The Fed's focus on domestic inflation and employment is a sideshow. The real story is a global, geopolitical shift where markets are questioning sovereign debt, leading to a parabolic squeeze in precious metals that central bankers are ignoring.
Extreme premiums on Chinese silver funds, reminiscent of the Grayscale Bitcoin premium in 2020, indicate that the marginal buyer driving the metals rally is Chinese investors seeking scarce assets outside their domestic market. This geopolitical flow is a critical, under-discussed factor.
Gold's current volatility has only been matched twice in 30 years: during the 2008 GFC and the 2020 pandemic. This indicates the market is not merely hedging inflation but is actively pricing in a generational, systemic crisis not yet reflected in equities or credit.
AI's ability to generate software at near-zero marginal cost is erasing the scarcity premium that propelled software stocks for over a decade. This realization is causing a massive capital rotation out of software ETFs and into tangible, scarce assets like metals and commodities.
Political pressure will ultimately force the Federal Reserve to ease monetary policy despite rising inflation expectations. This scenario, a repeat of 2021 dynamics, will mark a major policy error and create a highly inflationary environment favoring scarce assets over financial ones.
Don't wait for public credit spreads to blow out as a warning sign. In a system where sovereign debt is the primary vulnerability and corporates are easily bailed out, credit spreads have become a coincident, not leading, indicator. The real leverage risk is hidden in private credit.
Crypto is no longer the only game in town for high-risk speculation. The rise of compelling "frontier" narratives in public markets—like AI, space, and robotics—has diluted the pool of speculative capital that once flowed primarily into crypto, making sustained rallies harder to achieve.
Valuing companies like Meta based on past P/E multiples is flawed because their business model is changing. The shift from a capital-light, high-margin software firm to a leveraged, hardware-heavy business means it should command a much lower valuation multiple.
Companies like Meta are ceasing buybacks to fund existential AI CapEx, transforming them from high-margin, capital-light software businesses into leveraged, capital-intensive infrastructure players. This fundamental shift invalidates past valuation models based on free cash flow.
