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Lynn Alden notes the Strait of Hormuz conflict's resolution is incomplete, with key details like enriched uranium, inspections, and funding still unresolved. The current memorandum largely reconstructs the monitored 2015-2018 agreement.
Patrick Serezna reports WTI crude oil dropped 885 basis points, falling to $69.28, and collapsed from the $80 handle to $69.18, indicating an extremely oversold market.
Patrick Serezna highlights the US dollar index staged a technically significant breakout, rallying 210 basis points to 101.54 and decisively breaking a 15-month trade range.
Patrick Serezna notes gold declined roughly 900 basis points, falling back towards the $4,000 level not seen since October of the prior year.
Lynn Alden suggests new Fed Chair Worsh, despite his hawkish history, adopted a hawkish but vague tone due to recent high energy prices and rising inflation. The Fed typically prioritizes non-energy inflation.
Lynn Alden anticipates nominal US debt levels will continue rising aggressively, asserting the Treasury Secretary’s forecast of reducing deficits to 4% of GDP by administration's end is overly optimistic.
Lynn Alden argues the US can sustain larger deficits due to its diverse economy and global reserve currency status, which creates inflexible international demand for dollars. Consequences appear as a "two-speed economy" and political dissatisfaction, not immediate debt crises.
Lynn Alden observes the stablecoin market cap grew from $30 billion in January 2021 to $300 billion, expecting it to eventually exceed $1 trillion. These yieldless products are ideal for global payments and working capital.
Lynn Alden references a Citigroup report forecasting stablecoin market cap between $1 trillion (base) and $3 trillion (bull) by 2030. However, even a $1 trillion increase in stablecoin demand for treasuries would only cover about six months of US deficits.
Lynn Alden expects the AI trade to persist longer than anticipated, citing strong RAM demand and breakout earnings from companies like Micron. Narrative momentum can sustain high valuations, as seen with Tesla and SpaceX, despite decoupled fundamentals.
Lynn Alden expresses less bullishness on AI models due to their low switching costs and lack of economic moat. She identifies significant cybersecurity risks from AI tools exploiting code vulnerabilities, threatening DeFi and corporate data.
Eric Townsend notes China’s more developed energy policy and greater data center power capacity provide a strategic AI advantage. Lynn Alden agrees, highlighting China’s massive industrial power as a significant economic moat translating to AI.
Lynn Alden would "take the under" on the commercial viability of orbital data centers within a 5-10 year investable horizon (by 2036). Radical increases in rocket reusability are necessary to overcome high launch and maintenance costs.
Patrick Serezna recommends going long natural gas to capitalize on the AI power bottleneck. He suggests the UNL ETF for cleaner delta-1 exposure or using bull call spreads on December 2026 natural gas futures for convex upside.
Patrick Serezna reports the S&P 500 retraced half its post-peace deal rally, initially pressured by a 10% limit-down in the South Korean Kospi. Despite Micron’s earnings prompting a relief rally, leadership remains concentrated in semiconductors, indicating weak overall market breadth.
Patrick Serezna suggests crude oil's more reasonable intermediate fair value likely sits around the $80-$85 range, arguing recent declines below this level are due to forced liquidation rather than fundamental shifts.
Patrick Serezna observes strong bullish momentum for the US dollar, with the dollar index decisively breaking above 100 and a 15-month ceiling. The dollar-yen now holds above 160, and the euro broke major support at 114.
Patrick Serezna notes gold remains in a corrective phase, characterized by lower highs and lower lows, with rallies consistently met by supply. The $4,000 level is key; if it fails, $3,600 becomes the next major magnet, representing a 50% retracement.
Johnson believes the Iran conflict pause is temporary, lasting weeks or months, and expects a return to conflict because he doubts all sides will uphold their side of the agreement.
Johnson argues supply chain disruptions from the Strait closure will manifest in late 2026 or early 2027, impacting fertilizer and chemical availability during planting season.
Townsend notes the announced peace deal's terms include a toll-free Strait for 60 days, then Iran resumes collecting a $1 per barrel 'service fee,' effectively a permanent toll booth.
Johnson sees major investment opportunities in food, aviation MRO, national defense, and stablecoins due to shifting global dynamics like supply disruptions and rearming.
Johnson frames the U.S. strategic shift from a multilateral 'rules-based order' to a bilateral 'America First' approach as a move from a republic to an empire, driven by deglobalization.
Johnson contends de-dollarization is a myth, citing sustained high dollar usage in FX turnover, cross-border lending, and trade invoicing despite reserve share decline against gold.
Johnson explains the 'dual carry trade' burden: nations face conflicting local and dollar-based carry trades, creating dollar funding crises when the dollar index moves outside a stable 'band.'
Johnson argues the U.S. weaponizes the dollar, citing Treasury Secretary Bessant's admission of creating a dollar shortage in Iran to cause currency collapse and civil unrest.
Johnson notes that 99% of global stablecoins are dollar-denominated, reflecting market choice and transferring monetary sovereignty from local governments to Washington.
Townside observes China's large commodity stockpiles, particularly oil, allowed it to reduce imports and buffer global prices during the Strait closure, showcasing its market power.
Johnson sees the Iran conflict pause as a U.S. tactic to pressure the global system, enabling better terms in long-term energy deals and testing Russian and Chinese support for Iran.
Szna proposes a trade on delayed agricultural stress using a Jan 2027 DBA bull call spread (buy $27 call, sell $30 call) for a $0.90 debit, targeting food price impacts in Q4/Q1 2027.