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Top Three Videos – May 10, 2026

The convergence of a $700 billion AI infrastructure boom, a looming U.S. sovereign debt crisis, and a brewing silver supply squeeze is reshaping markets in 2026 — and investors are scrambling to position themselves for what comes next. From hyperscaler capex from Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, Alphabet, and Oracle driving S&P 500 earnings to record highs, to former Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson’s “break the glass” warning about the day Treasury demand dries up, to the Iran conflict threatening permanent damage to Gulf oil infrastructure and Macleod’s prediction of 20% bond yields, the macro picture has rarely been more consequential. The three video summaries below break down expert analysis on AI infrastructure spending and the next sectors poised to benefit, the fiscal doom loop pushing capital into gold, and the silver squeeze that could dwarf 2025’s 40% LBMA lease-rate spike.

Alasdair Macleod: Imminent Silver Squeeze Amid Iran Escalation...(May 6, 2026)

Liberty & Finance...

Summary

 

Macleod argues the Iran conflict is escalating despite a temporary U.S. pause (which he attributes to a Putin call to the White House warning of dire regional consequences), and that Iranian retaliation with hypersonic missiles could permanently destroy Gulf oil infrastructure, desalination plants, and refining capacity — driving stagflation across the West. He warns sovereign bond yields are about to break out to the upside, potentially heading toward 20% on the U.S. 10-year, slamming debt traps shut for the U.S., Germany, U.K., France, and Japan at debt-to-GDP levels around 120% (versus the U.K.’s 35% during its 1970s sterling crisis when yields hit 17%). On silver, Macleod sees a brewing crunch from six years of supply deficits combined with China refusing to supply America’s newly designated “critical mineral,” predicting another LBMA-style squeeze that will make last year’s 40% lease rates look like “the foothills of a mountain.”

 

Top 5 Key Topics

 

Russia-China-Iran trilateral and the Iran conflict pause: A January agreement between the three nations means Russia is providing technology and China is providing signals intelligence (including a ship in the Sea of Oman giving pinpoint targeting for Iranian missiles), and Putin’s reported warning call to the White House is what likely triggered the suspension of “Operation Fury” — though Macleod expects U.S. attacks to resume before Gulf summer heat makes operations untenable.

 

Permanent supply shock from potential Gulf infrastructure destruction: Iran has promised to wipe out Gulf desalination plants (which would make Kuwait uninhabitable), oil terminals, and refineries — and unlike the 1970s OPEC shock, today’s Persian Gulf is the world’s refining hub, so derivative products like fertilizers and helium would face permanent disruption.

 

Bond yield breakout and the debt trap closing: Macleod thinks the U.S. 10-year, having gone roughly 4x from post-COVID lows above 5%, could push toward 20%, leaving G7 governments only able to fund themselves through short-term T-bills — the U.K. faced the same setup in the mid-1970s with 17% yields and an IMF bailout, but at 35% debt-to-GDP versus today’s 100%+.

 

The Treasury-freeze nightmare scenario: Macleod recalls Alan Greenspan saying the U.S. could simply refuse to let China sell its Treasury holdings — and warns that if Washington actually did this during a funding crisis, it would “kill the dollar without a doubt” and signal to every foreign holder globally that they’re holding a hot potato.

 

Silver squeeze poised to dwarf the 40% lease-rate spike: Six years of industrial deficit demand from photovoltaics, EVs, and rising defense spending is colliding with China hoarding silver imports at record levels (after the U.S. designated silver a critical mineral last year), and Macleod expects a coming LBMA liquidity crisis that will make September’s 40% lease-rate spike look like “the foothills of a mountain.”

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The Final Phase Has Now Begun...(May 7, 2026)

Bravos Research...

Summary

 

The host argues that hyperscalers Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, Alphabet, and Oracle will spend $700 billion on AI infrastructure this year — more than the GDP of Sweden or Singapore — and while this echoes the late-1990s telecom buildout that saw $500 billion spent on fiber before the dot-com crash, today’s setup looks more like 1998 than 2000. The U.S. manufacturing PMI has moved back above 50 (the most reliable leading indicator that flagged 2000, 2008, and 2020 downturns first), and hyperscalers are still posting roughly 20% earnings growth with capex guidance climbing toward $800 billion by 2028, meaning the buildout likely has at least another year to run. The host is staying long semiconductors but expects capital to rotate into three overlooked beneficiaries — nuclear power, base metals like copper and aluminum, and energy infrastructure stocks — pitching a paid report on six specific picks.

