland Chinese savings leaving for Hong Kong and then to other Western economies, describing ring-fencing of capital flows and concentrating investments toward allies, BRICS, Belt and Road partners, and more focus within Asia. He also says capital outflows from the Gulf may be shifting toward East Asia. In Europe, Fu says China may reduce its position if the EU ramps up a trade war with China, but he argues China does not want to decouple from the EU entirely because Europe remains an important tech/consumer market. Finally, Fu advises diversification due to widespread bubbles across US stocks, tech, and semiconductors, arguing that oil-market disruptions from Hormuz can worsen energy shortages later (said to show up in July and August), pushing oil prices up and potentially popping bubbles through reduced consumption. He says cash bonds lose value via inflation, while gold remains a long-term purchase, and he recommends holding a mix including gold, international stocks, and exposure to China/RMB. He concludes that the “variables” in ongoing conflicts make predictions difficult.

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The speaker argues that central banks should not be given more power, asserting that the answer is a resounding no. They claim that the high inflation beginning in 2021 was created by central banks, regardless of any explanations about wars, and assert that the economics are clear. The speaker states they could forecast from May 2020 onwards that eighteen months later there would be significant inflation because the money creation was “massive off the charts.” They allege that central banks “imposed a fake pandemic,” referencing a conspiracy-like claim about a manufactured crisis. The speaker asserts that people such as Jeffrey Epstein are part of this narrative and that Epstein, in public records, was involved as early as 2017 in “setting up the scheme of this great pandemic for some investors to make a fortune,” naming Bill Gates as an example. The statement continues, claiming that “we can also make money injecting people with stuff and solve the problem” as discussed by Epstein and Bill Gates, and characterizes this as a matter of public record about how to “get rid of the poor people.” Finally, the speaker contends that this was used “at the same time to push digital ID.”

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Professor Michael Hudson and Glenn discuss how the war against Iran is reshaping the global economy and international order. Hudson contends this is World War III in the sense that energy, fertilizer, and oil exports are fundamental to the world economy, and the conflict targets these choke points. He notes a recent US stock market rally of about a thousand points, driven by hopes of reversibility, while insisting the war’s effects extend far beyond Iran and are irreversible. He asserts the US is waging a war to maintain control over the world oil economy by preventing any sovereignty that could export oil outside US influence. This includes sanctions on Iran and Russia, and earlier sanctions on Venezuela, with the aim of ensuring oil proceeds flow to US-controlled channels. He argues the US sought to control the Strait of Hormuz to decide who gets Gulf oil, but Trump’s advisers warned that attempting to seize Hormuz would leave troops as “sitting ducks,” yet the underlying goal remains “grab the oil.” He claims Iran’s objective is to guarantee security by removing all US bases in the Middle East and by relief of sanctions imposed by US allies; without that, Iran claims the world will not return to the previous order. Hudson emphasizes that the war disrupts key supply chains: oil, fertilizer, helium, sulfur, and related inputs. Although Iran allows oil exports via Hormuz for payments, it does not permit fertilizer exports, impacting the upcoming planting season. He forecasts the world entering the most serious depression since the 1930s due to these interruptions and the consequent financial ripples. On the financial system, Hudson explains that since the 2008 crisis, the US pursued zero or near-zero interest rates to rescue banks, enabling asset price inflation in real estate, stocks, and bonds. He describes a shift where non-bank lenders and private equity could borrow cheaply and buy up assets, creating a debt-led, Ponzi-like dynamic that depended on continued access to credit and rising asset prices. As long as rates stayed low, this system could keep rolling; now, with 10-year treasuries around 4.5 percent and 30-year mortgages above 5 percent, the cost of rolling over debt intensifies. The war-induced disruptions to energy and inputs threaten defaults and a feedback loop of debt collapse, catalyzing a depression. Regarding the broader international system, Hudson argues Europe is following sanctions on Russia at great economic cost, with Germany already experiencing GDP declines after energy sanctions in 2022. Europe’s shift away from Russian energy, the Ukraine-Hungary/gas dynamics, and the broader energy choke points threaten the cohesion of NATO and the EU. He predicts Europe may suffer consumer price increases and living standard cuts as deficits expand to subsidize heating and energy, leading to a reordering of alliances and economic blocs. He characterizes Asia–Russia–China as increasingly separate from Western systems, with a shift toward Asia as the growth center and Europe/US lagging. He asserts the West’s operational vocabulary frames the conflict as a clash of civilizations, but the underlying dynamic is a clash of classes, where the US seeks to subordinate others through energy and trade controls. Hudson argues the current trajectory signals not simply a decline but an abrupt systemic change: the end of the postwar Western-led order. He calls for rethinking international institutions and law, including a new framework to replace a discredited United Nations and to organize economic and military arrangements that protect sovereignty outside US-dominated systems. He highlights the need for energy and food self-sufficiency to resist weaponized foreign trade and to avoid being drawn into US-imposed economic chaos. In closing, Hudson points to Britain’s looming non-viability under deindustrialization and limited energy resources, illustrating how advanced economies may struggle to adapt to a new multipolar order.

