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Fiscal.ai
This might be Amazon's most under appreciated segment.

Amazon generates nearly $50 billion per year in subscription revenue.

And that figure has grown by 30% annually for more than 10 years.

$AMZN https://t.co/eUg2QFKEwM
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Quiver Quantitative
NEW: We just released a report on a congressional stock trade that caught our eye.

Watch here: https://t.co/Anvr9NF7KA
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EndGame Macro
Consumer Sentiment Is Falling for a Reason, Because The Stock Market Isn’t the Real Economy

If you zoom in on this chart and then layer it over what’s happening underneath the surface of the economy, it becomes obvious why people are this discouraged. Sentiment is falling because the lived reality of the average household has gotten heavier in ways that don’t show up cleanly in GDP or stock market levels.

Consumer sentiment is now brushing up against record lows, and views of personal finances have slipped to their weakest point in sixteen years. That’s the accumulated strain of prices that reset higher and never came back down, borrowing costs that climbed and stayed high, and a job market that feels a little less secure each month. When someone’s car insurance, rent, groceries, medical bills, and credit card interest all cost more at the same time, you don’t need an economist to tell you why confidence is sliding. People feel it in their checking accounts long before the data confirms it.

The Strain Is Now Showing Up in Hard Numbers, Not Just Feelings

This isn’t just sentiment drifting around in a vacuum. The delinquency data paints the same story. Credit card delinquency rates are now higher than they were at the peak of the Great Financial Crisis, that’s a stunning thing to be able to say with a straight face. Student loan delinquencies have surged since payments resumed, with about 10% of borrowers 90 days past due. Auto loan delinquencies are at their highest point since 2010. And in the commercial world, office vacancies are sitting at roughly 14.1%, more than six times the 2019 rate and far worse than what we saw heading into 2008. When this many corners of the credit universe start flashing yellow or red, households don’t need a sentiment survey to tell them something is off…they can sense it.

The kicker is that these pressures stack. A household that’s worried about its job prospects, and the University of Michigan data shows rising job loss fears across age groups, is often the same one juggling rising credit card balances, a car loan that costs more than it used to, and higher prices across everything essential. When those pieces move together, confidence slips because they’re paying attention.

A Split Between the Macro Story and the Everyday Story

What makes this moment tricky is that the headline economy still looks okay. GDP isn’t contracting, and the stock market keeps floating higher. But that disconnect is exactly why sentiment looks the way it does. Households see an economy that appears strong on paper while their personal experience is deteriorating. And when the gap between the official story and the lived story gets too wide, people stop believing the headlines and start trusting their own financial stress signals.

That’s what this chart captures. A population that’s not panicking but is quietly acknowledging that the math doesn’t work like it used to. A population that sees the bills rising faster than the paychecks. A population that knows something is tightening even if policymakers don’t want to say it out loud yet.

My Honest Read

This is late cycle behavior. It’s the kind of sentiment you get when households aren’t in freefall but are stretched thin and losing resilience. The fact that so many delinquency metrics are now worse than they were heading into the financial crisis is a signal that the average American balance sheet is more fragile than the macro narrative implies. And fragility has a way of surfacing all at once.
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EndGame Macro
The Vision Is Big, but Stablecoins Just Aren’t There Yet.

Stablecoins are still moving with the crypto tide, not breaking away into their own independent financial system. The market cap climbed steadily through 2024 and into mid 2025, then hit a ceiling and started to bend lower right alongside Bitcoin. That drop on the right side of the chart, about $303B outstanding and almost $2B gone in a week is the tell. If stablecoins were becoming the next big dollar funding layer, you wouldn’t see them shrink the minute risk comes off. You’d see inflows as people moved out of volatile assets and parked in digital dollars. Instead, you’re seeing people step out of the whole ecosystem.

The growth rate since the GENIUS Act is also part of the story. Roughly $10B a month isn’t trivial, but from a $300B base it’s not the kind of acceleration you’d expect if stablecoins were on track to become a $3T pillar of global liquidity anytime soon. At that pace, the math stretches out over decades. That gap between the hype and the slope of the actual line is important: it tells you stablecoins are still mostly serving traders, exchanges, arbitrage desks, and yield farmers, not yet the broader dollar plumbing that some analysts imagine.

A big part of that is structural. Money market funds are yielding real returns. Banks still dominate payments. Regulation is uneven. And most of the stablecoin market is concentrated in a single opaque issuer that big institutions can’t fully trust. So for now, stablecoins expand when crypto is hot and contract when crypto cools, which is exactly what the chart is capturing. It’s not that the idea lacks potential; it’s that the real world isn’t adopting it at the speed the narratives suggest.

Total stablecoin market cap has begun falling with BTC (far right on chart below.)

