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Fiscal.ai
Adobe is trading at its lowest forward valuation in more than a decade.

Forward EV/EBIT: 11.7x

Is this too cheap?

$ADBE https://t.co/BH8tecYDRD
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Quiver Quantitative
BREAKING: The House has passed the Epstein Files Transparency Act.

The bill was proposed by Representatives Thomas Massie and Ro Khanna to force the release of Epstein files. https://t.co/KiK76M0I0O
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WealthyReadings
What's the name of a bubble with revenue growth margin expansion and continuous demand?

Asking for a friend.

$GOOG casually dropping a benchmark-breaking model built in-house, trained on their own TPUs & infra.

Meanwhile $MSFT $NVDA Anthropic OpenAI & the rest of the world busy signing partnerships… and still getting outperformed.

Google is such an AI loser.

https://t.co/P6KD461mml
- WealthyReadings
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WealthyReadings
Which of my darling will yield the best returns in a year time, from today's price?

$TMDX
$PYPL
$NBIS
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EndGame Macro
Europe’s Quiet Fear Is A Dollar Crisis They Can’t Control

The ECB is acting like something is brewing underneath, forcing banks to run reverse stress tests and telling them the current calm won’t last.

The headlines talk about geopolitical tensions, trade conflicts, climate shocks, and market corrections. All true. But none of that fully explains the tone. The tone feels like a central bank that sees a deeper vulnerability it can’t quite name directly.

What They’re Really Worried About

If you fold in what came out back in September, the picture sharpens. European officials were already debating whether they needed to pool their own dollar reserves, because they weren’t sure the Fed would always be there in a crisis. That’s not a small thing. That’s a quiet admission that Europe knows its system is still tied to the dollar in ways it cannot fully control.

You can hear that anxiety in the details. The ECB told banks to watch their dollar exposures. Analysts talked openly about not taking Fed swap lines for granted. And the BIS numbers were sitting in the background…a massive offshore dollar market supported by far too little non US dollar reserves.

Once you see that, the ECB’s latest warning makes a lot more sense. They’re not worried about a normal recession. They’re worried about a world where a sudden shock hits trade or geopolitics, global markets stumble, and the offshore dollar plumbing tightens at the exact moment Europe needs it open.

Europe can print euros. It cannot print dollars. And when the dollar system catches a cold, Europe is always the first one to feel it.

The Real Message Behind the Language

Europe no longer feels comfortable assuming the Fed will always backstop the global system the way it did in 2008 or 2020. Add rising geopolitical tension, higher policy uncertainty in the U.S., and the sheer scale of the offshore dollar market, and the ECB is suddenly sounding more cautious than the numbers alone justify.

This is recognition that the world is shifting, the dollar system is more political, and Europe sits inside that architecture whether it likes it or not.

That’s why the ECB keeps talking about unprecedented risks even in a supposedly benign environment. They’re not looking at today. They’re looking at the kind of dollar shock that doesn’t show up in the data until it’s already happening and trying to prepare for it ahead of time.

Europe's banks face 'unprecedentedly high' risk of shocks, ECB warns https://t.co/1pOqjyhGmr https://t.co/1pOqjyhGmr
- Reuters
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EndGame Macro
RT @onechancefreedm: @TheBitcoinPope @LukeGromen Cartel is the cover story.

(1/2) Empire’s Workshop, Crude Interventions, and the New Struggle for Venezuela: U.S., China, Russia, and the Fight to Lock Down the Hemisphere

Greg Grandin’s Empire’s Workshop argued that Latin America was the testing ground where Washington refined the tools of modern empire with sanctions, covert wars, regime destabilization, and the ability to fold raw power into the language of democracy. Garry Leech’s Crude Interventions showed how U.S. foreign policy cannot be separated from oil, with military campaigns and financial pressure used to guarantee access to hydrocarbons and maintain the global dollar order. When read together, these books describe with eerie precision the storm now unfolding around Venezuela.

The U.S. is not treating Venezuela as a peripheral crisis but as a hinge point for the Western Hemisphere. Washington knows that in a Fourth Turning moment, when institutional and monetary systems globally are under stress, it cannot afford to let rivals exploit instability in its own backyard. This is why the narrative of a drug war has given way to a broader strategic frame: cartels as shadow sovereigns, controlling not only narcotics but also ports, trucking fleets, pipelines, minerals, and even migration flows. By designating them as terrorist entities, sanctioning their banks, and targeting their logistics networks, the U.S. is asserting that migration, minerals, and energy corridors fall under national security, not law enforcement.

Here Grandin’s thesis is alive: Latin America once again becomes the workshop where imperial methods are refined. But Leech’s oil centric warning is also central: this is not ultimately about law enforcement, it is about restructuring energy and financial flows to ensure they remain under U.S. command. Guyana’s new oil reserves, Venezuelan offshore rigs, and cartel linked extortion of refineries are treated as strategic arteries of the global economy. Washington’s military patrols in the Caribbean, sanctions on narco linked banks, and crackdowns on illicit shipping are less about Maduro than about guaranteeing that adversaries cannot disrupt or capture these arteries.

China and Russia complicate this picture. Beijing has become Venezuela’s primary creditor and economic lifeline, providing billions in loans, supplying oil and goods to circumvent U.S. sanctions, and securing new deals to develop oil fields that could generate over $1 billion in investment by 2026. Beyond Venezuela, China is now the leading trading partner for much of South America, backing infrastructure projects from Brazilian ports to Chilean energy grids. Its strategy is patient, embedding influence through debt, trade, and long term supply chains.

Russia, by contrast, plays a narrower but sharper role. Its influence rests on military and security cooperation. In 2025, Moscow and Caracas signed a new strategic partnership, followed by the opening of a Kalashnikov ammunition factory in Venezuela. Russia also positions itself as lender of last resort, offering oil swaps and financial lifelines despite sanctions. On the information front, it aligns with Maduro’s worldview, using state media to amplify narratives of resistance against U.S. imperialism. Its objective is less about economic penetration than about ensuring the U.S. faces constant friction in its own hemisphere. Continued on page 2…..
- EndGame Macro
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Quiver Quantitative
JUST IN: A trader on Polymarket just bet $10K that the Fed will decrease interest rates by 50 basis points.

They will win $500K if they are correct.

Gambler or insider? https://t.co/koIJvxqTCO
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Quiver Quantitative
BREAKING: AOC just said that there is a massive economic bubble from AI stocks.

She said that Congress should not entertain a bailout. https://t.co/EmLDeUcSTl
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