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Top Ten Videos – April 27, 2026

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Gregory Mannarino: Full-Blown Liquidity Crisis: War, Debt & the Collapse of the Dollar...(April 21, 2026)

Liberty & Finance...

Summary

 

Mannarino argues the United States is in a full-blown liquidity crisis deliberately engineered through the Fed-Treasury complex, artificially suppressed rates, headline-driven market manipulation, and endless war — citing the UAE seeking a dollar currency swap lifeline from Trump as “a shot across the bow” confirming there isn’t enough debt currency to keep the system functioning. He claims “the war is not over there, the war is right here” on the American people, insisting Iran is a manufactured pretext (echoing the Iraq WMD playbook) to justify borrowing cash into the system on the grandest scale possible, while Trump’s USD1 stablecoin via World Liberty Financial and the Genius Act signed last July are positioning a new digital stablecoin system pegged to the dollar that will sweep the world after a coming credit event. He calls Trump mentally in “serious decline” and under “the judgment of God,” demands invocation of the 25th Amendment, points to a $760 million insider trade 20 minutes before Trump’s pivot (investigated by the CFTC) paying $38-72 million in hours as proof the “Epstein class” is protected, and tells people to become their own central bank, exit dollar-pegged instruments, and return to constitutional money before the population is thrust “onto their hands and knees begging for a solution.”

 

Top 5 Key Topics

 

Full-blown liquidity crisis and the UAE dollar swap: Mannarino frames the UAE’s request for a US dollar currency swap lifeline during wartime — which Trump said he’s “considering” — as proof that even with a world awash in debt there isn’t enough, and he ties this to Hank Paulson’s recent “break the glass” warning that echoes 2008; he insists currency is a unit of debt and war is simply the largest possible mechanism to borrow cash into the system.

 

The Fed-Treasury complex and rate suppression as weapons: He calls the Fed-Treasury complex “the greatest threat to our freedom” for acting as lender and buyer of last resort while managing the yield curve, and says markets are betting that Trump’s new Fed pick Warsh will suppress rates even further — the opposite of what’s needed, since higher rates would restore purchasing power and let the economy take off.

 

USD1, the Genius Act, and the coming digital/stablecoin system: Mannarino points to Trump signing the Genius Act last July pegging stablecoins 1-to-1 with the dollar, Trump’s own USD1 stablecoin via World Liberty Financial, and the family becoming “their own bank” as evidence that the rails for a cashless, surveilled system are already built — insiders are reportedly warning of built-in limits and controls, with a possible 2030 deadline — and the elites only need a triggering credit event to roll it out.

 

Tariff refunds going to corporations, not people: He flags that the Supreme Court deemed Trump’s tariffs illegal and refunds began yesterday, but billions are flowing back to corporations while ordinary Americans who actually paid the tariffs get nothing — a replay of the COVID lockdown relief pattern where mega-corporations captured the lion’s share while small businesses were told “the money’s all gone.”

 

Insider trading, mental decline, and the call to exit the system: Mannarino cites a $760 million bet that Kroger would fall placed 20 minutes before Trump’s announcement — paying between $38 million and $72 million in hours and now under CFTC investigation — as proof Trump protects the “Epstein class” and vice versa via the Cantillon effect; he calls Trump “rotting before our eyes,” demands the 25th Amendment (noting Vance as successor is no answer), dismisses gasoline-driven retail sales strength as forced spending dressed up as economic health, and urges listeners to exit all central-bank-issued notes, “become your own central bank,” and “bet against the system.”

BREAKING: Kevin Warsh Hearing Just Revealed New Fed Chair's TRUE Agenda...(April 21, 2026)

CapitalCOSM...

Summary

 

Danny breaks down Kevin Warsh’s Senate Banking Committee confirmation hearing to replace Jerome Powell as Fed chair, arguing that markets went in expecting a dove who would deliver Trump’s demanded rate cuts but got someone notably more hawkish than anticipated. Warsh insisted on Fed independence, refused to tell Trump where he thought rates should be, framed interest rates (not bond and mortgage buying) as the Fed’s dominant tool, and weathered a combative exchange with Senator Elizabeth Warren over more than $100 million in undisclosed assets held via Juggernaut and THSDFS LLC — including her pointed question about whether he’s invested in Trump-family companies, money-laundering-linked firms, Chinese-controlled companies, or “financing vehicles established by Jeffrey Epstein” — to which he only replied he’d divest before taking office. The market reaction confirmed the hawkish read: the S&P sold off from the moment the hearing began while the 10-year yield spiked to 4.31%, which Danny interprets as the bond market concluding Warsh won’t cut as aggressively as Trump wants, because Warsh understands that if long rates refuse to follow cuts (as happened in late 2024 under Powell) it destroys confidence in the bond market.

