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Forwarded from Slaves No More
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Be very careful, fake notifications are being sent out for RV exchange, very elaborate and realistic.
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Bull Theory
@BullTheoryio

🚨 THE FED IS NOW PRIVATELY PREPARING FOR A POSSIBLE $2 TRILLION CREDIT MARKET COLLAPSE.

For the first time in over a decade, the Fed has started directly asking U.S. banks to hand over their exposure numbers to the private credit market.

This is the exact move regulators make when they stop trusting public numbers and start preparing for real stress.

Bloomberg reported on April 11 that the Fed has formally reached out to major U.S. banks for detailed information on how much risk they're carrying from private credit firms, and whether stress inside that sector could spread into the wider financial system.

Here's why this is happening now.

Over the past few weeks, three of the largest private credit funds in the market have limited investor withdrawals:

- Blue Owl Capital restricted redemptions on its $14B fund
- BlackRock capped withdrawals on its $26B HPS Corporate Lending Fund after investors requested $1.2B in redemptions
- Cliffwater capped withdrawals on its $33B fund after investors tried to pull 14% and only 7% was allowed to exit

Three of the biggest names in the industry, all hitting redemption limits within a short period. That's not random. That's investors trying to get out faster than the funds can return their money.

At the same time, Apollo executive John Zito publicly said private equity marks are wrong across the board. He said he "literally thinks all the marks are wrong."

His estimate: loans to a typical mid size software company bought between 2018 and 2022 could recover only 20 to 40 cents on the dollar in a slowdown. That implies losses of 60 to 80 percent.

So the pattern:

- Investors trying to withdraw from private credit funds
- Funds blocking those withdrawals
- A senior Apollo executive saying valuations across the industry aren't real
- The Treasury calling a meeting with insurance regulators this month to discuss the $2T private credit market
- The Fed directly asking banks for their exposure numbers

Now here's why this matters far beyond the U.S.

Private credit has grown to around $2T over the past decade, but it's not isolated. It sits in the middle of the global financial system. Pension funds, insurance companies, sovereign wealth funds, and foreign banks all have money parked in these funds because they were marketed as higher yielding and more stable than public bonds.

If valuations are revised down the way Apollo's own executive is suggesting, the losses don't stay with a handful of U.S. firms. They flow directly into:

- Public and private pension funds across Europe, Canada, Japan, and the Gulf that allocated heavily to private credit for yield

- Insurance companies, some of the largest buyers of private credit whose solvency ratios are tied to these valuations

- Banks in the U.S., Europe, and Asia that lend to the private credit firms themselves, which is exactly what the Fed is now trying to measure

Most people miss this part. A private credit fund limiting withdrawals isn't just a problem for that fund. The banks lend to the funds. The funds lend to private equity. Private equity owns thousands of mid sized companies. Those companies employ millions.

When valuations at the top are wrong, the entire chain underneath is mispriced.

The exposure also ties directly into the AI infrastructure buildout. Blue Owl alone is behind some of the largest AI infrastructure deals in the world:

- $27B joint venture with Meta in Louisiana
- $15B deal with Crusoe in Texas
- $5B backing CoreWeave

Oracle now carries over $100B in debt, much tied to AI infrastructure that will take years to generate returns. Companies like CoreWeave, Crusoe, and others are funding their buildouts through private credit rather than public bond markets.

The structure works as long as AI revenue grows fast enough to service the debt.

If it slows, the stress doesn't stay in tech stocks. It moves straight into the credit side of the system, which is the exact part the Fed is now trying to get a clearer picture of.

Globally, this is also colliding with:
- Japan dealing with the weakest yen in decades and rising bond yields
- Europe trying to manage weak growth and stretched sovereign balance sheets
- China still working through its own property and local government debt problems
- A U.S. consumer already showing signs of strain at the lower end

The world financial system has been running on elevated debt and loose valuations for years. Private credit is one of the largest and least transparent parts of that system.

