Player FM - Internet Radio Done Right
Checked 2d ago
Dodano eleven tygodni temu
Treść dostarczona przez McAlvany Weekly Commentary. Cała zawartość podcastów, w tym odcinki, grafika i opisy podcastów, jest przesyłana i udostępniana bezpośrednio przez McAlvany Weekly Commentary lub jego partnera na platformie podcastów. Jeśli uważasz, że ktoś wykorzystuje Twoje dzieło chronione prawem autorskim bez Twojej zgody, możesz postępować zgodnie z procedurą opisaną tutaj https://pl.player.fm/legal.
Player FM - aplikacja do podcastów
Przejdź do trybu offline z Player FM !
Przejdź do trybu offline z Player FM !
Podcasty warte posłuchania
SPONSOROWANY
<
<div class="span index">1</div> <span><a class="" data-remote="true" data-type="html" href="/series/series-2996722">The So What from BCG</a></span>


This podcast from Boston Consulting Group looks around the corner of today’s big business and social issues. The goal–the so what–is to make sense of today and prepare busy leaders and executives for the day after tomorrow. Award-winning British journalist Georgie Frost interviews the leading thinkers and doers at BCG on the trends, developments, and ideas that will shape and disrupt the future. This is not your typical business strategy podcast.
McAlvany Weekly Commentary explicit
Oznacz wszystkie jako (nie)odtworzone ...
Manage series 3624741
Treść dostarczona przez McAlvany Weekly Commentary. Cała zawartość podcastów, w tym odcinki, grafika i opisy podcastów, jest przesyłana i udostępniana bezpośrednio przez McAlvany Weekly Commentary lub jego partnera na platformie podcastów. Jeśli uważasz, że ktoś wykorzystuje Twoje dzieło chronione prawem autorskim bez Twojej zgody, możesz postępować zgodnie z procedurą opisaną tutaj https://pl.player.fm/legal.
WEEKLY MONETARY, ECONOMIC, GEOPOLITICAL NEWS AND EVENTS
…
continue reading
257 odcinków
Oznacz wszystkie jako (nie)odtworzone ...
Manage series 3624741
Treść dostarczona przez McAlvany Weekly Commentary. Cała zawartość podcastów, w tym odcinki, grafika i opisy podcastów, jest przesyłana i udostępniana bezpośrednio przez McAlvany Weekly Commentary lub jego partnera na platformie podcastów. Jeśli uważasz, że ktoś wykorzystuje Twoje dzieło chronione prawem autorskim bez Twojej zgody, możesz postępować zgodnie z procedurą opisaną tutaj https://pl.player.fm/legal.
WEEKLY MONETARY, ECONOMIC, GEOPOLITICAL NEWS AND EVENTS
…
continue reading
257 odcinków
כל הפרקים
×Gold was down slightly week over week. Silver dropped 3% over the past week, while platinum was flat and palladium dropped over 7%. Bitcoin took a massive hit following a major hack. Let’s take a look at where prices stand as of our recording on February 26: The price of gold is down 0.6% at $2,918 from a week earlier. The price of silver is down 3% sitting firmly at $31.80, still looking pretty strong after a big move up. Platinum is down 1.8% at $966. Palladium is down 7.25% in the last week to $921. Looking over at the broader markets… The S&P 500 is down about 3% to 5,950 from a week earlier. The US dollar is at $106.50, declining about 0.4% from a week earlier. Bitcoin is down 13% in the last week, after some North Korean hackers got into one of the crypto exchanges. Bullish Gold As we discussed before the election, we expected the price of gold to dip if a Republican president came into office. And as predicted, gold did decline once Trump sealed his victory. The difference is that gold’s dip was pretty insignificant if you compare it to other presidential elections. In Trump’s previous 2016 victory, gold bottomed out around 12-13% lower in February and March. For this election, gold only fell about 7% and it hit the bottom in December. Looking at the short-term move, gold was around $2590 in mid-December 2024. Now that we’re at the end of February, the price of gold has jumped up all the way to a high of $2,955. That’s an almost 50% rise over the last 12 months. Could there be a buying opportunity in the near future? With gold on this meteoric rise, there is still a chance that it will have a Fibonacci correction level — which would mean a potential $100 decline. But these buying opportunities have become more rare recently with the bullishness in the gold market. Silver Buy Opportunity Silver has been strong over the last several months, with a strong stair-step pattern up when you look at its price chart. Looking at the short term, silver has already taken about a 50% retracement in price. You're Silver’s bull market started around the end of December where the price was around $29.16. It has since run up to $33.40 taking a little interim step back down. Silver is still extremely undervalued, and investing in it while the price is down opens future opportunities for ratio trades. Especially when it comes to stacking ounce of gold over time, silver can create that opportunity with a smaller investment in silver ounces that can eventually be exchange for gold ounces. Seize Opportunity Still waiting on the sidelines for the right time to buy precious metals? The best time to buy metals was 20 years ago — but the second best time is today. Your McAlvany Advisor can help you determine your best strategy for adding ounces of gold and other precious metals to your portfolio. With decades of experience as investors themselves, they are happy to speak with you about your personal investment goals and get you started the right way. Just give the team a call at (800) 525-9556 to get a complimentary portfolio review.…
Bill King On Russia, Iran, China, & Bretton Woods III Should Trump Expect The Reagan Double Dip Recession? DOGE Attacks The Grift & Skim Government “The gold is an okay inflation hedge. It's an enormous political hedge, and that's what's going on. China, especially Europe. Europe is in deep, deep trouble. Now the good news is that Trump might force them to do the major restructuring that they need to do, just like some company that's going down and all of a sudden, the vultures of private equity start taking positions and you start saying, 'That's it. We got a position there, and guess what? If you don't cut all this stuff out, we're just pulling your funding and then you're going to go to zero.' That's what Trump's giving to Europe, reform or guess what? You're going to go to zero." —Bill King Kevin: Welcome to the McAlvany Weekly Commentary. I'm Kevin Orrick, along with David McAlvany. David, I'm really looking forward to this interview. We talk to Bill King at least once a year, maybe twice a year. I was talking to a client just before we stepped into the studio. This guy is pretty sharp. He works at a lab that works on nuclear fusion. He listens to the Commentary every week, and I said, we're going to go interview Bill King right now. And he goes, "Oh, I love Bill King." He says, "Now, I do have to listen two or three times, but I love Bill King." David: A lot to unpack for sure, every time. The perspective that is sort of from macro to micro, taking the 30,000-foot view and then getting right into the trenches, daily market activity. No better guest, I don't think, that we've had in the 18, 19 years we've been doing this. * * * Bill King, always great to have you on the program. I feel like we're in touch daily as we read the King Report without fail daily. In fact, my oldest son is a bit of a news junkie and he too has enjoyed the King Report as he's gotten older, freshman in college now and probably better read than most his age, and I have you to thank for that. So let's start with some contextual issues, and then drive towards specific market and asset class considerations. Really big things changing, potentially the re-engineering of the global trade system on the table. Tariffs are part of that, maybe change tax policy internationally factoring in. Expand for us what it means to be at the intersection of significant trade policy shifts, political re-engineering here in the US, and a morphing of geopolitical commitments. Bill: You know, these are changes that probably are more profound than even when Reagan came in, and probably more profound than the Republican Revolution in 1994 when they took the House for first time since with the '50s. Since then, they've had the House more than the Democrats, when you go back all those years between the '50s and whatever, thirty-some years, the Republicans seldom had the house. So some very profound changes. And the big one, of course, is Trump is trying to dismantle the administrative state, the deep state. And this is something all the way back to Reagan people talked about, but it hasn't happened because of entrenched interests in the United States Congress and in the executive branch and even the judiciary, and it's happening so rapidly. And then of course, the same thing is you're getting Europe. Europe had the changes with Soviet Union went down '91. The wall went down, what, '89 and then you saw that they brought in the euro, the EU, all this stuff is unwinding. And then even China, China's having all kinds of issues now. They have so much debt, they're straining to get their economy going. There's all kind of hints of political unrest and Xi's trying to hold on. So we don't quite know. I mean, the one thing the Fed is right, is they're saying, "We had to wait because we don't know how this is going to play out." Well, they're looking at the tariffs, but there's things far bigger than tariffs going on.…
Gold and silver rose up this week, while platinum slid off a new high and palladium remained flat. Let’s take a look at where prices stand as of our recording on February 19: The price of gold is up 0.6% at $2,935. However, gold was as high as around $2,947 this past week, so we did see gold put in a new all time high. The price of silver is up 1.4% on the week at $32.77. Silver got as high as about $33.40 this past week. So silver had a pretty strong week out doing gold by a little bit and bringing that ratio back under 90, currently sitting at around 89 to one. Platinum is down 6.3%, but we did start our week last Thursday at the October high of $1,053, so Platinum had a pretty strong week last week ending on Thursday at a multiple month high. Palladium is flat at $990. But it did go as high as $1,035 during the week and at one point was up about 5%. So there’s some consistent movement up in both platinum and palladium. Looking at the broader markets… The S&P 500 is up 1.3% to 6,143, putting in a new all time high. It has a beautiful stair-step chart. The US dollar is down about 0.5%, sitting at $107.01, confirming the downtrend in the purchasing power of the US dollar right now. Given what's going on in the precious metals market this week, we need to talk a little bit about supply and demand. Gold Leasing in Demand There’s a renewed interest in gold leases among large institutional investors. Here’s how gold leasing typically works: Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) will lease gold for a period of time depending upon the money that's flowing into their exchange traded funds. Market makers such as big corporate dealers will borrow gold for a year to capitalize their operation. Less than three months ago, institutions could borrow gold for close to 0% interest per year, and borrow several tons of gold at less than 0.5% - 1% per year cheaper than getting a bank loan. But now, gold lease rates are anywhere from 3% — or perhaps at 2% if you just borrow it for six months. More money is flowing into gold ETFs from Europe and Asia. But you can’t say the same about US investors. Americans Still Betting on Crypto Americans see it differently — their money is skipping the ETFs and going into cryptocurrencies and Bitcoin. With the new administration shaking things up, and with DOGE uncovering corruption, US investors are feeling more confident. So instead of putting their money in a real and tangible store of value like gold, they are willing to bet big on the uncertain cryptocurrencies. The only problem? The American public still hasn't caught on to the fact that the price of gold is going to go so much higher. The smartest wealth builders are quietly adding more gold ounces — serving as the insurance portion that will protect their purchasing power from being eroded by inflation. And the way the US government has been running up debt, inflation is inevitable. Add Gold Ounces Today Call us at (800) 525-9556 so we can speak with you individually and walk through your own portfolio. Our team of experts can help you understand the whys and the hows with acquiring gold.…