 

Top 5 Key Topics

 

Warsh’s hawkish framing on rates and Fed independence: Warsh told Senator Cynthia Lummis he never told Trump where rates should be and “wouldn’t have even thought about doing so,” arguing interest rates — not bond and mortgage purchases, which he called “mission creep” and “a confusion of roles” — are the dominant tool, and that the FOMC needs “messier meetings” and “a good family fight” rather than rehearsed scripts.

 

Warren’s ethics ambush over $100M and Epstein-linked vehicles: Warren pressed Warsh on whether the Juggernaut Fund or THSDFS LLC hold positions in Trump-family companies, money-laundering facilitators, Chinese-controlled firms, or “financing vehicles set up by Jeffrey Epstein,” and he refused to answer yes or no, only committing to divest before taking the oath — she also flagged that billionaire Stanley Druckenmiller, whom Warsh honored in his opening statement, makes a living guessing what the Fed will do next.

 

Warren’s independence/courage test and the 2020 election dodge: Warren quoted Trump saying “anybody that disagrees with me will never be Fed chairman” and “when Kevin gets in” rates will drop, then asked Warsh to confirm Trump lost the 2020 election and to name one aspect of Trump’s economic agenda he disagrees with — Warsh deflected on the election (“this body certified that election”) and offered only that he disagrees with Trump’s description of him as “out of central casting,” joking he’d need to be “older, grayer” with a cigar.

 

AI as a deflationary cover for rate cuts: Under questioning from Senator Kennedy, Warsh denied he’d claimed AI productivity alone justified rate cuts but called this “the most disruptive moment in modern economic history,” while Kennedy warned that much of the AI productivity narrative is “a bunch of hype by people who want to sell stock in an IPO”; Danny frames AI deflation as the cover story that could make cuts tolerable, though Warsh also conceded gas, beef, eggs, and milk prices are genuinely hurting Americans, contradicting Trump’s recent “not very high” gas price claim.

 

Market reaction signaled a hawkish surprise: The S&P 500 opened higher but sold off the moment the hearing began around 10:17 a.m. Eastern and kept falling through the proceedings, while the 10-year yield spiked to 4.31%, which Danny reads as the bond market repricing Warsh as less dovish than expected — echoing late 2024 when Powell cut rates but the long end refused to follow, a dynamic Danny says Warsh understands would destroy bond market confidence if repeated.

Craig Fuller: Miracle Turnaround? The US Industrial Economy Is Now Booming DESPITE High Oil Prices...(April 19, 2026)

Thoughtful Money...

Summary

 

Craig Fuller, who was deeply bearish on freight when he last appeared in November, flipped to “as bullish as I’ve been in many years,” arguing that after three-plus years of freight recession someone “flipped a switch” right after Thanksgiving and the US industrial economy is now roaring — chemical rail shipments hit their highest level ever recorded, grain shipments hit the highest since 1993, non-coal carloads hit the strongest March since 2008, Bank of America’s shipper survey rose 18% year-over-year, and ATA truck tonnage is at a three-year high. He credits the Trump administration with an “A” now (versus an “F” a year ago) for the Big Beautiful Bill’s 100% bonus depreciation and manufacturing-specific tax benefits, the data center buildout (where AI buyers are “price agnostic”), defense spending — 8% of US manufacturing is tied to defense goods and the Department of War has requested $200 billion more to replenish weapons — and the US natural gas advantage, which has an inverse relationship to oil and has driven US gas exports from 10 to 20 billion cubic feet per day since 2022. Fuller insists “nothing” in the data suggests the Iran war is hurting US industrial demand (war is historically good for US domestic manufacturing) and dismisses the consumer-gasoline objection as roughly $50/month offset by tax refunds, while Mike Preston adds that the S&P at ~6987 is a point from all-time highs with a breakaway gap signaling a likely blow-off top before what he still expects will be a 60% bear market, and notes silver needs to clear $90 spot (SLV $80) to give the all-clear.

