And the hits keep coming: the bid-to-cover ratio dropped to 2.36—its lowest since March—suggesting even bond buyers are starting to get cold feet. Foreign demand took a nosedive to 64.7% from last month’s 78.4%, as overseas investors apparently found better things to do. Meanwhile, Directs doubled their share (24.4%), leaving Dealers with just 10.9%—one of the puniest allocations on record. In short, the bond market’s enthusiasm is fading faster than a campaign promise after election day.
Overall, this was a forgettable and lackluster 5-year auction—just another reminder that the so-called “risk-free” asset is now anything but. In a world sliding deeper into stagflation and war-driven chaos, it’s bonds—not stocks—that investors may want to dodge first.
Titanic 2025: Brussels Edition" — A tragicomedy starring the usual suspects from #NATO (North Atlantic Terror Organization), confidently steering straight into the iceberg of global conflict, all while toasting champagne on the deck and calling it “peacekeeping.
https://vt.tiktok.com/ZSB1P9xPw/
https://vt.tiktok.com/ZSB1P9xPw/
TikTok
TikTok · Иван
Check out Иван’s video.
While anyone with a pulse in finance knows that bonds are the ultimate scam in the incoming “Trump Stagflation” era, the Fed just gave them a fresh coat of lipstick. In a move sold as “strengthening liquidity” but better described as bailing out the usual suspects, the Fed voted to loosen a post-2008 capital rule, making it easier for mega-banks to gorge on Treasuries. The idea? If you call them “safe assets” often enough, maybe people will forget the U.S. like most other government in the world is broke.
Powell and friends claim it’s all about “market resilience,” but the plan effectively cuts required capital for the big boys while hoping no one notices the increased systemic risk. Of course, a few party poopers at the Fed warned that this could backfire in the next crisis—assuming we ever leave the current one. But hey, what's a few hundred billion in risk when Wall Street needs a boost?
https://www.federalreserve.gov/aboutthefed/boardmeetings/20250625open.htm
Powell and friends claim it’s all about “market resilience,” but the plan effectively cuts required capital for the big boys while hoping no one notices the increased systemic risk. Of course, a few party poopers at the Fed warned that this could backfire in the next crisis—assuming we ever leave the current one. But hey, what's a few hundred billion in risk when Wall Street needs a boost?
https://www.federalreserve.gov/aboutthefed/boardmeetings/20250625open.htm
www.federalreserve.gov
Open Board Meeting -- June 25, 2025
The Federal Reserve Board of Governors in Washington DC.
The Macro Butler sat down for a no-holds-barred interview with https://t.me/ironwiredaily , connecting the burning threads of global upheaval—from rising tariffs to the escalating wars in the Middle East and Eastern Europe.
https://themacrobutler.substack.com/p/interview-with-iron-wire-daily-12062025
https://themacrobutler.substack.com/p/interview-with-iron-wire-daily-12062025
Telegram
Iron Wire
Get the Truth. The Iron Wire is a Canadian conservative news, interviews and commentary site that focuses on the counter-narrative.
As more people wake up to the grand bond illusion peddled by the West, the U.S. #Treasury—ever the optimist—wrapped up the week’s bond circus with a $44 billion offering of 7-year IOUs. And surprise! It was well received. The yield? A not-so-whopping 4.022%, the lowest since last September—because clearly nothing screams confidence like locking in sub-inflation returns for seven years. Oh, and it “stopped through” the when-issued by 2bps, which is apparently the bond world’s version of fireworks.
👍1
The bid-to-cover was nothing short of ugly, plunging to 2.531—the lowest since August 2024 and well below the six-auction average of 2.637. But hey, at least the internals tried to save face: Indirects stepped up with a strong 76.7% take, their best showing since December. Directs, on the other hand, barely showed up at 11.62%, the lowest since their December nap at 2.85%. That left Dealers holding the bag with 11.6%, nearly triple last month’s record-low 4.85%—proof that when everyone else ducks, the bagholders never miss.