1 Rising Gold Still Waiting For Western Investor 36:55
36:55
Na później
Na później
Listy
Polub
Polubione36:55
Median Age Of Renter Is Now 42, Up From 33 Trump Will Get A Victory Lap If He Cuts Middle Class Taxes Strong, Long-Term Holding Gold Buyers Dominate Market "I think Trump gets his victory lap if he can aid middle-class taxpayers with cuts, social security becoming tax-free, the extending of cuts already in place. These things would be very helpful to the middle class, and potentially offset a significant portion of the next inflationary increase. But asset classes remain very vulnerable to a second thrust higher from inflation. So the difference between the middle class worrying about income and how far their money goes versus what their balance sheet looks like, I think that's where the balance sheet is particularly vulnerable. From a valuation perspective, the stock market today is set to deliver the worst returns on record over the next decade." —David McAlvany Kevin: Welcome to the McAlvany Weekly Commentary. I'm Kevin Orrick, along with David McAlvany. David, if I look back, my wife and I, when we first got married we were quite young. I mean I was 20 when we got married, and we initially bought our first place with a little bit of help from our parents as far as the down payment goes. And what we've tried to do is we've tried to progressively own a little larger place—up to the point that the house we've been in now we've been in almost 30 years, and we'll probably at this point have to start downsizing—but that was the idea. All of the people that I knew, that's what you did. You built, you built, you built, and then you downsized. And what that did was that opened up the opportunity of possibly having a nest egg when it comes time for retirement. It feels like that's changing. David: Yeah. A mortgage allows you to over time build that nest egg through almost like a four savings program. Yes, there's the debt that's associated with it, but as you retain some equity, assuming that the value of the house is stable or moves higher, it's pretty remarkable. Zillow reported last week, the median age of a renter is now 42 years old— Kevin: Wow. David: —up from 33 years old just three years ago. Kevin: That is incredible. So renting in your 40s, that seems to be the new way. David: Shocking to me, but not surprising given the affordability of housing. So confirming an affordability crisis in real estate, the Zillow stats suggest we are creating a generation that is far less likely to see the net worth bump and liquidity bump in retirement years from converting home equity into a larger retirement nest egg, kind of topping it off and then converting it to an income-producing asset. Maybe it's bonds, maybe it's mutual funds, maybe it's something else. That is typical in investors' life cycle. Buy, gradually pay off the mortgage. If real estate values have increased, you have an appreciated asset that is larger than you need as your family matures and moves out, allowing you to convert the home equity into a retirement nest egg additive. Kevin: It just goes to show we've heard people say, "Well, someday you'll own nothing and you'll be happy about it," but we're seeing that trend right now. I mean with where people live or even music, Dave. In the old days you would download something, you'd have a CD or you'd download it and you'd pay for it and you'd have it. Now every time you try to listen to something, I was trying to listen to Beethoven's 6th Symphony the other day. I own it. I know it's somewhere on the iPod or it's on the iPhone, but they just wanted to sell me a subscription. They don't want me to own anything. David: That's right. Kevin: They just want me to renew and rent everything. David: Yeah, rent the song. Kevin: Everything. David: Well, the ramp up in real estate prices has been beneficial to current owners, but it's locked out a generation from home ownership, and it's creating over time a greater reliance on Social Security,…

