Luke Groman and Craig Tindel argue the US is in a “Wile E. Coyote moment” where closing the Strait of Hormuz — now under a double blockade — will force a violent repricing as the physical world collides with financial markets, with Roman predicting a “Tom Hanks COVID moment” in coming weeks when investors realize supply chains are far more broken than priced. Tindel details how China refines 50-98% of nearly every metal, chemical, and gas, could shut down the West in months by restricting rare earths and sulfuric acid (silver runs a ~5,000 ton annual deficit with 70% coming from China), and warns that damaged Gulf facilities like aluminum smelters take 12+ months to restart while Nvidia’s 2028 chip roadmap requires 250,000 tons of copper annually against current 30-40,000 ton usage. Roman calculates China’s 2024 record $990B trade surplus would have balanced at roughly $22,000/oz gold and the 2025 surplus at ~$26,000/oz — arguing Bessant is deliberately letting gold rise as the only way to devalue the dollar and reshore, while they’re 50%+ in cash and physical bullion because “if you don’t hold it, you don’t own it.”
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Strait of Hormuz and the end of the petrodollar recycling loop: Roman says closing Hormuz forces foreigners to sell dollar assets to buy finite commodities, and the pipes for a pro-yuan-through-gold arrangement are already built — China has the infrastructure set up and the switch is “really not a very hard switch at all.” He calls it a “very suboptimal” way to end the dollar’s post-1971 reserve status but “a highly effective” one, flagging a week where decades happen.
China’s refining chokehold and the “for want of a nail” dynamics: Tindel explains how sulfur and helium disruptions compound because sulfuric acid refines roughly 70% of the world’s silver via the copper/lead/zinc process, and that BHP caved in three weeks to CNY payment demands after a Chinese buyer strike in late 2024. Gallium — key to microwave energy weapons that dropped drones in Venezuela — is one of many materials China can weaponize via licensing, and Tindel thinks this is why Trump moved on Venezuela and Iran.
Treasury market is what Trump actually watches, not stocks: Roman points to three breaches of the 10-year yield above 4.4% in a single week in late March, each followed by a Trump “taco,” plus a shockingly bad two-year auction and the single biggest Treasury buyback ever at $15 billion in one day. Trump has said he’s willing to let stocks fall, but Bessant is laser-focused on keeping the Treasury market “functioning” so the bond market’s veto can be overridden — until rare earths, copper, or aluminum physically aren’t there.
Gold revaluation math and the dollar-gold realignment thesis: Roman says global central banks stopped reserving Treasuries 12 years ago and gold now exceeds Treasuries in global reserves for the first time in 30-35 years. At $22,000/oz China’s 2024 trade would have balanced; at $26,000/oz their 2025 trade would have. Tindel, a 40-year market veteran who stopped believing revaluation would happen, now thinks it’s “the most probable it’s been in the last 40 years” — possibly anchored on a gold/silver/commodity mix — citing Rubio’s comment that in five years not everyone will be using the dollar.
Portfolio positioning for stagflation as “emerging market currency crisis in a developed market”: Roman runs over 50% cash and physical gold bullion, arguing the Fed must inject liquidity into commodity spikes to keep nominal yields affordable because US entitlements plus interest already exceed 100% of receipts at near-record receipts. He recommends physical bullion specifically (not ETFs) because international law and property rights are “being stretched to be polite,” plus well-capitalized companies in electrical infrastructure, industrials, and commodity bottlenecks — noting Chinese stocks are cheap and competing well but remain sentiment pariahs.