Boaz Shoshan

Boaz Shoshan

When he trained to become a financial adviser, Boaz Shoshan earned a black mark against his name for asking too many questions. Having become disillusioned with the financial services industry, he joined Southbank Investment Research in 2017. The questions haven’t stopped.

Having ventured down many financial rabbit holes, Boaz now writes for Capital & Conflict and is the managing editor of The Fleet Street Letter Monthly Alert. From gold to violins, bitcoin to cigars, and whisky to wine, Boaz’s investing interests are often to be found outside the financial system – despite being a qualified financial adviser.

  • The parting glass

    Capital & Conflict – brought to you by Fortune & Freedom VAUXHALL, LONDON – Well dear reader, we had a good run. But today marks the end of the line for Capital & Conflict. From here on out, this newsletter…

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  • I have to tell you something

    Capital & Conflict – brought to you by Fortune & Freedom HYDE PARK, LONDON – I have some bad news. Actually, it’s not that bad. It’s just a change. But it is something you should be aware of as a…

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  • Going live in 30 mins: on the trail of the “Capital Tsunami”

    CHEDDAR, SOMERSET – Over the past 25 years, investors have bought – on average – $115 million worth of stocks around the world every trading day. That comes to roughly $29 billion entering the stock market every year.

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  • Going live in half an hour…

    The US joins the Soviet Union, the British Empire, and a long list of ancient powers that were bested by this unforgiving country at the centre of the world. Is the sun now setting on America’s superpower status, just as it was for the Soviet Union?

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  • Celebrating fifty golden fiat years

    I hope this letter finds you in good health, and having a great Sunday. I don’t normally write to you on weekends, but felt I had to make an exception today. For today is a very special occasion – a 50-year anniversary, no less. And if you enjoy my scribblings to you at all, I reckon you won’t want to let it go unobserved.

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  • No true ₿itcoin

    Last week, I asked you if you were feeling bullish or bearish on bitcoin. It’s not the first time I’ve asked the readership of Capital & Conflict such a question, but with the market evolving so fast it’s worth keeping our intel fresh.

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  • The Great House/Ape dilemma

    But before we get to that, there’s a different question I’d like to ask you. This is the very question myself and Charlie Morris have been pondering for our latest issue of The Fleet Street Letter Monthly Alert, going out tomorrow, and I’d love to know what you think.

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  • Black Tot Day

    CHEDDAR, SOMERSET – We must end the week on a sombre note. For tomorrow is a grave day indeed…

    It was in 1740 when the Royal Navy first formalised a daily rum ration for sailors aboard Her Majesty’s ships – what would become fondly known as “the tot”.

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  • £36 trillion whale

    Capital & Conflict – brought to you by Fortune & Freedom Watch the live stream this Friday We’ll be streaming our latest episode of Southbank Live on Friday at 10am here on YouTube – my guest this week is our…

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  • Bismarck’s forgotten legacy

    CHEDDAR, SOMERSET – “Whales” in capital markets – those individuals, funds and other players with enormous investment positions – are dangerous beasts.

    They can move markets with their trades, and if you get in their way, they can crush your portfolio.

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  • “You’ve been framed! pinged!”

    While I’m sure Her Majesty’s fine crew at the “Doughnut” in Cheltenham can trace my movements with ease, there’s something uniquely dystopian about willingly installing government surveillance tech on to one’s own electronics for “the greater good”, so I never installed the Test & Trace app.

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  • The quiet(er) crash

    CHEDDAR, SOMERSET – Following our look at bitcoin last week, I thought I should show you this small roundtable recorded over at Fortune & Freedom on Friday – featuring Nigel Farage, Nickolai Hubble and our tech expert Sam Volkering.

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  • Dubble?

    As I said yesterday, from the amount of bearishness I’ve seen from market commentators in recent weeks, I’m feeling pretty bullish. But one must never fall prey to wishful thinking – and as I’m a BTC holder, I of course want the market to be strong.

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  • Was that the end of the crypto cycle?

    CHEDDAR, SOMERSET – Over the past few weeks I’ve seen several veterans of the crypto space utter a similar refrain. Something to the tune of “We had a good run folks – I’ll see you in four years’ time.”

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  • What’s with the squid?

    CHEDDAR, SOMERSET – What is it about the subject of finance that lends itself so much to squid metaphors?

    In 2010, Rolling Stone famously described Goldman Sachs as “a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money.”

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  • Smouldering statistics

    I hope you’ve been getting some decent weather, wherever you happen to be reading this. Sure is toasty out here – but as Nickolai Hubble will tell you, the temperature is rising even further in inflation statistics…

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  • Happy “Freedom Day”

    “Freedom In Name Only”, or FRINO, was the topic of our latest Fortune & Freedom podcast with Nickolai Hubble and Nigel Farage – while you’re celebrating our state-sanctioned “freedom”, I encourage you to give it a listen.

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  • Riot with a platinum lining

    PICCADILLY, MANCHESTER – Gold holds the crown as the metal which feeds on social unrest and distrust in authority. But I suspect it shall be its elder sister platinum which will soar if the chaos unfolding in South Africa persists…

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  • Grass Glass is always greener

    THE HOWFF, DUNDEE – Political agendas favouring renewable energy (such as the “Green New Deal” which we see touted in the States) are, like all political agendas, polarising issues. There was a time when investors could remain “above the fray”…

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  • Curse of the South Sea

    THE HOWFF, DUNDEE – There’s an old saying that “a rolling loan gathers no loss”. But the act of “rolling” debt – paying off old loans with freshly borrowed money – is neither cheap nor easy for most of us….

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  • Back in Basel

    THE GEORGE ORWELL, DUNDEE – In our first episode of Southbank Live, gold expert John Butler explained how the new banking rules known as Basel III could lead to deep structural changes in the gold market. You can watch it…

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  • A muddled historical medley

    GALLERY 48, DUNDEE – “History might be rhyming, but there are a lot of different songs being played at the same time” says Nickolai Hubble of the current investing environment. When looking forward into the 2020s, we wonder what market…

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  • Penny Fortune for the Guy?

    MARYFIELD, DUNDEE – A few months ago in The Ultimate Philanthrope a reader suggested that Satoshi Nakamoto, the mystery man behind the creation of bitcoin, might be a modern-day Thomas Guy. Guy, a bookseller in the 1700s, made a fortune…

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  • The suppressed memories of central bankers

    MARYFIELD, DUNDEE – Do you remember what happens after a housing bubble bursts? That’s what my good friend and colleague Nickolai Hubble would like to ask you in today’s letter – for it seems many have forgotten. But before we…

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  • To err is human…

    MARYFIELD, DUNDEE – A quick note before we begin today. I’ll be hosting an online event tomorrow with a very special guest. He’s an American CEO with quite the investment tale to tell, and if you’re interested in streamlining your…

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  • Tomorrow at 10am: Southbank Live Episode #2

    MARYFIELD, DUNDEE – Named “Fundee” by some, and “Scumdee” by others, the bonny city of Dundee has a polarising nature. I used to come here quite often when I was younger to visit friends who were studying at the universities…

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  • The bastards who make billions

    HOLBURN, ABERDEEN – Felix Rohatyn was quite a character. He possessed what he called a “refugee’s sense of value”, which he picked up while on the run from the Nazis. When France was invaded in 1940, his family fled from…

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  • The first episode of Southbank Live – what do you make of it?

    BROOMHILL, ABERDEEN – Back at the helm of Capital & Conflict once more – with something special to share as well. I hope you’ve been enjoying the market musings of Andrew Hutchings and Will Dahl in my absence – I’ve…

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  • An inconvenient debate

    NEW TOWN, EDINBURGH ­– My good friend and colleague Nickolai Hubble is no stranger to controversy. Truth be told, he likes to stir it quite a bit. This note he penned for Fortune & Freedom (click here to subscribe) is…

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  • Golden green

    NEW TOWN, EDINBURGH – Following the completion of our 2021 Gold Summit, we recorded a few bonus episodes for our Gold Stock Fortunes subscribers featuring an additional roster of gold experts. Nickolai Hubble spoiled his Fortune & Freedom readers (click…

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  • The Vomit of Midas and the TTTT

    THE BALMORAL, EDINBURGH – If you’d only been observing the revelry on the streets over the weekend (both day and night), you’d have thought Scotland had defeated England with extreme prejudice at the match on Friday. Still, a good result…

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  • Hey big spender

    NEW TOWN, EDINBURGH – I’d been putting it off for so long… Looked steadily more ridiculous as the months have gone by… And been called a “pirate” (amongst other things) as a result… But it was finally time to get…

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  • Forbidden energy

    “A lethal dose to anyone within ten yards. Get it while it’s hot!” – Edge of Darkness (1985) NEW TOWN, EDINBURGH – Do I count any nuclear bulls amongst the readership? Anyone stacking uranium rods at home, or stuffing them…

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  • Solar Summer

    NEW TOWN, EDINBURGH – Edinburgh, like so many cities, looks its best in the sun. When the rays hit it just right, the sandstone skyline shines like gold. And shine it has over the past few days – we’ve had…

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  • The greenies respond in kind…

    THE MEADOWS, EDINBURGH – My good friend and colleague Nickolai Hubble isn’t one for political correctness. As I like to say, he won’t screw a silencer on his speech. This might preclude him from various other professions and speaking opportunities,…

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  • The green gangrene

    THE MEADOWS, EDINBURGH – There’s been a bit of drama here at Southbank Investment Research of late. It’s about our Beyond Oil Summit which goes live on Wednesday (get access here if you haven’t signed up yet). The subject of…

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  • Third time’s the charm

    BROUGHTON, EDINBURGH – Our very first Beyond Oil Summit feels like a different epoch… but it was only last year. Our plans for the event, featuring first-class energy experts on the future of black gold, began at the very beginning…

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  • A drove of black gold bulls

    BROUGHTON, EDINBURGH – Well, the results are in from Monday’s poll… And I must say, I’m a little surprised: A lot of oil bulls out there – nearly three quarters of respondents. And there I was thinking I had a…

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  • Searching for the Seven

    BROUGHTON, EDINBURGH – They called them the Seven Sisters. Seven companies which ruled the world. It all began in August 1928, at a castle called Achnacarry. It’s in the Highlands, near Ben Nevis – about half an hour’s drive from…

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  • Beyond Black Gold

    STOCKBRIDGE, EDINBURGH – A short note from me this morning, I’m just off to interview a certain gold expert based in the microstate of Liechtenstein. This gold discussion will be the final instalment our 2021 Gold Summit – after the…

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  • Black gold’s fate

    “Oil kindles extraordinary emotions and hopes, since oil is above all a great temptation. It is the temptation of ease, wealth, strength, fortune, power. It is a filthy, foul-smelling liquid that squirts obligingly up into the air and falls back…

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  • The crypto that was promised… delivered Down Under

    BROUGHTON, EDINBURGH – I have some bad news, dear reader: the Aussies have us beat. I’m not talking about the cricket. I can accept the weaponised autism of Steve Smith being a challenge (especially when sandpaper is involved). But when…

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  • Good paper/bad paper

    NEW TOWN, EDINBURGH – What’s the best way of protecting yourself against inflation? Ask a group of investors, and you’ll get as many answers. Real estate, agriculture, woodland, gold, oil… many investors have a favourite “hard asset” up their sleeve…

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  • Bread for brains

    THE STANDING ORDER, EDINBURGH – It almost feels like things are getting back to normal here. Almost. The streets are thronging with folk. Not so many as pre-WuFlu, but it’s damn busy nonetheless. There are enough tourists on the Royal…

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  • Inflatuation, part III

    What follows is the third instalment of Nickolai Hubble’s Inflatuation series. In case you missed them, click here to read part I and part II. The real inflation hasn’t even started By Nickolai Hubble for Fortune & Freedom Welcome to…

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  • Inflatuation, part II

    What follows is the second instalment of Nickolai Hubble’s Inflatuation series. To read part I, click here. How inflation gets out of control By Nickolai Hubble for Fortune & Freedom Friday’s examination of inflation explained how I saw inflation coming…

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  • Inflatuation, part I

    NEW TOWN, EDINBURGH – Friday at last. A bank holiday weekend beckons… In the next few instalments of Capital & Conflict, I’d like to share a trilogy of works by my good friend and colleague Nickolai Hubble. Long-time readers know…

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  • The Ides of May

    NEW TOWN, EDINBURGH – “My candle burns at both ends; It will not last the night; But ah, my foes, and oh, my friends— It gives a lovely light!”  Edna St Vincent Millay Apparently that was Roald Dahl’s motto. I…

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  • Will gold get “pounded”?

    NEW TOWN, EDINBURGH – “Is this a big problem for us?” asks a reader. They point to a topic discussed during our recent Gold Summit: In your [Gold] Summit discussion with Eoin [Treacy], you predicted a substantial fall in the…

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  • What is the significance of the latest crypto washout? A grizzled veteran chimes in…

    NEW TOWN, EDINBURGH – Crypto crunch? It may as well be a breakfast cereal – for I’ve tasted it many a time. The carnage which has beset the crypto market over the past week has set the press screeching –…

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  • Brave or stupid?

    THE HANGING BAT, EDINBURGH – At long last, I’m back in my favourite pub. Edinburgh is pleasingly lively – not so beaten down by the lockdowns as I’d feared. It’s been a couple years since I’ve been back here, and…

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  • Packing “The Classics”

    ECCLESHALL, STAFFORDSHIRE – In yesterday’s note, a reader made the case against gold. Or more specifically, against investing in gold miners over the long term. While it may feel like inflation is here to stay, they argued, it will not…

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  • Inflation: passing fad, or lingering fancy?

    ECCLESHALL, STAFFORDSHIRE – On Monday I asked you if I’d made a grave error in dumping my company pension pot into the gold mining sector. If you’ve been reading this letter for even a short time, you’ll know I’m very…

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  • A folly of fortune

    ECCLESHALL, STAFFORDSHIRE – “Boaz, I don’t believe you, you’re not that stupid, it’s bullsh*t.” Would you mind telling me how you really feel, please? I must say, I’ve had a great time reading the responses to Monday’s note (see: Have…

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  • The false scent of Musk

    ECCLESHALL, STAFFORDSHIRE – Remember when I said earlier in the year that – contrary to popular belief – it was inflation that was the big risk to the bitcoin rally? (See: The big risk to ₿itcoin – 8 January) Well,…

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  • Have I made a grave error?

    ECCLESHALL, STAFFORDSHIRE – Back in Staffs – right on time for the pubs to start letting people inside again. I’ll see you at the pub later. In light of our 2021 Gold Summit, I think it’ll have to be a…

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  • The inflation question

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – How much inflation can you tolerate? What percentage of your savings are you willing to watch burn every year, “for the good of the economy?” 0%? 1%? 5%? Perhaps I shouldn’t be asking. After all, that…

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  • The bullion banknote

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – Think you’d ever spend some of these? They’re called “Goldbacks”. That’s 24 carat gold, rolled thin as paper, and then insulated with even thinner layers of plastic. That’s the highest denomination Goldback there is: the 50….

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  • Golden Soda

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – Right on cue as our 2021 Gold Summit heats up (don’t miss today’s Keynote Address), Charlie Morris over at The Fleet Street Letter Wealth Builder has recently turned even more bullish on the metal. He already…

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  • Blast from the past

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – The Statue of Liberty was arriving in New York Harbor… Mark Twain was publishing Adventures of Huckleberry Finn… Gilbert & Sullivan’s The Mikado was having its opening premiere at the Savoy in London… The first official…

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  • The cursed gold that doomed an empire

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – How much gold is too much? This is probably the wrong question to be asking in the current climate. If anything, your average investor should be asking themselves, how much gold is too little? I don’t…

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  • Got gold?

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – “Get gold,” urged Spanish King Ferdinand II of his ambitious explorers in 1511, “humanely if possible, but at all hazards – get gold.” They took the “getting gold” bit to heart. As for “humanely”, well… that…

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  • A Scottish Sterling Referendum

    Before we get on with today’s letter, a quick heads up – if you haven’t signed up yet to our 2021 Gold Summit, you should do so here. I’ve been working on it for several months now in preparation for…

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  • This white metal is booming – but which one?

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – Can you guess what asset I’ve charted here? I’ll give you a clue – it’s a commodity. A hard, shiny one. It’s not gold, which we’ll come to in a minute. It’s one of gold’s siblings….

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  • Golden times are here once again…

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – Two years ago, we took a step into the unknown as a business with the launch of our 2019 Gold Summit. We hadn’t tried the format before, and we were unsure if it would be to…

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  • Fiat ²

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – If you own gold, it’s quite likely that you expect the banknotes in your wallet or purse to lose their value in the years to come. That’s certainly one of the reasons I own it –…

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  • The ultimate philanthrope

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – A dear reader writes in to complain… we’re stuck in a rut he says, and we need out: All of you at Southbank are going on & on about just one thing … Bitcoin, yet not…

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  • On the “real” price of a real asset

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – “Perhaps gold is cheap, just as it was in 1970 and 2000. I believe that this is the case.” … and so do I. That was Charlie Morris there in a recent update of The Fleet…

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  • Hiding in the money tree

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – “We haven’t seen anything like this in the last five to ten years,” an American bullion dealer tells me over the phone. “But we’re still not seeing anywhere near the level of interest there was in…

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  • Golden cannibals

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – In yesterday’s note we took a look at how the hoards of gold held by ETFs (exchange-traded funds) have been steadily draining for the past several months. This is – intriguingly – in stark contrast to…

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  • What does silver know that gold doesn’t?

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – You exit your tent on the sound of war trumpets. The encampment is awash with panic. The enemy have been spotted advancing over the horizon – and they’re swarming towards your position. As commander of the…

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  • Who do you think is the real Satoshi?

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – “Is this a nightmare?” asks a dear reader… I’ve received some wild responses to my recent letters. Some read like a fever dream: Bitcoin is (in my opinion) an Illusion, caused by drinking too much alcohol…

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  • Final encore

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – We have now entered the final phase of the most important market cycle there is, writes our colleague Akhil Patel. The land cycle has crossed its final hurdle, passed its last stopping post (the “mid-cycle slowdown”),…

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  • The real reason we don’t hear from Satoshi any more…

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – I’ve finally figured it out. After years of struggle… endless debates, fights, and bickering… from rootless speculation to ludicrous allegation, in a seemingly bottomless pit of conjecture… I know who Satoshi Nakamoto is. The pseudonymous creator…

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  • The Orange ₿anknote

    WINDERMERE, LAKE DISTRICT – I gave this away as a gift recently. It’s a remarkable little piece of kit. No ordinary USB stick, this orange flash drive is a miniature treasure chest – with virtually no limit on capacity. You…

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  • Who the hell is Hugo Stinnes?

    SOUTHWARK, LONDON – It’ll be a short note from me today. I’m adding the final touches to a project I’ve been working on behind the scenes for a while. I’ll be able to show you what’s been going on later…

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  • Dou₿le Trou₿le II

    SOUTHWARK, LONDON – Last Friday in Dou₿le Trou₿le I showed you a note from my colleague Charlie Morris, where he illustrated just how extraordinary the phenomenon of bitcoin continually doubling in value is. He’d written that note at the beginning…

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  • Season of our alt-contentment

    SOUTHWARK, LONDON – The doors to a speculator’s paradise have been thrown wide open. Rolling golden fields stretch into the distance. And those that dare explore this land seeking riches, risk ruin in equal measure… Yes, dear reader: it’s alt-season….