If the valuations are wrong, if redemptions keep accelerating, and if AI revenue assumptions disappoint, losses could cascade through pensions, insurers, and banks across multiple countries at the same time.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell said last month he doesn't currently see private credit issues infecting the wider financial system. St. Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem said stress is "largely limited" to the sector.

But the fact the Fed is now pulling exposure numbers directly from banks suggests the central bank wants to verify that for itself rather than take those statements at face value.

And this happens when regulators are no longer comfortable being surprised by what they find later. If stress inside this $2T market turns into actual losses, it won't stay inside the U.S., and it won't stay inside one sector.

It will move through pensions, insurers, banks, and AI infrastructure debt across the global system at the same time.
12:27 PM · Apr 13, 2026
Eric Yeung 👍🚀🌕
@KingKong9888

I read a comment today suggesting that Trump might revalue the U.S. Treasury’s gold reserves, pull $1.5–2 trillion from the Fed, and use that money to give every eligible American citizen $10,000 each — all in an effort to win the midterms.

Lol, it honestly sounds like something Trump might actually consider doing.

#Gold #Silver
4:56 AM · Apr 13, 2026
Forwarded from Cointelegraph
🇺🇸 JUST IN: Senator Thom Tillis says he plans to release the stablecoin yield draft agreement this week to resolve the lobbying standoff between banks and crypto, per Politico.

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“Next Conquest.”

He said it three days ago. Capital C. You read it. You shared it. But you didn’t decode it.

Now read today’s headline.

50% tariffs. Immediate. No exemptions. On every country supplying weapons to Iran.

One country supplies 87% of Iran’s military imports. One country built their drone fleet. One country sold them the radar that tracked American jets.

China.

He wasn’t talking about another war. He was talking about the economic execution of the country that armed his enemy.

Iran was the battlefield. China was always the target.


And while you process that — ask yourself this.

Where is the new Supreme Leader of Iran?

Mojtaba Khamenei. Son of the man they killed on February 28. He “inherited” the throne 42 days ago.

He has not appeared in public. Not once. No camera. No podium. No proof of life. Only written messages read by others.

THE LEADER OF A NATION AT WAR HAS NOT SHOWN HIS FACE IN 42 DAYS.

Why?

Because there is no leader. There is no regime. There is a ghost government running on fumes and fear, negotiating a surrender they already signed.

Trump didn’t just beat Iran. He erased it. And now the country that built Iran’s war machine gets the bill.


Gold at $4,742. Third weekly gain. Central banks dumping dollars and hoarding metal like the system has an expiration date.

Because it does.

The tariffs aren’t about trade. The war wasn’t about oil. The ceasefire isn’t about peace.

It’s about forcing every nation on Earth to choose. Dollar or gold. Old system or new. The cartel or the Republic.

China chose wrong. Iran chose wrong. The central banks see it. That’s why they’re buying gold at prices that make no sense — unless you know what replaces the dollar on the other side.

They know.

Do you?

CODE: NEXT-C-CHINA / GHOST-LEADER / AU-4742 / CHOOSE-SIDE / QFS-FORCE

https://t.me/AXIOS4B
Forwarded from CoinDesk News
XRP climbs 3% to $1.37 as accumulation builds, but key breakout still ahead

Strong volume and rising demand contrast with deeply bearish sentiment, setting up a potential move if $1.42 clears.
Forwarded from ToreSays®+
Iran was sanctioned into near-isolation. Its banking system was cut off. Its oil revenue was frozen. Its economy was collapsing. And yet Hezbollah kept operating, Hamas kept building, the Houthis kept firing, and the proxy network kept running. The question nobody in Washington wanted to answer was simple: where was the money coming from? The answer was in a federal courthouse in New York — and it led directly to the office of the Turkish president. READ IT HERE.
Here is part II.
https://toresays.com/2026/04/14/the-turkey-doctrine-part-ii-the-financing-machine/
Forwarded from Cointelegraph
🔥 NEW: Tether launches tether.wallet, a self-custodial wallet supporting USDT, gold, and Bitcoin.

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