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Fiscal.ai
Analysts currently expect Nebius Group to grow revenue 560% over the next year.

Nebius themselves are projecting 2026 ARR of $8 billion.

$NBIS https://t.co/e4hIdTdwNh
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EndGame Macro
China Just Made Silver Into A Geopolitical Nightmare

Starting January 1, 2026, China is tightening control over silver exports. This is a shift in mindset. Silver is being moved out of the commodity bucket and into the strategic material bucket.

The new licensing regime does two things at once. It centralizes decision making inside the state, and it quietly narrows who gets to participate. Large, state aligned producers with balance sheets and political trust will still ship metal. Smaller players and independent traders likely won’t. That alone reduces available supply to the rest of the world, even before any explicit quotas show up.

Markets didn’t need to wait for January to react. They understand concentration risk. When a country that sits at the center of refined supply changes the rules, prices don’t adjust later, they adjust immediately.

Why This Matters More for Silver Than Gold

Gold has already gone through this transition. Central banks treat it as a reserve asset. Flows are opaque, bilateral, and often political. Silver is just now crossing that line, but it’s doing so with an added complication because it’s both a monetary metal and a critical industrial input.

That dual role is what makes this move so powerful. Gold tightens financial conditions when it rises. Silver tightens real conditions. It feeds directly into solar panels, EVs, electronics, grid infrastructure, and communications. There is no clean substitute. When silver supply becomes conditional, investment decisions downstream get more cautious.

That’s why you’re already seeing price gaps open between regions. Silver is becoming more available in the East and scarcer in the West. That’s not an anomaly. It’s how controlled markets behave.

Market Bifurcation

Historically, when governments start managing the flow of essential inputs, markets split. Prices diverge. Liquidity pools fragment. The official price becomes less meaningful than where metal can actually be sourced.

We saw versions of this with oil, with gas, and with gold during periods of stress. The lesson is always the same: once supply becomes a policy tool, volatility rises and efficiency falls. Companies over hoard. Projects get delayed. Margins compress. And prices stop behaving smoothly.

This doesn’t require an outright embargo to matter. Even uncertainty is enough. When firms don’t know if material will be available next quarter, they act defensively. That behavior change is what tightens conditions system wide.

What This Means for Industry

For manufacturers, higher silver prices are only part of the problem. The bigger issue is reliability. Supply chains built on just in time assumptions don’t function well when access depends on licenses and politics.

That pushes companies to hold more inventory, pay premiums, or redesign products, all of which raise costs and slow rollout. In a world already dealing with tighter credit and weaker demand, that friction matters. It’s another headwind layered onto an economy that’s already cautious.

What This Means for Investors

For investors, the signal isn’t silver goes up tomorrow. It’s that silver is being rerated. Once a metal moves from freely traded to strategically managed, it stops behaving like a normal cyclical commodity.

Gold already reflects that reality. Silver is starting to. That’s why it can outperform even when growth is slowing and liquidity is tight. It’s not being priced purely on demand, it’s being priced on access.

The Bigger Picture

Zoom out, and this fits a broader shift. Trade is becoming conditional. Supply chains are becoming political. And assets tied to real inputs are increasingly treated as strategic rather than neutral.

Silver’s surge isn’t just about export rules. It’s about the world moving away from frictionless markets and toward controlled ones. In that kind of environment, price volatility is a sign of transition.

And transitions like this tend to last longer than people expect…<code[...]
Offshore
EndGame Macro China Just Made Silver Into A Geopolitical Nightmare Starting January 1, 2026, China is tightening control over silver exports. This is a shift in mindset. Silver is being moved out of the commodity bucket and into the strategic material bucket.…
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BREAKING: China will be imposing export restrictions on silver beginning in 5 days, on January 1st.

These restrictions will require special government licenses for silver exports.

Shanghai silver prices are now up to $85/oz, a ~$5 premium to spot prices in the US. https://t.co/Dw2R3ytaAv - The Kobeissi Letter tweet