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  • “The Big Suck” continues…

    SOUTHWARK, LONDON – There’s a chart I’d like to show you today. Just one. It’s the reason I don’t feel I can be bearish about bitcoin right now, despite all the hype… But first, some context. Remember The Big Suck…

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  • To the dreamer, the spoils

    SOUTHWARK, LONDON – We took a closer look at the uncanny ability of bitcoin to double in value last week (Dou₿le Trou₿le – 9 April 2021). We’re only a whisker away now from seeing a 20th “doubling” for bitcoin now…

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  • Gold’s forgotten bear market

    God damn them all, I was told we’d cruise the seas for American gold, We’d fire no guns, Shed no tears… Now I’m a broken man on a Halifax pier, The last of Barrett’s Privateers… –  Barrett’s Privateers (unofficial anthem…

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  • Dou₿le Trou₿le

    SOUTHWARK, LONDON – How many times do you reckon the price of bitcoin has doubled over the years? Bear in mind, bitcoin only began being traded for currency (and not for favours like pizza deliveries) in 2010. And where exactly…

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  • Superpower(ed) debt only lasts so long…

    SOUTHWARK, LONDON – I told you you’d need to act fast… That entire batch of ₿lockhead amber ale sold out in 12 hours. My hopes that there might be some extra left for me to buy in a fortnight have…

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  • The crypto conundrum

    SOUTHWARK, LONDON – This can’t be normal, surely. Surely. Is it really time to buy bitcoin when there are adverts telling you to buy it on the London Underground? Conventional investing wisdom would suggest the opposite. Ads for speculative investment…

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  • At long last… it is here

    Available now – while stocks last! SOUTHWARK, LONDON – Well, here I am, back in the capital, for a little while at least. How long I’ll stay, I’m not sure just yet. I’m in town to do some work on…

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  • Save the $ROOs

    SOMEWHERE ON THE ABERDEEN-LONDON LINE – I hope you had a good Easter. With the Ides of March now over and the re-opening now imminent (hopefully), we wonder what delights await investors in the second quarter of 2021. A couple…

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  • Miss Moneypenny Madame Moneyprinter

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Which of the major central bankers would come out on top in a bar brawl is a heavily under-discussed topic amongst investors. The top contender – by my humble estimation at least – used to be burly…

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  • Market, market, on the wall… who is the smartest of them all?

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Who would you trust more? A bond investor telling you they feel something is off… or a stock investor telling you everything is hunky-dory? You’ll often hear it said that “bond guys are smarter that stock guys”…

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  • Coming soon…

    Available 6 April at Cheddar Ales ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – One of the primary perks of being editor of this letter is being able to engage with the readership. As you can probably tell if you read Capital & Conflict often,…

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  • Trend of the century?

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – The Suez Canal traffic jam is easing. The Ever Given is free at last, and not only of its recently earned nickname the “Never Given Way”… In recent issues of this letter (Beached in particular) we’ve pondered…

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  • Warren Buffett’s Dominion

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – The energy sector has been a hotbed of market unrest over the past year: a constantly evolving, volatile warzone enriching and ruining investors in equal measure. Last April negative oil prices busted on to the scene for…

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  • Hard right, hot coffee, scarce cycles

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – The beached whale ain’t budging. The Ever Given remains stubbornly lodged in the middle of the Suez Canal. And the traffic jam is now close to some 240 vessels long… And that’s just in the jam itself….

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  • Bringing oil to the boil

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – We examined the spectacle of the Ever Given yesterday, the 200,000 tonne container vessel blocking the Suez Canal. As of this morning, it remains wedged in place, creating a traffic jam in global trade 150 vessels long…

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  • Beached

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – “If your travel today involves the Suez Canal, there will be a slight detour around Africa…” Source: Twitter Talk about a spot of bad parking. As of this morning, the 200,000 tonne Ever Given (which some believe…

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  • Fiat nihil!

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – I’m afraid it’ll be another short note from me today – I’ve been called away to conduct an interview with a certain globe-trotting market expert as part of a broader event we’re planning for you. This video…

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  • An unlikely legacy

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – A short note from me today -there’s a project I’m working on behind the scenes that demands much of my attention. We’re keeping it under wraps at the moment, but I’m looking forward to sharing it with…

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  • Kryptonite Cryptonite

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Let’s have a little rummage through the postbox as we end for the week… I received many responses to Red Collapso last week. As bitcoin rises in value, the question of how governments will respond to it…

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  • The hidden hunger

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – During the period running from Sunday to Tuesday, over a billion dollars were lost in an event which keeps recurring. It’s almost like clockwork. That’s the third time this year this has happened by my count, and…

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  • The silver sovereign

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Happy St Patrick’s day! While I’d love to join you with a Guinness (Lord knows I’ve drank enough of them in recent days), I’m afraid I’ll be staying dry tonight. My beer fast for Lent has finally…

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  • Hot crop: what is driving the boom in these commodities?

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – The inflation key is in the lock. It will be turned once the world economy fully reopens. And when that happens, Western investors will be caught unawares by the destructive nature of that force which they haven’t…

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  • Black gold²

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – I told you about my bullish view on oil last week – I think we’re due $100 a barrel this year. Further to that note, there’s a snippet of research from Charlie Morris over at The Fleet…

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  • My goodness, my Guinness gold!

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – As the week draws to a close, I thought we should finish it off with a chart. And not just any old chart either – this has recently become my favourite chart of the gold price. I…

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  • Red Collapso

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – “My Son-in-law has just bought ‘A Dummies guide to Bitcoin’” writes a reader. “I didn’t say anything, but headed towards the drinks cabinet for a large glass of ‘Red Collapso’”… Bitcoin ain’t for everyone, that’s for sure….

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  • Buy on the sound of cannons drone strikes

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – I took a wander downtown the other evening. I needed some fresh air, and I was curious to see how the high street is looking like these days. We’re all pretty used to the sight of desolate…

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  • An untold fortune at the final frontier

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – You won’t come across something like this every day. Of that, I’m almost certain. Here at Southbank Investment Research, the editorial team like to do a lot of reading – especially on fringe financial subjects which may…

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  • BTC on the precipice, Welsh gold on offer, and the beer-only diet

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Last week, I asked you if you think the bitcoin price has peaked, or if the bull market still has more juice in the tank (Power Games – 4 March). Is it all downhill from here, or…

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  • The sword in the stone… soon to be drawn?

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – I feel like I’ve opened a Pandora’s box. When I asked the readership for a suitable collective noun for gold sovereigns, I didn’t expect such a sustained response. Even after Tuesday’s note where I settled on “splendour”,…

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  • Power games

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – I’m keenly aware that I’ve been bumbling on about bitcoin very frequently in this letter, monopolising our conversation and without giving you a moment to speak on the subject. I want to know your views. Even if…

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  • Satoshi’s last move

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Bitcoin finds itself at a critical juncture. To my eyes, it can only go one of two ways – we’re on the cusp of either a parabolic blow-off top, or a bear market back to the likes…

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  • Fill in the blank: a _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ of sovereigns

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – So what is the collective noun for gold sovereigns? What word should we use to describe a collection of Britain’s benchmark gold coin? I wondered this aloud in Friday’s note where we took a look at the…

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  • Viva Americana

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – It’s somewhat fitting that as we approach “The Ides of March”, a deadline in the Roman calendar for the repayment of debts, that debt is beginning to matter for markets. A little while ago in Rumblings of…

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  • Evaporating aurum

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – It’s coming up to a year now since the WuFlu “metal famine”, when it became nearly impossible to obtain gold or silver from bullion dealers. Remarkably, the situation today feels very similar… Last March, the supply chain…

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  • The Sovereign and the Satoshi

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – It’s going to be a long Lent this year. To make lockdown more interesting, I decided to give up food. I’ve long been enthralled by the story of Bavarian monks in the 1600s who stopped eating during…

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  • Celebrating bitcoin at $50k with a special edition “cryptocast”

    In light of bitcoin passing the incredible milestone of $50k per BTC, it’s time to rally the troops and reassess our position. Where do we go from here? Is this the top of the latest crypto-boom, or are we only…

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  • Rumblings of a rout?

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Another old schoolmate contacted me out of the blue the other day to ask me if he should buy bitcoin. And now even Peter Schiff, notorious for his hatred of bitcoin, is talking about $100k BTC prices:…

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  • Canary in the commodity mine

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Any ideas what this is? It’s a pretty straightforward chart, that’s for sure: I know plenty amongst the Capital & Conflict readership like their metals, so I suspect that chart may be familiar to some of you….

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  • The supermodel trade

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – A month ago, I told you how a buddy of mine was getting into bitcoin, and how I feared this might be a classic sign of a market top (What should Nixon have done in 1971? –…

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  • Rock of ages

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – The year was 1862. Lewis Carroll was writing Alice in Wonderland in Oxford… America was alight, burning with a Civil War… … and the French were getting close to pasteurising milk. The Oil Age was in its…

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  • No man’s rally

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Well I must say, the timing of my note on Monday (Party at the frontier) wasn’t the best. My prediction that we were about to experience an alt-season, where bitcoin will take a step back and other…

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  • Crack-up ₿oom?

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – I’ve something a bit different for you today. Following yesterday’s note where I speculated we’re on the cusp of another grand “alt-season” in the cryptocurrency space, I thought I’d share a snippet from our latest issue of…

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  • Party at the frontier

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – We’ve had a fair bit of snowfall over the last few days. It’s nothing extreme – it’s not piling up high on the pavement – but it is damn chilly, and enough to remind everybody that we…

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  • Cat on a keyboard, or billion-dollar cheque?

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – “If I told you, I’d have to kill you,” he said gravely, wine glass in hand. It was the summer of 2017. I was in the Royal Automobile Club on Pall Mall, where Charlie Morris had just…

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  • ₤OCK/K€Y

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – I was given a set of lockpicks for my birthday a few years ago. I’d always wanted a set when I was a kid after reading one too many adventure novels, and a relative of mine thought…

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  • Robinwho?

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Who is it that’s been pushing the price of silver around over the past week? They’re hooded for sure… but is it really Robin, the Prince of Thieves? Or does another, more mysterious individual stand under the…

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  • Preparing for overdrive

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – In yesterday’s note, I published a few responses I’ve received from the readership on the curious case of Tesla. Broadly speaking, most of the letters I received took a negative view on the company – or at…

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  • When the illusion fails to fool

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Is it just me, or was that an incredibly long January? Hogmanay feels forever ago (though I’m sure it feels even longer than that for those who braved Dry January). A month can be an awfully long…

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  • The Plunger’s Inquisition

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – They’re calling it “The Capital Riot”. Over the pond, millennial militias are on the prowl. It’s patriotism run amok. They’re hunting down, brutalising and bankrupting all those suspected of committing the most anti-American activity of them all……

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  • Wile E. Musk

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – A reader writes in: I read your posts and you are often on the mark – thank you! I wonder if you have written about Tesla. To me this appears to be the greatest bubble of them…

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  • The Abominable 20

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – “One of the greatest risks in investing is crowding. Where there is hype, there is danger. That’s not just for bitcoin, but true for financial markets. Turn that idea on its head, and the contrarian starts hunting…

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  • “The Big Suck”

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – I’ve a chart I’d like to show you today. Just one this time – and it’s a corker. But before we get to it, I’d like to provide a little context. In today’s letter I’d like to…

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  • Storm in a teacup tailpipe

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Anybody bought a new car recently? I don’t know anybody who’s used the lockdowns as an auto-shopping opportunity, but there’s gotta be some out there… I was struck by a statistic published recently that car sales fell…

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  • Romans 13 (trillion)

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Earlier this week, somebody decided to inscribe the bitcoin blockchain with a bible verse. “Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good – Romans 12:21” is embedded within a transaction on block 666,666, presumably…

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  • Lenin’s bayonet

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – “I make the biggest efforts possible to not support the Chinese economy in any way. Supporting the economy is supporting the CCP. It’s crazy more people in the world are not standing up against this.” So says…

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  • $pilt ₿lood

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – “Could this possibly be true?” a reader asks. It’s quite a question. They’re effectively asking if the price of one bitcoin could rise to $4.38 million. I must say, that is quite the price forecast. Bitcoin gets…

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  • Guns for lefties

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – 13 rounds in the magazine, plus one in the chamber. You could fire this thing 14 times without needing to reload. Only problem is, there’s a shortage of bullets due to a sudden surge in demand… A…

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  • Out of the pit

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Ever since last March, I’ve grown increasingly bullish on a certain investment. Now to be clear, I have adored this asset for a long time – you might call me something of a collector. But I believe…

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  • Fed Chair Thunberg

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Is our interest in shiny bits of metal and magical internet money leaving our flank open to a major currency move? This reader thinks we might be blindsided: … everyone is predicting the Fed to carry on…

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  • What should Nixon have done in 1971?

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – One of my personal contrarian indicators has begun to flash a warning… but can it be trusted? If you’ve been reading my scribblings for a while, you may well know the story about an old schoolfriend of…

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  • Where oh where is Rupert Bear Jack Ma?

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Finally, a nice strong pullback in the bitcoin price. Thousand-dollar increases in price every day are great fun, but unsustainable – this weekend’s drop down to $34k is cause for relief. I mentioned last week how the…

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  • Performance so strong it breaks the chart – and the hidden risk facing it

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – “Here we go!! – insanity” read a message from a colleague out in the States yesterday. Attached was a screenshot of the bitcoin price, which had just hit the striking figure of $39,999.99. To think that less…

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  • Going ballistic ₿allooning

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Thirty-seven thousand dollars per bitcoin? Twenty-seven thousand pounds apiece? Why not. Why not? Watching bitcoin is like watching an art auction these days. The price just keeps going up, interrupted only by nervous pauses… and an ever-growing…

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  • The Night Trade

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – So why is it that the bitcoin price only seems to go up at night? Why does it only rise between 10pm and 8am, like some kind of vampire? As we illustrated in yesterday’s note, the overwhelming…

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  • Dark horse in limelight

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Is bitcoin becoming a household name once again? While the subject of bitcoin will be familiar to both initiates and veterans of Capital & Conflict, something I noted frequently in this letter, both in 2019 and 2020,…

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  • Apollo 18

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – So here we are, at the dawn of 2021 AD. I hope you had a good Hogmanay – nothing too eventful for me this year due to lockdown restrictions, but I enjoyed it nonetheless. If you’re doing…

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  • Happy Hogmanay!

    I hope you’ve been enjoying some of our festive content while our office is shut for the holidays. Rest assured, normal service shall resume in January – but for today, I’d just like to wish you a very happy Hogmanay….

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  • ‘Tis the season

    I hope this email finds you enjoying the festivities in good health. I won’t distract you long ­– just a quick note from me to wish you a very Merry Christmas. This year has been eventful to say the least,…

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  • The Irish Escapist seeking rogue real estate

    I was lucky to escape the second “official” lockdown with my little escapade to Stockholm. But I’m not sure how long I’ll be staying in the UK, so long as the lockdowns persist. I’ve a mind to seek my fortune…

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  • “Meanwhile, back at the ranch…”

    Something a little different in today’s note. Today’s Capital & Conflict is a postcard of sorts, from our company’s founding father – Bill Bonner – living out on his ranch in Argentina. Many of you will be familiar with Bill’s…

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  • The Ides of March

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – “If you thought 2020 was bad, wait until it turns 21 and starts drinking” – some American Christmas ain’t far… Hogmanay ain’t far… as we reach the end of the week, it’s becoming suddenly very apparent that…

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  • ₿LACK OP$

    ABERDEED, SCOTLAND – Eighteen… Nineteen… Twenty… Twenty-one. Maybe even twenty-two? Hell, I’m hearing twenty-three from some places… But we’ll come back to that in a second. The Black Operation making a mint in lockdown “THE NUMBERS, MASON. WHAT DO THEY…

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  • Hushed up: the forgotten winters of ‘99 and ‘00

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Well there goes the Quantitative Ease Double IPA! I told you you’d need to act fast yesterday – by the evening it was all sold out. To those who managed to snatch a few bottles, I hope…

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  • The mysterious wonder of the market world

    ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – The small microphone that loops around his ear is hovering before his mouth like a fluffy ball of cotton. With a nod from the video crew, he takes to the stage. “Hello everyone. Thank you for all…

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  • Brewed to perfection

    Available Now! ABERDEEN, SCOTLAND – Home once more. Following an uneventful return trip from Sweden, I’m back at the helm of Capital & Conflict. I hope Nathan Tipping and Will Dahl have been keeping you entertained in my absence –…

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  • Winter reflections

    SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – As I went for a walk yesterday evening, I heard warm notes of music drift through the chilly air. I wandered towards the cheery sound, and discovered a brass band had gathered to play outside the supermarket…

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  • London vs Shanghai: golden struggle

    SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – A short note from me today, I’m just about to go live with our quarterly conference call for subscribers to The Price Report with Tim Price. Tim has always been an outspoken character – but I’ve never…

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  • Sixty beers for ₿0.01147188

    SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – Happy hump day! A quick note before we begin: further to yesterday’s note, I want to know what your predictions are for 2021 – investment related, but not necessarily stock specific. Let me know here, and I’ll…

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  • Groundhog year

    SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – As 2020 winds to a close, it’s beginning to give me déjà vu. Everything has begun to feel 2017 all over again. Remember that year? Back when “Article 50” was plastered all over the press instead of…

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  • Approaching the iceberg

    HALF WAY INN, STOCKHOLM – Almost December, huh? This year has flown by faster for me than any other I can remember. Perhaps it’s a good thing that 2020 is “getting itself over with” so we can crack on with…

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  • A golden ratio

    SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – Of all the gold coins I’ve got, this one’s my favourite: Source: BullionStar Of all the designs the Royal Mint has stamped on gold and silver Britannias, it’s yet to surpass this one from 2003 in my…

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  • Permanent moral mental market incapacity

    SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – As the week draws to a close, it’s time for some light relief. We’ve written often about the strange happenings taking place in the bond market in recent years – like countries being paid to borrow money,…

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  • Free weddings and a funeral

    SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – The last time the Nikkei was this high, I hadn’t been born yet. Source: Fuller Treacy Money We’re a way off that ‘89 all-time high… but if the market has taught us anything this year, it’s that…

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  • Big ₿ang

    THE ARDBEG EMBASSY, STOCKHOLM – Turns out the Swedes aren’t half bad at distilling whisky. What they are bad at is charging an affordable price for it. Though perhaps I shouldn’t blame the Swedes. This establishment is after all owned…

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  • Wildcat bank meets Grey Rhino risk

    ESPRESSO HOUSE, STOCKHOLM – A new week beckons: let’s start it off with the results… Looks like most of you think bitcoin does have at least some value – though there’s a significant minority who think it doesn’t. Fascinatingly, the…

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  • Golden mountain peaks

    SOUTHSIDE PUB, STOCKHOLM – Ahoy from a faraway watering hole. They serve Guinness here and there’s a vending machine for Camel cigarettes, so it’s about as close to paradise as a man can get. It’s sleeting outside but nice and…

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  • Qui bono?

    SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – It’s all so damned… banal. Source: The Telegraph Our monetary oracle has spoken. Behold his wisdom. From The Telegraph: A widely used digital currency could pave the way for negative interest rates by making it harder to…

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  • The secret love of the “silent billionaires”

    SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – I told you this’d be coming yesterday… I’ve been banging on about bitcoin for a fair while now, but I want to know your thoughts on the matter. I was wondering how specific I should be with…

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  • Gold – the original fintech

    SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – Following on from yesterday’s rather alarming chart, I thought I’d continue today with another one, this time courtesy of Charlie Morris over at The Fleet Street Letter Wealth Builder. Source: Bloomberg What you’re looking at there is…

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  • “This market is quiet… too quiet”

    SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – Let’s start the week off with an alarming chart to get the juices flowing, shall we? This one certainly makes me nervous: Source: Google Trends That’s global Google search popularity for a certain word (indexed, so most…

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  • A grey rhino in the bank of the realm

    SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – There’s not even a flicker of hesitation in their eyes. Unflinching, unconscious of the awkward guarded manoeuvres now practiced in blighty… the Swedes squeeze past you on a supermarket shopping aisle. It’s strange how something that was…

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  • Deep water, buried treasure

    SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – Could this be a punter’s paradise? Goldman Sachs thinks we’re in one. Its list of stocks loved by the everyman is up nearly 70% since May, which would suggest that the “little guy” is having a big…

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  • A thoroughly vaccinated market

    SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – “So Pfizer waits until two days after a disputed election is “called” for Biden and six days after the election itself to release details [of a vaccine] they’ve probably had for weeks? Well, nothing to see here…”…

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  • Ab chao magna: a modern Drake’s fortune

    SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – “Greatness from small beginnings” – or more literally – “Great things, from small things” was the motto of Sir Francis Drake. Emblazoned on the coat of arms he was granted by Elizabeth I, sic parvis magna was…

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  • The Big Poll II

    SODERMALM, STOCKHOLM – Not a mask in sight. The pubs and restaurants are busy – often full. But the teetotaller lobby in government has a monopoly on the sale of all booze above 3.5% ABV, and taxes it to high…

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  • Penny for the Guy?

    TERMINAL 1, MANCHESTER AIRPORT – Remember, remember, the fifth of November… or don’t. Her Majesty’s government certainly seems to be having trouble with it. It’s ironic that tomorrow’s lockdown across England kicks off on Guy Fawkes Day. Especially now that…

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  • The night is always darkest before The Donald

    ECCLESHALL, STAFFORDSHIRE – Prior to his presidency, way back in 2015, Donald Trump tweeted – amongst many other things – that it is “often to your advantage to be underestimated”. (Not “misunderestimated” of course – you’d have to ask George…

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  • Pubbed to death

    THE ROYAL OAK, STAFFORDSHIRE – “A Tory MP, a Labour MP and an SNP MP go into a pub. And shut it down.” – Tim Price Once more into the pubs dear friends, once more. They need the business, the…

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  • “A Good Man” for president

    ECCLESHALL, STAFFORDSHIRE – “Donald Trump has desecrated the values that make America a beacon to the world. Joe Biden is a good man who would restore steadiness and civility to the White House. If The Economist had a vote, it…

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  • The coin that cursed a bull market

    THE KINGS ARMS, STAFFORDSHIRE – Got a new paperweight in the mail the other day. Makes for a decent coaster, too. In theory, I could deposit this giant coin at a bank, and see a mighty +£10 be credited to…

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  • Party like it’s 1826

    ECCLESHALL, STAFFORDSHIRE – A nice chart to start us off with today. While it’s no surprise where investors have placed their money in the stockmarket this year, the sheer degree to which they have shunned everything except tech stocks is…

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  • The full faith and credit of PayPal

    THE ROYAL OAK, STAFFORDSHIRE – “In the 1970s, it was gold. In the 2020s, it’s going to be bitcoin.” It’s not often that Charlie Morris pushes the boat out with a big claim. Indeed, it’s his ability to deftly hedge…

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  • A crucible of human effort in the palm of your hand

    Some of you may remember today’s letter, which I first wrote back in April. I’m re-publishing it today as I’m currently working on a related little side project which needs a bit more polish. While April feels like an awfully…

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  • The return of inflation, part II

    We continue with the second half of our short report on the return of inflation. If you haven’t read part I yet, you can find it on the website here. Tomorrow, you’ll be hearing from a new member of the…

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  • The return of inflation, part I

    I’ll be away from Capital & Conflict for the next few of days – I’m currently working on an exciting side project behind the scenes that needs a bit more polish before I can share it with you. I’ll be…

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  • Good cop, bad cop good cop

    THE ARTISAN, STAFFORDSHIRE – “Children have one kind of silliness, as you know, and grown-ups have another kind” – C.S. Lewis May I present, dear reader, the other kind: Italian government borrowing costs back below zero, and heading lower In…

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  • A fifthful of dollars

    THE ARTISAN, STAFFORDSHIRE – Almost a fifth of all the US dollars in existence were created this year. Quite an achievement, that. Considering the world’s dependency on greenbacks to do business – using pictures of Benjamin Franklin to do all…

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  • Through the wardrobe, and into the endless white winter

    THE NAVIGATION INN, STAFFORDSHIRE – “No interest? No problem!” So cry investors as the Italian government beats them bloody with a brand new stick: the zero-coupon bond. While it’s the first time the Italian government has been able to get…

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  • A Greek Odyssey

    THE OLD SMITHY, STAFFORDSHIRE – “Stuff it under your mattress and you’ll make more interest” bellows a voice from across the pub. The suggestion is addressed to a gentleman seated on the opposite side of the room who’s been trying…

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  • “Greenbacks from Greenpeace” and the investments of Icarus

    THE ROYAL OAK, STAFFORDSHIRE – “Sunshine, on my shoulders, makes me happy…” I doubt John Denver would be very chuffed were he living in the UK these days (or ever), given our weather. But the great musician’s music is likely…

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  • Trillions

    THE HYDRO, DERBYSHIRE – Well the cat’s out of the bag now… If you haven’t seen yesterday’s announcement yet, I suggest you do so now.  That marks one of the largest events in the history of this company – certainly…

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  • The European Paradox

    REDWILLOW BREWERY, DERBYSHIRE – “The value of money has been destroyed by around 98% since I’ve been living there” a colleague tells me over video chat. “Inflation has been kicking around 50% for the past five or six years. Which…

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  • Late night drinking borrowing with the IMF

    53 DEGREES NORTH, DERBYSHIRE – “I should tell you to leave Sir. But tonight, I’d like you to keep on drinking.” Sadly, this is not something I’ve been told by any barmen on my ongoing voyage through English pubs. It…

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  • The city that never sleeps is now asleep

    BUXTON BREWERY CELLAR, DERBYSHIRE – Is this chart a fifth full, or a fifth empty? Look there, on the bottom right – is this cause for optimism, or pessimism? Source: The Market Ear The city that never sleeps is looking…

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  • The Bursting Banks of Britain

    THE PALACE HOTEL, DERBYSHIRE – “Don’t ever remember three straight days of torrential rain – the canal is an inch from bursting its banks.” I like a bit of rain (you learn to in Aberdeen), so I’ve been quite enjoying…

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  • Tsunami in a spyglass

    THE KINGS ARMS, STAFFORDSHIRE – “Whenever I tweet, some call it a tirade. Totally dishonest!” – Donald Trump, 11 November 2012 (punctuation adjusted) To some, it is a tirade. To others it is a lullaby, a constant reassurance that a…

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  • Jump over the moon to me

    THE ROYAL OAK, STAFFORDSHIRE – Let’s start October and the sunset of the year with something optimistic, shall we? I have good news. Nay, that’s too mild – I have reason to rejoice, true cause for celebration… You see, I’ve…

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  • Lake-bombing and Twitter-spamming

    THE STAR, STAFFORDSHIRE – “It’s always fun throwing bombs into lakes.” Tim Price is a friend to furore. He made that quip after we finished a conference call for his readers at The Price Report yesterday, and I was commending…

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  • “Sweden was right”?

    THE OLD SMITHY, STAFFORDSHIRE – I can’t promise that you’ll agree with everything you’re about to read. Especially if yesterday’s poll is to be trusted. But we wouldn’t be doing our job if we weren’t challenging your views on investing,…

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  • The Big Poll: a readership divided

    THE RUTLAND ARMS, DERBYSHIRE – “I feel like Adam” reads a message from a friend. “I live in the garden of Eden, but I cannot partake of the fruits…” The fella in question is a university student in Edinburgh –…

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  • Coronavirus.exe

    THE OLD SMITHY, STAFFORDSHIRE – “Something very important, and indeed society changing, may come out of the Ebola epidemic that will be a very good thing: NO SHAKING HANDS!” – Donald Trump, 4 October 2014 He was ahead of his…

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  • Witching Hour

    THE ROYAL OAK, STAFFORDSHIRE – “The country is already a powder keg, and now we’ve lost Christmas.” As Danger Zone by Kenny Loggins plays over the pub speakers, Tim Price’s grim email hits all the harder. It’s not a sunny…

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  • Last orders?

    THE JUNCTION INN, STAFFORDSHIRE – Once more into the pub dear friends, once more! While we still can… I’m glad I’m not in London at the moment as the new anti-WuFlu measures come into force. Or Scotland for that matter,…

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  • We’re seven years below the waterline

    THE ECCLIAN, STAFFORDSHIRE – A hot air balloon hangs above the horizon like a dreamcatcher for the county. And the last squeezes of sunshine the season has to offer linger warm in the air. It’s a fine day indeed. And…

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  • Honeytrapped: China’s “beautiful person plan investment plan”

    THE OLD SMITHY, STAFFORDSHIRE – “[MI6] told me about honey-traps and warned me that the Chinese secret service often use women to entice men to bed to get information. I didn’t think for one minute that I would fall for…

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  • The Bird Cage of Moscow

    THE BELL, STAFFORDSHIRE – “It all sounds a bit like the man who jumped off the top of a skyscraper and said as he passed each floor on the way down ~ ‘So far, so good’…” A reader responds to…

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  • Flying to nowhere

    THE ROYAL OAK, STAFFORDSHIRE – “Are they going to the Bermuda Triangle?” “Bitchcraft”, a (presumably) pseudonymous Twitter user in Brazil, asks a fair question. With a chart like this, you have to wonder exactly where Singapore Airlines is flying people…

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  • Games of empire

    THE KINGS ARMS, STAFFORDSHIRE – “It’s like he’s consistently lucky. Which means there’s something we’re not getting…” So remarked our energy analyst Kit Winder to me the other day (via text). He was describing the performance of Sam Curran, a…

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  • The elephant in the living room

    Well dear reader, The results are in. … and it ain’t looking good for Joe Biden: Thank you for all who voted in our election poll – the more of these polls we do, the more of you seem to…

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  • An investor’s six-letter fever dream: NASDAQ

    Just look at this thing: Tripling since the lows of 2016, the mighty Nasdaq index stands tall. The WuFlu has not been a hinderance; quite the opposite. It’s acted as an accelerant, like some kind of performance-enhancing drug. A steroid…

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  • Chaos is the new cool

    Happy hump day, dear reader. I told you yesterday this poll was coming… Who do you reckon will win the US election? I want to know what the Capital & Conflict readership thinks. I’m not asking who will win the…

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  • The greatest market rally of all time

    September already, huh? What a year this is turning out to be. We’re going through the months like a pack of Chewits. It’ll only be a few weeks until autumn officially begins and this strange summer will be forever in…

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  • I couldn’t let this stay behind a paywall

    I often come across pieces of editorial written by my colleagues that are so good that I feel compelled to share them only to remember that I cannot, for it wouldn’t be fair on their paying subscribers. I make exceptions…

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  • The quaint club of countries destroying their citizens savings

    To start us off, here’s some light relief to brighten your day: Source: Twitter There’s a lot to unpack in there; we could go down several different routes on the subject of negative interest rates and the European Central Bank’s…

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  • I ignored this indicator once, and lost thousands. Should I ignore it again?

    I have some bad news. That’s if you like gold, at least. If you hate gold, this is probably great news; a ray of sunshine to brighten your day. And if you’re neutral about gold, perhaps this’ll just add some…

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  • The Capital & Conflict reader cocktail recipe is revealed

    Gold, silver, or bitcoin… if you had to hold only one of these assets for the next decade, which one would you choose? That’s what I asked you last week. The results have since come back, and it turns out……

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  • Hot money, high gas: the energy crisis in the ether

    Let’s start the week with an energy crisis, shall we? I can’t have been the only one in dire need of coffee this morning… The phrase “skyrocketing gas prices” may bring images of the 1970s to mind. Global energy supplies…

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  • Watch bitcoin’s thin golden line – the whales are up to something

    “What do ye do when ye see a whale, men?” “Sing out for him!” was the impulsive rejoinder from a score of clubbed voices. “Good!” cried Ahab, with a wild approval in his tones; observing the hearty animation into which…

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  • Making a massive win awful loss in silver’s sibling

    I’ve a story for you today – a deceptive one. Some might call it an investing success. Others might think it a failure. I’ll let you be the judge. It starts with a precious metal called palladium. While that name…

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  • One asset, for the next decade. But which?

    Happy hump day. Now imagine… It’s 19 August 2030. You wake up and stretch, and then immediately summon a screen to check your investment portfolio. A decade previously, an obscure investment writer on the internet challenged you to buy one…

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  • If the barman says this, it could be a “BUY” signal…

    It’s been a long time since I began working here at Southbank Investment Research, dear reader. … Or at least, it feels like it. In reality it’s been three years and a couple of months. I’ve changed a lot during…

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  • The silent charge of a quiet bull

    Why do so few people see what is happening? Bitcoin is quietly creeping back to the all-time high. The network is growing, the space is more vibrant than ever before, and volatility remains low. If this sort of performance comes…

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  • The £9 trillion tech company you’ve never heard of

    Well dear reader, the results are in. This week, we’ve been exploring the prospect of another nationwide lockdown brought about by a second wave of WuFlu. It’s a heavily consequential matter for our lives, let alone our investment portfolios. And…

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  • Tasteless whisky, flooded streets

    An old buddy of mine in Aberdeen was formally diagnosed with the WuFlu yesterday. He’s the only person I know to have actually tested positive, and not just exhibited symptoms which led them to conclude they had it. While several…

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  • A beating and a bright side

    Dear Reader, Happy Hump Day. That storm sure arrived soon enough. Thunder is grumbling constantly from the horizon as I write this, and the dark clouds are coming closer – but it’s not hit me yet. I’ve not seen any…

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  • Spectators in a storm

    It’s damn near sweltering here in London. Tropical weather, humid as hell. Inside or out, the heat feels inescapable. And the moist air clings to your form wherever you go. It’s like we’ve started importing foreign weather now that we…

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  • A pension for an immortal

    I’m about to show you one of the boldest, strangest financial images I have ever seen. To be honest with you, I’m still not entirely sure what to make of it. When I first came across it, I laughed aloud…

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  • The silver market is getting jubilant

    Silver, which just had its best month in 40 years… has started the current month with its best week in 40 years. I was planning on showing you a couple of charts today already, but I’m just going to show…

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  • The Italian Job has nothing on this gold haul…

    I must confess dear reader, I had not heard of the band named Spandau Ballet until this week. It was only after I received the rather… cryptic series of texts above that I discovered the group and its 1983 hit…

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  • In 2012, membership fees were £7,200 – now they’re £18 million

    Ever heard of the Vladimir Club, dear reader? It’s a real exclusive outfit. No riff-raff allowed. If you’re a member, you’ve probably got vaults in your name in Switzerland, a Learjet service on speed-dial, and a wine cellar big enough…

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  • Painkiller, but no skin graft

    Ouch. The ol’ business of banking is taking a beating. HSBC is in the process of cutting 35,000 jobs and setting aside $8-$12 billion to absorb losses from WuFlu-related defaults. The popular portfolio holding has now fallen beneath the level…

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  • Long in the tooth tech

    August already huh, dear reader? The year feels like it’s flying by… and yet the days before lockdown, from January through to March, feel like forever ago. Strange times. I wonder how we’ll look back on 2020 in a few…

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  • The emperors will bow, but their stocks will first

    “Our founders would not bow before a king. Nor should we bow before the emperors of the online economy.” – David Cicilline, US congressman for Rhode Island The emperors of Apple, Google, Facebook and Amazon appeared before the US House…

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  • Primal passions, Kodak smiles

    Dear reader, I- Hmmm. So, uh… you remember that company that used to make cameras when you were a kid? Kodak? Apparently it uh… makes drugs now. Got three-quarters of a billion dollars as a loan from the US government…

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  • Hitting the quicksilver cash machine after midnight

    Happy hump day, dear reader. I commented in yesterday’s note how the silver market had gone wild in the middle of the night – turns out some of you were involved! As one reader writes in: So, Boaz, were you…

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  • The Money Monsoon

    Have you been enjoying the weather, Reader? It’s been a damn rainy few days here in London – though it sounds like it’s the rest of the country that’s really got drookit. I must confess dear Reader, I’ve been loving…

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  • £2 billion in silver – a “proper” King’s ransom

    Ready for another market rodeo? We spent a fair bit of time on the action in gold silver last week – both exploded in price, with the former finally making it past its all-time high in dollars it hit in…

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  • This is the woman the establishment fears

    So here we are again dear reader, at the end of another wild week. It’s been a barnstormer for precious metals, as we’ve been writing about in recent days. We’re also seeing further signs of exhaustion in the tech sector,…

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  • No Robin Hood… but there’s Merry Men in this market

    Source: Austrian Mint The Merry Men of Sherwood Forest Silicon Valley will not be making their way to our shores after all… I’ve speculated a couple of times in this letter what might happen to the British stockmarket if Robinhood,…

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  • Don’t love silver? You will soon

    There’s something about silver that drives certain individuals nuts. If gold was the metal that drove the conquistadors mad, in recent decades silver has had the power to induce near-psychotic states among its holders. I almost wrote “investors”, but that…

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  • Martyrdom, gold, Rome… and a decent pint

    “… If society could solve all its problems by printing money, the Roman Empire would rule the world.” – Fringe news aggregator Zero Hedge, addressing the Federal Reserve That line came to mind as I was wandering over what remains…

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  • Freedom in the shadow of the British Empire?

    Back in early April when lockdown was stretching out before us like a vast expanse, I noted in this letter just how good it would finally be to have a freshly poured pint at a pub. With the pubs now…

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  • Airlines > electric vehicles?

    Happy hump day, Reader, And what a hump it is that we’re cresting. Charlie Morris, who had billions of pounds under his management when he was head of absolute returns at HSBC, described Tuesday to be “a memorable day in…

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  • The Looney Tunes episode of a lifetime

    The year of our Lord two thousand and twenty just keeps on delivering the goods. Remember this chart of Tesla I showed you a month ago (A Looney Tune you don’t want to miss – 10 June)? Source: me, on…

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  • Finding freedom and fortune outside the UK

    A buddy of mine has had enough – he’s getting out of here. It was the first time we’d seen each other since the lockdown began. I could tell he was somewhat different when I met him, and not just…

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  • “This isn’t sexy, but you should be excited about it”

    A few weeks back on our market broadcasts we discussed how the cybersecurity sector was booming amid the lockdown. I use interest in the $HACK ETF to gauge interest in the sector, and it’s now reached all-time highs, up over…

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  • Gold investors, 2030 AD

    Is this what a market top looks like? Source: Hao Hong, on Twitter When watching the market becomes not just a recreational, but a relaxing activity… you have to assume that the market must have moved in a direction which…

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  • “Extra suit for your sovereign” at Brooks Brothers?

    I asked you last week how it might be possible to buy four pints of bitter and fish and chips with change to spare from a single pound coin. Many of you wrote in with the answer I had in…

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  • The best of times, the worst of times: a tale of Gold ‘n Growth

    It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season…

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  • A brief encounter with a lockdown plutocrat

    It felt odd going back to the pub after three months of drinking in private. But it got much weirder after a stranger began speaking to me about my hat. I was standing in the queue outside with my girlfriend….

