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Wasteland Capital
Q3 GDP +4.3%. Wow. Absolutely nuts.

Roaring consumer spend. Imports weak, exports up (tariff effect). Investment still weak (due to high uncertainty). Government spend recovery.

Now imagine the upcoming AI investment acceleration on top… https://t.co/CLYgwUfkuL
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EndGame Macro
Personal Income & Outlays And How Health Care Spending Is Masking Consumer Weakness

If you step back from the headlines and just follow the money, this report tells a pretty clear story. The consumer is still spending, but the way they’re doing it matters, and that’s where the stress starts to show.

The core question isn’t is spending up?
It’s whether income growth is strong enough to support that spending without eating into the buffer.

Right now, the answer is no.

Income Is Rising But Buying Power Is Not

On paper, September looks fine…

• Personal income: up 0.4%
• Disposable personal income: up 0.3%

But once you strip out inflation, the picture softens fast…

• Real disposable income: up just 0.1%
• Real income per person: basically flat month to month

So incomes are growing in name, but what households can actually feel hasn’t changed much at all. That’s usually the first crack.

Spending Is Still Rising And Savings Are Filling The Gap

Spending didn’t slow in September…

• Personal consumption: up 0.4%
• Total outlays: also up 0.4%

But that spending outpaced income again. The way it balanced wasn’t higher pay, it was lower saving…

• Personal saving rate: down to 4.0%
• That’s steadily lower than earlier this year, when it was closer to 5.5%

This isn’t a one month quirk. It’s a trend. Households are keeping things going by giving up cushion, not because their income picture is improving.

Health Care Is Quietly Doing A Lot Of The Work

Here’s a piece that often gets overlooked.

Health care including health insurance and medical services now makes up roughly 17% of all consumer spending. And it’s one of the areas still growing.

That matters because…

• Health spending is mostly non discretionary. People don’t choose more medical bills the way they choose a vacation.

• A large share is paid by employers or the government, but it still shows up as consumer spending in the data.

• Insurance is measured as a service, which can rise even as households feel squeezed by premiums and out of pocket costs.

So consumer spending can look strong even when households themselves feel worse off. A lot of this growth is people paying unavoidable bills, not leaning into new demand.

Are People Buying More, Or Just Paying More?

The real versusbnominal split answers that…

• Nominal spending: up 0.4%
• Prices: up 0.3%
• Real spending: only +0.1%

And the mix is telling…

• Goods: down 0.3%
• Durables: down 0.4%
• Nondurables: down 0.3%
• Services: up 0.3%

People are pulling back on things and still paying for services, especially the ones they can’t avoid. That’s a very familiar late cycle pattern.

The Weak Spots Are Showing

A few areas stand out as pressure points…

• Big ticket items are rolling over. Cars, appliances, and other durables are slipping first, which is typical when rates stay high.

• Interest costs are creeping up. Personal interest payments rose again, quietly eating into cash flow.

• Spending is running ahead of income over the year.

• Real income: up about 1.5% year over year

• Real spending: up about 2.4%

That gap doesn’t close on its own. It gets closed by lower savings or more debt and right now it’s savings doing the work.

What Stands Out Most

The big takeaway is this…

Consumer spending is being propped up by momentum and mandatory expenses, not by rising real income or renewed confidence.

That doesn’t mean recession has arrived. But it does mean the system is getting tighter. Goods are weakening. Savings are thinning. Services especially health care are carrying more of the load.

My View

September shows an economy that’s still moving forward, but increasingly on inertia rather than fresh strength. Historically, that’s not where expansions end but it is where they start to lose their balance.
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The Few Bets That Matter
$PATH trades below 4.5x forward sales with a clear ARR and RPO acceleration while Maestro is only starting to be deployed and management guided to continuous acceleration.

I'll take it and say thanks. https://t.co/rAQHalZEYw
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The Few Bets That Matter
$PATH trades below 4.5x forward sales with ARR & RPO acceleration while Maestro is starting to be deployed and management guided to continuous acceleration. https://t.co/MYdHf3wXLm
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The Few Bets That Matter
$NVO is still not a great buy today.

But this FDA aproval might be the kick the company needed to see growth again - and therefore multiple expansions.

Although it is said to come at a low price to capture market shares first, which is a big deal as the market will want to see adoption before any rewards.

Still worth keeping an eye on.

$NVO is NOT cheap and NOT a buy right now.

GLP-1 was supposed to drive growth but market share is slipping in favor of competition. Growth guidance was cut twice and there are no near-term catalysts nor clarity on what the future will be like.

Lower growth → lower cash generation → lower multiples.

This is how the market works. Comparing today's valuation to the last two years' is like comparing apples to bananas. Conditions changed.

$NVO is a fantastic company. Just not a great stock, yet. There are no reasons to rush any purchase, better be patient.
- The Few Bets That Matter
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The Few Bets That Matter
Did not really expect such numbers, especially for consumption - even though healthcare is mostly responsible of such growth.

There's a reason to why the market anticipated on this sector already. https://t.co/mky3abEqWp
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The Few Bets That Matter
$GOLD is up ~70% YTD.
$SILVER is up ~142% YTD.

Both moves reflect a growing lack of trust in fiat currencies and the global financial system, including the U.S. dollar.

Gold and silver capitalizations are ~2.25x and ~17.8x that of $BTC. That gap is the Bitcoin bull case.

A time will come when Bitcoin will no longer be distorted by bad actors and excessive leverage, and Iistitutionalization is accelerating that process - through ETF and hedge funds interests.

When that happens, there is no reason for $BTC to be worth less than $GOLD over the long term.
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Quiver Quantitative
🚨 We're doing a holiday sale on Quiver.

Most of our stuff is free, but premium is pretty nice for live data alerts and helps support the rest of the site.

Half-off if you sign up before NYE.

Join here: https://t.co/2NJaK51aVx https://t.co/tWdU7v415E
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App Economy Insights
📺 US TV Time November 2025:

Streaming 46.7% (+5.1pp Y/Y).

• YouTube 12.9% (+2.1pp Y/Y).
• Netflix 8.3% (+0.6pp Y/Y).
• Disney apps 4.8% (+0.1pp Y/Y).
• Prime Video 3.8% (+0.1pp Y/Y).
• Roku Channel 2.9% (+1.0pp Y/Y).
$GOOG $NFLX $AMZN $DIS $ROKU
Source: Nielsen https://t.co/o627Rjjs2u
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Fiscal.ai
If you invested $10,000 in Nike 10 years ago, you would have...

$9,860 today.

$NKE https://t.co/e1f38Hd4xC
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