EndGame Macro
The risk of not acting is that Europe slowly loses control of one of the last industries it truly dominates. Cheap Chinese EVs don’t just undercut on price they squeeze margins, drain scale, and weaken Europe’s manufacturing base over time. Yes, China buys a lot of European cars, but that dependence cuts both ways. If Europe relies on China for growth abroad while absorbing Chinese imports at home, its leverage fades fast. The real danger is waking up years from now with a hollowed out auto sector and far less ability to push back at all.

What if Europe stopped buying Chinese cars tomorrow?

That would be a monumental show of European leverage.

And a major setback for China Car Inc’s global offensive - enough to swing the pendulum.

Could it happen?
- Michael Dunne
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AkhenOsiris
$COIN

Coinbase's equity perpetuals launch targets non-U.S. traders with 24/7 access to U.S. stocks via crypto-style derivatives, offering up to 20x leverage 🤡 to boost efficiency amid broader platform expansions like prediction markets and AI advisors
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EndGame Macro
RT @KobeissiLetter: BREAKING: President Trump's address to the nation concludes with no mention of Venezuela.
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Clark Square Capital
RT @ClarkSquareCap: Idea thread time!

What's your best idea heading into 2026? (Any style, any market cap, any geography).

Be sure to add why you like it + valuation.

I will compile the responses and share.

Appreciate a RT for visibility! 🙏
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Offshore
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EndGame Macro
And just like that… https://t.co/U1bkPoQnlb

BREAKING: US oil prices erase gains after President Trump concludes his address to the nation with no mention of Venezuela. https://t.co/s9EVr2mG6A
- The Kobeissi Letter
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Offshore
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EndGame Macro
Sowell’s Lesson for Today…When Tariffs Turn a Slowdown Into a Decade Long Problem

Sowell’s argument about the Great Depression focuses less on the 1929 crash itself and more on the policy error that followed. The market break hurt confidence, but the economy wasn’t yet in free fall, unemployment was uneven but improving into mid 1930. The real turning point was Smoot-Hawley, when Washington imposed sweeping tariffs to protect jobs, ignoring warnings from more than 1,000 economists that retaliation would gut trade. That warning proved right. Global trade collapsed, retaliation spread quickly, and unemployment surged into double digits within months, staying there for the entire 1930s. In Sowell’s view, the depression wasn’t unavoidable, it was extended and deepened by policy choices.

That’s why today’s tariff escalation deserves more attention than it gets. Modern reciprocal tariffs, Section 232 actions, and tit for tat responses across China, Europe, Canada, Mexico, and others rhyme uncomfortably with that period. Once trade shifts from being a pressure release to a blunt weapon, the damage compounds where supply chains fracture, exporters suffer, prices skew, and already weak sectors deteriorate further. The historical lesson is that broad, retaliatory protectionism has a habit of turning manageable slowdowns into long, grinding economic slogs.
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Offshore
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EndGame Macro
Prices Are Falling And Demand Is Frozen

Lennar’s average selling price on new homes is down about 27% from the pandemic peak, and that’s after adjusting for incentives. That matters, because a lot of the real price cutting isn’t showing up as big headline drops and is buried in mortgage buydowns, closing credits, and upgrades. On paper, prices look like they’re drifting. In practice, builders are doing whatever they can to make the monthly payment work.

Why this is happening

This is the hangover from higher rates. Existing homeowners are locked into cheap mortgages and don’t want to move, so resale supply stays tight. Builders don’t have that luxury. They have inventory to move, so they become the pressure valve for the whole market. That’s why new home prices and margins adjust first, even while people argue that housing is still strong.

My View

The real tell is in demand. Mortgage applications are still scraping along near multi decade lows, especially for purchases. That says buyers are constrained, not confident. This isn’t a sudden housing crash, it’s a slow reset. Prices soften where they can, volumes stay weak, and the market stalls until either rates come down meaningfully or incomes catch up.