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  • The Deux Com Boom

    Guess when this magazine cover was printed: Any ideas? Bloomberg bought BusinessWeek at the end of 2009, and the design is clearly quite dated… but pretty much all of those stories could be written today. Billions are flowing into index…

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  • A golden pound for four pints

    Oh say does that star-spangled banner yet wave…. O’er the land of the free, and the home of the brave? I’ve always been a little jealous of the Americans when they celebrate 4 July. It seems like such a great…

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  • Four pints and fish and chips for £1

    Two more days. Just two more days until the pubs open. Anticipation keeps building for a return to pub life. But when the doors finally do open on Independence Day… how expensive will a pint be? During the lockdown, we’ve…

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  • Cut your hair, buy great stocks

    Happy hump day, reader, To the reader who is asking, I am indeed in need of a shave. But back to that in a minute. I always enjoy looking through my mailbox to read your feedback on my scribblings (for…

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  • A fireball from the blue

    We had a hut by the river with my brother Chekaren. We were sleeping. Suddenly we both woke up at the same time. Somebody shoved us. We heard whistling and felt strong wind. Chekaren said, ‘Can you hear all those…

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  • This “Red Scare” will cause a red market

    At the beginning of this year, we published the most disturbing piece of research I’ve ever worked on here at Southbank Investment Research. It was about the crimes against humanity the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) has been perpetrating against its…

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  • Freddos, footballers, and ‘flation

    The pubs beckon. Independence Day awaits. Just a few more days… but a busy few, that’s for sure. And as I mentioned last week, we’re about to publish the monthly issue of The Fleet Street Letter Monthly Alert on the…

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  • Gold breaks free – but is a bear on its tail?

    As we’ve reached the end of yet another wild week, I reached out to macro specialist Nickolai Hubble and our energy analyst Kit Winder to discuss the stories they’re keeping a close eye on. In our final broadcast of the…

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  • The Commodity Capitol and the Great Land of Gold

    We’ve been writing about inflation this week. About that brutally destructive force, the bane of savers and investors alike, but especially cruel to the poorest in our society. It’s currently being administered to the everyman in a dose that’s just…

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  • The accidental discovery of a Money Machine by the UK government

    Go to the fringes of the investing world and you will find individuals with unconventional approaches, strong alternative opinions, or both. There are various topics around which these strong opinions are formed: gold, the accuracy of various economic schools of…

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  • Caught in the WuFlu’s wake: Wirecard Liarcard

    In yesterday’s note, we explored how inflation – almost forgotten as a threat by mainstream investors – may finally be brewing in the background, ready to return and wreak havoc. Now that it’s not just central banks stuffing money into…

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  • Buy 227 Mercedes cars, get the company free

    Most of those in political office, quite understandably, are firmly against inflation and firmly in favor of policies producing it. (This schizophrenia hasn’t caused them to lose touch with reality, however; Congressmen have made sure that their pensions – unlike…

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  • We haven’t been this broke since…

    1963. The decade that would be remembered as the swinging 60s had begun to earn its namesake. ‘63 saw the release of The Beatles’ first album (Please, Please Me), The Rolling Stones’ first single (a cover of Chuck Berry’s Come…

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  • The uncrowned monarch of money

    Make way, dear reader, make way! Make way… For King Benjamin Franklin! Behold, there he strides, in all his greenbacked glory… The US attracts all manner of international condemnation these days – criticism of its culture, of its endless wars…

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  • Preparing for the upcoming end-of-lockdown fireworks show

    As lockdown has dragged on and on, some folks have been hankering for a big ol’ fireworks display when it’s finally over. It’s quite understandable, especially for those in high-pressure jobs. Stuck alone indoors breathing stagnant air, you couldn’t really…

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  • Can we beat the Americans at underage gambling as well as drinking?

    Who better to express “animal spirits” in the market than kids entering their teenage years? We’ve written quite a few times about the commission-free trading app in the States called Robinhood, which is very popular amongst youngsters. Now this was…

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  • A Cold War with lockdown characteristics

    My colleague Nickolai Hubble has always told me one of the joys he has in his role in publishing his research is seeing his predictions play out in the news months later. It’s something I expect James Allen has been…

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  • Roll up, roll up: throw your trash in here and get a state-sponsored bailout

    There’s a lot of trash in the European banks. A lot of loans that shouldn’t have been made. Loans where there hasn’t been a payment of interest or principal for… well, a while. Best not dwell on that. Let’s just…

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  • This ain’t Sherwood Forest, but Robinhood is saving the day…

    Why have bankrupt companies become some of the biggest performers in the stockmarket in recent weeks? Could Robinhood, the trading app popular amongst kids in the States, be swooping in to save the day with a bailout of millennial capital?…

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  • Is Robinhood really stealing from the rich, to give to the poor?

    “I know this defies the law of gravity, but I never studied law!” – Bugs Bunny in High Diving Hare (1945) You might think that when a company starts exploring the possibility of declaring bankruptcy, that its share price would…

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  • A very American melt-up

    We went from a 2008 collapse to a 1999 stock bubble in under three months. – Chris Cole, Hedge fund manager earlier in the week Late last year, our publisher Nick O’Connor asked all of us editors at Southbank Investment…

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  • “Five buy airlines and humiliate Buffett”

    “I do love the beginning of the summer hols,” said Julian. “They always seem to stretch out ahead for ages and ages.” “They go so nice and slowly at first,” said Anne, his little sister. “Then they start to gallop.”…

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  • This woman in charge may be branded an outlaw…

    A quick heads up: our broadcast schedule is changing slightly from this week forwards – we’re shifting from a daily broadcast to three per week. With a more streamlined schedule, we hope to provide you with more incisive content going…

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  • A “largely peaceful” wealth redistribution

    Another week of chaos begins… With any luck, we’ll be able to go to the pub again soon – provided we identify as protestors first, of course. How times change. It wasn’t long ago that self-righteous moralists declared that flouting…

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  • Saddam and Smaug: golden hoards

    “Gold. Gold beyond measure, beyond sorrow and grief… Behold, the great treasure hoard of Thrór! the global ETF market!” – The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies (2014, script slightly altered) I wasn’t a big fan of the The…

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  • A day to remember

    “We are the good guys. We are on the side of angels.” – Jeff Skilling, slightly less than three years prior to his arrest 2020 just keeps on getting better… Jeff Skilling, the former CEO of Enron who was released…

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  • Reapers come out of their coffins

    I’m back at the helm of Capital & Conflict and our daily market broadcasts. It’s been good to take a couple days off and get burned to hell by the impressively strong London sun, and indeed to give you a…

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  • A generational investment opportunity for commodities?

    It wasn’t all that long ago that the price of a gold sovereign felt stuck around the £250 mark. Some days it’d be cheaper, some days it’d be more expensive… but between mid-2016 until May last year, the market’s idea…

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  • War cycle crescendo

    In the meantime, I’d like to show you a note Akhil Patel recently wrote for his subscribers over at Cycles, Trends and Forecasts. It’s about the historical “war cycle” we discussed on Friday’s market broadcast, a topic both fascinating and…

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  • A Brit, an Israeli, and a Pole walk into a bar…

    Well there we have it. As we wrote in Tuesday’s note (The Bond girl, the Cuban icon, and the man from Dixieland), we were watching the dollar for its next move. If it broke higher in value, it’d be bad…

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  • The biggest debt default ever? (A trillion+)

    It’s time for a look through the postbox. It’s been a while since we’ve had a good rummage through my mailbox at [email protected]. I’ve been somewhat distracted with hosting our daily market broadcasts and all the wild events we’ve seen…

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  • Darkness arrives in paradise

    Imagine if the Bank of England started taking to Twitter to make sure we knew what the word recession means – outside of a recession. You might find it strange – ominous, even – that such an institution would suddenly…

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  • The Bond girl, the Cuban icon, and the man from Dixieland

    Has the storm passed? Are happy days here again? The fella from Cuba with a machete at his waist says so. The Bond girl lounging nearby agrees. But the fella from Dixieland… he’s still got a menacing look in his…

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  • The gilded gardens between rich and poor

    Well here we are [%= :subscriberName(D,Reader) %], Friday again. It doesn’t feel like a week has passed since I was writing to you last Friday. Though longer or shorter, I can’t tell – isolation has made my perception of time…

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  • Where crypto and fiction meet

    My perception of time is becoming increasingly distorted by the isolation… but it doesn’t feel all that long since our last bank holiday. Spending every day alone in my flat has made life a blur – as most weeks are…

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  • The enemy has arrived on our shores

    We had long feared they would come. Watching the monetary corruption spread across foreign lands for so many years now, I guess we all knew, deep down, that they would arrive on British shores eventually. I had hoped we would…

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  • Menthols and magic mirrors: Big Tobacco and Berkshire Hathaway

    It’s your last chance to celebrate it with a menthol Camel cigarette. From today on, all flavoured cigarettes and rolling tobacco are illegal to sell in this country. Get ‘em while you can. The rationale behind banning menthols is that…

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  • 60 minutes of… surprising honesty

    Jerome Powell at the Federal Reserve recently took to television to reassure the world that everything is, indeed, under control Gromit. While the Fed is of course the US’s central bank, his words are globally relevant to investors here in…

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  • The golden bloody era of central banking

    Between the years of 1714 and 1815 the Royal Navy went to battle every three weeks on average. A battle every three weeks… for 101 years. That’s a lot of fighting.   It’s a lot of gunpowder. A lot of…

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  • Ways and Means of printing money

    “Way back”… in what feels like a year ago at the beginning of March, we noted how with every day that passed, a CEO of a major corporation was quitting their job. The exodus of executives was so great, that…

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  • Back to the seventies seventeen hundreds..?

    Behold the Wonder of this present Age, A Famous RIVER now become a Stage. Question not what I now declare to you, The Thames is now both Fair and Market too… And though these sights be to our admiration, Yet…

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  • A stroll through The Atlas Minefield

    Whenever I venture out into “The Great Outdoors” for supplies these days, I find I have more company than the last time. There are more people wandering the urban sprawl, more cars rumbling around. I notice fewer folks wearing masks,…

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  • Halvening done. What’s next?

    Well that’s that dear reader – The Halvening has happened. Block 630,000 was mined yesterday just after 8pm. The long-awaited block of transactoions only took 20 seconds in the end. It’ll be another few years before we see the next…

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  • A paperless privateer’s paradise

    Back when sailcloth and gunpowder ruled the waves, and the oceans were rich with plunder and pirates chasing it, Her Majesty’s Government (amongst others) decided to try financing itself the same way Blackbeard did. It was called “privateering”, and was…

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  • A halving by any other name would smell as sweet…

    Why would somebody be mining bitcoin in a mosque? About a year ago now, some images started circulating on Twitter showing vast bitcoin mining arrays, racks upon racks of monitor-less computers whirring away in a place of worship: Source: @Rmahdavii,…

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  • Your free issue of The Fleet Street Letter Monthly Alert

    I hope you’re enjoying the bank holiday as much as you can during the lockdown. With the long weekend, and the highly anticipated “halvening” just a few days away now, I thought I’d send you something special. This is an…

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  • Did you trade this four years ago? Because it’s happening again

    When you’re stuck indoors all day, the imagination wanders more than usual. We rerun old memories like a cabinet of dusty video cassettes, taking respite in reveries of better times. Come with me, and remember back to this, four years…

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  • A gamble, or gold?

    My affinity with Long John Silver continues apace. A colleague tells me during a video conference call that I’m turning not grey, but ginger. And my trusty Holland & Holland baseball cap, extra-large to accommodate my dome, no longer fits…

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  • On the trail for Turner’s lost masterpiece

    JMW Turner, one of the greatest artists born in Britain, was a notoriously reclusive man. But it’s one of his finest works which has recently “gone into hiding”. The Fighting Temeraire, tugged to her last berth to be broken up,…

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  • BP eats roadkill on Route 66, and a lumberjack comes knocking on Wood

    So here we are, at the end of another wild week. Another weekend in lockdown beckons… though according to Spotify ($SPOT), it’s earning money like it’s the weekend every day of the week. More than 30% more folks are turning…

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  • The optimism of youth: drowning in oil

    “Realise your youth while you have it. Don’t squander the gold of your days, listening to the tedious, trying to improve the hopeless failure, or giving away your life to the ignorant, the common, and the vulgar. These are the…

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  • Trading by ear when the cycle goes “off-piste”

    It’ll be a short note from me today, as I’m just off to write my segment of The Fleet Street Letter Monthly Alert… right after I finish today’s market broadcast with our tech investing specialist Sam Volkering. Further to yesterday’s…

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  • Two thrones, one brutal crown: the oil/dollar rivalry and the deadly duel to come

    A rather long note today. If you want to get right to The Two Thrones of the global economy, skip down to the next heading. If you want to meander down some rabbit holes with me first, just keep on…

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  • Oil rigs vacant, earnings season chaotic: a wild week awaits

    Monday again, and we’re back in business. A new week beckons – and if it’s even a quarter as dramatic as last week, we’re in for a hell of a ride. While the crazy action of last week was contained…

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  • Kill your assassin last

    Friday at last… I think. I find it hard to tell these days. All this staying at home has made the days a blur, I wouldn’t have been able to say it was Friday without checking. I often work on…

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  • In a world of no carbon dioxide, Carlsberg is king

    Too much oil is one thing… but no beer production is something else entirely. Some of the largest breweries in the world are facing a shortage of one crucial element required to brew their nectar. If left unchecked, a beer…

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  • Turning crisis into opportunity: destroying your enemies amid the havoc

    Oil creates the illusion of a completely changed life, life without work, life for free. Oil is a resource that anaesthetises thought, blurs vision, corrupts… – Shah of Shahs, Ryszard Kapuściński (1982) Times have changed an awful lot since 1982….

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  • Black gold black hole: an even (c)ruder awakening

    The oil price in the US began Monday at $12. That’s pretty low. … But that didn’t stop it falling by 300% just a few hours later. Yes, you’re reading that right. The price of the most important commodity in…

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  • Debt, unemployment, China, and beer

    I’m taking a short break from hosting our daily market broadcasts this week. My colleague Kit Winder will be hosting it in the meantime, focusing on how the WuFlu will permanently change the energy market. He’s never hosted a podcast…

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  • Strange booms and bank busts

    Nobody wants to talk about this asset… but it’s been performing incredibly well during these wild times. It’s been in a bull market for years now. It wasn’t shook at all during the brutal March we’ve just had – indeed,…

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  • A crucible of human effort in the palm of your hand

    Amid the WuFlu chaos… The escalating and ever more visible Second Cold War… The fiendishly volatile stockmarket… And as we all slowly go insane in isolation… We take a moment here in lockdown to admire something shiny in the sunlight….

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  • From the studios that brought you Champagne Socialism and Learjet Liberalism, Federal Reserve Productions now proudly presents… Junkie Capitalism

    Some 14 years ago, a cartoonist called Andy Riley published a book called Loads More Lies to Tell Small Kids, a sequel to Great Lies to Tell Small Kids. I distinctly remember one illustration which claimed Lego blocks are social…

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  • How Charlie Morris survived nine past crises, and plans to survive this one

    “If you’ve seen one, you’ve seen ‘em all.” While this old saying may be true of Marvel films, it sadly does not apply to financial crises. They never arrive exactly the same way as they have in the past –…

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  • The wartime investor

    Southbank Investment Research is shut today, but with everything going on out there and as it’s Eastertime, I thought we should send out something special in today’s note instead of my normal scribblings. Following the strong feedback we’ve had for…

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  • Tides of emotion, tides of money

    Happy Easter Monday! I hope you’ve been enjoying the break as much as you can in these circumstances. I’ve been taking the time to get my thoughts in order, do some reading, and listen in to what the folks at…

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  • Take comfort in your currency, part II

    An old buddy of mine contacted me yesterday asking what stocks he should buy now that the market has turned down. This very same friend contacted me at the very end of the crypto bull market to tell me he…

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  • Take comfort in your currency, part I

    The ability of a gyroscope to remain stable no matter the forces at play around it has immense value.  That perpetual stability – rain or shine, chaos or serenity – has allowed engineers to create ever more complex systems around…

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  • Currency conflict: brawl of the bankers

    Who would win in a fight: former president of the European Central Bank, Mario Draghi… or freshly anointed governor of the Bank of England, Andrew Bailey? I asked a few colleagues and contacts which of the central bankers they reckoned…

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  • Finding Vegas in the fog of war

    Somebody just got air-ambulanced nearby. The red chopper flew low over the rooftops with a mighty whirr, closer than any other aircraft I’ve seen whilst living here. All anyone could do is watch it through their windows like some metropolitan…

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  • This market is belching smoke

    Oil kindles extraordinary emotions and hopes, since oil is above all a great temptation. It is the temptation of ease, wealth, strength, fortune, power. – Shah of Shahs, Ryszard Kapuściński (1982) The chart speaks for itself. Source: me, on Twitter…

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  • The Panic in Paradise

    Is it just me, or did the day the pubs shut feel like an incredibly long time ago for you too? Seems like months since I’ve had a freshly poured pint in my hand. Let me tell you, when this…

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  • The restaurant in Florida that’s blowing up the global financial system

    I told you about the dearth of dollars in the global financial system yesterday. It’s a dynamic which threatens to cause chaos in the global financial system – especially in countries that don’t use dollars – and is already raising…

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  • These banknotes may not have the Queen on them, but they’re of royal importance

    Back when WuFlu was just a twinkle in some bat-eating deviant’s eye, I thought it’d be worth giving Seattle a visit. A reassuringly rainy area of the developed world with a strong beer culture and a view of the Pacific…

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  • Nature, markets, and Katharine Hepburn

    Remember when some fella attacked the bull sculpture on Wall Street with a banjo last year? We mentioned it in this letter at the time – The banjo player and the bull market golden calf (10 September 2019). We wondered…

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  • “The banks are completely safe and secur- STOP TAKING YOUR MONEY OUT”

    You ever watch an American TV show or film and think they overdo it with the music? Just smothering scenes in slow piano when they’re trying to spur emotion in the viewer? I felt that when I was watching an…

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  • Everything hinges on this metric

    I wish I was in Dixie, Hooray, Hooray In Dixieland I’ll take my stand, to live and die in Dixie Away, Away, Away down South in Dixie… – “I Wish I Was in Dixie” (1850s) You wouldn’t expect an old…

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  • The king is being ransomed

    I’m sorry for not getting in touch with you about this sooner. What’s going on here is really quite something. Last week I wrote about how the price of precious metals and the cost of actually acquiring them are decoupling,…

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  • Forget Federal Reserve, this is Federal Excess

    Well that was it, dear reader. “Whatever it takes” indeed. Mario Draghi’s statement, which is credited with saving the euro back in the sovereign debt crisis, has been taken to heart – and to market – by the Federal Reserve….

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  • It’s about demand.

    “You’ll find, young man, the future looks rosier through the bottom of a glass.” – The Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas With the pubs shut, British investors are going to have a harder time imagining a rosy future – right…

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  • Gold versus oil

    If you’ve been listening to our daily market broadcasts this week, you’ll have heard Charlie Morris’s unbridled optimism in the . To close us off for this week, he penned this note for me recently on what’s going on in…

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  • Investing when terrified

    I asked Tim Price to write today’s Capital & Conflict, as he’s just the man you want in your corner during a market panic like we’re witnessing now. Tim has won awards as a fund manager for his defensive investing style, and…

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  • “The reality you ordered is no longer in stock”

    The call to prayer rings out from the Grand Mosque in Kuwait City. The familiar melody echoes out from the tall minaret on to the shimmering Arab city of flat sandy roofs and white cars. But this time, it’s different….

