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February 4, 2026

As we discussed in my note yesterday, the coming regime change at the Fed could squeeze excess out of the market. 
 
It may be starting with Bitcoin.  It's now down 44% from the October record high. 
 
If we look back at the 40% or greater declines in Bitcoin (since it first broke $5,000), we get four other episodes. 
 
Let's take a look …
 
 
What did stocks do in these periods?
 
Mixed results. 
 
That's not too surprising.  These deep Bitcoin drawdowns were often crypto-specific events — regulatory tightening and/or corruption being exposed.
 
That said, any forced selling in stocks that may come from a Bitcoin decline should be considered non-fundamental.  That's a welcome dip to buy in a 4%+ growth economy, with 11%+ earnings growth, rates headed lower, and (for the next few months) a Fed that's pumping $30-$40 billion per month into the system.
 
Meanwhile, while the market obsesses over the noise, a real industrial revolution keeps accelerating.
 
The signal from Google today was clear:  this company is on track to do half-a-trillion dollars in revenue next year, growing near 20% with a 30% net income margin.
 
They invested over $90 billion in AI infrastructure last year, and were still left with over $73 billion in free cash flow. 
 
And they will double capex in 2026 just to keep up with the demand.
 
So, are the companies building AI supply behaving like demand is being satisfied? 
 
No.  They are acting like they still can't build fast enough
 
 

 

 

 

 

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February 03, 2026

We talked about Trump's Fed pick in my note yesterday. 
 
As we discussed, Kevin Warsh explicitly said back in July that the Fed needed regime change
 
Based on his commentary over the past six months and some clues given along the way, we should be in for lower rates, to follow what he thinks is the early stages of a structural decline in prices
 
But the "regime change" he speaks of isn't just related to the people, and processes, but to true structural reform — to break the entanglement of the Fed with government financing.
 
And with that, the days of the Fed backstopping bad fiscal policy and bad corporate behavior, via quantitative easing, should be over.
 
As we discussed yesterday, the 1951 Treasury-Fed Accord established the Fed as an independent central bank.  A new "accord" would put the responsibilties of managing crises back on the Treasury (Scott Bessent).
 
That would shore up confidence in the system and in the dollar — and establish a sustainable foundation for the productivity boom and industrial revolution. 
 
With this backstory revisited, let's talk about today's market action. 
 
Tech stocks were hit today.  And Wall Street and the financial media did what they do.  Instead of skating to where the puck is going, they walk around the puck and pontificate about why it's there. 
 
Let's talk about this chart …
 
 
As you may recall we talked about this Bitcoin chart in November. 
 
This big trendline represents the explosive bull trend that took Bitcoin almost 5x higher in just two years.  And it was started with the Fed's signaling that the rate hiking cycle was over (which implied an easing cycle was coming).
 
Then, after a 36% peak-to-trough decline over about a seven week period, Bitcoin opened the month of December sitting on this big trendline. 
 
The bottom was marked as the Fed officially ended quantitative tightening (QT) in early December, while the FOMC Vice Chair (John Williams) was already out signaling a return to balance sheet expansion!  That happened only 11 days later :  more liquidity, more currency debasement, higher Bitcoin. 
 
Here we are two months later, Warsh is on deck, and it appears that the perpetual QE business will be permanently ended by the Warsh-led Fed. 
 
Fiscal dominance (funded by the Fed) will give way to market discipline.  
 
That's kryptonite for the anti-dollar Bitcoin. 
 
And as you can see in the chart above, this big trendline has given way. 
 
What gets hit when Bitcoin breaks down? 
 
Stocks.  Particularly tech stocks. 
 
Remember we looked at this next chart a few times in November, during the Bitcoin swoon. 
 
 
Bitcoin and stocks have traded in a tight relationship in this cycle.  And now you can see the wide divergence.  
 
So, why does a fast drawdown in Bitcoin matter for stocks? 
 
Because Bitcoin is no longer just retail speculation.  Some corporate and financial firms hold it on balance sheet, and it's increasingly pledged against credit lines, structured products and derivatives.
 
When price falls quickly, lenders call for more collateral.  The easiest way to raise cash is to sell what's liquid — sell stocks.
 
If this is a real regime shift toward market discipline, we should expect to see market excesses shaken out, which could create opportunities to buy key companies in the tech revolution on sale.
 

 

 

 

 

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February 2, 2026

Let's talk about Trump's new Fed Chair.
 
Kevin Warsh was among the candidates for Fed Chair in Trump's first term.  It went to Powell. 
 
