EndGame Macro
RT @TOzgokmen: Decades of ZIRP & QE had no influence on Japan economy because these were banking matters (follow Richard Koo's explanations on this on utube), while households & corporations followed their own instinct: they paid off debt, saved and produced, enhancing Japan exports and economy. In other words, while BoJ was trying to recover debt-based system, people of Japan need subscribed to that again post 1989.
Now, tariffs means Japan's exports are collapsing. There are obstacles everywhere. China is producing competitive cars. Hence real-deal economy is being hit 🎯
The result is loss of Yen's value, hectic movements by BoJ to deal with potential inflation as well as economic collapse. Sell this, buy this, as pillars of Japan economy are hit, in an aging population.
People just looking at financial markets curves 📈📉will NEVER see this, as they never understood anything.
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RT @TOzgokmen: Decades of ZIRP & QE had no influence on Japan economy because these were banking matters (follow Richard Koo's explanations on this on utube), while households & corporations followed their own instinct: they paid off debt, saved and produced, enhancing Japan exports and economy. In other words, while BoJ was trying to recover debt-based system, people of Japan need subscribed to that again post 1989.
Now, tariffs means Japan's exports are collapsing. There are obstacles everywhere. China is producing competitive cars. Hence real-deal economy is being hit 🎯
The result is loss of Yen's value, hectic movements by BoJ to deal with potential inflation as well as economic collapse. Sell this, buy this, as pillars of Japan economy are hit, in an aging population.
People just looking at financial markets curves 📈📉will NEVER see this, as they never understood anything.
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Quiver Quantitative
If someone bought and held $10,000 of Carvana stock when this was posted, they would have $1 million today.
$CVNA has now risen 10,663% since this post.
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If someone bought and held $10,000 of Carvana stock when this was posted, they would have $1 million today.
$CVNA has now risen 10,663% since this post.
Carvana going bankrupt? Insiders don't think so
They've bought more than $663 million in $CVNA shares over the past year https://t.co/xRUSoJPUQh - Quiver Quantitativetweet
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Quiver Quantitative
JUST IN: Representative Julie Johnson just filed 63 new stock trades.
All sales.
She sold up to $945K of stock in total.
Full trade list up on Quiver. https://t.co/59P33zG36N
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JUST IN: Representative Julie Johnson just filed 63 new stock trades.
All sales.
She sold up to $945K of stock in total.
Full trade list up on Quiver. https://t.co/59P33zG36N
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EndGame Macro
When Borrowing Now Stops Being Cheap Later
The blue bars are the total global debt in dollars, and it just keeps grinding higher to new records. The red line is the global debt as a share of world GDP. That ratio exploded during COVID when governments borrowed aggressively and GDP collapsed, then eased as economies reopened and inflation boosted nominal growth.
At a glance, that easing makes things look more stable than they really are. The ratio going sideways doesn’t mean the system healed. It mostly means the denominator caught up for a while.
Why the picture is more fragile than it looks
The real shift isn’t the level of debt, it’s the cost of carrying it. When rates were near zero, you could pile on debt without immediate consequences. Now that rates are structurally higher, the pressure shows up in budgets, not charts. Interest expense starts eating fiscal space, and new borrowing increasingly goes toward servicing old borrowing rather than doing anything productive.
There’s also a political reality baked into this. Aging populations, healthcare, defense, supply chain reshoring, energy security…none of that is optional, and none of it is cheap. Democracies don’t like upfront pain, so deficits become permanent. Borrowing isn’t a temporary bridge anymore; it’s the default setting.
If you zoom out further the world is less stable and less efficient than it was a decade ago. Globalization isn’t gone, but it’s messier. Redundancy replaces efficiency. Geopolitics replaces pure economics. That all costs money, and governments are the ones footing the bill.
The takeaway
So this chart shows that every shock gets handled the same way…borrow first, worry later and the cost of that keeps climbing.
The risk isn’t the size of the debt by itself. It’s that the old assumptions behind it, that cheap money, plenty of time, and steady growth are starting to break down.
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When Borrowing Now Stops Being Cheap Later
The blue bars are the total global debt in dollars, and it just keeps grinding higher to new records. The red line is the global debt as a share of world GDP. That ratio exploded during COVID when governments borrowed aggressively and GDP collapsed, then eased as economies reopened and inflation boosted nominal growth.
At a glance, that easing makes things look more stable than they really are. The ratio going sideways doesn’t mean the system healed. It mostly means the denominator caught up for a while.
Why the picture is more fragile than it looks
The real shift isn’t the level of debt, it’s the cost of carrying it. When rates were near zero, you could pile on debt without immediate consequences. Now that rates are structurally higher, the pressure shows up in budgets, not charts. Interest expense starts eating fiscal space, and new borrowing increasingly goes toward servicing old borrowing rather than doing anything productive.
There’s also a political reality baked into this. Aging populations, healthcare, defense, supply chain reshoring, energy security…none of that is optional, and none of it is cheap. Democracies don’t like upfront pain, so deficits become permanent. Borrowing isn’t a temporary bridge anymore; it’s the default setting.
If you zoom out further the world is less stable and less efficient than it was a decade ago. Globalization isn’t gone, but it’s messier. Redundancy replaces efficiency. Geopolitics replaces pure economics. That all costs money, and governments are the ones footing the bill.
The takeaway
So this chart shows that every shock gets handled the same way…borrow first, worry later and the cost of that keeps climbing.
The risk isn’t the size of the debt by itself. It’s that the old assumptions behind it, that cheap money, plenty of time, and steady growth are starting to break down.
"The Institute of International Finance estimates that global sovereign debt surged by $8 trillion in the third quarter, up more than 8% from the previous quarter. The US and China accounted for almost a third of the increase."
@johnauthers https://t.co/23smKIXCkB - Daily Chartbooktweet
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memenodes
Do you keep your money onchain, on a CEX, or in a bank?
Crypto traders: https://t.co/P2BcvCAuvW
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Do you keep your money onchain, on a CEX, or in a bank?
Crypto traders: https://t.co/P2BcvCAuvW
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App Economy Insights
$ORCL Oracle just crashed 15% in 2 days.
It’s down over 40% from its September peak.
The backlog is wild ($523B).
But the cash burn is even wilder.
You need to see their cash flow chart. 👇
https://t.co/VL2r6J50Cv
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$ORCL Oracle just crashed 15% in 2 days.
It’s down over 40% from its September peak.
The backlog is wild ($523B).
But the cash burn is even wilder.
You need to see their cash flow chart. 👇
https://t.co/VL2r6J50Cv
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Quartr
"It pissed us off when somebody was wearing our high-tech products in the street with jeans. It really bugged us. It's like buying a Porsche and going shopping."
Olivier Bernhard knew the highs of a world-class triathlon career, and the strain of its closing years.
As injuries piled up, he began to wonder if there was room for a new kind of running sensation.
A prototype made from cut-up garden hose became CloudTec, the innovation behind "running on clouds."
What began in the Swiss Alps with a running shoe became a global sportswear brand.
Edge #70: On.
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"It pissed us off when somebody was wearing our high-tech products in the street with jeans. It really bugged us. It's like buying a Porsche and going shopping."
Olivier Bernhard knew the highs of a world-class triathlon career, and the strain of its closing years.
As injuries piled up, he began to wonder if there was room for a new kind of running sensation.
A prototype made from cut-up garden hose became CloudTec, the innovation behind "running on clouds."
What began in the Swiss Alps with a running shoe became a global sportswear brand.
Edge #70: On.
tweet