1 Gold Hits New All-Time Highs | Market Insights & Inflation Concerns 20:04
20:04
Na później
Na później
Listy
Polub
Polubione20:04
Gold and platinum continue to march higher, while silver and palladium buck the overall trend. Let’s take a look at where prices stand as of our recording on February 12: The price of gold is up 1.25% to around $2904 — not a huge change week over week. However, gold did reach a high of $2942 midweek, which marks a new all time high. The price of silver is down 0.2% on the week, sitting at $32.22 — just about flat. However, silver had a swing from the intraday high to low of about 5%. Platinum is up, 2.2% or $1,033, showing some strength this week. Palladium continues its slide down 3% to $985. And if you look at the high right at the end of January, palladium is down 9% in the month of February. Looking at the broader market… The S&P 500 is down about 0.4% or 6,053. However, it seems to be in a sideways pause. At least as of right now for the last couple of weeks, the equities market is trading sideways. The dollar is up about 0.16% to $108 from our recording last week — seeing some strength in the US dollar. Dr. Copper’s Check Up With the price of gold up and the price of silver basically flat, the gold-to-silver ratio hit 92.2 as of recording. That is the highest it has been since August 2022, and the fourth highest gold silver ratio ever. How do we see silver moving with the ratio widening? That’s when we look at what copper is doing. As we have discussed before, the metal carries the moniker "Dr. Copper" because it is an indicator that reflects the health of the economy. As we saw in a recent January episode, copper continues to show strength — which means the economy is growing. Copper is back near all-time highs. As of this recording, it is around $4.70, which is right at the top of its trading range. And it’s likely that it could break through to $5. If it does, we expect that the price of silver will also rise, and narrow the gold-to-silver ratio again. DOGE to Audit BLS We’ve talked before about how statistical reports seem to paint a more rosy picture of the outlook of the economy. For example, everybody knows that inflation is way under-reported compared to what it actually costs to put food on the table and gas in the car. Now, the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) is going to audit the Bureau of Labor Statistics. While it’s impossible to know exactly what will happen, it’s possible we’ll see major changes in past reports on everything from non-farm payrolls to GDP and CPI. The inflation rate will likely be significantly higher than what has been reported in the past. Because the policymakers in Washington use all of the figures in the economic reports to allocate funding, whatever DOGE uncovers in their reports could lead to a massive overhaul in governmental spending. Worldwide Demand for Gold Meanwhile, the gold price continues to climb higher with strong demand worldwide. Global gold ETF holdings bounced up 3,253 tons to a total assets under management of US $294 billion. Now it's a matter of who will control the physical aspect of of gold. Will it be the East or the West? Is it going to be the LBMA or the Comex and NYMEX? One thing’s for certain, US investors have a distinct advantage right now with premiums on real, physical gold at very low prices — so this is the time to start adding ounces to your portfolio. Plan Your Metals Strategy How many ounces of gold and other precious metals should you add to your portfolio? The McAlvany advisor team is here to help guide you. With decades of experience in precious metals investing, they are happy to speak with you about your strategy for investing in gold and other precious metals. Reach us at 800-525-9556…
Gold Price In Dollars To Rise China Approves Gold Now In Its Insurance Company Portfolios Russian Consumer Demand For Gold Up 60% Since Ukraine Invasion "A weaker dollar is on the agenda, and this is a decided shift to force the dollar lower on a managed basis, ultimately will require a multilateral currency agreement that takes the dollar lower relative to its global peers. We'll have to have participation from other central banks as we orchestrate that. The Plaza Accord accomplished this in 1985, and a version of that is a growing likelihood." —David McAlvany Kevin: Welcome to the McAlvany Weekly Commentary. I'm Kevin Orrick, along with David McAlvany. Well, it was a quick trip, but I have to say aloha. Welcome back. David: The halfway point between the Philippines and Durango, Colorado is Honolulu—Waikiki. Kevin: Honolulu with a— Didn't you say you got a convertible and you just drove all around the island up to the North Shore? David: Oh, got a great deal, and took my parents all over the place. Yes, we're going to talk about gold. Kevin: Yeah. David: Yeah. New all-time highs warrant a conversation. It's trading over 2,900 this week. My call on Bloomberg Television a month back for 3,250 in 2025 seems a little less far-fetched. Kevin: It feels sort of daring when you do it and now you can look at it and go, "Okay, 3,250." We're very, very close to that, but let's go back to the trip. You have been out of the office now for the last week. Is there perspective that comes when you step away from the chaos? David: Definitely. A few days out of the office, a few days with my parents brings perspective. I'm grateful for our annual meetups, and I hope we have a lot more of them. I treasure each one of them. Kevin: I love the fact that you guys are so deliberate year after year after year. Think back, Dave. Think back to some of the great trips that you've had with your parents. David: Oh, well, one that stands out, I remember a trip to Manhattan with my parents to celebrate what was our first anniversary and their 30th. We were living in Boston at the time, so New York was a short stretch away. Now I'm approaching, still have five years, a 30th anniversary of my own. Life happens that fast. You blink, and decades have passed. I think we're confronted with inescapable moments of self-reflection, and sometimes those are at big life events. Think of your family, weddings, funerals. You get together and it's reflecting back and you see how much has changed in the time that's passed in between. Outside of the best man's toast and the epitaph—between them, I should say—there's a blur of days and years and decades. I think some of us with a melancholy streak or sentimental soft spot reflect a little more often and don't need those big days for inspiration. Most days, frankly, are strung together in sort of an undifferentiated stream like frames in a film reel. Kevin: I just got off the phone with a client before we stepped into the studio. These folks own a ranch up in Oregon—or farm, actually—and they just had a new lamb that was born right before we talked. She had to run out the door to chase off predators actually, but they had been accumulating precious metals for years. They listen to the Commentary. I got to know them more than a decade ago, but they said, "Kevin, I just want you to know as we go through this triangle update, is what we call it, we are really thinking about our grandkids at this point." He said, "A lot of people think about their kids for inheritance. We're already on grandkids." And I said, "Well, Dave calls that legacy. Legacy investing. It's a legacy mindset." There's a lot of things to count other than money, right? I mean, we value a lot of things. David: Sure. I mean, we're in the investment business. We're constantly toggling between present value and future value. We assign resources for a positive outcome in the future,…
Gold and precious metals saw more volatility over the last week, but overall strong in the beginning of this new year. Let’s take a look at where prices stand as of our recording on February 5: The price of gold is up 3.6% to $2,862. However, gold did break above $2,900 in the futures market. The price of silver rose up 4.8% to $32.32. This has inched the gold to silver ratio down a couple of points to 88 to 1. Platinum is up about 3% to $1,008, from a week earlier. Palladium up about 3.8% to $1,015, rising from a week earlier as of recording. Looking at the broader markets… The S&P 500 moved sideways, and was at 6,058 as of recording. The US dollar index was down about 0.25% to $107.06. But it did reach $110 before making a pretty significant crash back down. A Strong January for Metals Looking back at January performance, precious metals across the board showed strength in the first month of the year. Gold closed out the month up 6.5%, while silver outperformed gold with a rise of 8.6%. It gets none of the attention, but that's because gold's at all time highs. Platinum rose up 8.1% in January, while palladium led the charge overall, up 10.6% by the end of the month. As discussed in our January 24th show, the commitment of traders continues to bet long on gold. We believe that gold could reach a new record high of $3,000 before we see a decline. Bond Market Stabilizes Despite interest rates shifting down 18%, the bond market looks pretty stable. The short-term one-year and two-year bond yields are down around 20%. But looking at the 10-year bond yield, it has only declined 10%. So despite the massive interest rate rise through 2022 into 2023, tapering off in 2024 and down a little bit at the end of last year, the bond rates have stabilized. The bond market is far bigger than the equities market, and it’s encouraging to see money moving into 10 year Treasurys — an indication that big money is happy with the direction the US is going and perhaps even hedging risk in the equity world. Volatility in Cryptos Bitcoin still looks relatively healthy, but Ethereum had a 36% drop in a day. And while it took a significant bounce up, it did also have a significant decline over the last couple weeks and months in some of the alternative cryptos. So we're seeing rampant volatility in certain places right now. While some investors will continue to beat the drum for this gold alternative, cryptocurrencies still haven’t shown the stability of precious metals. Gold is still the original money — real, tangible, and the true hedge against inflation. Protect Your Money With Gold Gold is a powerful safe haven and insurance policy against economic and political uncertainty. Now is the time to reach out to a trusted McAlvany advisor for precious metals investing advice. They are happy to speak with you about your investment goals and strategy for investing in gold and other precious metals. Reach us at 800-525-9556…
Radical Re-think On Dollar Boosts Gold's Future Read Doug Noland's Latest Credit Bubble Bulletin Read Morgan Lewis' Hard Asset Insights "If the US is to be the primary winner in the restructuring of the global system, it will come at the expense of our trade partners. Think about China and over a trillion dollars in Treasuries. Think about Japan. If that cycle has contributed to the hollowing out of our US manufacturing base, the course he's proposing is one that is decidedly dollar negative. So to boost the value of our trade partners' currencies, to devalue the dollar and rebuild our manufacturing base is a 180 from the conditions that have created our current system of trade and drive our import-export balances to the levels we have. Now, clearly we've got trade deficits on a gargantuan scale. I think we're on the cusp of a major monetary regime change." —David McAlvany Kevin: Welcome to the McAlvany Weekly Commentary. I'm Kevin Orrick along with David McAlvany. Dave, there are times when the guys that we would go to say, "Hey, where is this going to end up?", like Doug Noland or Morgan Lewis or some of the people that help give us instruction. We go, "Okay, so Trump's doing this. Where is this going to end up?" When these guys themselves are saying, "Well, let's analyze it, but I have no idea." That's what it feels like right now, that nobody really knows. What does this look like as we recreate the entire financial and economic structure of America? David: Yeah, the idiom being caught off balance, I think has application because there's not an asset class that hasn't been sort of scratching their head, investors saying, "What exactly does this mean and what am I supposed to do about it?" So yes, there is a sense of being annoyed and disturbed and rattled, and we're seeing that show up in the form of volatility, for sure. Kevin: And that's why it would probably be a good idea for our listeners to go back, if they didn't hear the Tactical Short call with you and Doug last week. It's not only available in recorded form on our website, we'll go ahead and put that on the links, but it's transcripted as well if you'd rather read. David: Yeah. So if you don't want to spend two hours, I think— Last week Doug Noland and I recorded the Tac Short call. There is a brief version of it in the Credit Bubble Bulletin from the weekend. So if you weren't on the call, I insist you take 10 minutes to read this week's Credit Bubble Bulletin. If I told you your financial health depended on it, would you ignore that? And I do think your financial health depends on it. In the show notes, follow the link and just take 10 minutes, read the first part of the weekly Credit Bubble Bulletin. It's the weekly. We do a daily as well, which has the news feeds. So make sure and look for the weekly. Kevin: Well, and just to mention, you're just about to get on a plane, and I love it when you get a chance to go see your dad, I think he's going to be 85 in June, and your mom. But just for the listener's sake, we're recording this one day early, so anything that we say, there'll be a little bit of news events that come before the Wednesday publication of this show. David: Well, the last few weeks, every day there's been news items coming at us fast and furious. But yeah, you're right. My dad's 85 this year. Mom is a spry 78, but with a cancer recovery effort still in play there are even more reasons to be with them whenever possible. So if the events in the call today seem different by the time you're listening, I just wanted you have that context. Kevin: Well, and so let's start putting some things in context because over the last week, we talked about the DeepSeek shock. But we're seeing shocks in a lot of areas: cryptocurrencies, AI, DeepSeek, and honestly a lot of the ramifications from tariffs I'd like to just maybe talk about all of that today. David: Yeah. Last week was DeepSeek and a challenge to the AI narrative....…
Gold and precious metals were largely flat over the week, as broader markets gyrated on AI news from China and the Fed’s decision to keep rates steady. Let’s take a look at where prices stand as of our recording on January 29: Gold is flat at $2,755 from a week earlier. Gold did touch up into its all-time high territory for a moment, but it didn’t reach its record. Silver is sitting at $30.65 — dead even from a week earlier. Silver did have a mid-week dip down 3%, but recovered by the time of recording. Platinum is up 1.5% to $972 from a week earlier. Palladium is down 1.5%, also at $972 from a week earlier. Looking at movement in the broader markets… The S&P 500 is down about 0.5% to 6,040 this week. It did put in a new high as well as about a 2% decline at one point in the immediate reaction of the AI news coming out of China. The US dollar is also dead even at $108. For the first time in quite a while, the dollar did go below $107 for a short period. Dr. Copper Shows Strength in Economy Looking at a chart of copper prices over the past year, the metal has shown a strong pendant formation. And when we look back over the last four years, copper shows its in a rising trend line. The shiny metal is nicknamed "Dr. Copper" because it is an indicator that reflects the health of the economy. With copper’s price rising steadily, the economy is growing stronger. Trump Picks a Fed Fight Trump is blaming Powell and the Fed for high inflation, and he wants the Fed to reduce the target for interest rates. On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve indicated that they would keep interest rates steady and noted the lack of progress toward their 2% inflation rate goal. Cutting rates would further stimulate the economy, increasing the inflation rate and making it harder for people to afford staples like groceries and gas. As we’ve discussed in past episodes, the way to attack inflation is to curb overspending by Congress — an unpopular solution that can kill a political career. One thing that will preserve your purchasing power no matter what move the Fed makes? Turning your dollar bills into gold ounces. Invest in Gold Today Our team of advisors have decades of experience investing in gold and other precious metals, and they can help you find the best strategy to meet your unique needs. They are happy to speak with you about your strategy for investing in gold and other precious metals. Reach us at 800-525-9556.…