Warsh was considered the likely Treasury Secretary in Trump 2.0, just two weeks after the November elections.  It went to Scott Bessent. 
 
And Warsh was considered the front runner for Fed Chair, back in July, when Trump started calling for Powell's resignation.  But as of last week, his chances seemed to have fallen. 
 
That said, Trump named Warsh the guy on Friday morning.  Markets spent the day unwinding the 'fiscal profligacy trade,' and selling the 'easy money trade.'  And with that, the market narrative on Warsh painted him as an inflation hawk.
 
That's not the case. 
 
Let's talk about why…    
 
Reason #1Trump just spent seven months hammering the current Fed Chair for misdiagnosing inflation outcomes from tariffs, and holding rates too high — fighting the pro-growth policies out of the White House. 
 
He's not going to hire a guy to do the same. 
 
Reason #2We talked back in July about Warsh's interview one morning on CNBC.  This came shortly after Trump began turning the screws on Powell and calling for his resignation.
 
Warsh went scorched-earth on the Fed hawks, Fed forecasting models and the Fed's lack of credibility (from cycles of bad policy making).  

 
With that, Warsh didn't hold anything back on calling for "regime change" at the Fed, and outlining what it would look like.
 
And he suggested a lower interest rate regime would be just the starting point. 
 
And here are the very big reasons why:  He said "AI is going to make everything cost less," and (consequently) "we are at the front end of a productivity boom." 
 
And because of the latter, unlike the current Fed, he doesn't believe a strong economy means inflation. 
 
In fact, he said "we are probably in the early innings of a structural decline in prices."
 
Now, when we look back to the day of that interview, the market reaction to Warsh was positive:  yields traded lower on the day, and stocks traded to record highs.
 
Reason #3:  Both Bessent and Warsh worked for, and are very close with, legendary macro investor Stan Druckenmiller
 
Druckenmiller is a mentor to both.  And few in the world understand global liquidity, sovereign debt supply, and how they affect capital flows, risk premiums and market psychology like Druckenmiller. 
 
Now we will have his proteges managing the world's most important liquidity spigots (one from the fiscal side, one from the monetary side).
 
Based on the above, they will be pointing in the same direction.  But does it mean the business of the Fed and Treasury will mix?  
 
It has been, already. 
 
On that note, in a recent FT article Druckenmiller used the word "accord" to describe the relationship Warsh and Bessent would have between the Fed and Treasury.
 
That word has significance.  And Warsh has used it himself. 
 
Back in 1951, the Fed and the government reached an "accord" that freed the Fed from financing the government debt (ending the wartime peg that kept rates artificially low). 
 
The 1951 Treasury-Fed Accord established the Fed as an independent central bank. 
 
Fast forward 70-years, and former Fed governor Charles Plosser wrote a paper a few years back calling for a new Treasury-Fed Accord — another separation of powers that have been tangled by the era of post-GFC central bank intervention.
 
This might be the best visual representation of what he's talking about … 
 
      
Now, it's important to know that Druckenmiller has been a vocal critic of the fiscal insanity the U.S. government has been running (for a long time) and the monetary policy backstopping that has been enabling it. 
 
Druckenmiller had a long interview with a Norwegian pension fund manager around the last Presidential election, where he talked about the U.S. budget deficit from a markets/positioning standpoint, but also "as an American." 
 
He said as an American, it's something he's "really obsessed" with, because the debt/GDP "can't go up forever," and a reckoning will come.
 
With that backdrop, perhaps this Warsh and Bessent pairing is exactly the opposite of what markets expect. 
 
It may be the execution of this "accord" 2.0:  End the Fed's QE business (manipulation of credit markets), stop the distortion in markets and outcomes, and preserve the value and reserve currency status of the dollar
 
Give the responsibilities back to the Treasury (the fiscal side).
 
But doesn't Trump just myopically want easy money?
 
Trump has been clear in the past about the dangers of inflation, and the damage it causes for everyday people.  He fears it.
 
But he sees the 10-year yield above 4%, mortgage rates around 6% — against an agenda he thinks is crushing inflation, by design, from the supply side (energy dominance, deregulation and AI). 
 
That said, a new "accord" would restore credibility and confidence in the dollar, U.S. assets and the economy.  On the dollar, Trump has said in the past, "if you want to go to third world status, lose your reserve currency."  He respects that privileged status.   
 
You can get all of this, and still get lower rates. 
 
Warsh won't be cutting rates to stimulate demand, he'll be cutting rates to follow (what he calls) the structural decline of prices — driven by a productivity boom, which happens to bring down debt service costs (lowers the budget deficit). 
 