 

Top 5 Key Topics

 

Freight/industrial renaissance with record-breaking data: Fuller cites chemical rail shipments at the highest level ever recorded, grain shipments at the highest since 1993, non-coal rail carloads at the strongest March since 2008, Truckstop load board postings at the highest since 2022, ATA truck tonnage at a three-year high, Bank of America shipper survey up 18% year-over-year, and ISM manufacturing PMI at three-year highs — and critically the center of the country is now shipping goods out rather than receiving imports, a reversal he hasn’t seen since FreightWaves began tracking data in 2018.

 

Bonus depreciation and the Big Beautiful Bill as catalyst: The Big Beautiful Bill signed last year restored 100% first-year write-offs (up from 40%) for qualifying capital investments including F-150s through F-350s, Silverados, and heavy machinery, with Ford and GM adding shifts and skipping typical seasonal shutdowns; separate manufacturing-specific provisions require American-made sourcing, which Fuller says explains why pent-up 2025 demand that froze in April after the tariff rollout is now being deployed.

 

Data centers, defense, and natural gas as demand pillars: AI data center developers are “price agnostic” buyers driving demand not just for GPUs but transmission lines, copper, aluminum, steel, generators, cooling systems, and concrete; 8% of US manufacturing is tied to defense goods and the Department of War has requested $200 billion more for weapons replenishment; 80% of US plastics and petrochemicals come from natural gas (not oil), and US gas exports have doubled from 10 to 20 billion cubic feet per day since 2022, with gas prices falling even as oil spikes because gas is an “exhaust” of oil drilling.

 

Iran war is a tailwind, not a headwind, for US industrials: Fuller states emphatically “nothing” in the data suggests the war is hurting US freight — “war is good for the US domestic economy as it relates to industrial activity” — and argues the Western Hemisphere is “the only place you can buy oil and natural gas and petrochemicals that’s not in a war zone”; he estimates $98/barrel WTI costs consumers about $50/month extra, offset by tax refunds, and notes stretched consumers actually drive more freight because grocery packaging consumes more logistics capacity than restaurant bulk supply (citing the 2020 toilet paper crisis as the template).

 

Trucking supercycle and Preston’s market/metals read: Fuller calls trucking “a great time to be a trucker” — the administration has already removed 18,000 drivers, the pending DIOS Act could remove 200,000-plus, and the illegal-immigrant CDL pipeline has been cut off, tightening supply against rising industrial demand; Mike Preston notes the S&P at 6987 is nearly at its 7,02.28 January high with a breakaway gap pointing to a likely blow-off top (possibly 7,500-8,000+) before what he still expects will be a ~60% bear market, while silver needs to clear $90 spot / SLV $80 to confirm a breakout, gold sits around $4,800-4,900 with a target near $5,200, and GDX has recovered from its drop from 117 to 80.

Alasdair Macleod: China Importing RECORD Levels of SILVER, $300+ 'Very Likely' in 2026...(April 24, 2026)

Commodity Culture...

Summary

 

Macleod argues that China completely ceased silver exports in 2025 (down from 4,200 tons in 2024 and 4,083 tons in 2023) after decades of suppressing prices by feeding silver into Western markets from its accumulated stockpiles, and with the market now in its seventh consecutive year of deficit — UBS pegs 2026’s shortfall at roughly 300 million ounces versus the Silver Institute’s 76 million — he endorses Michael Oliver’s $300-$500 silver price target for this year as “eminently possible.” He contends China and Russia have been planning a gold standard for decades (Chinese regulations dating to 1983 made the People’s Bank of China the sole national gold/silver dealer, and the Shanghai Gold Exchange’s new vaults in Hong Kong and Saudi Arabia allow yuan-gold exchange with no other currencies accepted), with Russia able to slash its 15-16% interest rates overnight by putting the ruble on gold — banks would lease Western gold at 1% and earn 15% as a gold substitute. He predicts fiat currencies are “on their deathbed” heading to zero, gold could hit $3,500, the UK is heading for a 1970s-style IMF bailout scenario except there’s no IMF rescue available this time (the US controls it and faces the same debt trap), and when the US credit bubble bursts — margin debt has soared from $200 billion during the 2008 GFC to $1.2 trillion today — the S&P will lose 95% measured in gold, echoing Germany’s 1921 stock crash where equities lost 90% in gold but only 25% in collapsing reichsmarks.