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The speaker argues that Jerome Powell is keeping interest rates too high despite inflation being under control, potentially due to personal feelings about the president. Inflation is near a four-year low after five consecutive better-than-expected readings, yet interest rates remain near twenty-year highs, with mortgage rates near 7% and credit card rates above 20%. The proposed solution is for the Federal Reserve to livestream its meetings, similar to the SEC, FTC, and FCC, to provide public scrutiny of their deliberations. The speaker believes the public deserves to know what this "secret group of bankers" is doing, as they are setting the cost of money.

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The speaker believes a coming international war panic cycle in 2026 is unstoppable. Even Trump's demands for lower rates are meaningless long-term, and thirty-year bonds must close above $12.84 to survive the year. Historically, war causes interest rates to rise due to increased spending and the risk of bond devaluation if a country loses. The computer models are showing long-term interest rates going up, irrespective of Trump's actions regarding the Federal Reserve. The spread between long-term and short-term rates will widen, reflecting war. Tensions are expected to rise starting in July and continuing through the fall. NATO requires war to remain relevant and is provoking conflict. Putin has had red lines crossed and China will back Russia against Europe because if Russia falls, China is next.

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The Federal Reserve's actions are worrisome. They've lost trillions by borrowing money at high rates (5.4% from banks, 5.3% from funds like Fidelity and Vanguard) to buy government bonds. This artificially inflates the government's perceived financial health, encouraging excessive borrowing when rates were low. This process diverts capital from the private sector, hindering business growth and job creation. Instead of the Fed holding massive balances, that money should be used by businesses for expansion and innovation. The Fed's actions are mirrored by other major central banks globally, exacerbating the problem. It's not money printing; it's expensive borrowing that harms the economy. Freeing up these funds would allow banks to lend to small businesses and stimulate economic growth.

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The Federal Reserve just said that the expectation is higher inflation and higher unemployment in 2025. In support of our goals, today the Federal Open Market Committee decided to leave our policy interest rate unchanged. The risks of higher unemployment and higher inflation appear to have risen, and we believe that the current stance of monetary policy leaves us well positioned to respond in a timely way to potential economic developments. So it's primarily being driven by the tariffs. If the large increases in tariffs that have been announced are sustained, they're likely to generate a rise in inflation, a slowdown in economic growth, and an increase in unemployment. The effects on inflation could be short lived, reflecting a one time shift in the price level. It is also possible that the inflationary effects could instead be more persistent.

Breaking Points

Treasury Secretary CELEBRATES Stock Crash: 'Healthy'
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Consumer sentiment is currently low, with an 11% decline reported by the University of Michigan survey, marking the lowest level since November 2022. This decline reflects concerns about inflation, which consumers expect to rise, leading to decreased spending. Consumer spending constitutes 70% of the economy, and a lack of spending can result in economic downturns. Retailers are already reporting soft sales, and there are fears of a recession benefiting only the wealthy. The chaotic economic policy environment further exacerbates consumer anxiety, as rising costs and potential service cuts create a sense of instability.

Breaking Points

Markets PANIC Over Trump Bill's Exploding Deficit
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Yesterday, the Dow dropped 800 points due to a weak 20-year Treasury bond auction, signaling a lack of demand and rising yields. This reflects a broader trend of moving away from the dollar as a reserve currency, exacerbated by Trump's tax bill, which is projected to increase the deficit by $4 trillion. Moody's downgraded US debt, and the bond market's instability has led to concerns about economic direction. Despite some positive jobless claims, retailers like Walmart and Target are raising prices due to tariffs, indicating consumer uncertainty and potential economic challenges ahead.

