You were taught how to work for money.
Nobody taught you how to make money work for you.
That’s the real gap.
And that gap costs you years.
At The Macro Butler Financial Academy, we don’t sell hype, hacks, or “get rich quick.”
We teach you how capital actually moves through cycles, policy, inflation, and markets—so you stop reacting and start positioning.
Work for money when you’re young.
Make money work for you before it’s too late.
https://www.tiktok.com/@the.macro.butler/video/7604429642790915348
📊 Learn how the system really works
📈 Learn how to allocate, protect, and compound
🧠 Learn to earn—macro first, noise last
👉 Join The Macro Butler Financial Academy
https://themacrobutler.com/financial-academy/
Nobody taught you how to make money work for you.
That’s the real gap.
And that gap costs you years.
At The Macro Butler Financial Academy, we don’t sell hype, hacks, or “get rich quick.”
We teach you how capital actually moves through cycles, policy, inflation, and markets—so you stop reacting and start positioning.
Work for money when you’re young.
Make money work for you before it’s too late.
https://www.tiktok.com/@the.macro.butler/video/7604429642790915348
📊 Learn how the system really works
📈 Learn how to allocate, protect, and compound
🧠 Learn to earn—macro first, noise last
👉 Join The Macro Butler Financial Academy
https://themacrobutler.com/financial-academy/
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In a plot twist worthy of Kabuki political theatre, the once–lame duck prime minister—long dismissed as a Western Keynesian darling and unapologetic China hawk—engineered a historic landslide, emerging as Japan’s most powerful postwar leader. Her Liberal Democratic Party secured a single-party, two-thirds supermajority in the lower house, completing a remarkable comeback for a party that was on life support just months ago. Having staked her job on the snap election, the gamble paid off handsomely, emboldening the new premier while giving markets fresh reason to speculate about fiscal largesse—and the volatility that may follow.
The result hands Takaichi a clear mandate to pursue ambitious spending plans that have investors twitchy, alongside a more assertive foreign policy that keeps Beijing firmly on edge over Taiwan. After the results were announced, the yen weaken, bonds yields move higher, and equities higher as the “Takaichi trade” gained fresh momentum. With a lower-house supermajority, her coalition can now legislate with ease—reopening sensitive debates on constitutional reform that delight nationalists and unsettle Japan’s postwar pacifists alike.
In a nutshell, in a Kabuki-style reversal, Takaichi turned a snap-election gamble into a historic supermajority, unleashing fiscal ambitions, a tougher foreign stance, and the full “Takaichi trade”—weaker yen, higher yields, stronger equities, and louder constitutional debates.
In the grand chessboard of empires, the wise know not to lend your sword—or your money—to your future adversary. Chinese regulators, perhaps smiling at the irony, have quietly told banks to ease up on U.S. Treasuries, warning that too much reliance on the promises of a rival may invite tremors rather than safety. Officially, it’s about “risk diversification,” but the lesson is clear: even paper gold can bite if held in the wrong hands. While state holdings remain untouched, commercial banks are nudged to pare back, reminding the world that debt, like trust, is only valuable when wielded with wisdom. The markets shivered, yields crept up, and the dollar blinked, while diplomats and leaders arrange their ritual dances of power. In Confucian terms: he who depends on his enemy for his bread or his bullets may find both stale or empty when the drum of history calls.
https://www.marketscreener.com/news/china-urges-banks-to-curb-us-treasuries-exposure-on-market-risk-bloomberg-news-says-ce7e5adedd88f02d
https://www.marketscreener.com/news/china-urges-banks-to-curb-us-treasuries-exposure-on-market-risk-bloomberg-news-says-ce7e5adedd88f02d
The U.S., ever fond of borrowing, is taking loans from the very hand that may one day oppose it in the theatre of what future historians might call World War III. China, unlike Western linear thinkers, understands the cycles of power and will surely avoid repeating Russia’s Donbass blunder. Wisdom dictates: never lend your enemy the means to strike you—one does not hand bullets to the man aiming at your heart, even under the guise of diplomacy or finance.
The Macro Butler pinned «You were taught how to work for money. Nobody taught you how to make money work for you. That’s the real gap. And that gap costs you years. At The Macro Butler Financial Academy, we don’t sell hype, hacks, or “get rich quick.” We teach you how capital actually…»
In a twist that would make Big Brother blush, AI—long feared as the human-replacing overlord—now outsources work back to humans. RentAHuman.ai bills itself as the “meatspace layer for AI,” where bots bid for your body, sight, touch, or signature to complete errands they cannot.
From delivering flowers to taste-testing restaurants, humans are commoditized inputs in a marketplace governed by lines of code, paid in crypto, and oblivious to labor rights. Orwellian automation isn’t that machines replace us—it’s that machines now control how we perform for them.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/ronschmelzer/2026/02/05/when-ai-agents-start-hiring-humans-rentahumanai-turns-the-tables/
From delivering flowers to taste-testing restaurants, humans are commoditized inputs in a marketplace governed by lines of code, paid in crypto, and oblivious to labor rights. Orwellian automation isn’t that machines replace us—it’s that machines now control how we perform for them.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/ronschmelzer/2026/02/05/when-ai-agents-start-hiring-humans-rentahumanai-turns-the-tables/
We’re riding a wave of Creative Destruction powered by AI, and the human-AI partnership is still uncharted territory. The notion of humans working for AI bots is novel, untested, and unlocking possibilities that once seemed impossible.
