BREAKING:
Trump says a whole civilization will DIE tonight, never to be brought back again.
"i donβt want that to happen, but it probably will."
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
Trump says a whole civilization will DIE tonight, never to be brought back again.
"i donβt want that to happen, but it probably will."
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π€¬6π₯5β‘1
JUST IN - Trump on Iran: "A whole civilization will die tonight, never to be brought back again."
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π€¬7π₯6β‘3β1
βso let me get this straight, you chose to focus primarily on trading p2p decentralized digital currencies because you believed they would be unaffected by the typical headwinds that impact global markets?β
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π1
There are heightening fears that Trump will use a nuclear weapon against Iran
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π₯4π€¬3π2
EARTHSET.
April 6, 2026.
Humanity, from the other side. First photo from the far side of the Moon. Captured from Orion as Earth dips beyond the lunar horizon. Photo: NASA
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
April 6, 2026.
Humanity, from the other side. First photo from the far side of the Moon. Captured from Orion as Earth dips beyond the lunar horizon. Photo: NASA
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
πΏ4π2
EUROPE IS DOOMED FOR THIS DECADE.
And this is not based on one problem.
It is a stack of problems hitting at the same time.
Europe lost cheap Russian energy after 2022, which permanently raised its cost base.
Industries that relied on low cost gas are now operating with structurally higher input costs, and some production has already started moving out.
Now a second shock is hitting.
The Middle East conflict and disruption around the Strait of Hormuz are pushing oil and gas prices higher again.
Europe is a large energy importer, so it does not control pricing.
Even without a full supply cutoff, it absorbs the price shock.
Estimates suggest a sustained rise in oil prices could add 1.5%-2.5% to Europe's inflation.
So energy costs are rising again on top of already elevated levels.
At the same time, the economy is weak.
Growth is expected to stay around 1%-1.2%, which is close to stagnation for a region of this size.
High energy costs are directly reducing competitiveness, especially in manufacturing, chemicals, and heavy industry.
Now look at the policy situation.
The ECB is stuck. Inflation is not fully under control, and energy is pushing it higher again.
At the same time, growth is weak.
That creates a hard constraint:
β’ Inflation is rising again
β’ Growth is already weak
β’ Policy cannot ease easily
If rates stay high, growth slows further.
If rates are cut too early, inflation risks increase again.
There is no clean solution.
But still, ECB is expected to move towards rate hikes which will make growth situation worse.
At the same time, the euro is not gaining global importance.
Its share of global reserves is still around 20% and has not increased meaningfully for years.
That means external demand for the currency is not improving.
So the system looks like this:
β’ Higher energy costs locked in
β’ New energy shock building
β’ Weak growth
β’ Tight monetary policy
β’ Limited external demand for the currency
And all this is hitting the economy at once.
We all know how this ends.
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
And this is not based on one problem.
It is a stack of problems hitting at the same time.
Europe lost cheap Russian energy after 2022, which permanently raised its cost base.
Industries that relied on low cost gas are now operating with structurally higher input costs, and some production has already started moving out.
Now a second shock is hitting.
The Middle East conflict and disruption around the Strait of Hormuz are pushing oil and gas prices higher again.
Europe is a large energy importer, so it does not control pricing.
Even without a full supply cutoff, it absorbs the price shock.
Estimates suggest a sustained rise in oil prices could add 1.5%-2.5% to Europe's inflation.
So energy costs are rising again on top of already elevated levels.
At the same time, the economy is weak.
Growth is expected to stay around 1%-1.2%, which is close to stagnation for a region of this size.
High energy costs are directly reducing competitiveness, especially in manufacturing, chemicals, and heavy industry.
Now look at the policy situation.
The ECB is stuck. Inflation is not fully under control, and energy is pushing it higher again.
At the same time, growth is weak.
That creates a hard constraint:
β’ Inflation is rising again
β’ Growth is already weak
β’ Policy cannot ease easily
If rates stay high, growth slows further.
If rates are cut too early, inflation risks increase again.
There is no clean solution.
But still, ECB is expected to move towards rate hikes which will make growth situation worse.
At the same time, the euro is not gaining global importance.
Its share of global reserves is still around 20% and has not increased meaningfully for years.
That means external demand for the currency is not improving.
So the system looks like this:
β’ Higher energy costs locked in
β’ New energy shock building
β’ Weak growth
β’ Tight monetary policy
β’ Limited external demand for the currency
And all this is hitting the economy at once.
We all know how this ends.
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
JUST IN - Ye banned from entering UK to perform at Wireless Festival, "as his presence would not be conducive to the public good" β Sky
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
One month of war
Here's what it did to your flight ticket.
Bangkok β Frankfurt: $474 β $2,870
Hong Kong β London: $503 β $3,318
Sydney β London: $733 β $3,875
Singapore β London: $598 β $1,953
Kuala Lumpur β Paris: $490 β $1,931
Some routes went up 5-6x in 30 days.
This is what a closed Hormuz looks like at the checkout.
In your holiday budget.
Read my latest to understand what's going to happen Link
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
Here's what it did to your flight ticket.
Bangkok β Frankfurt: $474 β $2,870
Hong Kong β London: $503 β $3,318
Sydney β London: $733 β $3,875
Singapore β London: $598 β $1,953
Kuala Lumpur β Paris: $490 β $1,931
Some routes went up 5-6x in 30 days.
This is what a closed Hormuz looks like at the checkout.
In your holiday budget.
Read my latest to understand what's going to happen Link
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
A 12% service charge instead of tipping. It goes to the staff, but does this feel better or worse than leaving a tip yourself?
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π‘3πΏ2
JUST IN: Artemis II crew captures the first ever photo from the far side of the moon
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
β€βπ₯1π1π1π1πΏ1
JUST IN: Iran's IRGC warns its response will go beyond the region if the US crosses its "red lines."
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π³πΎπΎπΌπΏπ€π π πΈπ½πΆ
π1π«‘1