Breaking Points

Peter Schiff: Dollar COLLAPSING, Crisis Worse Than 2008
Guests: Peter Schiff
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In this discussion, the hosts explore a view that the dollar could lose reserve status as central banks tilt toward gold and other assets. Peter Schiff argues the dollar will collapse and be replaced, a shift tied to global instability, rising gold prices, and a reassessment of how currencies back global trade. The segment also references Ray Dalio’s ideas about the end of fiat currencies and the potential implications for U.S. assets, debt, and the role of the dollar in everyday purchases. The speakers acknowledge that even if a sharp, immediate collapse is not certain, there is a discernible erosion of confidence in U.S. economic leadership and the safety of dollar-denominated investments, which could influence savers, exporters, and policy responses alike. They also note domestic effects, including AI-driven job cuts at major firms and how a weaker dollar might raise import costs while easing debt burdens for some. The hosts discuss policy signals and the uncertainty surrounding money’s future.

Breaking Points

Trump DOWNPLAYS Gas Price SPIKE As 'PEANUTS'
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The episode centers on the political battle over the Federal Reserve, highlighted by Donald Trump's push to choose a friendly chair amid rising oil prices tied to the Iran situation. The hosts recount a tense Senate hearing where Kevin Worsh faced questions about independence, disclosed assets, and ethics, while Elizabeth Warren pressed Trump's influence on monetary policy. They contrast Trump’s preference for rate cuts with concerns that independence and accountability are essential to maintaining credibility in inflationary times. They also discuss broader policy tradeoffs, arguing that a rate cut in a high-inflation environment could relieve debt service but risk fueling further price gains. The conversation touches energy prices, fertilizer costs, and the footprint of AI data centers on the economy, tying monetary choices to everyday costs. The segment closes by questioning transparency in the nomination process and noting how midterm politics may hinge on perceptions of the Fed’s independence and the administration’s approach to inflation.

The Pomp Podcast

What’s Actually Happening To Bitcoin & The Economy Right Now
Guests: Jordi Visser
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The episode centers on how investors interpret a mix of signals in a complex economy, with Bitcoin playing a recurring theme as a scarce asset amid broader inflation debates and oil dynamics. The hosts and guest discuss how markets discount the future rather than the present, weighing resilient earnings in certain sectors against higher energy prices, and they explore how AI is accelerating disruption across software, hardware, and business models. A key thread is that AI-enabled tools are already creating deflationary pressure by increasing productivity and enabling rapid price discovery, while also reshaping competitive dynamics for startups and established enterprises alike. They emphasize that true inflation signals, while debated, are not the sole driver of market direction; rather, the reaction of markets to AI adoption, capital allocation, and the evolving debt and equity landscape will determine macro outcomes in the months ahead. The conversation also delves into how investor sentiment, private credit, and the leverage in the economy complicate policy options. The speakers compare this cycle to past shifts, noting that oil’s elevated price floor and AI’s rapid deployment create a regime where traditional monetary tightening faces practical limits due to debt and equity valuations. This leads to a nuanced view: Bitcoin could benefit as a store of value and as a hedge, given the structural constraints on fiat debasement and the ongoing need for portable, private capital. Throughout, concrete examples illustrate how AI is reshaping industries—from healthcare front ends to supply-chain optimization and targeted investment research—demonstrating that the disruption is not merely hype but a practical catalyst for new business models and capital strategies. The episode closes with a provocative sense that a broad transfer of wealth and influence may be underway, driven by technologies that empower millions of individuals to outperform traditional gatekeepers, and with the caution that rapid AI advancement requires vigilance around security and governance as the landscape evolves.

Breaking Points

AI Bubble Could DECIMATE US Economy
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The episode explores debates about the Federal Reserve’s independence as Kevin Worsh is sworn in and political efforts are framed as attempts to influence monetary policy. Roit Chopra argues that no single person should control the money supply to reward allies or punish opponents, while noting long-standing concerns that the Fed has been shaped by powerful financial interests. He links these governance issues to today’s economic pressures: rising bond yields, fears about inflation, and the possibility that market dynamics may constrain what the Fed can do, even if rate cuts are politically desired. The discussion then turns to why bond markets signal more stress than stocks. Chopra says yields are climbing as investors question repayment capacity in real terms and anticipate higher inflation, alongside global uncertainty such as energy disruptions and a changing appetite for Treasuries. He connects consumer strain to higher prices for essentials, and warns that equity valuations may be concentrated in a small group of large technology and artificial-intelligence related firms, raising bubble concerns if losses mount and optimism fades. The episode also addresses political conflict over safeguards for advanced AI, cybersecurity, and risk assessment, and the recurring worry that downturns can bring unequal protection for those with wealth and power rather than broad accountability.