👍2
Overall, it was a solid auction—if you ignore the fact that Wall Street’s finest are still peddling the fantasy that bonds remain “risk-free.” Spoiler alert: they’re not. Meanwhile, #gold—the one true antifragile asset with zero counterparty risk—quietly waits, as always, ready to outshine everything when the house of cards finally collapses.
The May personal income and outlays report reads like a stagflation sitcom: prices are rising, incomes are falling, and consumers are finally realizing they can't outspend tariffs forever. Core PCE came in hotter than expected—because apparently, even legal advice and haircuts are feeling the heat. Spending shrank, especially on fun stuff, while incomes took a hit thanks to Uncle Sam tightening the transfer-payment tap. Meanwhile, the Fed’s favorite inflation metric, core PCE, keeps creeping up like that uninvited guest who won’t take the hint. Long story short: Americans are earning less, paying more, and spending with the enthusiasm of someone reading a tax audit letter.
In a nutshell, Americans are earning less, spending less, and paying more—stagflation is here, and it's charging service fees.
Despite empty wallets and shrinking pay checks, consumers somehow found their happy place in late June—maybe denial really is a superpower. Sentiment jumped 16% from May, the first cheer in six months, even as real spending shrank and future expectations dimmed. Fewer folks are fretting over tariffs, Iran, or Trump’s tax plan, and inflation fears are down—because nothing says “economic confidence” like ignoring reality and hoping the bill never arrives.
In conclusion, consumers are feeling better, spending less, and choosing optimism over reality—because why worry when you can just vibe through the tariffs?
🤵 The Macro Butler Weekly Digest 🤵
🌐 From revolutions to capital wars and conflicts that spread like a disease, The Solar War Syndrome exposes how solar cycles spark the shocks that reshape the world. 🌐
Read more here: https://themacrobutler.substack.com/p/the-solar-war-syndrome
🌐 From revolutions to capital wars and conflicts that spread like a disease, The Solar War Syndrome exposes how solar cycles spark the shocks that reshape the world. 🌐
Read more here: https://themacrobutler.substack.com/p/the-solar-war-syndrome
Substack
The Solar War Syndrome
From revolutions to capital wars and conflicts that spread like a disease, The Solar War Syndrome exposes how solar cycles spark the shocks that reshape the world.
You can now also listen to a summary of The Macro Butler weekly newsletter via podcast on Substack; YouTube; Rumble & TikTok.
https://themacrobutler.substack.com/p/the-solar-war-syndrome-podcast
https://themacrobutler.substack.com/p/the-solar-war-syndrome-podcast
Substack
The Solar War Syndrome - Podcast
You can now also listen to a summary of The Macro Butler weekly newsletter via podcast on Substack; YouTube; Rumble & TikTok.
The “Manipulator in Chief” — a business genius with six bankruptcies under his belt — now gearing up to run the U.S. economy like one of his failed casinos.
In the coming “#Trump #Stagflation,” the #FED might as well take a sabbatical, especially if His Royal Hairness installs another loyal court jester to nod on cue.
Who needs central bank independence anyway, when the only policy that matters is: Make America Great Again… for the donors?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KTck5Y9Kl64
In the coming “#Trump #Stagflation,” the #FED might as well take a sabbatical, especially if His Royal Hairness installs another loyal court jester to nod on cue.
Who needs central bank independence anyway, when the only policy that matters is: Make America Great Again… for the donors?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KTck5Y9Kl64
YouTube
Trump Says Next Fed Chair Will Be 'Somebody That Wants to Cut Rates'
President Donald Trump said he would choose a successor for Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell who wants to cut interest rates, a condition that would strike at the heart of the central bank’s independence.
“If I think somebody’s going to keep the rates…
“If I think somebody’s going to keep the rates…
👍1
New York, once the glittering crown jewel of capitalism, is now auditioning to become the capital of communism—led by its latest visionary, Mayor Zohran Mamdani. Because nothing says economic brilliance like turning Wall Street into Woke Street.
https://www.politico.com/news/2025/06/25/trump-zohran-mamdani-reaction-00423933
https://www.politico.com/news/2025/06/25/trump-zohran-mamdani-reaction-00423933
POLITICO
Trump weighs in on Mamdani’s win: ‘a 100% Communist Lunatic’
The president called the NYC mayoral primary “a big moment in the History of our Country.”
