The Macro Butler
309 subscribers
695 photos
3 videos
470 links
The Macro Butler aims to deliver concise yet comprehensive macroeconomic insights that impact global and regional markets. We analyze key indicators, trends to provide actionable & timely investment recommendations to all kind of investors.
Download Telegram
As of end-2025, the U.S. agency MBS market alone weighs in at about $9.1 trillion—a modest pile of mortgage paper issued by Fannie, Freddie, and Ginnie that just happens to underpin global housing finance. Against this backdrop, the White House’s $200 billion bond-buying announcement is less “game-changer” and more eyedropper in the ocean. In a market measured in trillions, this is financial theatre: symbolically busy, mathematically irrelevant, and highly unlikely to bend long-dated yields or overpower the gravitational pull of the ‘Trump Stagflation’.



https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/mortgaged-backed-securities-market?utm_source=chatgpt.com
As the sages quietly rearrange the pieces on the board, China has discovered a small and ironic truth: inflation has returned, but only to the dinner table. December CPI rose to 0.8%, driven almost entirely by food—vegetables up double digits—while the broader economy remains trapped in deflation, with producer prices falling for a 39th straight month and full-year inflation flat at zero. Holiday spending briefly stirred consumption, jewellery prices surged with gold, and officials praised “anti-involution” efforts, even as housing slumps, price wars, and excess capacity persist.
A look at the spread between core CPI and PPI—a useful gauge of corporate profitability—shows a slight decline from November, but it remains firmly positive, extending a trend that has been in place since August 2022. This suggests that, even amid intense competition and price pressure, companies that can truly meet customer demand are still able to protect margins. In contrast to the Western tendency to socialize losses and preserve weak players, China has tolerated creative destruction, allowing inefficient firms to fail while stronger ones consolidate market share. The result is a corporate landscape where national champions are forged through competition, not protection, and emerge structurally better positioned to compete on the global stage.
Thus the lesson is clear: when demand is weak and stimulus timid, prices do not rise by policy, but by weather, weddings, and the cost of cabbage.
Summoned at dawn by BFM 89.9, The Macro Butler offered a few Confucian reminders on the U.S. job market—and on investing: the man who chases the crowd arrives last, usually at the top. FOMO, as the sages would agree, is not a strategy but a reliable method for buying enthusiasm and selling remorse.

https://themacrobutler.substack.com/p/interview-with-bfm-899-malaysia-09012026
In a rare flash of clarity since reclaiming the Oval Office, Donald Copperfield pulled the U.S. plug on 66 international organizations—climate clubs, policy talk-shops, and assorted globalist echo chambers—declaring them expensive, inefficient, and oddly uninterested in American sovereignty. Funding is cut, participation ends, and the message is simple: fewer conferences, more country.