 

Top 5 Key Topics

 

China’s silver export halt and the coming squeeze: China stopped silver exports completely in 2025 (from 4,200 tons in 2024, 4,083 in 2023, roughly 137 million ounces annually) after decades of quietly supplying Western markets from its 40-50 year stockpile — explaining the market’s seven-year deficit — and last October’s geopolitical rupture over rare earths saw the London lease rate spike to 40%; Shanghai now trades at a 12-14% premium and China has told its own photovoltaic industry to slow production, signaling stockpile exhaustion.

 

The Chinese gold standard playbook and Russia’s opportunity: People’s Bank of China regulations dating to 1983 made it the sole national gold dealer (“Hotel California for gold — it goes in but never comes out,” confirmed by a Swiss refiner who told Macleod in 2014 and again years later that virtually zero Chinese gold ever reaches the market), and new Shanghai Gold Exchange vaults in Hong Kong and Saudi Arabia settle only in yuan; Russia could slash its 15-16% rates overnight by putting the ruble on gold, since banks would lease Western gold at 1% and earn 15% as a gold substitute.

 

Silver to $300-500 and gold to $3,500: Macleod endorses Michael Oliver’s $300-500 silver target as “eminently possible” given the supply-demand collision, Indian photovoltaic buildout, US designating silver a critical mineral (meaning China definitely won’t supply it), and Chinese household savings of roughly $5 trillion annually at 30-35% savings rates seeking refuge in metals as bank deposit rates fall; he sees gold potentially hitting $3,500 as Hormuz closure and potential Houthi action at the Bab-el-Mandeb strait (threatening 6 million barrels a day out of Yanbu plus Suez) crushes dollar purchasing power.

 

UK bond crisis and the “no IMF this time” problem: UK 10-year gilts at ~5% (highest since 2008) sit atop a government Macleod calls “left-wing stroke communist” under Starmer, with Peter Mandelson problems and local elections threatening to push Labour even further left; he compares this to 1973 when the IMF bailed out Britain with roughly $2 billion conditional on spending cuts — but this time there’s no North Sea oil windfall (climate ideology prevents restart) and no IMF rescue because its controller, the US, faces the same debt trap.

 

Trump-era insider trading and the credit bubble ending like Weimar 1921: Macleod calls blatant insider trading around Trump’s market-moving announcements and the Trump/Melania memecoin rugpulls “one sign of end of empire,” suspecting regulators are collecting evidence for when Trump falls, Netanyahu-style; on the S&P at all-time highs, margin debt has exploded from $200 billion at the 2008 GFC to $1.2 trillion (FINRA, retail only — excluding hedge funds), and when this credit bubble bursts he expects a Weimar 1921 template where German stocks lost 90% in gold but only 25% in collapsing reichsmarks, meaning the S&P loses ~95% in gold terms while falling only one-third to two-thirds in dollar terms.

Doug Casey: How I'm betting? Mining stocks are cheap!...(April 24, 2026)

Metals and Miners...

Summary

 

Casey argues the US/Israel “unprovoked surprise attack” on Iran during negotiations was a war crime that will drag on because the Iranians won’t back down and will extract de facto reparations by charging roughly $1 a barrel on VLCC tankers transiting the Strait of Hormuz, meaning oil (currently ~$90-91) and natural gas ($2.50-2.60 in North America, a bargain versus 3-5x elsewhere) are going higher, not lower as the futures curve implies. He considers the Federal Reserve useless and says it should be abolished — the dollar has lost 95-98% of its value since the Fed’s 1913 creation — and with $9 trillion in maturing debt rolling over plus $2 trillion in new issuance this year and interest expense over $1.2 trillion, he predicts US rates will climb back to the 15-18% levels of the early 1980s while the stock market has become “a massive gambling casino” driven by Robin Hood traders. He’s bullish on gold (which he calls the only financial asset that isn’t simultaneously someone else’s liability, with a redemption math implying $20,000-30,000/oz), silver at its ~$75 floor, copper, coal, uranium (he’s owned it since the early 2000s when it was $30/lb before hitting $150), and small-cap entrepreneur-run mining juniors over majors like BHP, while calling government itself “a parasite” that draws “the scum of humanity.”

 

Top 5 Key Topics

 

Iran war will drag on and push oil/gas higher: Casey calls the strike a war crime carried out during negotiations and predicts Iran will keep the Strait of Hormuz hostile by charging roughly $1/barrel on 2 million barrel VLCC tankers, with oil at ~$90-91 and US natural gas at $2.50-2.60 (versus 3-5x abroad); he’s long Petrobras, Ecopetrol, Canadian producers, and coal stocks paying up to 10% dividends because “everybody hates coal which is a good reason to buy it.”