PBD Podcast

Massie's Primary Loss, Trump's 37-0 Win + AI Wars Heat Up | PBD #802
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The episode opens with reactions to a high-spending Republican primary in which a candidate backed by the president still suffered a decisive loss, despite an earlier expectation that the endorsement would be decisive. The hosts discuss how influence appears to shift across regions and voter age groups, and they debate whether the outcome was primarily driven by funding, messaging, or the way different media ecosystems shape perceptions. They also highlight related political developments, including a Senate vote that advanced legislation aimed at requiring congressional approval for continued military operations connected to Iran, and they note an unexpected change in a senator’s pattern of support after losing a primary. Broader discussion turns to questions about what issues will matter most in the next presidential cycle. Later, the conversation moves to business and technology. The hosts focus on rapid talent movement inside leading machine-learning labs, describing a co-founder leaving one research organization to join another and taking on work tied to large-scale model training. They connect this to growing concerns about job displacement across office and professional roles, while arguing that some occupations remain more resilient and that new opportunities may emerge for smaller operators and entrepreneurs. They also discuss large-scale layoffs at a major social-media company, describing internal reassignment of staff to new AI-focused projects and employee uncertainty. On the investment side, they describe an unusually concentrated flow of venture capital into a handful of model-development companies, alongside the participation of major sovereign and state-linked investors. The show then shifts to macroeconomics. The hosts analyze expectations for interest-rate policy and rising bond yields, linking them to inflation pressures, currency dynamics, and the economic costs of prolonged conflict. They discuss how oil-market conditions may affect prices and monetary decision-making, and they consider a forthcoming confirmation and its likely influence on markets. The episode closes with debate over whether policy should encourage more decentralized lending and credit creation to support productivity and job growth, contrasting this with approaches that may rely more heavily on government borrowing and central-bank balance sheet actions.

The Pomp Podcast

Why Bitcoin Could Explode As Global Markets Crack
Guests: Jordi Visser
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The episode centers on how macro tensions, energy markets, and rapid advances in AI could shape Bitcoin and broader financial markets. The hosts discuss how a continuing credit problem and a commodity bull market—driven by energy, metals, and supply constraints—could position Bitcoin as a reliable store of value or “battery” for capital to move into when other assets falter. The conversation weaves in Iran-related disruptions, oil price dynamics, and the risk that inflation could persist even as markets oscillate between fear and relief. The speakers stress that current price movements in gas, diesel, and key inputs like plastics and fertilizers illustrate that inflation remains entrenched, while the energy sector’s volatility can ripple into semiconductors and hardware costs, potentially reshaping earnings revisions and equity valuations. The dialogue also explores how this environment could influence corporate behavior, including capital expenditure, labor strategies, and the adoption of AI and automation—particularly in hardware and robotics. Within this framework, Bitcoin is discussed not only as a hedge but as a growth asset that could benefit from liquidity constraints and a deflationary impulse from AI-driven productivity gains. The guests examine how Middle Eastern sovereign wealth funds and other non‑Western actors might tilt demand and markets toward Bitcoin and other fintech innovations as geopolitical risk persists. A recurring theme is the tension between short-term oil-driven inflation signals and long-term AI-driven deflation in software and compute, which could steer the Fed’s stance and overall macro policy. Against this backdrop, the episode probes how various investors should position portfolios, with a cautious tilt toward cash and hardware-oriented investments, given potential volatility in software equities. The conversation closes by acknowledging how AI-native tools and “agentic” computing are accelerating disruption across industries, from Notion-like workflows to the broader labor market, while noting that Bitcoin could emerge stronger as liquidity dynamics evolve and as global capital flows shift in response to geopolitical and technological developments.