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  • When crises occur, this asset mysteriously disappears (no, it’s not loo roll)

    The US stockmarket was halted just 30 seconds after opening yesterday. Couldn’t even survive a minute before eating a 7% loss. And that was after the Federal Reserve threw the sink at the problem, cutting interest rates to zero and…

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  • The Rational Revenant Investor

    The global stockmarket (MSCI World index, three-year chart) gets a front-row seat to a viewing of Leonardo DiCaprio’s The Revenant “Honestly I think every national politician is going to get CV-19. Their lives are a series of meetings like this,…

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  • The world money is not enough

    Let me be frank. By the time you read this, I have no idea where the market will be for almost any asset. The volatility and speed with which they are moving as I write makes it almost impossible to…

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  • “If we’re saved. That was the moment.”

    It was only a matter of time. The Bank of England (BoE) took it upon itself to cut interest rates, following the Americans’ example of a double-cut, reducing the BoE base rate by 0.5% down to 0.25%. They’re meeting again…

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  • Scorched sand, bloody markets

    The CNN Fear & Greed index, which gauges the mood in the US stockmarket from utterly terrified at 0, and scandalously greedy at 100, is currently displaying a reading of… four. Fear is in fashion. But so far, the American…

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  • Did Saudi Arabia just save the world? And will it be enough?

    “This is the best goddam drill the army’s ever put on!” – US Navy sailor at Pearl Harbor after the explosions began The bull market is dead. Long live the bull market. That’s the FTSE 100 well into the bear’s…

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  • Black swan strikes black gold

    So you’ve heard of Big Tobacco… Big Oil… Big Pharma… Big Tech… But what about Big Loo Roll? If anybody’s making a mint from the pandemic panic, it’s the toilet paper manufacturers. The Australians are eating each other over Andrex….

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  • Flirting with the Golden Doughnut

    The most powerful bank CEO in the world had to have emergency heart surgery yesterday. I don’t blame him. I was going to write to you about something different today, but the level of sheer stress writhing within the financial…

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  • No Time to Fly

    “How did he die?”  “Your contact?” Mr Market?” *nods* “Not well.” – Casino Royale, opening scene (mildly edited) It’s “No Time to Die”… or to risk losing Chinese box office revenue. I may well be proven wrong on this, but…

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  • How bastards make billions

    Felix Rohatyn was a shrewd man. He possessed what he called a “refugee’s sense of value”, which he picked up while on the run from the Nazis. When France was invaded in 1940, his family fled from Paris and embarked…

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  • How I lost thousands in one of the greatest bull markets in history

    Another day, another dollar CEO decides they don’t want to be responsible for what happens next. This time it’s the man at the helm of Harley-Davidson ($HOG) who’s joined the group of easy-rider executives cruising into the sunset. What happens…

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  • Warnings that save lives – and money

    Many years ago, a lady by the name of Leslie Shook was contacted by a stranger who told her that she’d saved his life. She wasn’t the creator of some new wonder drug. Nor had she recently donated an organ,…

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  • Britain paints the globe pink once again – with help from the Wolf in Cashmere

    “Artist’s impression” of the global stockmarket after we buy everything the Shoshan-Hubble Inter-market Transnational Easing Scheme of 2020 is implemented and a BoE-financed foreign acquisition boom begins The British Empire, with its pink map and territory equivalent to the surface…

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  • Flying in low from the East, engines purring and weapons primed… the cash killer cometh

    He had killed six men during the past month—or was it a year?—he had forgotten. Time had become curiously telescoped lately. What did it matter, anyway? He knew he had to die some time and had long ago ceased to…

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  • No empires for young men

    Were you taught about this at school? Source: britishempire.co.uk This likely reveals a lot about my age, but I only discovered that maps of the British Empire were illustrated in pink relatively recently. For those as uninformed as myself, this…

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  • Britain stands on the scales… and slips on oil

    Today’s letter comes from Eoin Treacy, who wanted to expand on a crucial flaw in the UK economy which he believes will drive. It all comes down to a simple metric so basic that’s it’s often overlooked – despite its…

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  • PetroPounds, HydroSterling, and the Empty Oasis

    In November 2008, in the churning black depths of the global credit crisis, Prime Minister Gordon Brown decided it was time for a trip. Leaving the winter weather and Downing Street behind, he charted a course for sunnier, sandier climes,…

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  • Gunrunning in No 10

    What lethal goods were Harold Wilson, Margaret Thatcher, and Tony Blair all keen on selling to one particular client while they were in Downing Street? The three make for strange company. But their political differences – Wilson’s price fixing, Thatcher’s…

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  • Solve this, and I’ll buy you a beer – part III!

    It’s that time again. Time for beer where beer is due – to a switched-on subscriber who can crack the investment theme that answers a riddle. But this time, we’re trying something slightly different. I’m not going to ask you…

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  • They crushed gold with it in 1974. Then they whacked bitcoin with it 43 years later…

    Gold manipulation. Not many people want to talk about it. And those that do, are generally far removed from where the manipulation they claim is actually taking place. Last week, we noted the interesting incidence of gold breaking away and…

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  • Buying a nuke shouldn’t mean breaking a currency

    Have you watched Treadstone on Amazon Prime by any chance? It’s a spin-off TV series from the Jason Bourne series of films. It’s not quite the same as watching Matt Damon pulverise legions of CIA/FSB foes without any equipment, but…

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  • A postcard from “Corona-land”

    I’ve something special for you this fine Sunday. While you don’t normally receive my daily notes here at Capital & Conflict over the weekend, today we’re making an exception – we’ve received some valuable intelligence straight from “Corona-land” that’s worthy…

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  • Conspiracy theory, or conspiracy fact?

    King of Thieves, released in 2018, is a film about the Hatton Garden heist that took place three years prior.   It had a lot going for it when it was released, with an all-star cast led by Michael Caine.   However,…

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  • Britannia brings back her bullion?

    This chart may not look all that important… Source: Bloomberg  … but it is. Let me tell you why. That line represents the amount of gold held by certain investors.  It’s just hit an all-time high – an important story…

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  • No symptoms? No problem!

    Cats and dogs litter the pavement. Their small fluffy bodies are contorted into unnatural positions, limp and lifeless. A rumour went around that pets might be carriers for the coronavirus, and their owners threw them from their apartment windows high…

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  • Running out of loo roll

    There are always wars of opinion within the investment community – it’s a difference in views that makes a market after all. The more long term the issue is, the more likely you will find a binary split where two…

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  • The most disgusting, disturbing, and repulsive piece of editorial we’ve written

    What I’m about to share with you is something subscribers to The Fleet Street Letter Monthly Alert asked us to make public. While I normally enjoy my job, what I’m about to link to in today’s note has most certainly…

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  • Moments from the $10k trigger: bitcoin for the cautious (Part 2)

    Our ride on the “₿ullet Train” continues. This sure as hell isn’t a sleeper journey – if you doze off on this ride it might wipe you out… The bitcoin price over the last few days has been going at…

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  • A cautious ride on the ₿ullet train

    Between 3pm and 6.30pm on Monday, three and a half billion quid’s worth of BTC was transacted over the bitcoin blockchain. Nobody knows who it was or what it was for. And as every transaction verified by the bitcoin miners…

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  • We need to talk about Tesla… and $TSLA

    Well. Source: wolfstreet.com Well, well, well. We mentioned yesterday that Tesla ($TSLA) was going parabolic. Turns out that buying the share when the price was already vertical was actually a good idea. “If it keeps going, it will pierce the…

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  • Donald Trump was right

    So the Chinese Communist Party ram £130 billion worth of stimulus into its financial system in a day… It makes it illegal for major shareholders in companies to sell any stock for six months… It straight up bans people from…

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  • Solve this, and I’ll buy you a beer – part II!

    What connects a monument in the Czech Republic… David Bowie… A romance involving a pigeon… The ancestor of the “Marine Lizards” prowling the South China Sea… And an investment of several million dollars (in today’s terms) by JP Morgan in…

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  • Copper goes in… communists come out

    “What is it?” “It’s a pie machine, you idiot. Chickens go in, pies come out.” “Ooh, what kind of pies?” “Apple.” “My favourite!” “Chicken pies, you great lummox. Imagine: in less than a fortnight, every grocers’ in the county will…

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  • Devoured by the Cook

    What’s worse than finding a worm in your apple? Being eaten by it. And I’m not talking about the worm.   Bigger than BMW… Volkswagen… Daimler… Adidas… Lufthansa… Siemens… and 24 other titans of the German economy… $AAPL is now bigger…

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  • Exceptional breeding conditions for locusts higher bitcoin prices?

    As strange great swell of sea foam floods through the streets of a town in Catalonia… As warming weather leads to “exceptional breeding conditions” for locusts, and terrible swarms ravage East Africa, threatening famine… As cases of the coronavirus are…

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  • The missing link, and the fatal energy swap

    Well that was quick! I was going to send through some additional doctored photographs, but several of you figured it out right away… Yesterday I asked you what historical event brought a motley crew including commodity traders, a US business…

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  • Solve this, and I’ll buy you a beer

    It may be Monday… but that doesn’t mean it isn’t beer o’clock. Don’t worry, I’m not downing pints of Guinness at my desk this fine morning (though that does sound delightful). No, it’s time I put a bottle of my…

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  • What is there left to be afraid of?

    A truck chugs slowly through a street in Shanghai, spewing bulbous great clouds of disinfectant powder into tower upon tower of apartment buildings. It’s like the crop duster scene from North by Northwest. Except instead of taking place in a…

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  • The forgotten wonder of the world

    If you saved $10,000 (£7,600) a day… … every day… … since the pyramids in Egypt were constructed… … you would now have one fifth the average wealth… … of the world’s five wealthiest people. So says a report called…

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  • A snake chokes on its own tail

    “I don’t know why everyone thinks that Lockheed is managed so bad. Because I tell you it is not.” – Daniel Haughton, CEO of Lockheed in 1971. His company was bankrupt and begging the government for a bailout Children named “Max”…

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  • How the streets are paved with palladium, and oil is already $100 a barrel

    A reader responds to our letter on Friday… Highly prophetic that you should write “guard your car” – someone has just had the catalytic converter off my mother’s car as it sat outside her house in West London. You guys…

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  • How to burn gold

    What will a cocktail of market forces and climate change taste like, when they’re shaken together by a politico with a righteous twist of regulation? While this drink has yet to reach the global market, it is possible to get…

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  • Once a decade, let’s go crazy

    I hated my name when I was a teenager. I despised hearing “… What?” whenever I introduced myself, and didn’t like standing out during my formative years. In fact, I abhorred “Boaz” so much, that when I spent a year…

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  • Furnace of dreams (coal powered)

    “Who do you think buys the stones I bring out? Dreamy American girls who want a storybook wedding and a big shiny rock just like the ones they see in the advertisements in your politically correct magazines. So, please, don’t…

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  • Devouring each other alive?

    Of the many brilliant Calvin and Hobbes comic strips penned by the great Bill Watterson, there is one which aptly describes our direction this week. Six-year-old Calvin feels that technology has separated humans from nature. And so while out walking…

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  • Escaping Seeking Reality

    Ayn Rand famously declared that “We can ignore reality, but we cannot ignore the consequences of ignoring reality”. Escaping reality is big business, and likely always will be. Even during Oliver Cromwell’s Puritan cultural purges, people still risked going to…

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  • Go bankrupt for long-term success

    How should one best prepare for long-term success? Get on the housing ladder as soon as you can scrape together a deposit? Should you invest in your appearance, to make better first impressions in your professional life? Maybe amplify a…

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  • How to crush your enemies by taxing the planet

    Yesterday, we speculated that the US is turning Russian. We weren’t referring to any of the “Trump is a Russian asset” hysteria of course – we were referring to how the energy market has changed the US’s temperament. When it…

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  • Investing like a Rothschild

    “Buy when there’s blood in the streets, even if the blood is your own” goes the advice of Baron Rothschild, sharing an investment lesson he learned brutally during the chaotic tumult of the 18th century. … or at least, that’s…

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  • The best kind of war

    Not a good day to be a camel – even if it is hump day. The Australians, faced with drought and wanting to do their bit for the planet, have settled on a strange solution: the camels have to go….

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  • Drones, defaults, and WWIII

    Well here we are dear xXreaderXx, We’re one week into 2020. And what a year it’s turning out to be so far. The US embassy in Baghdad being stormed by militia… an IRGC general getting droned by the Americans in…

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  • Interrogated by a German

    Something a little unusual to go in today’s episode of our 20/20 Vision series. You see, normally it’s me interviewing our editors on video – but this time, the tables have been turned – and it’s me being grilled this…

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  • Our 20/20 Visions begin!

    Well here we are: another Christmas beckons. A lot of us at Southbank Investment Research will be heading back home next week to spend Christmas with friends and family – myself included. But don’t worry – we’ve lined up plenty…

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  • War is peace?

    Apple ($AAPL) has seen a 30% drop in sales, year-on-year, in 2019. I wouldn’t blame you for thinking this might lead to a similar drop in its share price – it’s an entirely reasonable assumption. But I’m afraid that’s not…

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  • Defending yourself against the decade to come

    In today’s episode of our 20/20 Vision series, I bring you Tim Price, award-winning defensive investor and free market firebrand. In this interview, he lays out his investment philosophy, and answers your questions on investment strategy and how to prepare…

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  • What’s 2020 gonna look like for energy?

    In today’s episode of our 20/20 Vision series, I’ve brought in our energy expert James Allen. An unashamed renewables bull, James has taken some of the negative press green energy took in 2019 on the chin, and lays out his…

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  • How to break the rules like a central banker

    In today’s episode of 20/20 Vision, I sit down with my good friend and colleague Nickolai Hubble to discuss what the coming year has in store for investors (we let our video production go nuts with the background). In our…

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  • An American in London

    In today’s episode of our 20/20 Vision series, I’ve something special for you – a gentleman “old school” Southbank Investment Research readers in particular will remember and appreciate. The founder of our business, Dan Denning, was in town recently, and…

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  • No country for old men billionaires?

    “Can you give me a good reason one person should have a BILLION dollars??” Some questions produce more questions than they do answers. That question comes from Peter Daou, a politico formerly in the employ of John Kerry and Hillary…

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  • Stolen by sterling: a tale of two FTSEs

    Behold: the great waves of global investment flows are returning to Britain’s drying shores. Source: The Market Ear The removal of “Corbyn risk” and BoJo’s unchallenged control over the Brexit process now has cash pouring back into the country like…

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  • Roaring ’20s redux?

    The “Santa Claus rally”, a recurring trend where stocks tend to go up as the end of the year draws near, appears to be arriving on schedule, with Boris Johnson loading the sleigh. I freely admit it: what happened on…

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  • Deep fried dove for dinner

    Owls have a reputation for being intelligent beasts. It’s hard to say where exactly this idea came from, other than their behaviour as predators, but it’s likely because Athena, the Greek goddess known for her wisdom was said to wander…

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  • Dollars, dinosaurs, meltdowns and death

    “We have been striking for over a year, and basically nothing has happened. – Greta Thunberg The world’s most valuable listed company was born yesterday – right as its polar opposite made the front page of Time magazine.   I’ve…

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  • Vote for Buck’s Fizz?

    Brexit continues to deliver sterling results – in the most unexpected of places. You may well be familiar with some of the strong economic gains the UK has reaped since 2016: low unemployment, wage growth, interest rates above zero and…

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  • You write ‘em, I’ll ask ‘em

    As the end of the year draws closer, we’re preparing some festive content for Capital & Conflict readers which we hope to share with you over Christmas and Hogmanay. I’ll be hosting a short video series with our editors, to…

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  • The war on terror is over?

    The next issue of The Fleet Street Letter Monthly Alert drops tomorrow. As I mentioned yesterday, myself, Nickolai Hubble and Charlie Morris will all be issuing our predictions as to what will happen next year. As we’re in a festive…

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  • Sunrise on the retail volatility salesman?

    It’ll be a short note from me today. I’m currently writing this month’s editorial for The Fleet Street Letter Monthly Alert. Charlie Morris, Nickolai Hubble and I are all submitting three predictions for 2020, and how to profit if we’re…

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  • From the South Sea to the moon, part II: Standard Lunacy

    The governments of the world are in debt to the tune of £46 trillion. When you include unfunded liabilities like state pensions and welfare, the figure is much higher. And with politicos unlikely to break the habit of spending other…

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  • From the South Sea to the moon, part I: a historic prophesy?

    If you’ve been reading this letter for a while, you’ll likely know I often compare events occurring now to those that have occurred in the past. My Cold War II thesis is probably the biggest example of this, though in…

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  • You’re the captain, and there’s a mutiny aboard…

    Part II: Marooned! Marooned, by Howard Pyle (1909) Source: WikiCommons I am monarch of all I survey, My right there is none to dispute; From the centre all round to the sea, I am lord of the fowl and the…

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  • You’re the captain, and there’s a mutiny aboard…

    Promising plunder was as much a skill for a pirate raising a crew back in the early 1700s as it is today for a politician. However, while pirate captains had literal skin in the game, losing their captaincy and often…

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  • Kicked in the privates

    There are some phrases you should always be wary of when you hear them. “I trust you to do the right thing…” “I’m not telling you what to do, but…”  “In the end it’s your decision, but…” “This is not…

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  • Alpine liqueur and an appetite for risk

    Will Rogers, the old-school American actor and humourist, once advised: “Don’t gamble; take all your savings and buy some good stock and hold it till it goes up, then sell it. If it don’t go up, don’t buy it.” What…

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  • Only the smart people are clapping

    Remember, we are actively competing with nations who openly cut interest rates so that now many are actually getting paid when they pay off their loan, known as negative interest. Who heard of such a thing? Give me some of…

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  • Battle for the fifth domain

    At the beginning of last year, a member of Trump’s National Security Council leaked a deck of PowerPoint slides to the press which had been presented to senior Whitehouse officials. In order to counter the rise of China, the presentation…

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  • A fork in the Silk Road

    Considering the amount of press garnered by China’s Silk Road project in recent years, it’s surprising how little attention was paid to the US’s announcement that it was launching a Silk Road of its own earlier this month. The Silk…

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  • Golden toilets, bespoke truffle transport, and 15 bucks for sex

    I read a lot of comic books when I was a kid. Many of them were published in the States, and so they contained ads targeted at young Americans. I enjoyed seeing what the ads were like over the pond…

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  • No oil for us, dear reader…

    It seems our investing opportunities are running out, dear XXC&CsubXX. We wanted in on the yacht industry – more QE = more wealth inequality, we argued – and keenly anticipated the initial public offering (IPO) of Italian yacht builder Ferretti….

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  • G-nie to bring riches from bricks?