 

Fed is useless and rates are going to 15-18%: Casey wants the Fed abolished — the dollar has lost 95-98% of value since 1913 — and with Kevin Warsh likely incoming as Fed chair, $9 trillion of debt rolling over, $2 trillion in new debt, and over $1.2 trillion in annual interest expense, he predicts rates rise back to early-1980s levels of 15-18% or higher and says bonds should be avoided “under any circumstances.”

Stock market is a gambling casino heading for trouble: Casey says retail traders on Robin Hood do zero fundamental analysis and Benjamin Graham “wouldn’t even understand it,” with the government creating trillions (possibly quadrillions eventually) to finance deficits; he thinks the Magnificent Seven is a “gigantic bubble” even if Kurzweil’s singularity thesis on AI is correct, and he’d rather own commodity stocks, oil/gas, coal, and grains/cotton/rice ETFs.

 

Gold as money, small juniors over majors for leverage: Casey has never sold an ounce of gold, says fair redemption value is $20,000-30,000/oz (only 6x current, versus the 120x run since 1971), and expects gold to be reinstituted as international money since Russia demonstrated the risk of holding dollars; he avoids BHP and the majors because their managers lack skin in the game, instead hunting 50-to-1 winners in entrepreneur-run juniors (name-checking Ross Beaty and Rob McEwen) in the $50M-$500M range he expects majors to acquire in a coming M&A frenzy.

 

Silver at $75 floor, uranium, and copper caveats: Casey sees silver finding equilibrium around $75 with mining stocks “grossly underpriced” because retail hasn’t arrived — he compares it to trying to force Hoover Dam’s contents through a garden hose — and he’s a self-described “original uranium bull” from when it was $30/lb before hitting $150, owning the Sprott uranium trust and several uranium stocks; on copper he’s bullish given Robert Friedland’s six-new-mines-a-year math but warns carbon nanotubes are a future substitute and notes copper has only gone up 20x from 30 cents since his college days versus gold’s 100x+.

Edward Luce: US Grand Strategy & the Revenge of Geopolitics...(April 20, 2026)

Hidden Forces...

Summary

 

Luce argues the West got “drunk on hubris” after the Berlin Wall fell on November 9, 1989 (he personally drove there with pickaxes at age 21), squandering the 1990s as “holidays from history” and misreading great power rivalry as a thing of the past — a naive misreading of human nature the US is still paying for. He contrasts Cold War-era grand strategists like Kissinger and Brzezinski — flinty Old World realists, refugees from 1930s Europe who had standup arguments with presidents as intellectual equals — with today’s risk-averse, lawyered-up, process-obsessed “blob” (Ben Rhodes’s term), noting Jake Sullivan couldn’t push back on Biden the way Brzezinski did on Carter given the 30-year age gap and Biden’s thin-skinned stubbornness. Luce calls Trump both “a symptom and an accelerant,” crediting Operation Warp Speed as genuinely impossible under Democrats but calling Operation Epic Fury against Iran a potential catastrophe rivaling Iraq, arguing Iran will now race toward North Korea-style nuclear deterrence (it’s already at 3.67% enrichment with 420 kg of enriched uranium), 80-90% of Republicans still back Trump because there are no body bags, and the real danger is that an alienated, weakened America hands Xi Jinping geopolitical temptations at the exact moment Trump has turned surprisingly dovish and “almost submissive” toward China ahead of their upcoming summit.

 

Top 5 Key Topics

 

1989 hubris hangover as the origin of today’s dysfunction: Luce dates the West’s decline to the fall of the Berlin Wall on November 9, 1989 (which he personally attended with pickaxes at 21), arguing the Clinton-era “holidays from history” squandered the postwar moment to forge new partnerships, and the belief that great power rivalry was over was “a tremendously naive misreading of the recurring folly of human nature.”

 

Grand strategists versus the risk-averse “blob”: Kissinger (from Bavaria) and Brzezinski (from Poland) arrived in America as refugees in 1938, rose as intellectual equals to their presidents (Kissinger a decade younger than Nixon, Brzezinski 3-4 years younger than Carter), and had genuine standup arguments — Luce contrasts this with today’s lawyered-up interagency process, naming Ben Rhodes’s term “the blob” and arguing it’s a demand problem, not a supply problem, since smart scholars still exist but the climate punishes controversial strategic thinking.

