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Oh-la-laaaay.
We return with the FT finance feature (#1286439, #1287024).
Mr. Armstrong is out trying to divine why markets are so jittery
It’s been a jittery couple of weeks, and more and more investors and pundits (including Unhedged) are talking about downside scenarios and bear cases.
  1. Fiscal "largesse" -- frontloaded stimulus from OBBB running out
  1. Stimulus check nonsense...?
  2. Company profits are fine, and Big Tech not overvalued
S&P 500 revenues rose solidly faster than inflation in the third quarter and margins are widening. And no, the Magnificent 7 are not doing all the work. Consider this chart from FactSet, or revenue growth by sector
So, everything is great
you will notice one item conspicuously absent from the above list: Federal Reserve rate cuts. Given the prominent place fiscal looseness and bond-market fiddling play in the bull case, deep rate reductions would be too much to hope for. The scariest risk, in our view, is not an AI meltdown but resurgent inflation, which could topple the very large, delicately balanced financial superstructure resting on top of the US economy. If core CPI goes back above 4 per cent, all bets are off.
Except Bitcoin (but we already knew that)

The crypto whiplash has been intense over the past few weeks. Bitcoin prices hit an all-time high of about $126,000 in early October. Less than a week later, Trump threatened “massive” China tariffs, the apparent catalyst for the liquidation of $20bn in leveraged crypto positions, the largest single-day sell-off on record. The wipeout in value has continued.
This leaves the cryptocurrency trading at the levels of way back in, er, April.
cue Blackrock outflows. Also, not ouoooouuuur fault:
It is worth remembering how far the picture just sketched is from the original promise of Bitcoin. It was the future of money; it was digital gold; it was an alternative to what the analogue financial system had to offer. Now, it looks like another leveraged financial asset, intertwined with the fate of the tech sector. But, producing no cash flows, it is unusually dependent on the vicissitudes of market liquidity and market mood.
Yeah, pretty much. Hashtag de-financialize Bitcoin, please.

Don’t worry, we’ll be getting our $2k tariff checks any minute
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Haha, funny, I literally just talked about that with @siggy47!
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great for you guys. Save me some, please :/
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42 sats \ 1 reply \ @nichro 11h
BTC is tanking to allow you to get more sats with the 2k$ stimmy bless 🙏
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Thanks Trump!
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thaaaaank you! Forgot about that
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14 sats \ 0 replies \ @Taj 9h
If the ft hate Bitcoin so much why do they keep writing about it 🤣🤣🤣 keep them coming den
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But every hard asset has become financialized, from real estate to Pokemon cards. It's the inevitable result of a Cantillonized economy
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USA has already lost trade war. It cannot make things competitively anymore. It cannot fight a military war for at least a decade due to lack of rare earths. AI is a bottomless pit of absurd US exceptionalist last ditch hope. USA cannot generate enough electricity to compete with China on AI. China will be making its own 3nm chips in 2026. USA has lost the post industrial economy.
Meanwhile Trumps Jewish banker masters have captured and controlled Bitcoin via financialisation/commodification which renders Bitcoin MoE almost non existent (and much easier to cancel via an EO6102B) because 'bitcoiners' were successfully distracted with inane NGU DCA greed is good bullshit rather than sticking to the protocols declared primary purpose of provisioning censorship resistance p2p payments.
The Jewish bankers own Trump, but they don't own China. The next 5 years will be interesting.
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