The Macro Butler
New York, once the glittering crown jewel of capitalism, is now auditioning to become the capital of communism—led by its latest visionary, Mayor Zohran Mamdani. Because nothing says economic brilliance like turning Wall Street into Woke Street. https://…
Under the sacred banner of Keynesian mythology, Zohran Mamdani—the latest reckless hero of “affordability”—is set to finish what decades of bad policy started: driving New York City straight into economic oblivion. His grand plan to make #NYC more “livable” will likely accelerate the great blue-to-red state migration, handing over the financial crown to places like Texas and Florida. Soon, Wall Street might just be a souvenir shop in the People’s Republic of New York.
https://cbsaustin.com/features/we-are-austin/nyse-texas-to-launch-as-fully-electronic-exchange-expanding-business-opportunities
https://cbsaustin.com/features/we-are-austin/nyse-texas-to-launch-as-fully-electronic-exchange-expanding-business-opportunities
CBS Austin
NYSE Texas to launch as fully electronic exchange, expanding business opportunities
TEXAS — The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) is set to expand its reach with the establishment of NYSE Texas, a fully electronic exchange. Michael Reinking, the N
👍2❤1
In the latest plot twist of the climate soap opera, #Australia has introduced the world’s first “#climate visa,” letting Tuvaluans escape their allegedly sinking paradise—because what’s a better passport than rising sea levels?
As of June 30, 2025, over a third of the island’s 4,000+ residents have applied, eager to trade beachfront doom for Aussie healthcare and Wi-Fi. Under a treaty signed in 2023, 280 Tuvaluans a year get golden tickets out—because nothing says climate emergency like a bureaucratic quota.
As of June 30, 2025, over a third of the island’s 4,000+ residents have applied, eager to trade beachfront doom for Aussie healthcare and Wi-Fi. Under a treaty signed in 2023, 280 Tuvaluans a year get golden tickets out—because nothing says climate emergency like a bureaucratic quota.
The Macro Butler
In the latest plot twist of the climate soap opera, #Australia has introduced the world’s first “#climate visa,” letting Tuvaluans escape their allegedly sinking paradise—because what’s a better passport than rising sea levels? As of June 30, 2025, over a…
The so-called “climate visa” may sound like an act of environmental compassion, but it’s really more geopolitical chess than humanitarian charity. Under the Australia-Tuvalu Falepili Union treaty, Tuvaluans get a lifeline only if Tuvalu hands over veto power to Australia on any future security or defense agreements. Conveniently, Tuvalu is one of the few countries that recognizes Taiwan over China—making it a strategic pawn in the Indo-Pacific. So yes, it’s less “climate rescue,” more “checkmate Beijing with a coconut island.”
https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2025/06/26/asia-pacific/politics/tuvalu-australia-climate-visa/
https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2025/06/26/asia-pacific/politics/tuvalu-australia-climate-visa/
The Japan Times
Nearly one-third of Tuvalu citizens seek to live in Australia on climate visa
The visa program has been hailed as a landmark response to the looming challenge of climate-forced migration.
#China’s June #PMI was a bit like that glass of champagne at a frat party—it looks bubbly, but the room’s still a mess. Manufacturing production perked up and demand expanded for the first time in three months—cheers to that! But don’t get too carried away (or end up hugging the porcelain bowl), because employment is still shrivelling and business confidence is down in the dumps—the weakest since Beijing’s big growth pep talk last September.
With the U.S.–China #tariff truce expiring in mid‑August, that glass of optimism might evaporate faster than a cold brew on a hot day. Sure, Beijing cranked up construction, signalling support for the economy, but any real stimulus is apparently being saved for late Q3—just in time to either calm nerves or go off-script entirely if trade tensions choke again.
With the U.S.–China #tariff truce expiring in mid‑August, that glass of optimism might evaporate faster than a cold brew on a hot day. Sure, Beijing cranked up construction, signalling support for the economy, but any real stimulus is apparently being saved for late Q3—just in time to either calm nerves or go off-script entirely if trade tensions choke again.
👍2