 

Top 5 Key Topics

 

The $700 billion hyperscaler capex wave: Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, Alphabet, and Oracle are projected to spend $700 billion this year on AI infrastructure with management guidance reaching $800 billion by 2028, and this spending is the single biggest force lifting S&P 500 earnings as it flows into Nvidia, TSMC, and other equipment suppliers.

 

Dot-com parallel — but the timing isn’t there yet: Between 1996 and 2001, telecom firms like WorldCom and Global Crossing spent roughly $500 billion laying fiber that ended up at 100x actual demand, leading to a market that lost half its value — but the host argues current conditions look more like 1998 than 2000 because the leading indicators haven’t rolled over.

 

PMI is the tell, and it’s saying “not yet”: The U.S. manufacturing PMI dropped below 50 in 2000, 2008, and ahead of 2020 before earnings collapsed each time, but it has now moved back above 50 and stayed there — signaling capex isn’t slowing and S&P 500 earnings aren’t about to roll over for at least another year.

 

Hyperscaler earnings still confirming the thesis: Amazon, Alphabet, and Microsoft are all posting roughly 20% annual earnings growth, capex guidance keeps revising upward, and 80% of primary-market data center capacity was pre-leased in 2025 — so capital is not the constraint right now.

 

Rotation play into nuclear, base metals, and energy infrastructure: The host expects the next leg of AI-driven returns in nuclear (the hyperscalers’ stated #1 power solution), copper and aluminum (copper rose 400% during the early-2000s infrastructure boom and is positioned for a similar move), and energy infrastructure stocks already showing record earnings growth.

Michelle Makori: The Man Who Managed 2008 Financial Crisis Warns: ‘Break-the-Glass’ Emergency Ahead...(May 5, 2026)

Miles Franklin Media...

Summary

 

Former Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson — who steered the U.S. through 2008 — is warning that policymakers need a “break the glass” emergency plan ready for the moment Treasury demand dries up and the Fed is forced to become buyer of last resort, which Paulson says will be sudden and “vicious” when it hits. Makori frames this as a fiscal doom loop where U.S. debt past $39 trillion (roughly 4x the 2008 level) forces higher yields, which raise borrowing costs, which force more issuance — and notes Paulson is joined by the IMF, Mohamed El-Erian, Jamie Dimon, Ray Dalio, and even Jerome Powell in calling the trajectory unsustainable. She argues the likely emergency response — large-scale QE, liquidity backstops, and yield curve control — would only buy time and accelerate the underlying problem, which is why central banks have been buying gold at record levels and gold has now overtaken U.S. Treasuries as the world’s largest central bank reserve asset.

 

Top 5 Key Topics

 

Paulson’s “break the glass” warning: The architect of the 2008 response says the U.S. will eventually try to issue debt and find no buyers, forcing the Fed in as buyer of last resort with falling Treasury prices and rising rates — and policymakers need a targeted, short-term emergency plan sitting “on the shelf” ready to deploy when the wall is hit.

 

2008 vs. today — the government IS the problem now: In 2008 U.S. debt was around $10 trillion, rates were collapsing, and the crisis was in private-sector banks the government could rescue; today debt is nearly four times that at $39 trillion, rates remain elevated, and the government itself is the source of instability with no comparable backstop.

 

The fiscal doom loop mechanics: Investors demand higher yields to compensate for sustainability risk, which raises borrowing costs, which widens deficits, which forces more issuance — a self-reinforcing cycle that ends in money printing, currency devaluation, and inflation.

 

The chorus of warnings is converging: The IMF says Treasury issuance volume is eroding the historical safety premium, El-Erian flags a structural supply/demand imbalance, Dimon warns of bond market turmoil spilling into credit, Dalio argues the real risk is debasement (paying back in devalued dollars) rather than default, and Powell himself acknowledges the path is unsustainable.

 

Gold replacing Treasuries as the reserve anchor: The likely “break the glass” toolkit — aggressive QE, liquidity backstops, and yield curve control — only buys time without solving the debt problem, and the structural shift is already visible: gold has now overtaken U.S. Treasuries as the world’s largest central bank reserve asset.

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