https://www.whitehouse.gov/fact-sheets/2026/01/fact-sheet-president-donald-j-trump-withdraws-the-united-states-from-international-organizations-that-are-contrary-to-the-interests-of-the-united-states/
The American people asked for self-rule, yet were handed binders from unelected councils who speak many languages but answer to none. In the name of “emergency,” sovereignty is borrowed, never returned, and democracy is told to wait in the hallway.
When many officials govern but no one is accountable, disorder is inevitable. If this path continues, the American Republic will not fall in battle, but drown in paperwork—until necessity, as always, forces renewal.
While the usual data cheerleaders will celebrate a lower unemployment rate, December’s nonfarm payrolls quietly tell a different story: the U.S. job market isn’t expanding—it’s napping. Payrolls rose a modest 50,000, well below expectations (which are traditionally optimistic works of fiction), and prior months were revised lower. Even during the holiday shopping frenzy, retail managed to shed 25,000 jobs, while hiring remained confined to leisure, hospitality, and healthcare—the economic equivalent of comfort food. For all of 2025, job creation limped in at just 584,000, the weakest year outside the Covid era. Layoffs are scarce, but so is ambition.
Unemployment may have graciously dipped to 4.4%, but now sitting comfortably above its two-year average, it’s yet another reminder that this much-celebrated “boom” is starting to wheeze like a late-cycle marathon runner—still upright, but clearly past its victory lap.
In a nutshell, December payrolls confirm that beneath the headline cheer, the U.S. job market isn’t booming at all—it’s a late-cycle economy quietly dozing off ahead of an election year.
U.S. consumer sentiment perked up slightly—apparently buoyed by holiday cheer and fading tariff fears—with the Michigan index inching up to 54, just enough to let economists declare victory. Inflation expectations, however, remain stubbornly festive at 4.2% for the year ahead and even higher over the long run, while worries about jobs and wages refuse to take the hint. Nearly two-thirds of consumers still expect unemployment to rise, especially the well-educated and well-paid, suggesting anxiety trickles down from the top. Spending holds up, confidence limps along just above record lows, and the Fed—having already cut rates three times—now watches patiently as inflation stays above target and optimism remains more seasonal than structural.
In a nutshell, holiday cheer nudged consumer sentiment higher, but with inflation expectations stuck high and job worries spreading, optimism looks more seasonal than structural.
After unveiling his very own “Presidential QE,” Donald Copperfield—now clearly battling an advanced case of Chronic Interventionist Syndrome—announced his latest magic trick. To celebrate the first anniversary of his return to the Oval Office and apparently inspired by the Bolivarian playbook he once mocked, he has decided to channel his inner Caracas: cue the price controls. Starting January 20, credit-card interest rates will be capped at a saintly 10%, proving once again that when reality gets inconvenient, Copperfield prefers sleight of hand—ideology included.
Known more for confidence than curiosity, the Manipulator-in-Chief might pause before adding yet another layer of price controls to his résumé. History’s quiet but consistent lesson is that price controls never fix problems created by reckless politicians—they simply rebrand them as shortages, distortions, and, eventually, popular misery. And when misery compounds long enough, it tends to end not in policy success but in revolution—those inconvenient, grassroots regime changes driven by public sentiment, which history shows are far more effective than the export-grade regime changes that have been a staple of imperial American policy since World War II.
Putting corporate diplomacy into refreshingly plain English, Exxon’s Darren Woods politely translated the obvious: Venezuela remains “uninvestable,” which in CEO dialect means “we’ve already been robbed twice and aren’t lining up for a third round.” Yes, the oil is abundant, but so are asset seizures, legal uncertainty, and political roulette—small inconveniences investors tend to dislike. Unsurprisingly, Exxon and ConocoPhillips are staying on the sidelines, Chevron is cautiously tiptoeing without opening its wallet, and smaller players are waving around checkbooks measured in millions, not the $100 billion daydream floated by Donald Copperfield. In short, Venezuela has plenty of oil—just not enough rule of law to go with it.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OLl2umofu9Y
FOMO is not a strategy - it’s how you buy the top and sell the regret. 📉

At The Macro Butler Financial Academy, you learn the macro, the cycles, and the timing — so you stop chasing hype and start earning with intent.
See you inside https://themacrobutler.com/financial-academy/
👍1
In the latest episode of Progress Is Freedom, OpenAI has unveiled ChatGPT Health—a “secure” space where you can generously connect your medical records, smartwatch data, diet apps, workouts, and presumably your pulse of existential dread. Apple Health, Peloton, MyFitnessPal, Weight Watchers—because nothing says wellness like centralizing your biology in one convenient place.

We’re told this is about empowerment: understanding test results, preparing for doctor visits, optimizing diet and exercise. History, however, gently clears its throat and reminds us that every centralized database eventually finds a second career—as leverage. Political, financial, legal—pick your dystopia.

Of course, we’re reassured the data won’t be used for training. Privacy will be respected. Safeguards are in place.

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cpqy29d0yjgo
Governments and institutions always say this at the beginning of the movie, never at the end. The real question isn’t what the system promises today—it’s what it will quietly require tomorrow.

Health data isn’t just personal; it’s power. Once digitized and centralized, it becomes subpoena-ready, hackable, and irresistibly interesting to regulators with “good intentions.” HIPAA won’t save you from the state, and no database in history has remained untouched forever.

But don’t worry—this is all for your own good.

After all, Big Brother doesn’t want to control you. He just wants you healthy.