    Remember this thing? A screen that never cracked…   A battery life that lasted for days… Required no updates required. An actually finished tech product right off the shelf (perfection requires no improvement, as the Russians say of the Lada)……

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  • Ancient horses’ asses, part IV

    The last of the ancient horses’ asses (for this week, at least). We began this series with a gem from Twitter, so it’s only fitting that we end with one too. This one comes from none other than The Don…

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  • Ancient horses’ asses, part III

    In today’s letter, I’m going to tell you about that heavily relied upon (though rarely acknowledged or appreciated) force underpinning the global economy that I’ve been referring to over the last couple of days. More importantly, I’ll tell you why…

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  • Ancient horses’ asses, part II

    What do you make of this thing? Looks like a UFO to me: Source: Sinot Yacht Architecture & Design That’s a superyacht concept from a design firm called Sinot. 112m in length, with all the goodies one would expect inside,…

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  • Ancient horses’ asses, part I

    What do horse asses, a 1.5 mile tunnel in Staffordshire, the Space Shuttle, and the price of oil all have in common? I wrote yesterday how the peace of “the post-Cold War order” (as Tony Blair would put it) bred…

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  • The price of peace

    A few days after the invasion of Iraq in March 2003, Tony Blair sent a note to George W. Bush titled “The Fundamental Goal”. “This is the moment when you can define international priorities for the next generation – the…

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  • No yachts for us, dear reader…

    Our investing strategy has been scuppered. It’s been holed beneath the waterline. A favoured stock we were watching has been scuttled in the harbour before it ever took to the high seas… A little over a month ago we were…

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  • Making sure the ladies know that you’re B.I.O

    How suddenly it seems the nights draw in at this time of year. Like Ernest Hemingway’s description of bankruptcy, the days seem to get shorter gradually, and then all at once. A few years ago in an interview, the hedge…

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  • If you invest in Saudi Aramco, you’re a…

    I got a new hoodie recently: bright blue, with orange details and a massive “Gulf Oil” logo printed on the back and breast (I say “I” got it: my girlfriend is credited with the procurement). As we’ve detailed in previous…

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  • Grave speculations for the UK’s sovereign wealth fund

    My tip for future investments. Funeral directors. Add in a few extras such as alternatives to burying or burning and you are onto a winner. For traditionalists, investment in land suitable for cemeteries. For those of the burning kind, super…

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  • All aboard the Peace Train, and let’s party like it’s 1998!

    November already, huh? It feels like this year has flown by even faster than the last. With the nights drawing in and the Christmas trees nearly upon us, it’ll soon be time to reflect on the past year. How will…

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  • Plot to knacker the “little people”

    “We should be happier to have a job than to have our savings protected” – Christine Lagarde, president of the European Central Bank (ECB) as of today If you work in the eurozone, and plan on retiring… at any point,…

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  • Kissing $1 trillion goodbye

    It’s a bit like watching the national debt go up. Except the other way around. Source: nbim.no That’s the homepage for Norway’s Sovereign Wealth Fund, the trillion-dollar beast of an investment portfolio born of the country’s oil revenues. While the…

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  • “The two sentences worth $50 billion”, and America’s very delicate space

    I’ve never been to California, but I’m reliably informed that those who hail from the state are not known for their subtlety. With that in mind, it’s fitting that when Mark Zuckerberg showed up before Congress to testify on his…

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  • What happened at 9pm last night?

    It‘ll be a short note from me today. I’m currently working with Charlie Morris over at The Fleet Street Letter on a new project: a comprehensive guide to valuing Bitcoin, for speculative or long term investing purposes. The Bitcoin market…

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  • Every exhaust fume has a precious metal lining

    Have thieves snuck under your car, ripped out its catalytic converter and harvested its innards yet? No? Well if I were you I’d be getting very protective of that grimy box under the chassis… for the precious metal within it…

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  • Mike Pence and the second coming of “Machine Gun Joe”

    “We rebuilt China over the past 25 years… But those days are over… No longer will America’s leaders hope that economic engagement alone will transform Communist China’s authoritarian state into a free and open society that respects private property, the…

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  • A truth forgotten for 30 years will be remembered today

    Sometimes, you have to laugh. I know I did. Source: DW The news that the German defence minister suggested sending the emaciated German military into Syria, to provide the illusion that the EU can project power abroad, was quite something….

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  • Britain goes hypersonic

    Or at least, that’s how nuclear Armageddon would have looked like in the “olden days”… That was the playbook for the last Cold War, produced by the Nuclear Threat Initiative over in the US, giving an illustration of just how…

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  • Cold War II will escalate on Thursday

    Thursday could be one for the history books. I won’t beat around the bush. Let me tell you why I think an event that day is worthy of your attention, be you an investor or an observer with an interest…

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  • The man with the golden cigar

    In the wealthier countries around the Persian Gulf, gold can be eaten in all manner of ways. Injected into soups, dusted over fries, flaked on pizza, frosted on muffins… some hotels have to buy kilos of gold leaf every year…

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  • Pillaged by the pound

    Is this a dagger deal I see before me, the handle toward my hand..? Tomorrow we’ll see if BoJo can clutch it, or if it’s really a “false creation” of multiple “heat-oppressed brains”… All joking aside, the Brexit drama has…

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  • Escaping financial blitzkrieg

    I’d been meaning to tell you about this for a while, but hadn’t got around to it. I’ve been working on a new project here at Southbank Investment Research with Nickolai Hubble. It’s called the Daily Blitz. It’s not a…

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  • The journal of “Post Soviet”, amid thunder and rain (part II)

    On 24 January this year, an individual known by the online handle “Grubles” was woken early in the morning to the sound of thunder and rain outside. Half asleep, they rushed to make sure a small computer plugged into a…

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  • Pierce Brosnan, Sean Connery and the satellites at your service (part I)

    As the Greek government is paid to borrow money, eight years after being charged credit card rates… As the Federal Reserve starts printing $60 billion a month, but refuses to call it quantitative easing… And while the Dutch central bank…

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  • Black hawk up

    “You Americans don’t smoke anymore. You live long, dull, uninteresting lives.”  – Black Hawk Down A Blackhawk helicopter over Iraq. Source: WikiCommons It’s strange to think that once January comes around, all the kids born in this country when Black…

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  • Watch now: an impromptu round table at Southbank Investment Research

    It’s a rare occasion in the office when several of our editors are around at once, and I wasn’t going to let it go to waste. Eoin Treacy and Sam Volkering, who spend their working lives analysing the future of…

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  • Helicopters, Hollywood, and the Age of the Reboot

    “That’s funny. That plane’s dusting crops where there ain’t no crops.” – North by Northwest (1959) Source: WikiCommons If Hollywood ever churns out a modern-day reboot of North by Northwest, it’ll be a drone that hares after the protagonist in…

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  • Postcard from the Sahara

    In the previous stages in the Atlas Mountains, I could always see the tire tracks of my competitors in the dirt in front of me. But right now, in the golden Sahara sand, I could not find any tire tracks….

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  • Buying Britain, and going offshore

    I hope you enjoyed Kit Winder’s note yesterday. I was working on the latest issue of Zero Hour Alert last week, and I’m just getting caught up now. It was worth it though – that issue is a winner. Using…

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  • How to get free gold (yes really, and there are no strings attached)

    Last week, my girlfriend was pleasantly surprised when she opened her mail to find gold inside. It was free: she hadn’t paid for it, and nor had I. Even more surprising, she hadn’t even paid for the postage – and…

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  • Let wealth disparity fill your sails: how to stowaway aboard the central banker’s next joyride

    When Sotheby’s got bought out earlier in the year I was disappointed, as its shares were one of the few ways the everyman could receive a dividend from the central banks. As I wrote in QE for the auctioneer (16…

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  • No pigeons allowed on parade

    Well now it’s official. The People’s Republic of China has made it past the Soviet Union. The USSR died at 69. The PRC has made it to 70. But with the US now raising its shotgun, for how much longer…

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  • The reclusive German anarchist gets a social life

    For the last couple of weeks, Nickolai Hubble has been furtively sneaking into the studio, not telling anybody what he’s in there for. Such behaviour is in some regards, to be expected; Nickolai has a reputation for being the office’s…

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  • Market maulings and missiles with men in them

    Making connections and recognising patterns where none actually exist is a risk all investors face. As humans, we’re hard-wired to do it. After all, our ancestors who didn’t make connections – like linking the sound of leaves rustling to the…

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  • Something new, something dangerous: Ross Ulbricht at the end of the road

    Over the last couple of days, the UK government has been doing something it never has before: selling bitcoin. It’s not doing it to bring about greater BTC adoption of course. Nor is this an attempt to suppress its price….

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  • The leviathan at the bottom of the deep ₿lue sea

    Well thar she blows again! A whale has surfaced once more in the bitcoin market – and this time, it’s caused even more of a stir. Though it’s disturbed the water, I’m not so worried; over the long term the…

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  • Life in the shadow of the Silk Road

    Have you ever heard of Camel City? Its official name is Winston-Salem. It’s over the pond in North Carolina, and earned its nickname from being the base of the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company – creator of Camel cigarettes. Nearly…

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  • Randy dandy and the backdoor bailout

    Now we are ready to sail for the horn Weigh, hey, roll and go Our boots and our clothes boys are all in the pawn To be rollicking randy dandy-o… Sea shanties, like financial data, can be quite hard to…

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  • Milking Mayfair

    I first visited New York City a couple of years ago. I was there to attend my brother’s wedding, but it was scheduled close to my birthday, so I took a few extra days off to see more of what…

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  • The rise of Fidel Crypto

    The capital of Cuba likely isn’t the city that springs to mind when you think of a bustling stock exchange. But on the dusty streets of Old Havana, there’s still one standing there. The Lonja del Comercio building in Old…

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  • ₿athwater overflow

    “Eureka!” cries Archimedes, rising from his bathtub. Sculpture of Archimedes outside Manchester University. Source: flickr He’d just discovered how displacement works. That the volume of water displaced when he entered the bath must be equal to the volume of his…

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  • Thar she ₿lows! Who is the mighty whale making waves in the bitcoin market?

    There’s something happening here. What it is, ain’t exactly clear. There’s a man with a gun over there, Telling me I got to beware. I think it’s time we stop, Children, what’s that sound? Everybody look what’s going down… –…

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  • Playing the “Get into Jail” card

    “I reached pension age and then I ran out of money. So it occurred to me – perhaps I could live for free if I lived in jail. So I took a bicycle and rode it to the police station…

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  • Cash-22

    “Investing in today’s surreal world calls for the experienced eye of the Profit Hunter.” So read an ad for Artemis Investment Management on the side of a black cab. I noticed it as I was heading back into work after…

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  • The banjo player and the bull market golden calf

    One cold December night in 1989, a man drove a lorry into Wall Street. He was there to commit a crime he’d spent two years preparing for – ever since the stockmarket crash of Black Monday in 1987. As he…

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  • Prozac not required… yet?

    A few weeks back in this letter (Fear is in fashion –19 August), we declared that with the financial commentariat becoming so bearish, that it was high time we got a melt-up. However, if a global recession accompanied by a…

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  • Five Avoid Negative Rates (Enid Blyton’s unreleased banking novel)

    If negative rates become more widespread across the globe, then the financial system needs to be rebuilt on a new set of assumptions. The problem is we do not yet know what those should be or how they would work. – Jim…

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  • Terrorism, typhoons, tornadoes and Ebola: the bonds we buy for yield

    Less than 5% of all bonds yield more than 5%. Pension funds need 7% to break even, assuming they are funded (most aren’t). Thus, almost all Pension Funds are fighting an impossible battle to meet future obligations. They Broke The…

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  • For king and capital

    What asset performs well in an era of deglobalisation? As luck would have it, beer. Or at least, beer made in certain areas. A few months back, a South Korean court ruled that Japanese companies must pay compensation to Korean…

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  • Absurd

    Now we buy bonds for capital appreciation, and stocks for yield! – Kyle Bass, hedge fund manager Outside the European Central Bank (ECB) in Frankfurt stands a massive artificial tree. Named “Gravity and Growth”, this sculpture built of brass and…

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  • Howzat, America?

    I only found out how the scoring worked in cricket about a month ago. Cricket isn’t taught much in Scotland for reasons which may have something to do with the weather. I think the only time I was ever taught…

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  • Boris Johnson: Central Banker of the Year 2019

    There’s nothing quite like a nice suspension of Parliament to weaken a currency. If you’ve been trading the pound, I hope you made the right call this morning. The strength of the pound relative to the dollar from late last…

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  • Daggers drawn, guns on the table

    Though the year 2019 will not go down as one in which you finally began to earn some decent interest at the bank, it will at least go down as one which produced some exceptional political theatre. Who would’ve thought…

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  • Kneecappings and fever dreams

    … we have begun a bull market in the world ‘control’ and a long bear market in the word ‘market’. Whether spoken in French, German or Bulgarian – ‘controle’, ‘steurung’ or ‘kontrole’ – all lead to the same thing: a…

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  • “A damn shame”, a “****ing waste”…

    We argued on Monday that now everybody is expecting a bear market, it’s unlikely we’ll see one arrive anytime soon. In fact, with everybody on the bearish side of the boat, we think one final, painful, cathartic hurrah may be…

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  • Things become more serious

    I hope this finds you well, and you’re enjoying the bank holiday. Unless you’re in Scotland, in which case, I hope this finds you well and you had a good bank holiday three weeks ago. Anyhow, as I’m out of…

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  • WHERE ARE THE CENTRAL BANKS..?!

    Donald Trump’s mastery of Twitter to bypass the media and control political narratives is unprecedented, and will go down in history as a symbol of our time.  We’ve argued in this letter before that his Twitter feed contains glimpses of…

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  • I won’t be seduced at the punchbowl

    Who’d have thought that we’d see Carlsberg encourage abstinence this year? A brewery discouraging the consumption of booze? Sure is wild. But as we noted a couple months back (Theatre of the absurd, 25 June), 2019 is feeling very much…

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  • Fire in the Hole

    June Carter: Well, go on down to Jackson; go ahead and wreck your health. Go play your hand you big-talkin’ man, make a big fool of yourself, You’re goin’ to Jackson; go comb your hair! Johnny Cash: Honey, I’m gonna…

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  • Melt-up incoming?

    If the world enters a recession in the near future, it will be one of the most well-predicted events in economic history. All over the press, from Bloomberg, to the Financial Times, to the Economist, to CNN and the Guardian,…

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  • A blue bear amid a black dawn

    “This has to be the biggest single week for UK aerospace since at least the Cold War” – Steve Trimble, defence editor of Aviation Week in late July Last month, a permanent new department in the Ministry of Defence was…

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  • The imperial investor

    Investing in a country “because it’ll be the next great empire” isn’t a thesis you hear every day. It certainly makes for a welcome break from the normal reasons, like low inflation and unemployment, decent demographics, etc. But hedge fund…

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  • National skin in the great game

    The Apollo 11 programme was developed faster than a next-generation iPhone. Why? I think it’s all about risk. The perception of risk – or perhaps I should say the feeling of fear – changes everything. Feeling like something is at…

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  • Latest Red Rumour: They’ll Nuke Moon

    As the US’s fresh batch of hypersonic weapons approaches the flight-testing phase… As a nuclear-powered missile test in Russia goes horribly awry… And as an Australian MP compares his country’s obliviousness to the threat of China as the French were…

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  • The bank run in disguise

    Pub quiz (I know it’s a Monday, but humour me). As the pound gets wrecked… as German manufacturing is beaten with a shovel… and as the wheels fall off the Chinese economy (HengFeng marks the third Chinese bank in as…

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  • Monstrosities on the Thames

    Enough of Cold War II for this week – today it’s time for a rifle through the mailbag. (Heads up for new readers – your thoughts and observations on the subjects we explore here at Capital & Conflict are always…

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  • Cold War on tour

    Sometimes I’ll hear folks talk about trade and economic issues as separate from national security. Let’s make no mistake about it: China’s capacity, the People’s Liberation Army’s capacity to do exactly what they’re doing is a direct result of the…

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  • Red flags in the water

    “America’s predicament is tantamount to that of the Soviet Union”, runs the front page headline of a Chinese newspaper. “The American Empire is abandoning the values that have been regarded as its standard, such as the family and religion. And…

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  • Missile crisis incoming

    We wrote yesterday how mainstream investors have grown complacent to geopolitical issues thanks to decades of US dominance. They meet the rapidly developing Cold War between the US and China with a shrug. What better way to wake ‘em up…

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  • Tom Cruise arrives in Cold War II

    We mentioned previously in this letter (“Crack Pipe”, 12/06/2019) that if the yuan cracked 7 against the dollar, that bitcoin would boom. That happened yesterday – and as expected bitcoin is taking off.  Cold War II is heating up –…

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  • Wildfires in the wilderness

    The world’s most important central banker has managed to cut interest rates, end quantitative tightening, and disappoint markets. Jerome Powell is truly a man of many talents. … though not nearly so multi-talented as the leader of the free world….

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  • Millennial Monetary Theory, part III

    If you want to sell high inflation to voters as a positive thing, you’re gonna need a damn compelling narrative. It just so happens that such a narrative is being developed and distributed. A narrative that the millennials – who’re…

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  • Millennial Monetary Theory, part II

    “Everybody would like a little more inflation…” – Christine Lagarde We dwelt yesterday on the divisions that have emerged between the millennial and boomer generations. The rifts that have emerged, especially since the credit crisis, have mostly been contained to…

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  • Millennial Monetary Theory, part 1

    The snake which cannot cast its skin has to die. – Friedrich Nietzsche The young and old appear to be at an impasse. Divided by wealth, divided by politics. Which rift caused the other? It’s arguable that the difference in…

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  • The September that never ended

    The rain was a welcome reprieve over the weekend after the baking heat last week. This summer’s temperature has certainly given the press plenty to write about, and the Extinction Rebellion crowd cause to litter Central London with stickers. But…

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  • Deported to the desert

    It was so hot outside yesterday, I thought I’d been deported. Not back to Scotland of course. Somewhere sunnier – maybe even a tax haven. Sure is summer out there. I felt like Lawrence of Arabia as I headed to…

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  • A wicked circle

    Trivia time. If you had to guess, when in history do you think this happened in the UK and the US? Earlier optimism about a progressive future gave way to a jazz-age nihilism and a pervasive cynicism about high ideals……

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  • Ditch your riches?

    “It’s never a good time to be poor, but now is a really bad time to be rich.” Steve Diggle, a hedge fund manager said that in a Real Vision interview back in 2014. On the face of it, this…

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  • The extinction of war

    In the early 1900s, a radical new idea was born, blossoming in ivory towers and high society. War, it became popular to believe, had been made obsolete. This strange idea, to be proved so awfully incorrect, was thanks to the…

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  • Little by little, we went insane

    Last week, we drew a comparison between the state of the bond market and Apocalypse Now. I’m not the only one here at Southbank Investment Research to have made the comparison. Tim Price over at The Price Report has his…

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  • Enclosed – your free gold investing ‘how to’ guide

    Thanks for reading my offer to send you our gold investing USB device. As a ‘thank you’ for taking the time to consider it… I’m giving you access to one of the reports from the device for free: It’s called:…

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  • What happens when the music stops?

    I was sent an email yesterday asking me what I think will happen in the next global economic downturn. By the senders reckoning, we’ll be “pretty screwed” he explained, as interest rates are still close to zero since the last…

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  • Smell the napalm?

    “I love the smell of napalm in the morning. You know, one time we had a hill bombed for 12 hours. When it was all over, I walked up. We didn’t find one of ’em, not one stinkin’ dink body….

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  • The horror… the horror

    Captain Willard: They told me that you had gone totally insane, and that your methods were unsound. Colonel Kurtz: Are my methods unsound? Captain Willard: I don’t see any method at all, sir. – Apocalypse Now, 1979 The horror. Data courtesy…

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  • Cool (and political)!