1 Tactical Short 4th Quarter 2024 Recap 1:51:00
1:51:00
Na później
Na później
Listy
Polub
Polubione1:51:00
Historic ‘24 Excess Portends Precarious 2025 MWM Q4 2024 Tactical Short Conference Call January 30, 2025 David: Good afternoon. This is David McAlvany. We'll go ahead and get started. This is our January 30th, 2025 Tactical Short conference call titled Historic 2024 Excess Portends Precarious 2025. Good afternoon. Thank you for participating in our fourth-quarter recap. As always, thank you to our valued account holders. We so greatly value our client relationships. With first-time listeners on today's call, we'll begin with some general information. And for those of you unfamiliar with Tactical Short, more detailed information is available at mcalvany.com/wealth/tactical-short/. If you'd like to explore next steps for opening a Tactical Short account or investigate how the service might complement your existing equity exposures, it's a good time to do so. The order of our call today will be my comments on performance followed by Doug's market commentary and then Q&A at the tail end. I have a number of questions already submitted. You may submit further questions to Ted via his email ted@mcalvany.com. And also, for inquiries on Tactical Short and its inclusion in your current strategies, you can also submit those inquiries to ted@mcavany.com. The objective of Tactical Short is to provide a professionally managed product that reduces the overall risk in a client's total investment portfolio, while at the same time providing downside protection in a global market backdrop with extraordinary uncertainty and extreme risk. The strategy is designed for separately managed accounts. It's investor friendly with full transparency, flexibility, reasonable fees, and no lockups. We have the flexibility to short stocks and ETFs and our plan has been to on occasion buy liquid listed put options. Shorting entails a unique set of risks we're set apart both by our analytical framework as well as our uncompromising focus on identifying and managing risk. Our Tactical Short strategy began the quarter with short exposure targeted at 80%. The target was held steady throughout the quarter, focused on the challenging backdrop for managing short exposure. The short in the S&P 500 ETF, SPY remains the default position for this high-risk environment. I'll give you an update on performance. Tactical Short accounts after fees returned negative 1.73 during Q4. The S&P 500 returned a positive 2.39. So for the quarter, Tactical Short accounts returned negative 72% of the S&P 500's positive return. As for one-year performance, Tactical Short after fees returned negative 15.32% versus the 25% return of the S&P, with Tactical Short losing 61.3% of the S&P 500's positive return. We regularly track Tactical Short performance versus three actively managed short-fund competitors. First, the Grizzly Short Fund, which returned a negative 1.64 during Q4, and over the past year Grizzly returned a negative 6.74. Ranger Equity Bear returned a negative 5.71 for the quarter, with a negative 7.97 for a one-year return. And Federated Prudent Bear returned a negative 0.68% during Q4 and a negative 12.32 for the one year. Tactical Short outperformed the actively managed bear funds for the quarter on average by 95 basis points. Tactical Short underperformed over the past year by an average 631 basis points. It has significantly outperformed, Tactical Short has, each of the bear funds since inception. From April 7th, 2017 inception through the end of the year, Tactical Short outperformed each of the three competitors by an average of 1,743 basis points or 17.43 percentage points. There are also the passive short index products. ProShares' short S&P 500 ETFs, which returned a negative 70 basis points for the quarter and a negative 13.51% for the past year. And the Rydex Inverse S&P 500 fund, which returned negative 0.53 in Q4, negative 13.08 for the one-year numbers. And then the PIMCO StocksPLUS Short Fund with a Q4 return of negative 15 b...…