Breaking Points

'WORST NIGHTMARE': CNBC FREAKS As Inflation Stays High
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Inflation is rising, with the Consumer Price Index increasing by 3% in January, disappointing the Fed and markets. Core inflation is at 3.3% year-over-year, driven largely by a 15% spike in egg prices due to bird flu, which has led to egg rationing. Trump's administration faces pressure as tariffs are set to impact manufacturing, complicating the Fed's ability to lower rates. The cost of living crisis, particularly in housing and groceries, is politically damaging. Despite promises, there are no quick solutions to lower prices, and deportation numbers remain unchanged under the current regime.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Dismal State of Our Economy, and Harry and Meghan's Narcissism, with Peter Schiff and Adam Carolla
Guests: Peter Schiff, Adam Carolla
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Megyn Kelly discusses the dire economic outlook for America with economist Peter Schiff, who warns of worsening inflation and a potential recession. Schiff criticizes President Biden's optimistic portrayal of the economy, arguing that the current economic situation is dire, with low savings rates and record-high credit card debt. He highlights that many Americans are struggling to afford basic necessities, leading to a record number of people taking on multiple jobs. Schiff disputes the positive interpretation of job growth, stating that many new jobs are part-time and taken by those already employed. He emphasizes that the low unemployment rate is misleading, as many discouraged workers are not counted. He believes the actual unemployment rate is much higher when considering those who have given up looking for work. The conversation shifts to consumer debt, with Schiff noting that rising credit card debt is a sign of financial distress. He predicts a potential credit card default crisis similar to the housing crisis of 2008, as many individuals may max out their cards before declaring bankruptcy. Schiff argues that the Federal Reserve's interest rate hikes are exacerbating the recession, as they reveal the problems created by previous low rates. He believes that inflation is here to stay, leading to further declines in stock and bond markets. He advises investors to seek alternative investments outside the U.S. and to be cautious with stock selections. The discussion also touches on the housing market, where Schiff predicts falling home prices due to rising mortgage rates and declining affordability. He notes that many homeowners are trapped in their current homes due to high mortgage rates, further constraining supply. In the latter part of the conversation, Kelly and Schiff discuss the fallout from the FTX crypto scandal, with Schiff expressing skepticism about the integrity of the crypto market and predicting further bankruptcies in the sector. He criticizes the media's previous adulation of FTX's founder, Sam Bankman-Fried, and highlights the risks associated with investing in crypto. Overall, the discussion paints a bleak picture of the economic landscape, with Schiff urging listeners to prepare for worsening conditions in the coming year.

All In Podcast

E80: Recession deep dive: VC psychology, macro risks, Tiger Global, predictions and more
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The hosts of the All In podcast, Chamath Palihapitiya, Jason Calacanis, David Sacks, and David Friedberg, discuss the current economic climate, focusing on the significant downturn in stocks and crypto, with a collective loss of $35 trillion in global market value since the beginning of the year. They reflect on the rapid inflation of asset values during the pandemic due to zero interest rates, which led to unsustainable bubbles. As interest rates rise, these bubbles are deflating quickly, causing widespread panic and layoffs across various sectors. The conversation highlights the correlation between the Fed's monetary policy and stock market performance, noting a 0.92 correlation between Fed money printing and the S&P 500 from 2018 to late 2021. The hosts express concern over the consumer credit bubble, as consumers increasingly rely on credit to maintain their lifestyles amid rising costs and stagnant wages. They emphasize the importance of businesses tightening their belts and focusing on profitability, as many companies are now facing pressure to cut costs and reduce headcount. The discussion also touches on the venture capital landscape, where a significant amount of dry powder exists, but investors are becoming more discerning. The hosts predict a bifurcation in the market, where only high-growth companies will secure funding, while those with mediocre performance may struggle. They stress the need for founders to adapt to the changing environment by managing burn rates and resetting valuations. The hosts conclude that while the current economic situation is challenging, downturns can create opportunities for building successful companies. They encourage founders to focus on business fundamentals and prepare for a more disciplined investment environment, as the market adjusts to the realities of reduced capital availability and changing consumer behavior.

PBD Podcast

Trump's State of the Union + Supreme Court Tariff Troubles | PBD #746
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The episode centers on post-State of the Union reactions and a wide array of money and policy-focused topics, anchored by Kenneth Rogoff’s insights and a panel of voices weighing in on tariffs, inflation, and global dynamics. The discussion opens with reflections on the length and reception of the speech, then shifts to practical economic matters: tariff litigation from major firms like FedEx, L’Oréal, Dyson, and Prada, and the Supreme Court ruling that affects the legality and execution of those tariffs. The speakers analyze how the ruling narrows presidential authority and what mechanisms—such as Congressional ratification or existing war powers—might still allow executive action, while acknowledging the real costs and uncertainty faced by small businesses during tariff changes. The conversation moves to broader macro concerns, including housing, energy prices, supply chains, and the performance of the dollar, linking policy shifts to consumer realities observed in inflation trends and mortgage refinancing behavior. A substantial portion of the episode investigates the policy landscape around AI and national security. Anthropic’s accusations of distillation attacks by Chinese labs, the strategic questions surrounding Nvidia chips, and the tension between innovation and safety surface in the panel’s analysis. The group discusses the implications for national defense and the delicate balance between deregulation and safeguarding sensitive technologies, with some participants warning against accelerating AI development without guardrails. They also consider the private sector’s role in shaping risk, governance, and compliance, including the dynamics of a shrinking pool of defense and tech contractors and the potential consequences for competition and innovation. In parallel, they touch on media consolidation and entertainment—Paramount’s bid, Netflix’s position, and the broader implications for culture and soft power—alongside geopolitical maneuvers such as Panama Canal sovereignty and U.S.-China competition in critical infrastructure. Throughout, the talk weaves together finance, policy, technology, and geopolitics, reflecting on how leadership, regulatory design, and market incentives interact in shaping the near- and medium-term outlook.