    I read Calvin and Hobbes religiously when I was a kid. I used to memorise the storylines, and recite them at the dinner table – drove my parents nuts. For those unfamiliar, Calvin and Hobbes was a comic strip printed…

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  • Bitcoin is CANCELLED

    What a week it’s been. Yesterday, Jerome Powell at the Federal Reserve told the Senate Banking Committee that they should not assume that the US dollar will remain the world’s reserve currency, and that bitcoin was a store of value…

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  • Silver: it’s a waiting game

    I’ve something special for you today. A few weeks back, I noted that silver was barely stirring when gold began roaring in June. Yesterday, Charlie Morris over at The Fleet Street Letter gave his insights on the precious metals market…

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  • Gunfire in the sunshine

    There’s always some shoot-out or other going on in that wild west of finance otherwise known as the crypto market. Yesterday, protestors swarmed the headquarters of TRON, a major crypto project in Beijing, and police were called in to intervene….

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  • The silk noose

    If Mark Carney is ever hanged (by the government at least), it will be with a silk rope. This exemption from hemp rope is not a job benefit that comes with running the Bank of England. It’s an esoteric privilege…

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  • Land of delusion

    “Not all EU civil servants are overpaid, some (for instance some contractors) are not, and many work hard.” – The Open Europe think tank Hello again [%= :subscriberName(D,Reader) %], Boaz Shoshan here. I hope you’ve been finding Kit Winder’s editorial…

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  • Protectors… or looters?

    Tim Price shared an interesting story during our quarterly conference call for those subscribed to The Price Report – an investing “war story” if you like. Following the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008, Tim had a meeting with…

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  • LISTEN: Southbank quarterly roundtable

    We may only be halfway through this year, but it sure is turning out to be an eventful one. With that in mind, we thought now would be a good time to have a Southbank roundtable, and get as many…

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  • No gold, no glory?

    We took a quick look at gold yesterday, which has recently belted higher all across the globe. After writing that note, I got the opportunity to speak to fund manager and gold bug Tim Price about the recent move. Though…

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  • Gold ascends to the sunlit uplands

    Down, down, down… and then all of a sudden UP all at once. This is a rather esoteric chart, but one I’ve become increasingly interested in over time: What this chart displays is what’s known as the “implied volatility” of…

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  • Theatre of the absurd

    2019 is beginning to feel an awful lot like 2016. Just as then, heralded by stalling global growth and low inflation figures, the central banker’s nightmare – deflation – is back. The same dynamics are playing out – the prices…

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  • Unlicensed to print money

    I was wrong. Bitcoin did not hit $10,000 by midnight on Friday. I was too bullish by 40 minutes: BTC reclaimed the $10k territory at twenty to one on Saturday morning. But once it hit the $10k handle, it was…

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  • $10k ₿itcoin by midnight?

    Will bitcoin hit $10k by midnight tonight? It’s at $9,600 as I write this, up more than 400 bucks since yesterday morning – and if recent weekends are any guide, the psychological $10k level may well be on the horizon….

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  • Becoming systemic

    Yesterday, we took a look at Mark Zuckerberg’s ambition to become a central banker, launching a form of “world money” called Libra. Libra will essentially be an exchange-traded fund (ETF). It’ll hold a diverse basket of currencies and short-term government…

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  • Governor Zuck, of the Bank of Libra

    Almost two years ago in Southbank Investment Daily, I speculated that Mark Zuckerberg was slyly setting the foundations for a US presidential run. After hiring Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign manager (“change you can believe in” still brings a cynical…

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  • QE for the people auctioneer

    I had this one stock waiting in the wings, which I was dying to recommend when the conditions were just right. But as luck would have it, just as those conditions are arriving… I can no longer recommend it. The…

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  • Sitting tight, in the world’s wildest market

    I woke up Sunday morning bleary eyed, after a late evening at a beer festival in Hackney. Upon checking my phone, I let out an exclamation that had my girlfriend yelling from across the room to ask me what was…

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  • (M)ore war?

    The London Metal Exchange is toughening its stance on alcohol consumption with new rules that will prohibit floor traders from drinking during the workday, according to people familiar with the matter. – Bloomberg The change in rules comes at a…

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  • Tear gas and train tickets

    There were long and winding queues at the ticket machines for the metro in Hong Kong yesterday. The Hongkongers, who’d normally use their plastic “Octopus” cards to pay for public transport (similar to Oyster cards in London), instead wanted paper…

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  • Crack pipe

    State seizure of private wealth in the UK is something I expect we’ll see a lot more of in coming years. The recently launched unexplained wealth orders (UWOs), which permits the National Crime Agency to seize your assets if it’s…

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  • Bastard money

    It’ll be a short note from me today – I’ve just returned from a short holiday, and am still getting properly caught up. It’s been good to “unplug” from screens for a while, and I highly recommend it. It does…

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  • “Ground zero” for 21st century chaos

    “How could it be that the economy which is leading the world, that was on top of the world in 1950, that after half a century of more patents, more professors, more scientists, more engineers, more everything that you could…

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  • The conflict to come

    I hope you enjoyed part I of my conversation with Dan Denning yesterday. Today we continue on with part II, the latter half, where we discussed the causes of Cold War II between the US and China, the 2020 presidential…

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  • Under surveillance

    Long-time readers of Southbank Investment Research will remember Dan Denning, our erstwhile publisher and the former writer of this very letter. Dan was back in town recently, having been on adventure all around the globe looking for “boltholes” where liberty…

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  • The anti-trust bust

    You could almost draw this chart with a setsquare. Investors in Deutsche Bank have been reminded once again that just because something is cheap doesn’t mean it’s valuable. Trust is a damn rare commodity these days, and $DB, one of…

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  • The wind that shakes the BTC

    At 0%, Bitcoin has a higher yield than government bonds in 18 countries whose central banks are attempting to debase their currencies and inflate asset prices. In unrelated news, Bitcoin is up 112% year-to-date. – Charlie Bilello, on Twitter That’s…

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  • Passage to the crypt(o)

    In yesterday’s note, I made the case that the crypto boom of 2017 was the product of post-crisis monetary policy. Investors, forced to take more risk due to the low returns found in traditional assets, reached for yield in the…

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  • Much ado about something, part II

    Yesterday we took a look at who it might be that’s bidding up bitcoin. In today’s note, I’d like to zoom out a bit, and put the blooming of BTC in the context of the global macroeconomic garden. For regardless…

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  • Much ado about something, part I

    Yesterday we took a look at bitcoin’s abrupt spike upwards over the weekend. Today, let’s investigate what has so suddenly woken the crypto market. This is not the product of retail investor exuberance which characterised the grand bull run of…

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  • A mid-Sunday’s pipe dream

    Look into the camera. Hold the sign up in front of you. Keep the sign there, and now turn your head to the left. And now to the right. Good. Getting your mugshots taken in this manner feels like you’re…

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  • The only metric that matters?

    Optimism. Devotion. Confusion. Scepticism. Outright hatred… Cryptocurrencies bring out a wide spectrum of responses from investors. Their recent arrival in the investment world has been divisive, as some dismiss their existence, while the optimists look for fundamentals that can be…

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  • Prozac investment plays

    Imagine an investment that made you rich… and made you feel like the planet’s saviour? A winning combination, right? Great investment gains plus a higher self-esteem… who wouldn’t invest? It’s a Prozac investment play. I think I’ve found what could…

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  • Filthy Fuel Finale

    Whatever your opinion on climate change, its increasing presence in political discourse is set to continue. The consequences of this – how governments decide to interfere in the economy in the name of climate change – is tricky to predict,…

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  • LISTEN: new CryptoCast now online

    It’ll be a short note from me today. We have a guest in the office this week, our former publisher no less, who’s come over from New Zealand for a brief visit. Long-time subscribers to Capital & Conflict will remember…

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  • Sabotage and subterfuge in Saudi

    Somebody is trying to turn off the world’s biggest oil tap. The last few days have seen multiple attacks in the Arabian Peninsula, all directed toward hindering oil and gas operations. It began on Sunday with the UAE declaring that…

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  • What the hell is going on?

    I had almost forgotten the madness of the crypto market. In late 2017 I was endlessly squinting at my monitor to make sure I hadn’t misread the figures I was seeing – the sudden changes in price were so extreme….

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  • A deep green gluttony

    Ben Bernanke, who was chair of the Federal Reserve during the financial crisis, glowingly referred to his actions as “The Courage to Act”. This form of “courage”, likely also felt by those orchestrating the invasion of Iraq or the suppression…

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  • Bears in the Black Gold Bazaar?

    Further to our musings on energy this week, I’d like to introduce you to one of our editors who thinks crunch time is approaching for the Gulf oil powers. Eoin Treacy is of the opinion that Saudi Arabia in particular,…

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  • Petroactive

    Earlier this week, I asked your thoughts on what the future holds for Saudi Arabia, oil, and energy in general. Thank you to all who wrote in, it’s been great to hear your predictions and stories on the topic. On…

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  • Killing it

    Larry Kudlow, former television host and now director of the National Economic Council over in the US, recently appeared in a video on the official White House Twitter account, in which he proudly exclaimed in a prepared statement: “Wow. Low…

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  • Twilight in the desert

    In 2005, two men made a bet over the phone. They both chipped in $5,000, with the winner to take the ten grand, plus interest earned on 1 January 2011. It became known as “the $10,000.00 question”, and gained a…

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  • A golden geyser coming to the boil?

    Today and next week, you’re in for something special. If I told you that net household wealth around the globe would double by 2026, would you believe me? To clarify, by net household wealth, that’s the value of everything owned…

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  • Back to war

    Scrolling through my Twitter feed over the long weekend I came across something curious. Now curiosities, are of course, par for the course on Twitter (which is why I imagine a lot of folks use it), but this one stood…

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  • No oil, no quarter

    US oil exports are a success story of the past decade. They are a function of new drilling technology, record average annual oil prices post-2008, cheap capital post-2008, and one last (but greatly-underappreciated) factor: The US government sanctioning cheaper oil…

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  • VIDEO: a crude conversation

    Wishing you a very Happy Easter from all of us here at Southbank Investment Research! Hopefully you’ll be spending this long weekend with family and friends (in the sunshine if we’re lucky). But if you get a spare moment, I’ve…

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  • VIDEO: a crude conversation, part II

    Hope you’ve been having a great Easter. And I hope you enjoyed part I of my conversation with James Allen on the possibility of a “Crude Credit Crunch” (if you’ve not watched it yet, you can see it here). James…

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  • Sunset on the cowboys of New Arabia

    Even assuming future annual increases are only one-third that of what they were in 2018, [American oil production] will add a new Saudi Arabia of output within a decade. … It is indeed time to start noodling over what it means…

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  • Sins of the Kaiser

    I used to read this newsletter during my lunch break in my previous job. While I enjoyed and looked forward to reading it each day, I often wished that it would focus a little more on conflict, and not just…

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  • “Skipping blindly down the road to hell”

    Last week, I asked for your thoughts on the millennial generation. And you didn’t disappoint. It’s time for a rummage through the mailbag. While the age parameters vary depending on who you ask, the generation born during the 80s and…

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  • The truth about our business

    I’ve something special for you today. While in normally in Capital & Conflict we peer at the financial markets and try to learn their secrets, today I’d like to try and answer a more existential question: why does this business…

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  • It’s almost funny

    I received a terrific email from a reader yesterday morning, which I’d like to share with you today. Please tell me I’m wrong… So when the next European banking crisis hits, let’s say in Italy, and it’s due… Everyone will…

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  • GET DEBT

    The most profitable company in the world has drunk from the debt pool for the first time… and to great applause. Saudi Aramco, titan of the oil market, finally gave into temptation and borrowed over £9 billion earlier this week….

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  • The Trust Crisis

    Boaz Shoshan here, I’m back again. I took a brief holiday home to Aberdeen for the BrewDog AGM, but have now returned to the southern English sunshine. I was hoping to “decompress” and keep my mind off work while I…

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  • Something crazy this way comes

    Friday at last. What a busy week it has been here at the office. We’ve plenty in the works at the moment that you’ll be hearing more about in the coming weeks. I’m only now getting caught up on the…

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  • A new Golden Age? Part III

    Boaz here again. I’ve just finished working on a brand new project with Nick Hubble in our studio, which you’ll hear more about next week. I hope you enjoyed Nick O’Connor’s thoughts on gold while I was away but today…

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  • A new Golden Age? Part II

    We continue on from yesterday’s letter on why I believe gold has a bright future. In yesterday’s letter, we detailed what real interest rates are, and how falling and negative real interest rates push the gold price up like a…

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  • A new Golden Age? Part I

    Gold. Some love it, some hate it. We’re in the former camp, but whether you like it or not there are forces at work we believe will push its price higher. I’m currently writing a report on what those forces…

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  • The curtains close

    So ends an eventful quarter here at Southbank Investment Research. It’s been a hyperactive beginning to the year, with plenty going on at the office. But now it’s time to move into the next quarter, and just next week our…

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  • What are we doing here?

    Our publisher Nick O’Connor gave a presentation to everyone in the office not long ago. I was away on holiday at the time so I didn’t get to see it, but thankfully it was captured on video. I watched it…

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  • “The best investment I have ever made…”

    I’m just off to begin the first quarterly conference call of the year for readers of The Price Report. Tim and I were going to call it a “Brexit Special”, but that was before talk of a delay came to…

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  • This is what freedom tastes like

    It’s not often our head quant heads over from Texas, but when he does, I have a simple request: please bring a six-pack of Lone Star beer. Lone Star, the “National Beer of Texas”, is brewed out in Fort Worth….

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  • No Capital & Conflict this week

    There won’t be receiving your daily dose of Capital & Conflict editorial this week. Have no fear – we’re not closing our doors for good. But right now it’s all hands on deck as we launch The Southbank Investors’ Exhibition….

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  • An AK-47 on my desk

    One morning in Mauritius last week, a message arrived from work that yanked me firmly out of my jovial holiday mood. “Your Kalashnikov arrived in the mail” read the WhatsApp message. It was from my good friend and colleague Nick…

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  • Buy bombs, wear diamonds

    Back in the late 80s and 90s there was a saying that rose to popularity among traders on Wall Street: “buy bonds, wear diamonds.” The meaning behind it was simple. If you filled your portfolio with bonds, you’d make so…

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  • Allergy warning

    I was lucky enough to get an hour of his time before he leaves for the Ivory Coast for a job he’s working on with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. And I wasn’t disappointed – he’d plenty to…

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  • Back at the beehive

    Boaz Shoshan here, back at the helm of Capital & Conflict. I’m just returned from holiday, complete with sunburn and an ignorance of the latest Brexit drama. I hope you’ve enjoyed the sterling work of Kit Winder and Nickolai Hubble…

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  • Return of the Pound Scots?

    The Scottish Independence referendum feels like an incredibly long time ago. The political drama has increased by a factor of 11 since then, but oh boy did it feel intense at the time. In retrospect, it was probably a great…

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  • The Coca-Cola of war

    “Of all the weapons in the vast Soviet arsenal, nothing was more profitable than Avtomat Kalashnikova model of 1947, more commonly known as the AK-47 or Kalashnikov. It’s the world’s most popular assault rifle, a weapon all fighters love. An…

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  • Brown Bottom: a golden ale for golden times

    We’re thinking of buying a load of beer here at Southbank Investment Research. Not just for us, mind – but for you too. It started with the news story that MPs in the Public Accounts Committee had recommended the Bank…

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  • Get out of jail free employment absolutely minted

    Why are CEOs bailing out of their companies like there’s a financial crisis on? They must not have got Donald Trump’s memo that everything is fine in the US economy. Or read the latest issue of The Fleet Street Letter,…

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  • Dogfights and deadly treasure

    I’ve no edge when it comes to India-Pakistan relations, so I’ve no insight as to how the two countries will behave now that violence has erupted between them. All I know is, 1: You’ll be able to cut the atmosphere…

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  • The man who bludgeoned Bear Stearns

    “On Wednesday we wired all the money out of there, and they failed, as you may remember, on Friday.”  Hedge fund veteran Simon Mikhailovich told me that in a recent conversation we recorded for our 2019 Gold Summit. We’re going live with it today, for a 24-hour period…

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  • How the world just changed, in two metrics

    In today’s letter, I’d like to focus on two things. Two things changed recently, which haven’t changed in a very long time. There are very few traders and investment managers around today who were working the last time they occurred….

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  • Waiting on the nuke

    I hope you’ve been getting as much sunshine as we have in London! I always thought my birthday was in winter, but when the day passed last week, it felt like spring. I’m currently enjoying the sun as I write…

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  • The Great British Gold Grab

    If you ever want to get a strong response out of somebody in finance, just ask them if the gold price is manipulated. It’s a question that’s incredibly divisive, especially on the fringes of the financial world. As the gold…

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  • There’s something under your car…

    Financial markets often seem very detached from the real world. It can be hard to relate the green or red numbers flickering up and down on a screen to what’s actually going on outside. But sometimes, the seemingly inscrutable movements…

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  • FOUND: the Magic Money Tree

    I’m short gold. And it’s not feeling good. As you may already know as a Capital & Conflict reader, betting against the value of gold doesn’t come naturally to me – I love the stuff. But I’ve ended up doing…

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  • A Golden Abyss

    It’ll be a short note from me today – I’m just about to chat to a world-renowned gold insider for our 2019 Gold Summit. If you’ve not claimed your ticket yet, I recommend you do – we’ve got a terrific…

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  • Rage of the thirsty

    Recent analyses, notably from the World Bank, show that while levels of inequality at a global scale have gone down, the average person lives now in a more unequal country than in the late 1980s… … inequality does not only…

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  • Happy hour for Molotov cocktails

    We mentioned on Tuesday how the last thing the eurozone needed right now was a Cold War between the US and China. Germany is the economic engine of the eurozone, fuelled by exports to the US and China. When those…

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  • They’re not letting us back in here…

    Germans joining Italians in recession (and soon to join the French in the streets)… The Spanish youth nearly as woefully unemployed as young Greeks… and Belgium almost as indebted as the Republic of Ireland. I’m not sure this was the…

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  • The devil arrives in Deutschland

    The European Spring is coming to Germany. But before we get to that, I’ve an announcement to make. My colleague Nick Hubble has just returned from a trip to the heart of the EU, where he delivered a message so…

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  • Riddle of the Rothschilds

    “When the streets of Paris are running with blood, I buy”, claimed a Rothschild banker in the 19th century. Buy assets cheaply during conflict, and sell them at a profit at conflict resolution; a cold-hearted strategy certainly, but a profitable…

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  • Black helicopters over Britain

    As I was walking home from work the other day, I was met with an unusual sight. It was when I was crossing Southwark Bridge, that I saw them: a pair of Apache gunships flying down the Thames in close…

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  • These nukes aren’t gonna replace themselves

    I am writing this just a few hours after the US launched a nuke. Fear not – we aren’t all seconds from being evaporated. It was the US testing its nuclear deterrent, or more specifically, the delivery vehicle. The unarmed…

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  • Time of death debt

    Riddle me this: why have investors started paying to lend to the French government… as the yellow vest protests intensify? The yellow vest protests in France kicked off in full on 17 November. But since then, demand for French government…

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  • White Swans over Venezuela

    Our “Blueprint for Cold War II” series last week was timely. On Thursday, we outlined the risks to investors should the US pull out of a certain missile non-proliferation treaty with Russia. On Friday, it pulled out of it, and…

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  • “The most erotic thing in their world was…”

    “Money, capital, has a life of its own. It’s a force of the nature. Like gravity. Like the oceans. It flows where it wants to flow. This whole thing with the Arabs and gold is inevitable – we’re just going…

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  • A mirage in the desert

    Some more comedy relief to start us off today. This statement comes courtesy of the European Central Bank (ECB), via its Twitter account: ECB asset purchases have reduced inequality in the eurozone, our research shows. They have especially benefited low-income…

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  • The blueprint for Cold War II: part 3

    A return to the dark days of the first Cold War, constant threat of nuclear annihilation included, is not exactly a pleasant prospect. So before I conclude this three-part series on why I think that’s coming (and how to profit…

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  • The blueprint for Cold War II: part 2

    Today we continue with our Cold War II thesis. If you want to know why a sequel to the Cuban Missile Crisis is coming and you didn’t read yesterday’s letter, click here to read it. The final part of this…

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  • The Blueprint for Cold War II: part 1

    I’m currently drafting a report for the Capital & Conflict website to attract new readers. But I thought I’d share it in the daily letter to begin with – after all, you lot signed up first! Some of this briefing…

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  • Boozing in the Bank of England

    Getting hammered in a central bank is an experience reserved only for the financial elite. The idea of proles like you or I knocking back drinks in such ivory towers borders on heresy. But believe it or not, the Public…

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  • Trillion-pound accounting error

    There’s a large Metro Bank branch not far from my flat. Whenever I pass it, my eyes are drawn to a large, unusual device it has inside. It’s a circular hole in the wall with the words “The magic money…

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  • Empire or bust

    “They can paper over the cracks,” he said. “The political will is there.” “So it’s empire or bust?” I asked. “Yes.” It was nearly midnight. We were in the smoking lounge of a grand private club in Whitehall, not far…

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  • Who can you trust?