1 Will DeepSeek Be Deepshock To The Market? 28:20
28:20
Na później
Na później
Listy
Polub
Polubione28:20
NVIDIA Loses Over Half Trillion In One Day The World Needs Resources The Fed Can't Print DeepSink Is AI's Sputnik Moment "So earnings growth in the AI space, admittedly meteoric if not miraculous through the early quarters of 2024. Earnings growth slowed considerably in late 2024 and as we come into this year. And if the supply chain for AI is put under the microscope and found to be creating overcapacity, you've got an eerie echo from 1999 and 2000." —David McAlvany Kevin: Welcome to the McAlvany Weekly Commentary. I'm Kevin Orrick, along with David McAlvany. Before we start, Dave, let's go ahead and remind our listeners about the call with Doug Noland this week. David: Yeah, join Doug Noland and me on Thursday afternoon, 4:00 p.m. Eastern, 2:00 Mountain, for the Tactical Short. This is a Q4 recap conference call, “Historic ’24 Excess Portends Precarious 2025.” I announced this call three weeks ago, and the word "precarious” seemed out of place. The comment might not have made sense. Kevin: A little precarious now, though, huh? David: Yeah. Kevin: Yeah. David: Do market conditions seemed more precarious? I think so. Perceptions shift, and with them market pricing does as well. I highly recommend that you join us. If you are inadequately hedged, you can still remedy that. Get informed, register for the call, submit your questions ahead of time, and we'll do our best to address specific issues following the formal remarks. Short exposure has, as you might expect, been the inverse to the markets as they've been rising in recent years. You may not care about short exposure in a rising market without limits, but what about the limits? And what about a falling market? Are you adequately liquid? Do you have a form of financial insurance in place? We look forward to your presence on Thursday's call. Kevin: It's important to talk about hedges. I was thinking this week, Dave, when we saw DeepSeek come out. We can talk about that through the show, but I love South Pole history. I love Ernest Shackleton, or Robert Falcon Scott, or Roald Amundsen, and it reminded me of the story. You probably remember this, but in January of 1912, a very well-stocked team of 65, it started with 65 people. The last five to push to the South Pole for the English, it was Robert Falcon Scott, and four other guys. 65 people, hardware heavy. They had dogs, they had ponies, they had motors that they had to move, but there was a shock when they got there on January 17th, 1912. A Norwegian team had gotten there first. David: Almost a month earlier. Kevin: A month earlier, and they had 19 guys—19 in, 19 out. No one was lost. The Norwegians beat them. It was very light on the hardware. Scott was heavy on the hardware, and unfortunately the five that went in and came back out, all five were lost for the Scott team. So I'm wondering, Dave, if NVIDIA isn't a little bit like the Scott team right now, hardware heavy, and then you had DeepSeek this last week, come in and say, "Hey, you don't need that much hardware." David: Well, it's exactly right. You had a decline of $589 billion in a single day, and that marks the greatest concentrated single-company loss in financial history— Kevin: Wow. David: —in a 24-hour period. Kevin: Almost $600 billion lost. David: Forbes reports, "NVIDIA's nearly $600 billion market cap loss Monday is larger than the individual market values of all but 13 American companies. More than the market cap of titans like health insurer United Health, oil giant ExxonMobil, and retailer Costco. Kevin: Wow. David: And at issue, if Chinese company DeepSeek can do what the large language models do at a fraction of the cost with a fraction of the hardware, then you're looking at the AI supply chain in that Wile E. Coyote moment. Kevin: Wow. David: Gravity is in effect, and so the claim is that this more efficient open-source application was built for under $6 million, uses fewer than 10,…
Gold and precious metals continue their march higher this week, buoyed by continued enthusiasm for the new US president and administration. Let’s take a look at where prices stand as of our recording on January 23: The price of gold is up 2.5%, sitting at around $2,756. That’s only about $35 away from its previous all-time high. The price of silver is up around 0.9% at $30.85. Platinum is up 2.8%, to $960. Palladium is up 3.9% at $1000, just slightly below platinum. Looking at the broader market… The S&P 500 is up about 2% this week to 6,091. The US dollar is down a little over 1% at $108.22. Big Money Bets on Gold Rise The Commitment of Traders (COT) report shows the aggregate holdings of different participants in the U.S. futures market. These are compiled and published by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission in the U.S. COT reports detail how many long, short, and spread positions make up the open interest. Looking at a recent report, we see that far more institutional investors have been betting long on gold futures. Their bets have paid off handsomely, as gold has recovered from its dip to rise back up to record levels. But will the managed money continue to speculate that gold will go up? Or will they start taking profits? Of course, it’s impossible to predict exactly how the price of gold will change. But here are a few scenarios to consider. Scenario 1: A Mild Selloff If there is an unwinding of those managed money speculative bets, it’s possible that we’ll see gold drop down closer to the lows seen in post-election November and December — potentially around the $2,500 per ounce range. If this happens, gold could trade sideways for a few months. Scenario 2: A Shallow Correction If instead there’s more of a correction, we might see gold in the intermediate term fall to a floor. A shallow correction would look like gold dropping to $2,350 per ounce. A deeper correction might be closer to where gold was during the post-pandemic highs, around $2,075. If silver decides to hold around its current level, that would open up a potential gold to silver ratio trade. That’s because the gold to silver ratio would be closer to 52:1 in this case. However, it looks less likely that this scenario would happen. Scenario 3: Untested Territory There’s a good possibility that a correction might not happen at all. And instead, gold would push up to new high levels into uncharted territory. If this happens, it’s possible that gold could climb to a new high around $3,500 per ounce. Looking at recent charting patterns, it is possible that gold could reach these new highs. Which means that investors waiting on the sidelines to catch the next dip would continue to miss out. Should you buy gold right now? The best way to know what would work for you is to consult a trusted, experienced precious metals professional. Get Started With Expert Advice Our advisors have decades of experience investing in gold and other precious metals, and they can help you find the best strategy to meet your unique needs. They are happy to speak with you about your strategy for investing in gold and other precious metals. Reach us at 800-525-9556.…

1 The Trump Sounds & Volatility Shall Follow 33:17
33:17
Na później
Na później
Listy
Polub
Polubione33:17
Executive Orders Signal Immediate Change Mr. Bond Vigilante Still Has The Strongest Say Uncertainty The Best Driver To Gold "So returning to the executive orders, at the end of page 2, I was saying, "Wow." At the end of page 5, each page with at least 10 executive orders on it, it was awe-inspiring, ambitious in scope, sure to offend, and FDR and Reagan both came to mind. Massive change, very disruptive to the status quo. From a market perspective, I kept thinking disruption, uncertainty. These are things that drive market volatility." —David McAlvany Kevin: Welcome to the McAlvany Weekly Commentary. I'm Kevin Orrick, along with David McAlvany. Well, David, all I can describe is sensory overload. I think about punk rock concerts back in the 1970s through the mid '80s. You had the bright lights, the strobes, you had the loud music, you had all these different things going on, which purposely are trying to create sensory overload. I wasn't really part of that movement, but I remember getting my pilot's license. And the guy who was checking me out was trying to do the same thing while I was flying a plane. Now, if I'm the markets right now, whether you're happy about Trump, whether you're not happy about Trump, but if I'm the markets, how in the world do I know what to do next? David: It's an amazing week. Normally on MLK day, I read a passage from MLK, Jr. and discuss it with my kids. Not this year. We've got the inauguration, the announcement of sweeping changes into the late hours of the evening. I was reading word for word the five pages of links to the new executive orders, redirecting the usual practice and had me a little bit distracted. So we've got the rescindment of 78 Biden-era executive actions. The second executive order stopped bureaucrats from issuing new regulations. The third mandated federal workers return to offices. Imagine that. Kevin: You got to go to work. David: I know. Kevin: You got to go to work. David: Ending government censorship, freezing hiring of the IRS agents, ending some birthright citizenships, signing pardons for 1,500 Jan. 6 prisoners, and then six commutations as a part of that. It goes on and on. Kevin: I told you, bright lights, strobe lights, sounds, it's all happening all at once. David: Yeah. Kevin: And it's presidential. I mean, these are executive orders, Dave. Nobody's voting on this. David: The one word I would apply to the markets going forward—reflecting on the knowns and the unknowns, the intended changes, and really the actual paths forward—is the word volatility. Kevin: Oh, sure. Well, what do you do when you have sensory overload? And again, there may be many really great long-term outcomes coming out of this, but what do you do in the meantime while things are shifting back and forth? David: I'm trying to replay in my mind Sid Vicious soundtracks, cassette tapes—because it would've been a cassette tape. The best way of describing the financial markets in the current context is like a vast casino. And again, you talk about sensory overload. Vegas has gotten a little bit better, even leaving the airport's not quite as loud as it used to be. But our current context is like a casino. You've got high stakes bets. They're rolling through constantly. You've got currency bets and fixed income bets and equity and option bets, cryptocurrency and commodity bets. And all of these bets are based on economic inputs. They're based on external factors which are deemed to tilt the odds in the favor of a certain outcome. Make no mistake, it is a casino and it's no longer clear to the currency players what those external factors are going to be. It's no longer clear to the fixed income players, the options traders, the commodity traders, and the equity operators just how those external factors are going to impact pricing. Kevin: Well, how about crypto? I mean, crypto just has one direction, doesn't it? David: Well,…