 

Biden’s slow process versus Trump’s no-process chaos: Luce cites an ambassador who said Democratic administrations produce deals that “3 years later still haven’t been implemented,” praises Operation Warp Speed as impossible under Democrats (noting Trump can’t boast about his biggest accomplishment because antivaxers support him), but blames Biden’s second-guessing about imaginary Putin red lines for Ukraine aid arriving “months after it could have been decisive”; the Iran war, conversely, “could only happen with no interagency process.”

 

The Iran endgame and Trump’s pride problem: Luce calls Operation Epic Fury a potential catastrophe rivaling Iraq, says Iran will race from “0 to 60 miles per hour from Tehran to Kim Jong-un-style nuclear defense” because it’s existential for the regime and they won’t trust any Trump pledge, and frames the deal math around whether Trump’s pride can accept something weaker than the Obama JCPOA he trashed — enrichment might have to drop from 3.67% to maybe 2.5%, with the 420 kg of enriched uranium the real sticking point; 80-90% of Republicans back the war because there are no body bags, and Luce doesn’t see boots on the ground happening.

 

China as the real keep-him-up-at-night risk: Luce says the US-China relationship is the most important geopolitical relationship in the world and Trump has been surprisingly “almost submissive” toward Xi — chasing a summit since before his inauguration and climbing down from the tariff war in a “spinal tap moment” calling the relationship “a 12 out of 10”; the danger is Xi seeing a weakened, allied-alienated America as geopolitical opportunity during the Iran crisis, especially given Pete Hegseth briefings that Luce calls “the ugly American… glorying in violence and misquoting the Bible,” which are driving global south sympathy toward Iran and straining even patient Chinese leadership.

Jim Rickards: Why Nations Are Preparing for Financial Collapse... (April 21, 2026)

GoldRepublic Global...

Summary

 

Jim Rickards argues that the mainstream Wall Street narrative about gold — that central banks are dumping US Treasuries, the dollar is collapsing, and the BRICS are launching a new currency — is almost entirely wrong, and that the US is not going broke because with debt at $39 trillion and a debt-to-GDP ratio of 124%, nominal GDP growth faster than debt growth can bring that ratio down just as it did from 114% in 1945 to 30% in 1980. The real drivers of gold are central bank net buying since 2010 (Russia, China, Kazakhstan, Philippines, Vietnam, Mexico), tokenized gold products like Tether, flat mining output around 4,000 metric tons annually, a record-low copper-to-gold ratio, and the fact that the BRICS already have a common settlement currency — gold itself — settling Russia-China trade on a net quarterly basis outside the dollar system. Rickards forecasts gold hitting $10,000 an ounce in 2026 and argues it will happen faster than people expect because of anchoring bias — each $1,000 leap becomes a smaller percentage gain — and notes that from 1971 to 1980 gold rose 2,300% while the dollar lost 97% of its value against gold, which if repeated would put gold at $100,000 an ounce.

 

Top 5 Key Topics

 

The mainstream narrative is wrong on Treasuries and the dollar: According to the US Treasury’s monthly TIC report, Chinese holdings of US Treasuries are roughly flat and Japan is actually buying more, not dumping — and there is in fact a global dollar shortage because the Fed’s $10 trillion of printed money sits sterilized as excess reserves on its balance sheet while commercial bank balance sheets contract and money velocity has been collapsing for 20 years.

 

US debt is manageable via the debt-to-GDP ratio and hidden assets: The US debt-to-GDP ratio fell from an all-time high of 114% in 1945 to 30% in 1980 even as nominal debt tripled, purely through growth, and Rickards estimates US government assets (federal land, oil, gas, rare earths, intellectual property) at $150-200 trillion against the $39 trillion debt — the last time US debt was fully paid off was 1836 under Andrew Jackson.

 

BRICS already use gold, not a new currency: Rickards says creating a new currency took the euro 10 years from the 1991 Maastricht Treaty to 2000, so BRICS won’t do it in two, but Russia-China trade already bypasses the dollar using ruble-yuan rails with gold for net quarterly settlement; China’s reported 2,600 metric tons is only about a quarter of US holdings, and even doubled or tripled gold would be roughly 2% of their money supply versus the ~40% needed for a true gold-backed currency.

