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Top Three Videos – April 17, 2026

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Peter St. Onge: Will Iran Mortally Wound the Petrodollar?...(April 16, 2026)

Peter St. Onge...

Summary

 

The video argues that Iran’s new toll on the Strait of Hormuz—$2 million per ship, payable only in Chinese yuan, stablecoins, or Bitcoin—represents another crack in the petrodollar system, where Gulf states have long priced oil in dollars and recycled those dollars into US Treasuries.

 

However, the speaker contends the petrodollar’s importance is overrated, since Gulf oil is only about 4% of world trade and Gulf states hold less than 2% of Treasuries, meaning even a significant shift away would raise US borrowing costs only marginally. Trust in the dollar had already been eroding after the US seized $300 billion in Russian central bank assets, prompting central banks worldwide to buy gold at record levels.

 

Ultimately, the speaker argues that what truly threatens dollar dominance isn’t the petrodollar’s decline but “fiscal dominance”—$2 trillion deficits forcing the Fed to print money—which will bring the US back to a financial cliff regardless of what happens in the Middle East.

Doug Casey: Narrative Warfare, Iran, and the Looming Energy Shock...(April 15, 2026)

Doug Casey's Take...

Summary

 

Doug and the host discuss how society has lost its shared cultural narrative, leaving people susceptible to a flood of competing, unverifiable “narratives” about world events—a phenomenon they see as information warfare rather than traditional censorship. They focus heavily on the US conflict with Iran, arguing that Trump knowingly triggered the closure of the Strait of Hormuz despite clear warnings, and that markets are dangerously mispricing the coming economic fallout. They conclude that fuel shortages, inflation, a potential bond market panic, and domestic blowback (possibly terror or false flag events) are increasingly likely, and urge viewers to prepare.

 

Cultural gloom and lost shared story: Younger generations no longer believe hard work leads to success; Western civilization lacks binding narratives while Islam and other groups retain theirs.

 

Narrative flooding as warfare: Rather than censoring for narrative control (as during COVID), the information environment now floods people with plausible-but-unprovable stories (US-Russia-China secret pact, 5D chess theories, City of London conspiracies) that satisfy three human cravings: plausibility, comfort, and gratification.

 

Iran conflict and escalation risks: The war won’t end soon because Iranians won’t “roll over”; scenarios discussed include Iran placing soldiers on tankers to resist US boarding and potential confrontations with Chinese-flagged vessels.

 

Strait of Hormuz closure: A 47-day closure has already cut ~13 million barrels/day from global supply (larger than COVID’s 9 million barrel demand drop), guaranteeing a COVID-scale economic contraction regardless of price signals.

 

Market mispricing: Oil is in backwardation around $90, grain/fertilizer-sensitive commodities haven’t moved, and the stock market hit 50,000—suggesting either the Fed has its thumb on the scale or investors expect it to blow over.

 

Trump knew the consequences: Iranian parliament, IRGC, CENTCOM commander, and Israeli intelligence all publicly stated the Strait would close if Iran was attacked—suggesting closure may have been the objective, with Israel as the primary beneficiary.

 

Historical amnesia and hypocrisy: The 1988 USS Vincennes shootdown of Iran Air Flight 655 (290 civilians killed) is largely forgotten in the US, while Americans would never forgive an equivalent act against them.

 

Bond market and dollar risks: Japan and other foreign holders may be forced to dump US Treasuries to cover yen weakness or fuel costs, potentially triggering a run on the bond market amid accelerating inflation.

 

Domestic blowback concerns: Cyberattacks, terror attacks, or false flag events are seen as increasingly likely as justification mounts against US actions abroad.

Chris Vermeulen: MARKETS ON EDGE: Oil, Dollar Surge & the Coming Gold Reset?...(April 13, 2026)

Liberty and Finance...

Summary

 

Technical analyst Chris Vermeulen argues that most markets are currently stuck at either resistance or support levels, with oil’s movements (driven by Middle East tensions and Strait of Hormuz developments) largely dictating broader market direction. He believes precious metals have likely put in a euphoric blowoff top similar to 2011, and he has exited most of his gold and silver positions in anticipation of a significant correction that could take gold down to ~$3,500 and silver down to ~$40. A rally in the US dollar index—potentially 10-20% higher—could trigger a major selloff across equities and metals, creating what he calls a “perfect storm” and a generational buying opportunity.

 

Current market state: S&P 500, NASDAQ, and precious metals have bounced into resistance, while oil has pulled back to support; underlying trends remain up, but action is headline-driven and emotional.

 

Oil as the market driver: Trump’s weekend comments about a “barricade” to keep the Strait of Hormuz moving caused stocks to gap down and oil to gap higher, showing how geopolitical headlines are whipsawing all asset classes.

 

Precious metals outlook (bearish short-term): Vermeulen exited gold around $5,200 and silver around $113; he sees the recent run as a euphoric FOMO-driven top resembling 2011, with potential for a sharp correction.

 

Downside targets: Using Fibonacci analysis, gold could pull back to ~$3,500 (a 34% drop similar to 2008) and silver to ~$40 (a 60%+ drop similar to 2008), which he views as ideal re-entry points.

 

Long-term bullish thesis: After the correction, he expects gold to rally to $7,000-$10,000 over the next decade; silver could eventually reach $200/oz, making this potentially a “last opportunity” buying window for some investors.

 

US Dollar setup: The DXY is forming a rounding bottom near 100; a breakout could produce a 10-20% rally toward 114-120, which historically crushes metals (as in 2008).

 

“Perfect storm” convergence: Metals topping, equities near a top, dollar bottoming, ongoing war, and elevated energy prices are all aligning in the way that typically precedes major corrections.

 

Strategies for a downturn: For active investors, he suggests moving to cash/T-bill ETFs (like BIL), high-interest savings, inverse ETFs to profit from declines, or dollar-index ETFs (UUP, USDU) to capture dollar strength.

 

Investor philosophy: Follow price action rather than narratives; buy-and-hold money managers suffer during bear markets because they must stay invested, while individuals have the flexibility to sidestep declines entirely.

 

Two scenarios for silver: Either it breaks out from a bull flag and runs toward $200, or it corrects to the low $40s first before launching—both ultimately bullish, but timing matters enormously.

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