1 Markets Hold Steady Amid Incoming Inauguration 18:37
18:37
Na później
Na później
Listy
Polub
Polubione18:37
The markets are sitting with bated breath ahead of the inauguration of President Trump. However, precious metals continue to show strength. Let’s take a look at where prices stand as of this recording, January 15: The price of gold is up 1.3%, sitting at around $2,695. The price of silver is up 1.8% at $30.66. It is now comfortably above the $30 mark. Platinum is down 3.3%, to $934. But in the middle of the week, it did hit a high that it hadn’t reached since November 2024. Platinum is stair-stepping up. Palladium is up 5.2%, a big move up the day of recording. at $924, just slightly below platinum. Looking at the broader market… The S&P 500 is up about 1.1% this week to 5,954. It is on an upswing of a downward movement, as it has been stair-stepping down. The US dollar is even this week, hovering around $109.20. But the dollar did have an intraweek high as it broke above $110. If we could look into a crystal ball and predict the future, the outlook right now is one of great optimism There’s a consistent pattern that we’re following according to our election market expectation show. The honeymoon is over, and the markets are settling back into reality — that is, back into the trends that they were in before the election. Economic Watch The CPI report for December indicated that inflation is still hot, rising up 2.9% over the year. The core CPI figure, tracking food and energy prices, rose 0.2%. The markets reacted with enthusiasm, hoping for an additional rate cut by the Fed. The DJIA, S&P 500, and NASDAQ rose up around 2% on the news. Over the last few days, bond yields have been declining while prices continue to rise. Even though yields have declined, bonds appear to be in a holding pattern ahead of the inaugration. Gold to $3,000? For people holding gold, the fundamentals look good. We predict that we’ll be seeing gold peeking above $3,000 per ounce this spring. Gold rising up to $3,000 per ounce in 2025 is a conservative estimate, because that would be a 10% gain at its current price. If you look back over the last 50 years, you will see that gold has been gaining an average of 8.5% - 10% per year. Gold: Silver Ratio Trades As for an upcoming ratio trade between gold and silver, it will depend on whether the ratio widens or narrows to a favorable ratio. The price of silver dipped below $30 a bit earlier in the week. However, silver has bounced back strongly above $30. Silver still has a lot of upside potential, and it is undervalued right now. Industrial demand for silver continues to grow, especially with the development of new EV batteries that rely heavily on the white metal for their manufacturing. There’s also the potential for internal ratio trades — such as trading silver bars for junk silver or silver American eagles. Sometimes, the premiums on one product are significantly lower than for another product, and a trade will give you more ounces without paying for them. Get Started With Expert Advice Will there be a new ratio-trading opportunity coming up this year for you? The best way to know what your ideal next trade would look like is to speak with your McAlvany financial advisor. Our advisors have decades of experience investing in gold and other precious metals, and they can help you find the best strategy to meet your unique needs. They are happy to speak with you about your strategy for investing in gold and other precious metals. Reach us at 800-525-9556.…

1 Your Mission Critical Checklist For 2025 45:43
45:43
Na później
Na później
Listy
Polub
Polubione45:43
AI Tech Bubble Says, "Feed Me"! How Will Trump Respond To Financial Instability? The Fed Can't Get Longer Maturity Interest Rates To Go Down "This is one of the factors which is super bullish for gold. Bond markets are signaling a divergence for monetary policy, and implicitly saying that either fiscal commitments are already too great or inflation is coming back. Perhaps it's a combination of the two, but either way, yields are telling you where rates are headed next, and it's not lower. The implication is that financial market stability is very much in the cross hairs." —David McAlvany Kevin: Welcome to the McAlvany Weekly Commentary. I'm Kevin Orrick, along with David McAlvany. David, I was just going back and looking at discussions we've had in the past on catastrophe math. Zeeman made that very famous back in the 1960s, 1970s, and what it basically boils down to is, certain factors build to a tension point, like a bridge. A bridge may work for 40 or 45 years and then suddenly collapse. And the question is, is there any math behind that? Is there any predictability in the timing behind that? And you've just brought up in our meeting the sand pile effect, same type of thing. Let's talk about that a little bit because there are some tensions building right now in one direction that can't hold forever. David: Well, first of all, welcome back. You had more eventful weekend than I did, and I'm glad you're in— Kevin: Speaking of catastrophe. Yeah. David: Yeah. You're in good repair, stitches and all. Kevin: Yeah. Yeah, emergency appendectomy, but boy, am I happy that we have a medical system that can actually get that kind of thing out. David: Well, looking ahead to two weeks out, we can put it on the calendar. January 30th, Doug and I will tackle perhaps the toughest analytical mashup ever on our quarterly Tactical Short call. Starting 2025, there is a confluence of major concerns—and this is to your point, Kevin. When you start looking at the various factors, you don't know, considering that sand pile effect, which grain is the culprit for the slide, but there's a confluence of major concerns, whether it's fiscal, economic, financial market—encompassing both equities and bonds, geopolitical and strategic considerations that make this Tactical Short call a feast for the inquisitive. And, I think, full of opportunity, if you are observant and in the markets and agile, assuming you can get a few of these macro themes right. I think the difference could be between your best performance in a calendar year or your worst, and 2025 is shaping up to be very, very interesting. Of great consequence long-term are the impacts on society as a larger expression of your own balance sheet expansion or balance sheet compression because there is a mirror, there is an echo, a reflection. Kevin: Yeah. We just heard Morgan give the update to our meeting today, and he said we have two major, major issues right now, inflation and a debt problem, the interest that we have to pay on our debt. And he calls that a debt spiral. It gets to the point where the Federal Reserve has lost control and we talk about catastrophe. You can have inflation and manage inflation if you don't have too much of a debt problem. You can have a debt problem if you don't have inflation, but when the two come together, it creates a major issue. And I know you've got some other major issues. I would imagine one of the issues you guys are going to talk about is the bond market, which reflects that. David: Well, again, one of the key issues there is with debt being at the level it's at, typically the way that you would fight inflation is by raising rates, except if you're raising rates because of how much debt we already have in play, the interest component is already at an overwhelming level. So to raise interest rates just piles on even more to the deficit via the interest component. And that is unique because typically a debt crisis can...…
M
McAlvany Weekly Commentary

Precious metals started the year strong, with prices rising higher across the board. Let’s take a look at where prices stand as of January 9: The price of gold is up 1.2% currently sitting at around $2,656. Looking back at 2024, gold ended last year strong — moving up about 27% throughout the year. The price of silver is up 4% to $30.11 so far in 2025. Silver rose up 22% in 2024, a good year though not quite as strong as gold. Platinum is up 8% so far in 2025, to $968. In 2024, platinum was actually down 10% — so now it’s about flat from a year earlier. Palladium is up about 2% so far in 2025 at $924, just slightly below platinum. Looking at the broader market… The S&P 500 is up about 1% this week, but it did push up about 24% last year. The US dollar is up about 0.5% to $109.20, also starting the year strong. The dollar index was up about 7% in 2024. Dollar, Gold in Lockstep It is very unusual to have a strong gold market coupled with a strong dollar market. They usually have an inverse relationship, so this is a strange time. In case you missed it, we did a deep dive into the fundamentals of gold investing on our last show. This explains more about how gold moves compared to other asset classes. Inflation Watch It appears as if the market is pricing in expected inflation. If you look at the deficit from the first fiscal quarter of 2024 to the first fiscal quarter of 2025, the US deficit is up over 60% from where it was a year ago. And it looks like it will continue along the same trajectory. The US has a strong economy. Commodity prices are rising according to CPI numbers and inflation is starting to rise. Trump will likely want the Fed to cut interest rates at their meeting in January. A rate cut would drive the credit markets, borrowing and potentially spending. But analysts have noted that there’s less than a 50% change of a rate cut in January because the economic numbers aren’t indicating a rate cut is needed. Gold to Silver Ratio at 90:1 It’s important to note that the gold to silver ratio has shifted again to 90:1 at the close of 2024. The last six times that the ratio has widened that much, there has been a massive rally in silver. The minimum rally in 2024 was a 26% move in the price of silver. In the largest rally, the price of silver gained 79%. So this is a massive opportunity to purchase silver now and see big gains in the near future. Buying Opportunities For silver, the most intriguing product right now is junk silver. Even though silver has been flat to down through the close of 2024, the premiums have come down in that particular product. Junk silver is less per ounce now than the big thousand ounce silver bullion bar. Looking at the collectible gold coin market, US Double Eagles are priced at the same price per coin as Gold Eagles. Fractional European 100-year-old coins are in some instances cheaper than one ounce Gold Eagles. There are some great values right now — if you know where to look. Get Started With Expert Advice Working with an expert in precious metals will help you find the best buying opportunities. If you haven’t had a complimentary meeting with an advisor at McAlvany Precious Metals to talk through your financial objectives, now is a great time to start. Our advisors have decades of experience investing in gold and other precious metals, and they can help you find the best strategy to meet your unique needs. They are happy to speak with you about your strategy for investing in gold and other precious metals. Reach us at 800-525-9556.…
M
McAlvany Weekly Commentary