 

Fort Knox, gold leasing, and the $42/oz Treasury certificate: Roughly 4,000 tons sit at Fort Knox and 4,000 at West Point (owned by the Army), but leased gold gets rehypothecated on paper 10-100x — former JP Morgan commodities head Blythe Masters once said “gold never settles”; the Treasury’s gold certificate on the Fed’s balance sheet is still valued at $42 an ounce, and marking it to market would inject roughly $1 trillion of hidden asset value into the Treasury account.

 

$10,000 gold in 2026 and anchoring bias: Rickards reiterates his $10,000-per-ounce forecast for 2026, arguing 2,000 to 3,000 was a 50% lift but 9,000 to 10,000 is only 11% — “like a good month” — so the later thousand-dollar legs happen fast; he flags Tucker Carlson’s launch of an online gold dealership as a signal that retail frenzy is imminent and calls gold the “everything hedge,” noting it rose 75% during the Great Depression deflation.

Mark Thornton: Gold Could Rise 'By Thousands of Dollars'... (April 21, 2026)

Minor Issues...

Summary

 

Thornton argues we’re “on the onramp to the road to hyperinflation” and that the recent gold and silver pullback from January’s blowoff highs is a textbook correction, not a broken thesis — gold bounced $6 above its 200-day moving average on the overnight March 23rd low of roughly $4,099 (down $391) and has since rebounded. He explains the oil spike from the Iran war is actually blocking what the Fed desperately wants to do — cut rates and flood the system with liquidity — because the CPI bump gives them no political cover, and predicts that when AI-bubble malinvestment, private equity, private credit, and commercial mortgage landmines start exploding later this year, the Fed will throw up its hands on inflation and cut aggressively, repeating the pattern of GFC and COVID responses ($5 trillion in 2020 alone). He endorses $1 trillion in hidden Treasury gold certificate value at the $42/oz book price, calls CPI an inherently flawed Mises-era “construction” biased to under-report debasement, frames the Kennedy-shaped economy as Mises predicted in 1928 — workers emiserated while the capitalist class gains — and expects gold to make new all-time highs in 2026 with the gold-silver ratio (currently above 60) eventually returning to its free-market range of 10-to-20, meaning silver going up hundreds of dollars and gold thousands.

 

Top 5 Key Topics

 

The Iran oil spike is blocking the Fed’s preferred rate cuts: Thornton says rising oil is feeding directly into CPI and PPI, which strips the Fed of political cover to cut — all anticipated 2026 rate cuts came off the board when the war broke out — but the Fed is “chomping at the bit” to cut because of landmines in AI, private equity, private credit, and commercial mortgages, and he’ll bet $100 the next Fed move is a cut, not a hike, despite the December emergency liquidity program that was really “QE under a variety of different names.”

 

The January gold/silver correction was textbook, not structural: Gold hit an overnight low around $4,099 (down $391 from peaks) on March 23rd but traded just $6 above its 200-day moving average before rebounding — Thornton points to German 1918-1923 hyperinflation as the template, where the mark fell by a factor of a million against gold but the graph showed massive corrections and spikes along the way, not a straight line, and warns investors against being psychologically wiped out by aberrations that hedge funds and algos amplify.

 

Malinvestment as the core gold thesis: Thornton calls malinvestment the most important Austrian concept — artificially low rates induce bad investment in speculative, long-duration, high-tech projects (his book The Skyscraper Curse uses record-setting skyscrapers as the barometer, dating the pattern back to the 19th century), and the Fed will do everything to prevent rationalization, making gold a mandatory portfolio asset until that tension resolves; he dismisses the question “what stops the Fed from taking its balance sheet from 6.5 to 20 trillion” with “nothing,” because the global political elites who control presidents and prime ministers want to kick the can to preserve power and wealth.

 

CPI is a flawed Mises-era “construction,” not real inflation measurement: Thornton rejects the CPI-gold correlation, explaining Mises in 1928 warned Irving Fisher (the “godfather” of American central banking whose perpetual-prosperity projections preceded the 1929 crash) that price indexes “can lead to errors of significant magnitude” and are biased to under-report monetary debasement — Mises uniquely predicted that money printing would cause stock crashes, hyperinflation, and a redistribution of wealth from the working class to the top 1% (today’s K-shaped economy).

 

$10,000 gold, three-digit silver, and the gold-silver ratio collapse: Thornton expects both metals above all-time highs in 2026 with another psychologically euphoric cycle by year-end, gold rising by thousands and silver by hundreds of dollars, and the gold-silver ratio falling from 60+ back toward its free-market range of 10-to-20 ounces of silver per ounce of gold (it dropped from 104 to 50 during the January run); he favors large producing gold and silver miners and royalty companies — whose profit margins now rival the Magnificent Seven — with the sweet spot eventually spreading to developers, explorers, and M&A targets.