So, if this is the case, the gold move has been right (since Friday), same with the dollar.   And if the U.S. chooses this type of structural reform, those that don't will get punished (i.e. Europe, the euro). 
 
PS:  If you know someone that might like to receive my daily notes, they can sign up by clicking below …  

 

 

 

 

 

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January 29, 2026

As we discussed earlier this month, it’s reasonable to think that some companies will be disrupted by AI.  For some, AI will be existential.  And AI will outright transform other companies — turning the old into new.

The latter is happening in the data storage business.

The earnings we heard from Western Digital and Sandisk this afternoon (we own both in our Billionaires Portfolio), suggest we may be witnessing the “Nvidia moment” for storage.

Remember, back in May of 2023, Nvidia shocked the world with a huge quarter, and then told us the data center demand was so steep, that the next quarter revenues would jump by more than 50% (from $7 billion to $11 billion).  And they said the hyper-growth would continue for the foreseeable future.

So, May 2023 was the moment the world realized that AI was about to reinvent computing, and it would be powered by Nvidia’s GPUs.  Similarly, January 2026 looks like the moment the world is realizing it needs endless data storage to feed the AI.

With that, today Sandisk delivered guidance that looked a lot like Nvidia’s famous Q2 2023 guide for a $7 to $11 billion quarterly revenue jump.

For the most recent quarter, Sandisk reported $3 billion in revenue (up 31% from the prior quarter) and then guided for $4.4-$4.8 billion next quarter(!).  That’s a 50% sequential leap in just 90 days.

And margins are exploding.  Gross margins were up 21 percentage points from the prior quarter, and they are guiding another 15 percentage points of margin expansion for next quarter.

What’s this all about?

Remember, as Jensen Huang said earlier this month at CES in Las Vegas, the data that AI produces is growing at a rate of 5x per year.

The AI models are running non-stop, creating oceans of data.  Demand for data storage is “meaningfully” exceeding supply.  And the data storage companies have been effectively sold out now for two quarters.  This means pricing power – prices up, margins up.

And like Nvidia, Sandisk is now choosing its customers rather than chasing, and planning production against a committed backlog.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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January 28, 2026

The Fed held rates steady today, as expected. 

Let’s talk about what Jerome Powell said about the Fed’s new asset purchase program.

Remember last month, the Fed started buying Treasuries again to address a liquidity problem that was bubbling up. 

Like 2019, it was “strains in the money markets” again, that prompted the return of Fed action.

Not only did they start with $40 billion worth of short-term Treasuries (what Powell himself described as ‘big’), but he said the situation would require ongoing $20-$25 billion a month (a perpetual liquidity injection — up to $300 billion a year, indefinitely).

As we’ve discussed along the way, this pro-liquidity pivot equals pro-asset prices.

One of the clearest reactions has been in gold:  it’s up 34% in the 35 days since this December Fed meeting.

Let’s take a look at the other moments in the past 50+ years of history, when gold had a run of this magnitude.   

    

As you can see, these comparables come with significant monetary, fiscal and/or geopolitical crises.

So, back to the initial question: What did Powell say today about this “not QE” liquidity injection program?

Nothing. 

How many questions did the room full of financial journalists ask about it in the press conference?

Zero. 

Meanwhile, gold was pricing in the permanent feature of Fed money printing. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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January 27, 2026

We get the Fed tomorrow.
 
The market is pricing in a near certainty that they will hold the line on rates, following the three consecutive rate cuts into the end of last year — along with the resumption of balance sheet expansion.
 
Let's talk about the latter. 
 
Remember, the Fed was hinting late last year that there was (once again) liquidity stress emerging in the system.
 
And in December, in response to that, they didn't just restart the money printer, they did so with immediacy and size.  Moreover, Jerome Powell openly explained that the economy now requires the Fed to inject $250-$300 billion a year, indefinitely, just to maintain ample liquidity. 
 
So, the Fed officially ended quantitative tightening (extracting liquidity) on December 1st.  And by December 12th, they turned the liquidity spigot back on, to the tune of $40 billion in month one, which continues in month two (a nearly half-a-trillion dollar annual pace).  
 
And remember, in his earnings call earlier this month, Jamie Dimon described the transmission of this capital across the economy.  He said that cash enters the banking system — it "shows up in wholesale deposits" (accounts held by large corporations and institutions).  And he said it gets redeployed (it's not just sitting idle). 
 