1 Trump Is Bold But Liquidity Is A Coward 29:56
29:56
Na później
Na później
Listy
Polub
Polubione29:56
Interest Rates Rise In Worldwide Competition For Liquidity Mag 7 Stocks Represent 70% Of Trading Volume Gold & Dollar Rise In 2024, What Does That Mean? "Yeah. I mean, breadth is the idea of how spread out the participation is in a market move to higher levels. Are all boats rising with the tide or just a few? And when you have narrow breadth, it's just a few names participating. It's not a good sign when breadth is narrow in only a few names—70% of trading volume in seven names, 20% of global market cap. Breadth this narrow is, to say the least, worrying." - David McAlvany Kevin: Welcome to the McAlvany Weekly Commentary. I'm Kevin Orrick, along with David McAlvany. Well, David, where the holidays fell this year—Christmas on a Wednesday, New Year's on a Wednesday—with my travel plans, with my kids' travel plans, I honestly feel like, well, happy New Year. It feels like the holiday was about a month. It was wonderful. It was wonderful. But gosh, it's sort of nice to be back in the pattern. David: It is good to be back. I love the holidays. I love the guests and hosting parties. I love the family time and the change of pace. And I love getting back to routines as well. As the new year starts, there are the common reflections on the past year and anticipations or goal setting for the new year. And everybody has prognostications of what will be in 2025. I feel this with clients, the number of requests to do financial planning reviews, how are we doing. It increases dramatically in the first quarter. And I encourage you to do that as well. The next four years are likely to have surprises geopolitically, economically, and in the financial markets. And I think getting your bearings is a good idea. So whether it's a quick look at how you're balancing liquidity, precious metals, growth and income assets, real estate, or factoring in new situations like retirement, a new job, other new variables, our staff are a great resource to bring perspective and counsel. Kevin: Well, and you know, Dave, I dream triangles. Okay? I love the triangle, the foundation, the preservation element, and then of course the left side, which has to do with growth and income, and the right side, your cash savings. And that's what I encourage my clients to do. I have, I think, trained— We talk about habits and how you can train yourself in habits. You can also help train others to have good habits. I've been really thinking about this. One of the great habits of what we've done is we draw triangles and we do that analysis, the how-we-are-doing analysis. So that's what I would encourage our clients to do too. I've got my clients calling me right now and saying, "Hey, let's do a triangle update." David: Yeah, I think probably the underemphasized portion of the perspective triangle for most investors is the metals piece. We think of it as insurance, that's the role that it plays in an overall portfolio. From a practical standpoint, it's there as a reserve. And you don't know you need the reserves until you need the reserves. We're watching a lot of currency volatility, 2024, and that's a big question. When do these countries who are defending their currency, supporting their currency with tens of billions of dollars, sometimes in a week, when do they run thin on reserves? That's when you end up with real currency crisis. You can get through any kind of crisis—whether it's an emotional crisis, a spiritual crisis, a family crisis, a financial crisis—if you're adequately reserved, and I think that's worth taking stock of. Kevin: You know, Dave, that's a great point as far as reserves emotionally, spiritually, financially. I remember I was walking out to the car the other day, and sometimes in the first of the year I can also feel a heaviness. It's like, "Wow, what have I got to do this year? There's things I've got to do." I felt this heaviness, and I realized I had forgotten to be thankful.…
M
McAlvany Weekly Commentary

1 Our Annual Q&A Part 2 – Happy New Year! 37:20
37:20
Na później
Na później
Listy
Polub
Polubione37:20
Morgan Lewis answers your question on Gold Recycling/Dollar Recycling Philip Wortman on Crypto and Gold What indicators does David McAlvany look at consistently? Welcome to the McAlvany Weekly Commentary. Happy New Year! I'm Kevin Orrick, along with David McAlvany. Well, I sure enjoyed the questions last week, Dave, and look forward to what you have to say on the questions this week. We're never disappointed, are we? David: No, and I'm grateful to be closing out another year with the Weekly Commentary. Kevin, thank you for your efforts throughout the year. I enjoy the engagement with our audience and am grateful for the questions that have been sent in. You know, some of the questions are beyond what I have the capability to answer, so we bring in Philip Wortman and Morgan Lewis to tackle a couple of the ones that are just right down their alley. Kevin: And I'm looking forward to that. Well, tell you what, let's just go ahead and get started. Jeff asks, "Do you see the stock market correcting, and if so, when will that happen? And will it be a minor correction or a large pullback?" The second part of the question is the commercial real estate market, Dave, in America. "Is it still in trouble? If so, how will that affect the banking system? And thanks for your efforts in putting the weekly podcast together." That was Jeff. David: The answer is yes. No idea when we have a market correction. We just know the context is set, and by any measure valuation, it will happen. When is, of course, the billion-dollar question. A '30s-style crash? I think that's less likely. A '70s-style crash, where performance in real inflation-adjusted terms ends up over a course of time being as grave as the 1930s? I think that kind of pressured environment is more probable. So it's either large and all at once, or less extreme—minor, if you want to think of it in those terms—extended, and excruciating over time because of the impact of inflation. Commercial real estate, there are really big refinance needs in 2025. Estimates are between one and two trillion dollars, and so it makes sense that we would see pressure in commercial real estate. But I think it obviously depends on liquidity dynamics at the time. Your ability to refinance that debt, if it is with commercial lenders or if it's in the private markets, it all depends on the current liquidity dynamics and financial market conditions at that time. Part of the commercial real estate market is finding a bottom, part of the commercial real estate market has yet to materially correct. So if we assume that there is another leg or another segment within that asset class—commercial real estate—then I think your banks—commercial banks—will see a lot of stress on their CRE portfolios. Kevin: Dave, this next question reminds me of a conversation I had with a client the other day. He said he's got a Wednesday morning ritual. He pours a cup of coffee, he listens to the Commentary every Wednesday, and I was surprised at how many people do that. They have rituals for actually sitting down and listening. So James—this question reminded me of this—he said, "It's been great listening to the show over the last few months. It's become part of my Wednesday morning routine at this point. I've got a few questions, no pressure to answer any or all of them." Dave, I know you're probably going to answer them, so I'll ask you the first one. "Are there any often overlooked market indicators that you'll be paying attention to in 2025?" David: Well, I love the rituals. It also reminds me of a friend of ours, a client of ours in Mexico, and that's a common thing. Friday evening at the end of a work week, popcorn, a glass of wine, and the Weekly Commentary. Kevin: That sounds like fun. David: And he and his wife have been doing that for the better part of 15 years. Kevin: Wow. Wow. So what are you looking at in 2025? David: Yeah. Yeah,…
M
McAlvany Weekly Commentary