Marty & Scott: Bitcoin Just Killed Private Equity... (Apr. 18, 2026)

Tales for the Commoner...

Summary

 

Marty and Scott launch a Bitcoin Treasury and Exit Playbook for private business owners, arguing the Michael Saylor strategy applies even better to private companies than public ones because private markets still overvalue cash-flowing businesses at fiat hurdle rates rather than Bitcoin’s 30-50% CAGR. Scott’s central provocation: “Why does this industry exist at all?” — if you take private equity’s 5-7 year illiquidity playbook and apply it to just holding Bitcoin, you’d outperform 99% of PE funds, meaning business owners can exploit the artificial PE bid to sell equity at fiat valuations and stack Bitcoin at what everyone agrees are lower prices than will exist in the future. They walk through three exit scenarios (full sale, partial sale with PE rollover where the owner could eventually buy the business back using appreciated Bitcoin, or keep it and stack), dismiss CPI as manipulated (real purchasing power loss is closer to 10% annually for businesses with hard-asset inventory), argue AI is deflationary enough that Scott’s CBA may never need to hire the million-dollar junior team he originally planned, and predict that by September 2026 the 5-year rolling comp against the $65K September 2021 high will either look mediocre or make current Strait of Hormuz fears look ridiculous — Scott puts himself firmly in the second camp.

 

Top 5 Key Topics

 

Private equity is underperforming spot Bitcoin, creating an arbitrage for owners: Scott argues PE’s 2-and-20 fee structure over 5-7 year illiquid holds underperforms just buying and holding Bitcoin, and theorizes PE hasn’t embraced Bitcoin because doing so would beg the question of why the industry exists at all; this creates “an artificial bid for nice cash flowing businesses” from PE firms deploying capital for teachers’ pensions, firefighters’ unions, and university endowments, letting owners sell at fiat valuations and convert proceeds to Bitcoin.

 

Three exit scenarios with the “buy it back later” gambit: Full sale for owners whose ROIC is objectively unexciting versus Bitcoin’s hurdle rate; partial sale with PE rollover where the owner stays in an operator seat while taking chips off the table; or keep the business entirely if it’s “lightning in a bottle.” Scott’s favorite scenario: sell part of the business, use proceeds to buy Bitcoin personally, watch PE underperform over 5-7 years, then buy the business back at the end using appreciated Bitcoin — “it’s going to take me half the cash you gave me because I stored it in Bitcoin.”

 

Cash on the balance sheet is an inflation trap worse than CPI suggests: Scott dismisses official CPI as manipulated and argues most businesses with hard-asset inventory experience closer to 10% purchasing power loss annually — $10 million of working capital becomes $8 million of stuff in a year; he recommends the debt-to-buy-Bitcoin play (3-4x EBITDA in private credit, pitching it as better collateral than a typical dividend recap where proceeds buy boats and airplanes) and notes $2 trillion in private credit dry powder is hungry for deals.

 

AI as a million-dollar deflationary force inside the business: Scott admits he owed Marty “a big thank you” — after being encouraged to stop pinching pennies on AI subscriptions and lean into frontier models (OpenClaude, agentic harnesses), his plan to hire a $1 million team of 3-5 junior analysts at CBA may never be necessary; he’s launched a side business helping Bitcoiners set up these AI harnesses and says 30+ customers have all started their own businesses as a result, warning that privacy trade-offs exist but open-source self-hosted models on $30K in GPUs will be viable in 6-12 months.

 

The September 2026 test and rising hurdle rates killing bad businesses: Scott frames the coming 5-year rolling comp against the $65K September 2021 high as a binary: either Bitcoin’s returns will look mediocre or current Strait of Hormuz anxiety will seem ridiculous in hindsight — he takes the second side of that bet. He also concedes that as Bitcoin’s hurdle rate rises, many currently “good” businesses will be exposed as malinvestment: “If I can make 30-40-50% CAGR holding Bitcoin, I’m not going to open another Taco Bell” — and suggests that’s not a bad thing, just a period of austerity where saving equals investing in the future.

The Babylon Bee: Conservative Destroys Liberal In Gun Debate...(April 17, 2026)

The Babylon Bee...

Summary

 
 
SATIRE

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