The key point:  He described it not just as liquidity stabilization, but as stimulative
 
In short, it looks like, and acts like QE.  It's QE.  And as we know, QE tends to make asset prices go up.
 
We talked yesterday about the rising bets on Rick Rieder to become the next Fed Chair, and his view on getting the 10-year yield lower — and with that lower anchor, bringing mortgage rates down and unlocking the housing market contribution to the economy.
 
With this balance sheet expansion already restarted at the Fed, Rieder could move the $300 billion annual injection from bills to 10-year notes.
 
That shift would be a recipe for an asset price melt-up, as it would push capital out of bonds (into higher risk assets).  And pinning the 10-year in the mid-to-high 3% area (a lower and "stable" 10-year, which Rieder desires) would finance an economic boom (with cheap capital). 
 
That would mean gold at $5k is still cheap.    
 

 

 

 

 

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January 26, 2026

Let's talk about this chart …
 
 
The betting markets on the next Fed Chair swung over the weekend, in favor of Rick Rieder.  
 
Rieder runs Blackrock's huge bond investing business.  And Trump has pulled his name back into the mix recently.  
 
What makes the markets think Rieder could be the guy?
 
Perhaps a leak.  But let's talk about why Rieder is a logical fit to lead the Trump Fed.
 
Trump has clearly found a very (and uniquely) effective Treasury Secretary in Scott Bessent.  He's a markets guy who understands the plumbing, flows, global positioning, spreads, incentives, market psychology — and how to use his position to influence market direction and stability.  And he has proven to use it all, very effectively, as leverage for geopolitical gain
 
With that, we can see how Trump might want a markets guy — with Rieder's skillset and experience — to run the Fed.
 
And we already know that Rieder and Trump are on the same page. 
 
Rieder's done plenty of media, where he's made it clear that he sees interest rates lower and faster (than the Fed is projecting).
 
He sees the neutral rate lower than the Fed sees it, because he thinks we're in a (disinflationary) "productivity revolution."   
 
But here's where he aligns even more closely with Trump.  
 
He understands that it's important to get consumer borrowing costs lower, not just the Fed's benchmark rate.
 
Rieder's focus is on the 10-year yield — the interest rate from which real-world borrowing is priced.  He wants to see it between 3.5% and 4% and, importantly, stable
 
And with that, an historically average spread between mortgage rates and the 10-year yield would bring mortgage rates down to the mid-5% area.
 
As we know, Trump has been focused on the housing affordability problem, and getting mortgage rates down (by activating Fannie and Freddie to buy mortgage bonds). 
 
Likewise, Rieder framed housing as a priority in a podcast interview late last year.
 
He thinks getting mortgages in the mid-to-high 5% area would unlock housing, and unlock labor mobility, new home construction (and related jobs) and get the younger generation into home ownership.
 
He uses the same language as Trump, presenting home ownership as a key wealth builder for the country.  
Now, from all of this, what key expectation should we have of a Rieder-led Fed? 
 
This:  He doesn't just want a lower 10-year yield, he wants it stable.
 
What does "stable" imply?  It implies, as Fed Chair, he might be inclined to influence that stability with the Fed toolbox (like yield curve control — capping the 10-year yield).
 
That might be part of the explanation for the 10% rise in gold prices over the past seven days. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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January 21, 2026

Trump showed up today at the World Economic Forum and cited the economic successes of his American First agenda.

And he called out the failures of the climate and social agenda that Canada and Europe have pursued.

Remember, yesterday Macron and Carney tried to get in front of this by framing this economic performance divergence with the U.S. as a regime change in the world order — brought about by the greed and immorality of hegemonies (China and America), not by their own failures.

That framing effort doesn’t seem to have worked.

It doesn’t help their case that Mario Draghi, the former Prime Minister of Italy and President of the ECB, wrote a paper a little over a year ago that highlighted the exact failures and vulnerabilities of the European economy that have been exposed over the past year.

On that note, we’ve talked the economic fragility of Europe that was exposed once Trump’s “burden sharing” strategy was rolled out.

Remember, this “burden sharing” is from (now Fed governor) Stephen Miran’s blueprint on restructuring global trade.  It’s about requiring allies and trading partners to pay for access to safety (U.S. security guarantees), stability (the dollar and U.S. capital markets), and markets (U.S. consumers).

Europe’s response has been big spending promises (on defense, and AI investment).

The question then, and the quesion now:  Where will the money come from?

More deficit spending.  More debt.

But as we’ve also discussed along the way, for any large scale fiscal spending plan to work in Europe, without triggering another sovereign debt crisis, the ECB will be forced back into action — with more central bank backstops to tame the bond yields of the fiscally vulnerable countries.