    Who can be trusted these days? The media? The government? The central banks? Trust in all three is waning, if not outright broken in the eyes of some. Which poses a big problem to us as investors for our entire…

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  • Bonfire of the globalists

    It’s time for the global elite to reassure each other that they’re still in charge, and that everything will be all right. Yes dear reader, it’s time for Davos, the annual globalist gathering. Central bankers, economists, multinational businessmen, politicos and…

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  • Europe’s Eclipse

    I got up early this morning and headed on to the roof, hoping for a peek at the eclipse. I was met instead by birdsong and a sky draped in red clouds. Oh well. Hopefully you were luckier than I…

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  • Fire up the printing presses, we’re going to war

    “But what about the pension funds?” the man across the table asked me. We were having dinner in a restaurant overlooking the Thames, a view tarnished only by the scaffolding cocooning Westminster. I had just outlined my theory that as…

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  • Blood on the horizon

    The January issue of Zero Hour Alert went out last week. It’s all about how China is amping up its navy, and the risks this poses to financial markets as China looks to control financial markets. While the expansion of…

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  • Shoot the protestors

    If you’ve been trading sterling over the last few days, I tip my hat to you. If you’ve turned a profit, I tip it again. With another vote of no confidence on the table, the distinct lack of a dull…

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  • How to split the market

    I bought my father a splitting maul for his birthday a few years ago. Turned out to be the best present I’ve ever given him. By the time I got to have a go with it in December, it was…

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  • Poseidon the profiteer

    [The] future has arrived, and it is nothing less than a new cold war. … this situation will last decades and will only get worse, whatever this or that trade deal is struck between smiling Chinese and American presidents in…

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  • French toast

    The French central bank on fire… fork lifts rammed into banks and the ministry of finance… brutal fights between riot police and protestors… cars set ablaze… and yet the market is still willing to lend to the French government at…

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  • The great unplugging

    Way back in 2012 (remember then?), a Danish policeman ordered some Cuban cigars from Germany. It was a perfectly legal and above-board bank transaction, but the money he paid – roughly £16,500 – disappeared. Why? The answer is simple, but…

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  • $AAPL crumble

    By Christmas, my iPhone SE had less battery life than a Mayfly and needed a replacement. I headed to the Apple store to take a look at the latest iPhone X. I was wholly uninspired by the design, and wondered…

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  • The spring of hope, the winter of despair

    Happy New Year! I hope you all had a good Hogmanay. I had a great time back home in Scotland where today there’s an extra bank holiday to provide more hangover recovery time. But now I’m back at my desk…

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  • Blood Meridian

    To conclude the week, and our “golden conversations” miniseries, I have this podcast to share with you. This one was with John Butler, gold expert, author, and the current CEO of the Lend & Borrow Trust Company, which allows individuals…

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  • The gold/beer ratio and monetary madness

    Next up in our “golden conversations” mini-series, is a brilliant discussion I had with Ronald-Peter Stöeferle – an Austrian, Austrian economist. Ronnie is a treasure trove of information, and in this discussion he revealed what risks lie on the horizon…

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  • The return of the wolves

    Happy Boxing Day! For the rest of this week, we’ll be publishing some of the highlights of a side project I’ve been working on this year: The Gold Podcast. In 2018 I’ve had some incredible conversations with folks in the…

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  • Season’s greetings from Southbank Investment Research

    A short note from me today. I’d just like to wish you a very Merry Christmas on behalf of myself and everyone else at Southbank Investment Research. We write to you often about markets and money, risk and opportunity, but…

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  • The future, in pictures: part II

    Before we get going, just a reminder that right now, there’s a way you can claim a free copy of Charlie Morris’s complete strategy for surviving the market downturn, “Surviving the Next Bear Market: a field guide for investors”. As…

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  • The future, in pictures: part I

    Today’s letter is a free peak at an issue of The Price Report, my colleague and friend Tim Price’s investment advisory. The issue was jam-packed with links to additional information worth looking at. Enjoy! The future, in pictures: part I…

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  • The houses built on sand

    Today I bring you a piece from Akhil Patel, editor of Cycles Trends & Forecasts. Akhil thinks we’re in a lull of a colossal bull market that will rip on into the 2020s. Not a very popular view at the…

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  • The domino that ends the euro

    Continuing our highlight reel for the year, here’s the letter in which Nick Hubble correctly predicted how the Italian elections would ignite financial markets. This went out on 16 February; the Italian bond market exploded in May, so Nick wasn’t…

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  • Home for Christmas

    I’m currently back home for the holidays in Aberdeen (enjoying the weather of course), so over the break you won’t have to put up with my scribblings and can sample some of our best editorial instead. To begin the week,…

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  • Listen to this

    I’ve not got something for you to read today, but something to listen to. It’s the Southbank Annual Roundtable event that we’ve just recorded. Nick Hubble, chief strategist of Zero Hour Alert, Harry Hamburg, editor of Exponential Investor, Nick O’Connor,…

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  • A goose in the crossfire

    Theresa May wrestles on in the mud of No. 10. The value of the pound has taken a return flight to where it was on 10 December before the no confidence commotion, this short act of the play now concluded….

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  • Dark days for a Davos Man

    So, who’s going to be our new prime minister? Or will Theresa May manage to wrestle on in the mud at No. 10? Never a dull moment these days. If nothing else, we should at least appreciate the theatre –…

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  • Letters from a banana republic

    Almost two years ago now, during my old job as a financial adviser, I attended an “annual masterclass” for fellow advisers. The event was held in a scenic location by a horse racing track in the Scottish countryside. During these…

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  • Honey for the bears?

    Hope you had a great weekend. I’m out of the office today, so no market commentary from me. Instead, I’ll leave you in the capable hands of Charlie Morris, with a snippet of his latest editorial for readers of The…

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  • The Judas Pair

    If the US stock and bond markets were to close for the year today, it would be the first time in over 40 years that both assets ended the year in the red. There’s a few weeks in December yet,…

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  • The safety is off

    It’s time to appreciate the sunset as this year draws to a close, and reflect on what 2018 really meant for financial markets. What’s past is prologue; let’s see what we can arm ourselves with from the last 12 months…

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  • Does Washington want the euro to fail?

    A short note from me today – we’re just about to go live with the latest quarterly conference call for The Price Report subscribers. I’m sure Tim Price will have much to say on the events of the past year,…

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  • The secret bail-out blueprints

    … like a circle in a spiral, like a wheel within a wheel, Never ending or beginning on an ever spinning reel… – “Windmills of Your Mind”, Alan and Marilyn Bergman (1968) Our old friend the doom loop is back…

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  • The Last Day of Pompeii

    “I can definitely say that DB is a safe bank.” – Stuart Lewis, chief risk officer at Deutsche Bank in August The Last Day of Pompeii – Karl Brullov I’d like to believe that all is fine and dandy over…

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  • Your letters on Cold War II

    Yesterday I took advantage of our newly refurbished studio to interview Nick Hubble on his new book, How the Euro Dies – look out for it later this week. With any luck I’ll be recording an episode of The Gold…

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  • Will we betray America?

    In Cold War II, where will the UK stand? To whom will Britannia pledge her trident: the US, or China? A quick recap. My thesis that Cold War II will occur runs as follows: to remain a superpower, the US…

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  • “The new QE”

    “Just remember that Mr Market will coax everybody back into the pool before he tosses the toaster oven in.” – Dave Collum, financial commentator/chemistry professor Collum’s metaphor is somewhat crude, but he makes a good point – the death of…

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  • Splinternet

    How long must we benefit from something… before we take it for granted? A week? A year? A decade? Stock prices are built on many layers of our assumptions. Investors assume many conditions will stay the same or will move…

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  • Spiral descension

    I had a phone call yesterday evening with a man who caused the financial crisis. He had been in the hedge fund business at the time. Bear Stearns was their prime broker. Lehman Brothers was their counterparty. And Fortis –…

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  • My biggest call

    Christmas cannot come early enough for General Electric ($GE).   While Oxford Street may be getting its Christmas lights switched on today, the festive mood has yet to bleed into global stockmarkets. GE in particular could really use some eggnog…

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  • It’s midnight on the Titanic

    It’s midnight on the Titanic. As it sails through the darkness, an ominous object looms on the horizon… But it’s not an iceberg this time. It’s a massive black rock: I am referring to BlackRock ($BLK), the world’s largest investment…

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  • Draghi’s dogs in deep water

    Would you like the good news, or the bad news first? Whenever I’ve asked people this in the past they’ve always picked the bad news, so I’ll start with that on this fine morning in Bloody October. I wrote to…

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  • You can’t talk about this

    A subscriber to Zero Hour Alert wrote in recently, with an intriguing story I’m compelled to share. I am an avid reader of your Zero Hour Alert, just love it. I wanted you to know, recently attending a luncheon full…

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  • The Da Vinci omen

    On the very same day Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy, the art market was booming in ways nobody had seen before. Damien Hirst had bypassed his art dealer and his gallery, and listed a large collection of his work directly…

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  • Gold – the opposite of growth?

    I’m currently back in Scotland visiting family, so it’ll be a short note from me today. But gold has flared up again in recent times and Charlie Morris has been quick to detect the change in trend over at The…

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  • Et in Arcadia ego

    “… as of today, the doom loop is very big and very much alive.” Lorenzo Codogno and Mara Monti – The London School of Economics Hanging in the Louvre in Paris is a work of art that has provoked debate…

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  • Pilots of Fortune

    The “reach for yield” – where investors take on more risk to scrape ever smaller returns – continues, despite the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England raising rates. It’ll take many more rate hikes without something breaking before we…

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  • Want to look like a demigod?

    Got 400 grand lying around, and want to look like a demigod? No? That’s too bad. For today, Sotheby’s is auctioning something that wouldn’t look out of place in the hands of a mythological hero, returning triumphant from some divine…

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  • Degradation ceremony

    The fallout from the Nasdaq nuke on Wednesday persists across markets. Asian markets have had a bounce, but in the West, stocks are suffering. The FTSE, the S&P, and the EuroStoxx have continued to bleed. And importantly, government bonds in…

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  • The Nasdaq gets nuked

    The men labelled by the Italian deputy prime minister as “the gentlemen of the spread” are roughing him up. Who are these “gentlemen of the spread”? In short, they’re investors selling Italian debt, and buying German debt instead. The buying…

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  • The Lone Ranger rides again

    The Lone Ranger has returned. Not in a reboot of the classic black and white western series, but in the US stockmarket. A master of disguise, he now goes by the handle “S&P 500”. In his guise as the US…

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  • A steamroller of a rollover

    If you were a government looking to default on some debts and didn’t want to ruffle many feathers, who would you decide to default on? Which lender would be the most politically palatable victim? And which would damage your credit…

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  • The next big bubble

    What if you invested in the next market bubble… before it became a bubble? What if you bought an asset when it was trading at fair value… before everyone and their dog bought in too? Due to the structure of…

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  • The gentlemen of the spread cometh

    It’s happening. Blood is being spilt in the financial markets over Italy. Italian government bonds continue to plummet as investors sell them off cheaper and cheaper. The latest trigger? Claudio Borghi, a senior official and lawmaker in the Italian government,…

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  • The death of words

    “A good sketch is better than a long speech.” – Napoleon Bonaparte The written word is faced by an ancient threat today: hieroglyphs. Kids these days can have entire text conversations with each other, while barely typing a word –…

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  • Masters of perception

    A short letter today. I’m just off to host a quarterly conference call with Tim Price for subscribers of The Price Report. With the tenth anniversary of Lehman Brothers’ bankruptcy just two days away, it’s a time for reflection. What’s…

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  • Your plum pudding is in danger

    “What joins men together is not the sharing of bread but sharing of enemies.” – Cormac McCarthy, Blood Meridian More than a year ago when we had a hung parliament, I suggested in Capital & Conflict that those wanting power…

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  • The cruellest month awaits

    Another week, another member of the elite rings the alarm on the growing risk in the financial system. Harald Malmgren was a senior economic adviser to presidents John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford. A consummate…

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  • Sucked dry

    Bloomberg reports that gold investors are “giving up hope”. Speculators in the gold futures market are making record bets on a crash… But if you tune out the noise of the media, hold your breath, and listen very closely… you…

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  • The Skuridin incident

    4 July 1989. As Americans awoke to celebrate Independence Day, a lone Soviet fighter jet took off from Poland and began flying west. The pilot of the MiG-23 “Flogger” did not explain himself as he soared across Europe. Crossing Polish…

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  • Walking the plank with John Denver

    Bond investors are turning to John Denver songs to make money. Yes, you read that right. Country Roads and Leaving on a Jet Plane have become a substitute for bonds. Such is the state of the fixed income market. Who…

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  • Sure is toasty out there

    It was nice and cold in Edinburgh this weekend. It seems strange saying that, but this heatwave has turned our London office into a furnace. When I saw the sky go overcast through the train window shortly after crossing the…

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  • The spearhead loses its edge

    Have you heard of a “vanward” before? It’s a word that’s sadly fallen out of use in recent times, but it actually applies well to financial markets today. In fact, if you’re reading this, you may well be a vanward!…

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  • A most destructive milkshake

    What’s a dollar milkshake when it’s at home? Well, if Brent Johnson is any guide, it’s a move in currencies that is going to rip the world apart and make it beg for mercy. Brent is a wealth manager and…

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  • Escape of the truth genie

    Before England got booted out of the World Cup last week, I asked you why politics has come to dominate so much of our lives, and what vacuum it is filling. I received many thoughtful responses – thank you to…

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  • When cheating is OK

    Oh well. It was good while it lasted. At least my colleague won his bet and won’t have to get a three lions tattoo… I’m just glad I had enough beer in the fridge to last me through the semi-final….

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  • A fervour for the fringe

    A colleague has just informed me he’s put a bet on. Not for money either. If England win the World Cup, he’s going to get his first tattoo: the three lions crest, with “thirty years of hurt” in bold beneath…

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  • Inside Davy Jones’ locker

    What perils lie in wait for financial markets? I attended a conference in Blackfriars last week centred on just this question. This “risk horizon” event was intended for fund managers and other investment professionals. We’re on the fringe of the…

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  • Secrets of the car boot portfolio

    How much of your total wealth could you fit into the boot of your car at a moment’s notice? 5%? 10%? If you’re anything like “the everyman”, the figure will be very low. Putting some of your wealth into physical…

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  • Russia’s golden gambit

    Last week, in the dusty recesses of the US Treasury website, a new document appeared. Its bland contents – just another pale soup of numbers – was deceptive. For the document revealed a startling act of financial aggression that Russia…

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  • Temples of vermin

    “… there’s this massive dead cockroach right under this chair.” “[nodding] There are nights sometimes when you hear the rats scurrying around in the ceiling too.” Where do you reckon this conversation took place? The answer may surprise you. And…

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  • The blockheads of Babylon

    26 years ago, the European Council released a poster. It illustrated its ambitions for Europe with a bright catchphrase and colours. But soon after its release, it abruptly withdrew it. It wasn’t popular with the public. And it revealed a…

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  • “… you have to lie”

    Have you ever held a bar of solid gold? If you’ve not tried it before, and happen to be in London, head over to a bullion dealer called Sharps Pixley in Mayfair. Ross Norman, the owner, will be happy to…

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  • Password: Azusol32

    I stepped out of the office into the bright afternoon, and paused for a moment. On the face of it, I was about to make a completely stupid move. In pursuit of something that nobody seems to value these days,…

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  • The taste of snake

    “It’s impossible not to commit fraud in this job,” said a voice from across the table. I raised my eyebrows. Others around me did not – this was not surprising to them. Who would say such a thing? What profession…

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  • The secret formula for divine fire

    Today, I’m going to share a secret with you. It’s a hidden recipe for a life-changing concoction. The Aztecs called it the “Divine Messenger”. The very first anthropologist said of those that consumed it, “it sustains them and gives them…

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  • First data, then hellfire

    Have you ever heard of a whisky called Rattlesnake Rosie’s? Its apple pie flavoured. That’s right – apple pie whisky. Whatever will they think of next? Its American made, of course. I came across it at a bar in New…

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  • No nukes for me

    Have you been investing in Iranian nuclear technology? If you have, I applaud your audacity. Fortune favours the bold, and investing moves don’t get much bolder than trying to profit from Iranian nukes. To be clear: I have not been…

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  • Death wears bunny slippers

    Have you heard of the Kanyon? It’s a new addition to Russia’s nuclear arsenal. It’s an underwater drone, designed to be fired from a submarine like a torpedo. It can race across the ocean for days, thousands of feet below…

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  • Excesses of the evergreen empire

    It’s been an interesting week in financial markets. FTSE: flat. Gold: up. War stocks: up. As I write, cryptocurrencies are catching a bid again. If your portfolio is in the green today, you’re probably a cynic, or as the Americans…

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  • Monarch of the Beasts

    An apex predator is an animal at the top of the food chain, with prey to hunt, but no predator to fear. They are the royalty of an ecosystem. Beasts are often used as symbols to explain the abstractions of…

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  • The elimination of desire

    Have you heard of a colour called Pantone 448C? It’s also known as “opaque couché”. If you’re a smoker in the UK, you’ll probably have seen it by now on tobacco products, as part of a drive to “kill the…

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  • Trillion pound porridge

    “Stress level quite close.” So ended an email I received from Charlie Morris yesterday. I had asked him his thoughts on a recent spike in a metric that’s built in to more than £250 trillion of assets around the world….

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  • Money making melodies

    What do you reckon this is? I thought it was from a real estate brochure. I was disappointed to find that you can’t live in there as this is the inside of a violin (I suppose the watermark is a…

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  • To define is to limit

    Volatility as a concept is widely misunderstood. Volatility is not fear. Volatility is not the VIX index. Volatility is not a statistic or a standard deviation, or any other number derived by abstract formula. Volatility is no different in markets…

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