Stablecoins have only grown $10B per month since the passage of the GENIUS Act. At this pace, it will take 23 years for stablecoin market cap to hit Bessent's $3T stablecoin market cap goal.🤔 https://t.co/nar9NbxPjq
- Luke Gromen
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Quiver Quantitative
BREAKING: The House Ethics Committee is investigating Representative Mike Collins.

Unclear what the investigation is for.

Worth noting that Collins is the most active crypto trader in Congress. https://t.co/zMevmu46Ij
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WealthyReadings
RT @ruth_capital: one thing that baffles me a lot is how horrible and bifurcating some of these accounts become once you're in a clear down-trend/retracement

no capital protection/bias swap whatsoever once bridge starts collapsing and spamming daily AI-points fails

be selective whom you follow
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EndGame Macro
When Geopolitics Tighten, Even Cutting Edge Chips Become Trade Currency.

You’ve got a White House that treats everything as a transaction. H200s into China aren’t just exports, they’re a bargaining chip. Floating the idea right now signals to Beijing that this is something you want, and we can take it away or give it back depending on what we get on trade, ag, or broader geopolitical concessions. You can’t play that card if it’s never on the table, so the leak itself is part of the negotiation.

On top of that, Nvidia has just printed an absurd quarter…$57B in revenue, $51B from data center, 73%+ margins, and guidance to $65B next quarter. They’re not limping; they’re a core pillar of the stock market. Letting them tap China again under strict export controls gives the administration an easy win with more U.S. corporate profits, higher tax receipts, and a happy equity market, without writing a stimulus check. And because there’s already precedent with the H20 deal where the U.S. Treasury took a 15% skim, you can easily imagine them reviving that model “We’ll let you sell, but we take a cut.” It turns national security policy into a revenue sharing agreement.

There’s also a quiet risk management angle. Nvidia’s balance sheet shows inventories nearly doubling this year to just under $20B. They’re ramping supply hard on the assumption that AI demand stays vertical. If that curve bends, you don’t want a strategic U.S. champion stuck with shelves of high end chips and another multi billion write down tied to export rules. Opening a tightly controlled Chinese outlet for last season’s H200s gives Nvidia an extra release valve for that capacity and lowers the odds that Washington’s own restrictions blow back into a big market scare later.

The Deeper Strategic Logic

Finally, there’s the tech race logic some people inside the administration clearly buy…H200 is powerful, but the real bleeding edge is already shifting to Blackwell and then Rubin. Selling H200s under performance caps and quotas can be framed as keeping Chinese labs dependent on U.S. hardware that’s one step behind, while U.S. and allied players move on to the next node. That’s how they reconcile that they’re tough on China with we’re going to let Nvidia book billions.

So when you put it all together, the timing isn’t random. They’re staring at a hugely profitable but inventory heavy U.S. champion, a slowing global backdrop, a need for bargaining chips with Beijing, and an election narrative built on deals and markets. In that mix, floating controlled H200 sales to China becomes less about softening on national security and more about creating optionality…a card they can trade, tax, or pull back depending on how the rest of the game unfolds.

US officials are having early discussions on whether to let Nvidia sell its H200 artificial intelligence chips to China, a contentious potential move that would mark a major win for the world’s most valuable company https://t.co/j30skXGqT4
- Bloomberg
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EndGame Macro
Want Good Schools? Look at the Town’s Budget, Not Just the Ranking

If you’re planning to buy a home in the next few years, this is one of those moments where you really need to pay attention to the town, not just the house. We’re heading into a period where budgets are tightening, federal support is fading, and costs are rising for schools, infrastructure, and municipal services. That’s when you find out which communities are actually well run and which ones have been papering over problems during the good years. The last thing you want is to move somewhere that suddenly has to cut school programs, lay off teachers, or hike taxes because the math stopped working.

When I look at towns, school quality is obviously a starting point…everyone wants good schools. But the part I focus on the most is the tax base behind those schools. The towns that hold up in rougher cycles usually have a solid mix of commercial revenue, especially from businesses that aren’t the first to disappear in a downturn. Healthcare, medical campuses, logistics, universities, government, long established professional firms, those anchors keep money coming in even when the economy softens. And that stability is what protects school budgets, local services, and long term property values.

So if you’re trying to set up your future, think the way you would about any investment…look past the surface and look at the fundamentals. The next few years will tell you a lot about which towns have their act together. And that’s the environment you want to build a life in.
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AkhenOsiris
Trump trying to give NVDA access to China should absolutely pump $APP, they will gain from this 🤪
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Dimitry Nakhla | Babylon Capital®
Oracle is now down ~40% from its September peak, with the multiple contracting from 46x to a more reasonable 28x

At long last, The Intelligent Investor has re-entered the chat 😂

$ORCL https://t.co/i9aXglG17p
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Quiver Quantitative
BREAKING: Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene has resigned from Congress.

She said:

There is no plan to save the world or insane 4D chess being played by Donald Trump
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