The Pomp Podcast

Why Bitcoin Will Hit $150,000 Sooner Than You Think
Guests: Jordi Visser
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Bitcoin could surge to 150,000 faster than many expect, Jordy Visser argues, driven by a convergence of artificial intelligence and massive financial markets expansion. He points to the Mag 7’s ascent from one trillion to fifteen trillion and suggests Bitcoin’s market might chase a similar scale as AI accelerates efficiency and capital investment. The conversation opens with the bad jobs report, the inflation picture, and a Fed that Visser says is behind the curve. Tariffs, AI-driven productivity, and energy costs shape how markets are pricing risk and growth today. Visser frames the economy as sprinting into a headwind: a powerful deflationary force from tariffs and AI, with inflation measured around 1.98% and jobless claims stubbornly flat. He notes housing is holding up while rates are expected to fall, and PMIs are drifting higher globally. Despite strong earnings, a cautious narrative persists about payrolls and the trajectory of demand. The stock market’s all-time highs and gold and Bitcoin’s outperformance are presented as forward-looking signals, underpinned by anticipated monetary easing and continued corporate capital expenditure in AI. On Bitcoin, Visser revisits his own forecast and acknowledges being wrong about timing. He describes a framework where Bitcoin is a risk asset tightly linked to global liquidity and the digital economy. If the MAG7 stop outperforming, Bitcoin could catch a bid as institutions, and perhaps governments, increase exposure. He argues the next phase may involve more adoption by public companies and large investors, with a potential move toward multi-hundred-thousand-dollar prices and eventually higher targets as the macro environment remains favorable for asset prices. The discussion shifts to technology and energy. Visser highlights Tesla’s robo-taxis and the race in vision-based AI for autonomous systems, arguing that ‘eyes on the car’ and on-device data centers could drive explosive growth. He notes AI-driven efficiency will rewrite business competition, and he returns to the policy playbook—probing narratives, signaling a possible national emergency—while underscoring rising electricity prices and the demand surge for batteries and transformers. The overall tone is that rapid AI adoption and policy signals will continue to reshape markets, with Bitcoin and crypto as part of the new macro landscape.

Johnny Harris

INFLATION, Explained in 6 Minutes
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Johnny Harris explains inflation as a situation where there’s more money than goods, leading to price increases. The Federal Reserve raises interest rates to control spending and borrowing. He highlights the impact of pandemic stimulus checks on demand and supply chain issues, warning that unchecked inflation can lead to severe economic consequences.

Breaking Points

Mortgage Rates SPIRAL As Trump Polling TANKS
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The episode opens by examining how a renewed Middle East conflict could affect the dollar’s global role and the flow of oil, citing a Deutsche Bank warning about the petrodollar’s fragility and how tolls on sanctions and currency choices might shift global energy trade. The discussion then turns to U.S. mortgage rates, which have surged back toward seven percent, and how voters perceive the economy as disconnected from market optimism. The hosts analyze polling that shows support for the economy slipping, even as markets appear strong, and consider how this tension shapes campaign narratives ahead of a busy political year. A guest explains how local race dynamics in Philadelphia reflect broader frustrations with money in politics, advocating for independent positions and universal healthcare while linking foreign policy debates to domestic economic realities. A Sunrise Movement Philadelphia clip amplifies tensions over Gaza, illustrating how candidates navigate inflammatory rhetoric and align with climate and healthcare platforms. The segment ultimately connects foreign policy choices, campaign finance, and social programs to voters’ day-to-day concerns about cost of living and opportunity, underscoring the complexity of balancing national strategy with local electoral dynamics.
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