BREAKING: The S&P 500 officially rises above 7,400 for the first time in history, now up +17.2% since March 30th.
That's now +$10 TRILLION in market cap in 29 trading days.
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That's now +$10 TRILLION in market cap in 29 trading days.
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The S&P 500 just crossed above 7,400 for the first time. A year ago it was at 5,600. 5 years ago it was at 4,200. 10 years ago it was at 2,100. $SPY
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Bitcoin Metcalfe Value hits new all time high of $130,000.
New highs in this metric have always preceded new bull markets in price.
You can view the details at bluroo ai
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New highs in this metric have always preceded new bull markets in price.
You can view the details at bluroo ai
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BREAKING: Apple and Intel have reached a preliminary agreement for Intel to manufacture some of the chips that power Apple devices, per WSJ.
Intel stock, $INTC, surges another +14% to its highest level on record.
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Intel stock, $INTC, surges another +14% to its highest level on record.
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This is absolutely insane:
Trump's purchase of 10% of Intel, $INTC, was worth $8.9 billion in August 2025.
Today, Apple announced a deal with Intel and this position is worth $56.5 billion.
That's a gain of +$47.6 BILLION in less than 8 months.
Truly unprecedented.
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Trump's purchase of 10% of Intel, $INTC, was worth $8.9 billion in August 2025.
Today, Apple announced a deal with Intel and this position is worth $56.5 billion.
That's a gain of +$47.6 BILLION in less than 8 months.
Truly unprecedented.
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Corporate America is warning that the Iran war is feeding into a recession-level downturn, with Whirlpool slashing its 2026 profit outlook by 10% as collapsing consumer confidence, higher oil-linked transportation costs, and supply-chain disruptions hit demand and corporate earnings
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THE NEXT FINANCIAL CRISIS COULD BE HIDING INSIDE THE $2 TRILLION PRIVATE CREDIT MARKET.
And the stress is already showing.
The Financial Stability Board (FSB) just warned that the private credit market has grown into a $1.5-$2 trillion system deeply connected to banks, insurers, pension funds, and private equity firms.
But this market has never been tested during a real prolonged recession.
Now cracks are starting to appear.
Last month, Blue Owl Capital was forced to limit withdrawals from two major private credit funds after investors requested to pull out $5.4 billion in a single quarter.
Its $36 billion Credit Income fund received redemption requests equal to 21.9% of assets.
Its technology lending fund saw withdrawal requests equal to 40.7% of assets.
Blue Owl responded by capping withdrawals at just 5% per quarter.
And Blue Owl is not alone.
According to multiple reports, KKR, Apollo, BlackRock, and other large private credit managers have also started restricting investor redemptions as stress spreads across the industry.
This is exactly the type of liquidity mismatch regulators are warning about.
Many private credit funds promise periodic withdrawals to investors while holding highly illiquid loans underneath.
That structure works during bull markets.
It becomes dangerous when large numbers of investors suddenly want their money back at the same time.
The FSB specifically warned that:
β’ leverage is increasing
β’ defaults are rising
β’ valuations remain opaque
β’ borrower quality is deteriorating
β’ payment-in-kind structures are becoming more common
Payment-in-kind financing is especially concerning.
Many borrowers are no longer paying interest in cash.
Instead, they borrow MORE money just to cover existing interest payments.
That is usually a major sign that credit quality is weakening.
The FSB also warned that private credit is heavily concentrated in sectors like:
β’ technology
β’ healthcare
β’ business services
Meaning stress in one sector can quickly spread across the system.
And unlike public markets, there is very little transparency.
Many private credit loans:
β’ do not trade publicly
β’ are not marked to market daily
β’ rely on internal valuations
β’ use private ratings from lesser-known firms
Regulators admitted they still do not fully understand where many of the risks are sitting because global reporting standards remain inconsistent.
The banking system is also becoming increasingly exposed.
The FSB estimates banks already have between $220 billion and $500 billion of direct and indirect exposure to private credit through financing lines, revolving facilities, and synthetic risk structures.
This matters because private credit exploded during one of the easiest money environments in modern history.
Cheap borrowing costs allowed weak companies to survive for years.