In a rare moment of blunt realism from a European leader, Viktor ‘Kozak’ Orbán said the quiet part out loud: when someone tries to blow up energy supply, they’re not your “partner,” they’re your problem. His refusal to cheer Ukraine’s EU accession isn’t a nationalist tantrum but a simple lesson in economics Brussels prefers to ignore—Hungary’s economy, like Slovakia’s, was built on cheap, reliable Russian energy, not moral posturing. While Western Europe can subsidize virtue and call it strategy, Central Europe pays the bill.
Ukraine’s push to cut Russian transit may win applause among the warmongering Malthusian in Brussels, but for Hungary it means higher costs, lost stability, and a front-row seat in a war it never wanted to join.
https://kyivindependent.com/orban-declares-ukraine-enemy-of-hungary/
Ukraine’s push to cut Russian transit may win applause among the warmongering Malthusian in Brussels, but for Hungary it means higher costs, lost stability, and a front-row seat in a war it never wanted to join.
https://kyivindependent.com/orban-declares-ukraine-enemy-of-hungary/
EUROSTAN didn’t stumble into this crisis—it engineered it by pretending energy is a moral abstraction rather than the bedrock of modern civilization. You can’t replace reliable supply chains with slogans, windmills, and press conferences. The result is entirely predictable: higher inflation, falling real wages, hollowed-out manufacturing, and rising social tension—now rebranded as a “surprise” across the old continent.
Between two moments of quiet contemplation with his clients, The Macro Butler appeared on Asharq Bloomberg TV to remind viewers that a bull who pauses is not a bull who is finished.
Precious metals, he explained, are merely catching their breath before climbing higher, and as chaos ripples through the world, the path of the bull will eventually extend from gold to energy and beyond—just as Confucius might have observed,
“When disorder grows, value seeks shelter.”
https://themacrobutler.substack.com/p/interview-with-asharq-bloomberg-tv-f29
Precious metals, he explained, are merely catching their breath before climbing higher, and as chaos ripples through the world, the path of the bull will eventually extend from gold to energy and beyond—just as Confucius might have observed,
“When disorder grows, value seeks shelter.”
https://themacrobutler.substack.com/p/interview-with-asharq-bloomberg-tv-f29
Substack
Interview with Asharq Bloomberg TV Dubai 10.02.2026
Between two moments of quiet contemplation with his clients, The Macro Butler appeared on Asharq Bloomberg TV to remind viewers that a bull who pauses is not a bull who is finished.
Still dizzy from Washington’s shutdown theatrics, investors finally got the holiday shopping receipt—and it wasn’t festive. After a strong November, December retail sales flatlined, missing expectations and marking the weakest year-on-year growth since September 2024. Autos and clothing led the retreat, while building materials and food held up, suggesting consumers stocked pantries rather than splurged. Core sales and the GDP-relevant control group both disappointed, though seasonal quirks and a strong prior month may soften the blow. Beneath the adjustments, the message is clear: higher-income households may still be spending, but discretionary demand is thinning, winter weather is muddying the data, and consumption growth is set to cool meaningfully into the new year.
In a nutshell, December’s retail report delivered a lump of coal: headline sales stalled, real spending fell, pantries beat purchases, and the data quietly warned that U.S. consumption is cooling as 2026 begins.
It’s refunding week again—cue the ritual of 3-, 10-, and 30-year auctions—and the Treasury opened the show with a notably strong $58 billion 3-year sale. The issue cleared at 3.518%, down from 3.609% in January and the lowest yield since September 2025, stopping through the 3.519% when-issued level by 0.1bp—its sixth consecutive stop-through. Not a bad start for what is usually considered the “boring” part of the curve.
The bid-to-cover ratio was less impressive at 2.624, down from 2.650 in January and below the recent average of 2.676. Indirect demand accounted for 57.15% of the allocation, slightly above January’s 56.50% but still well below the 63.73% average—suggesting the headline strength came with a few asterisks.
Dealers were left holding a modest 10.94%, while Direct bidders stepped in for a record 31.92%, up from 29.50%—apparently deciding that if foreigners won’t show up to the party, someone has to. This now-familiar choreography—Indirection fading, Directs charging in—has become a recurring feature of coupon auctions and may only grow more pronounced if foreign reserve managers continue to quietly trim their Treasury allocations.
Overall, it was a remarkably steady auction—proof that Wall Street has not yet received the memo that bonds are the riskiest asset to own under the reign of the ‘Educated Yet Idiots’ . In a world rediscovering inflation and policy chaos, the bond once crowned as perfectly safe is now gently being rebranded as “conditionally stable”—terms and conditions, of course, apply.
In the Middle Kingdom, January’s soft inflation, arriving politely before Lunar New Year, is less a warning than a reminder: when the calendar shifts, so do the numbers. As the old base runs high and festival demand waits for February, CPI briefly bows, only to rise again in due course—much like a student who appears late but knows the lesson. Factory prices show early signs of warming, aided by commodities, though deflation still lingers like an uninvited guest. As Confucius might say: with steadier policy and stronger households, demand will follow—but haste will not make it arrive sooner.
For investors focused on underlying economic health, the spread between core CPI and core PPI remains instructive. Unlike in the U.S., where this margin proxy has oscillated between positive and negative territory over the past year, China’s spread has widened again, suggesting improved pricing power. In the Middle Kingdom, sector leaders appear able to defend margins—supporting earnings resilience and, by extension, the potential for higher valuations.