*Credit to @nickgerli1 for the chart.
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Offshore
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EndGame Macro
🏠 Why Home Sellers Are Quietly Tapping Out

A growing share of sellers are pulling listings because homes are sitting longer, offers are softer, and cutting prices feels like locking in a loss. Redfin data shows nearly 70% of homes listed in September sat on the market for 60+ days, and roughly 15% of delistings were at risk of selling below purchase price, which helps explain why owners would rather wait than blink first.

What this says about the housing market

This is what a frozen market looks like. Buyers are constrained by affordability and rates; sellers are anchored to 2021–2022 price memories. So instead of prices clearing lower in a clean way, supply gets artificially pulled back. Historically, when listings are withdrawn en masse, it’s not the bottom; it’s the phase where neither side has accepted the new clearing price yet. Eventually, either rates fall meaningfully, incomes catch up, or prices do the work. Right now, sellers stepping away is the market telling you that adjustment is still unfinished.
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Offshore
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EndGame Macro
Warren Buffett’s Subtle Warning About the Endgame of Debt

This is Warren Buffett speaking on May 3, 2025, at the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Shareholder Meeting broadcast on CNBC. His point isn’t about imminent collapse, I t’s about incentives and arithmetic. Modern democracies are structurally wired to spend more than they tax, especially when growth slows and voters feel pressure. Promising relief is rewarded; restraint isn’t. Over time, that bias shows up as persistent deficits, rising debt loads, and a growing dependence on easier money to smooth the cycle. That’s the backdrop of today: elevated delinquencies, a massive 2026 refinancing wall, stressed commercial real estate, and government interest costs at their highest levels since the GFC. None of this requires bad actors, it’s the system doing what it’s designed to do when obligations outrun growth.

What makes Buffett’s warning matter is the gap between concern and inevitability. He’s uneasy about long term currency erosion, yet Berkshire’s huge cash and Treasury position tells you he still sees the dollar as the best house in a shaky neighborhood. But the sequence is familiar with stress first, intervention second. As refinancing pressure builds and growth cools, the Fed’s room to maneuver narrows. Rates can stay restrictive only until something breaks, at which point the playbook tends to reappear with liquidity backstops, renewed QE, and eventually some form of financial repression. It’s not a call for panic or an imminent crash; it’s a reminder that currency strength is preserved carefully or diluted gradually, then suddenly, when the math leaves no alternative.
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AkhenOsiris
$ORCL OpenAI

The Oracle data center in Michigan, which is part of the Stargate project with OpenAI, may still get delayed. Local officials tell Axios they are not willing to fast-track approvals for projects that deserve scrutiny.
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Offshore
Video
EndGame Macro
Warren Buffett’s Subtle Warning About the Endgame of Debt

This is Warren Buffett speaking on May 3, 2025, at the Berkshire Hathaway Annual Shareholder Meeting broadcast on CNBC. His point isn’t about imminent collapse, it’s about incentives and arithmetic. Modern democracies are structurally wired to spend more than they tax, especially when growth slows and voters feel pressure. Promising relief is rewarded; restraint isn’t. Over time, that bias shows up as persistent deficits, rising debt loads, and a growing dependence on easier money to smooth the cycle. That’s the backdrop of today: elevated delinquencies, a massive 2026 refinancing wall, stressed commercial real estate, and government interest costs at their highest levels since the GFC. None of this requires bad actors, it’s the system doing what it’s designed to do when obligations outrun growth.

What makes Buffett’s warning matter is the gap between concern and inevitability. He’s uneasy about long term currency erosion, yet Berkshire’s huge cash and Treasury position tells you he still sees the dollar as the best house in a shaky neighborhood. But the sequence is familiar with stress first, intervention second. As refinancing pressure builds and growth cools, the Fed’s room to maneuver narrows. Rates can stay restrictive only until something breaks, at which point the playbook tends to reappear with liquidity backstops, renewed QE, and eventually some form of financial repression. It’s not a call for panic or an imminent crash; it’s a reminder that currency strength is preserved carefully or diluted gradually, then suddenly, when the math leaves no alternative.
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