Now rates remain elevated, refinancing conditions are tightening, and investors are starting to demand liquidity at the exact moment credit conditions are worsening.
The entire system is now facing its first real stress test.
And regulators are openly warning they may not fully see the risks until the pressure spreads through the financial system.
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And the stress is already showing.
The Financial Stability Board (FSB) just warned that the private credit market has grown into a $1.5-$2 trillion system deeply connected to banks, insurers, pension funds, and private equity firms.
But this market has never been tested during a real prolonged recession.
Now cracks are starting to appear.
Last month, Blue Owl Capital was forced to limit withdrawals from two major private credit funds after investors requested to pull out $5.4 billion in a single quarter.
Its $36 billion Credit Income fund received redemption requests equal to 21.9% of assets.
Its technology lending fund saw withdrawal requests equal to 40.7% of assets.
Blue Owl responded by capping withdrawals at just 5% per quarter.
And Blue Owl is not alone.
According to multiple reports, KKR, Apollo, BlackRock, and other large private credit managers have also started restricting investor redemptions as stress spreads across the industry.
This is exactly the type of liquidity mismatch regulators are warning about.
Many private credit funds promise periodic withdrawals to investors while holding highly illiquid loans underneath.
That structure works during bull markets.
It becomes dangerous when large numbers of investors suddenly want their money back at the same time.
The FSB specifically warned that:
β’ leverage is increasing
β’ defaults are rising
β’ valuations remain opaque
β’ borrower quality is deteriorating
β’ payment-in-kind structures are becoming more common
Payment-in-kind financing is especially concerning.
Many borrowers are no longer paying interest in cash.
Instead, they borrow MORE money just to cover existing interest payments.
That is usually a major sign that credit quality is weakening.
The FSB also warned that private credit is heavily concentrated in sectors like:
β’ technology
β’ healthcare
β’ business services
Meaning stress in one sector can quickly spread across the system.
And unlike public markets, there is very little transparency.
Many private credit loans:
β’ do not trade publicly
β’ are not marked to market daily
β’ rely on internal valuations
β’ use private ratings from lesser-known firms
Regulators admitted they still do not fully understand where many of the risks are sitting because global reporting standards remain inconsistent.
The banking system is also becoming increasingly exposed.
The FSB estimates banks already have between $220 billion and $500 billion of direct and indirect exposure to private credit through financing lines, revolving facilities, and synthetic risk structures.
This matters because private credit exploded during one of the easiest money environments in modern history.
Cheap borrowing costs allowed weak companies to survive for years.
Now rates remain elevated, refinancing conditions are tightening, and investors are starting to demand liquidity at the exact moment credit conditions are worsening.
The entire system is now facing its first real stress test.
And regulators are openly warning they may not fully see the risks until the pressure spreads through the financial system.
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KRAKEN PARENT MOVES TO BECOME A FEDERAL CRYPTO BANK
Payward has applied for an OCC charter, a step that would add a federally regulated trust company to Krakenβs existing Wyoming bank charter and Fed master account.
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Payward has applied for an OCC charter, a step that would add a federally regulated trust company to Krakenβs existing Wyoming bank charter and Fed master account.
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Factory construction jobs show rapid expansion of industrial development under Trump, reporting over 12k construction jobs in April alone, raising expectations further
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Media is too big
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Spencer Pratt says he would work to end the fraudulent spending of LAβs tax dollars and use it to rebuild and improve LAβs infrastructure
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Another massive gamma squeeze day as "spot up, vol up": VIX soars on Call buying as everyone rushes into the AI mania.
Not even during the "Summer of 2020 Softbank squeeze" did we see such moves
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Not even during the "Summer of 2020 Softbank squeeze" did we see such moves
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Not only did she want more than half of what he has now, she wants to attach herself like a leech. She wants to enslave him to her forever
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BREAKING: The S&P 500 closes at its highest level on record, now up +17.2% since the March 30th bottom.
That's +$10 TRILLION in market cap in 29 trading days.
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That's +$10 TRILLION in market cap in 29 trading days.
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Joe Lonsdale calls out Tucker Carlson for saying to βProfessorβ Jiang, whom Lonsdale called a βspy, that the US should βshareβ power with the Chinese
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