And that ECB backstop works only if its major global central bank peers support it (namely the Fed).  We should expect Trump to use that as leverage when his hand selected Fed Chair takes office.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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January 20, 2026

We’ve talked about the “wartime behavior” of metals prices, more specifically the historical signal of the gold/silver ratio.

That signal is being articulated (put to words) at the World Economic Forum (WEF) this week.

Here’s the developing story that’s fitting the price.

It started with Macron (France).

Macron said there’s a shift towards a “world without rules,” a “world without effective governance,” and where cooperation is giving way to “relentless competition.”

His answer was strategic mobilization:  more economic  sovereignty, protection (not “naïve openness”), and heavy investment in AI, defense, and critical inputs.

Then came Carney (Canada), and he made the same case, but more explicit.

Carney told Davos we’re “in the middle of a rupture, not a transition.”

He said for decades, countries pretended the rules-based order worked as advertised.  Now it’s breaking, because economic integration itself has become a weapon (and has led to Canadian subordination).

He said “we live in an era of great power rivalry.”  And he referenced a phrase from Thucydides’ History of the Peloponnesian War, that suggests the world has returned to the “natural logic of international relations is reasserting itself.”  That logic: “the strong do what they can, and the weak suffer what they must.”

In this new era, if you aren’t strong enough to defend yourself or part of a powerful group, as Carney says, you will be “on the menu.”

So, for the better part of the past decade, we’ve heard the incessant call for “cooperation and coordination” from the global leadership at the World Economic Forum, all designed around a multi-trillion dollar climate agenda (“decarbonizing”).

Now, it’s about fragmentation, sovereignty and self-reliance.  And it’s about a world that needs to pursue all energy sources to power AI.

This is clear regime change: re-arming, re-building, re-shoring.  Resilience over reliance.  Sovereignty over dependence.  Energy abundance over energy purity.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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January 15, 2026

Since Jerome Powell signaled the end of the tightening cycle in October of 2023, we’ve talked about the long-awaited narrowing of the performance gap between mega-cap tech and the rest of the market (particularly small caps).

It hasn’t happened.  It’s been a series of headfakes.

Why?

Because the Fed has been tapping the brakes all along (through real rates and messaging), countering an economy with fiscal and industrial policy tailwinds.

But as we entered 2026, we’re finally seeing monetary and fiscal policy moving in the same direction.  And as we discussed last week, the “diffusion” (the spread/distribution) of AI and the productivity gains are beginning to show up in the data.  That’s a setup for capital to spread across the market.

And we’re seeing it in the new year.  Small caps are finally outperforming.

Now, here’s the other chart we’ve been watching — the one that tends to signal regime change … 

Over time in these notes, we’ve tracked this gold/silver ratio as a signal of extreme moments of safe-haven demand.

Importantly, in the chart, the extreme peaks line up with big events (WW2, the Gulf War, the pandemic). 

And the sequence is consistent:  Gold leads as global capital flows to the relative safe-haven asset.  Silver later follows (higher) partly as a cheaper “safe haven,” but also because it’s an industrial metal

And in the prior peaks, as we’ve discussed along the way, it’s the outsized rise in silver that pushes the ratio back down. 

That’s exactly what we’ve seen.  Since we revisited this ratio in the fall, silver has ripped, and the ratio has now “puked” lower from an extreme reading.

So what is it communicating

Historically, this represents a new phase where fear of war turns into wartime behavior: military buildup, reshoring, supply chain hardening.

That’s happening. 

On that note, let’s talk about the National Security Strategy document the White House posted in November (you can see it here). 

This document explains many of the events that have taken place in the first couple of weeks of 2026, including this about the Western Hemisphere:  “we will assert and enforce a ‘Trump Corollary’ to the Monroe Doctrine.”

And there are two other key assertions in what Trump called this “roadmap.”

First, on China, the document says deterring a conflict over Taiwan is priority, mostly because of the threat to global shipping through the South China Sea.  It says it requires a vigilant posture, a renewed defense industrial base, greater military investment, and winning the economic and technological competition. 

And it’s blunt on Europe.  It calls out the European Union and “other transnational bodies” for undermining political liberty and sovereignty through migration policies, censorship, and loss of national identities and self-confidence. It explicitly questions whether or not they will be strong enough “to remain reliable allies.”

Expect this to create some fireworks next week when Trump gives a speech at the World Economic Forum (to a room full of the parties he is calling out).