With this mid-week Christmas break, we won’t be going into the usual analysis as we normally do. Instead, we’re going to dive deeper into the fundamentals and a recap of why gold is a great investment tool. Regardless of what will happen economically or geopolitically, some things don't change and those fundamentals are what really move the gold price. Despite a lot of volatility in different investment categories and what policy makers do, gold responds and reacts to underlying fundamentals. Who Buys Gold These Days? There’s a misconception that people who buy gold are somewhat “weird.” And while you might hold a greater percentage of your portfolio in gold if you lose faith in the system, there’s nothing strange about owning gold. Investors buy gold because they want to have real money that’s valued anywhere. Gold is recognized everywhere around the world. You can get on an airplane and fly anywhere in the world, hold up a gold coin and smile. Even if you don’t speak the language, people will know that you’re friendly and you have money. It’s a universal language. Preserves Your Purchasing Power Gold today will buy what it buys in five years regardless of the price. It's a constant store of value. It hasn't changed. Our friend Kevin Orrick on our McAlvany Weekly Commentary talks about how an ounce of gold buys a loaf of bread every day for a year. It's done that for thousands of years, and it still does today. If you’re considering owning gold, it’s smart to think of it as a legacy investment, something that you can hold. Insurance for Your Portfolio Gold is often described as insurance for the rest of the portfolio, but aside from the Justin Case, you went into all these different things that are, because it's guaranteed. Just look at the track record of gold over the years, and you’ll see that it is asset preservation. Tangible and Real Gold gets you out of “paper promise” assets into a tangible commodity. We're not talking about ETFs, mining shares or stocks. We're talking about owning physical coins and bars in various forms in and through various vehicles. It could be in your IRA or in a regular account in a vault. Tangible precious metals also provide a privacy component in the instance that you are holding it at home. What Moves the Gold Price? Most factors that move the price of gold have to do with fear or greed. For example, geopolitical fears such as global instability and threats of war — when the future looks uncertain, fear drives demand and increases the price. Another example is central bank demand — What do they know that we don't know? Why are they stocking up on gold? Obviously they're looking at the same things we see, but thinking, “wow, I don't like what I see. I think I'm going to increase my allocation to gold.” How Much Gold Should You Own? If you want to fund your retirement with gold, the best way to think about it is how much you will spend per month. What's your burn rate? You need to know your projection as well — do you need something like a 10 year or a 20 year annuity? When do you want to retire? You can then put that amount into ounces of gold. For example, if you need two ounces or three ounces a month to live, you start accumulating that ounce by ounce. The other way to look at owning precious metals in our Investment Triangle model. A third of your liquid wealth should be in physical gold. A third on the left hand side of the triangle is for growth and income. A third on the right hand side of the triangle is liquid Add Gold Ounces Today Call us at (800) 525-9556 so we can speak with you individually and walk through your own portfolio. Our team of experts can help you understand the whys and the hows with acquiring gold.…
M
McAlvany Weekly Commentary

Kevin: Welcome to the McAlvany Weekly Commentary. Merry Christmas and happy Hanukkah. I'm Kevin Orrick, along with David McAlvany. Well, David, it's fun recording these programs. I had lunch with your son, who is a freshman in college, and I told him, "I'm thinking back 25 years, 26 years when we had lunch together, and what's happened, and then, before that, me working for your dad." What's amazing is these conversations have turned into the Weekly Commentary. And as I was talking to your son, I was thinking, wow, no wonder. There's so many interesting things to talk about, books, the things that we've studied, just our thoughts and dreams moving forward. The questions that our clients ask, I was reading through them and I was thinking, they're really family. Don't you feel like this is sort of family? David: Oh, I do. It's an extended conversation. It's a lot of what we experience, the two of us, when we get together for the regular Commentary meetings on a Monday afternoon and evening. Some of the questions are beyond what I have the capability to answer, so this will be the first Q&A that we bring in Philip Wortman and Morgan Lewis to tackle a couple of the ones that are just right down their alley. Kevin: I'm looking forward to that. Well, tell you what? Let's just go ahead and get started. And I hate to start saying that John Maynard Keynes might be right on something, but here's the question, "Dear Kevin and David, John Maynard Keynes was a complex human, but one thing he got absolutely right was the relationship between macroeconomics and wars. You and Doug (Doug Noland) have been warning of macro risks in China for years now, and we see those warnings playing out in real time. However, as China's economy falters, so does their ability to invade Taiwan. Are the Chinese still serious, and are they a serious military threat to Taiwan? Thanks, Seth." David: Well, thank you Seth. Yes, the Chinese economy has experienced much slower growth, and their primary source of growth has been impaired for many years from the real estate sector. And even now we're beginning to see yields on those companies, so their borrowing costs—numbers that you just can't even wrap your minds around. The very best case scenario is Vanke going from 17.5% to 21.5% just in the last two weeks. And then, on top of that, you've got other yields for companies that are 500%, 1,000%, 12,000%, and higher. So it's basically saying, in that sector, is game over. They do still maintain GDP growth well above that of the U.S. Even if you discount the official statistics by 30 or 40%, I would argue that the case for war does not go away. In fact, it increases with economic desperation. There's the aspect of public distraction on the one hand, playing to nationalist themes, and there's also the positive impact to youth employment, what is today an unemployment problem, both inside the military via conscription and in manufacturing employment growth, as well, for military hardware. So discouraged and unemployed youth need purpose. Low levels of inflation in China also leave them with the latitude to increase spending and money printing with less immediate negative impact to their consumers. Gas war is inflationary, so that's one other aspect of that John Maynard Keynes macroeconomic connection between war and the economy and macroeconomics, but the deflationary malaise they've been locked in is creating a dynamic which increases social and political pressure domestically. Thus far, they've not announced any radical fiscal measures to break that trend, and so I think it's worth keeping in mind that war could very well be an opportunity to redirect that negative attention. I think they understand the global demand for semiconductors and other manufactured goods from Taiwan. They may be inclined to invade Taiwan as if it were a hostile takeover of an industry or company. Not everyone's happy about a change in management, but your suppliers,…
M
McAlvany Weekly Commentary

1 Markets React Sharply to Fed’s Rate Cut: What It Means for Gold 10:20
10:20
Na później
Na później
Listy
Polub
Polubione10:20
Remarks from the Federal Open Market Committee meeting after an expected rate cut rocked the markets, with major indexes falling across the board. Let’s take a look at where prices stand as of December 18: The price of gold dropped to $2,560, or over $100 from a week ago. However, it’s still holding above the November lows and nowhere near longer-term correction levels. The price of silver broke below $30, dropping to around $29.21. It did break below short-term support levels and to the deep 786 fibonacci level on the market push since August. The US dollar rallied sharply above $108 after the Fed announcement. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 2.6% or 1,123 points. The S&P 500 fell 2.9% on the news. The Nasdaq Composite declined 3.5%, its worst day since July. The Dow Transportation Index fell 2.75% on the fed funds news. It was down over 10% since its November 25 high. Powell Rattles Investors Sentiment around the Fed’s expected 0.25% rate cut was dampened by hawkish remarks from the Fed Chairman. Markets expected to see four additional rate cuts in 2025, and were surprised when Jerome Powell remarked that, “We think the economy is in a really good place.” In one instance, the Fed noted that there would be at most two more cuts. A cut in the federal funds rate does help make banks more competitive. However, it has not translated into a decline in the 10-year yield on Treasurys. Nor has it dropped the 30-year mortgage rate to stimulate the housing market. Precious metals also declined, opening up a potential buying opportunity for investors looking to add to their ounces of gold and silver. Gold to Silver Ratio Widens With the latest dip in the gold and silver prices, the silver to gold ratio now stands at 88 to one. With silver’s drop disproportionately larger compared to gold, this is a new opportunity for investors to take a position in silver. Adding more ounces of silver on a dip will potentially open up a ratio trade to shift silver ounces into gold when the ratio narrows again. Typically, when the ratio widens as much as 90 ounces of silver equal to one ounce of gold, silver will then rally. So this is a rare time to get in at a good price. Year-End Fundamentals Wrap If you want to know a little bit more about why gold reacts the way it does, sometimes predictably, sometimes unpredictably, we'll discuss it next week. We will go into a deep dive on what causes the gold price to move in the short and the long term, and all those underlying fundamentals. Call for Expert Guidance The McAlvany Precious Metals advisors have decades of experience investing in gold and other precious metals, and they can help you find the best strategy to meet your unique needs. They are happy to speak with you about your strategy for investing in gold and other precious metals. Reach us at 800-525-9556.…
M
McAlvany Weekly Commentary

S&P 500: More Declines Than Advances Every Day In December China Adds 160,000 oz of Gold Send Questions To info@mcalvany.com "We're at this moment where, again, credibility gets thrown out the window for the Fed. And I think that is the final stage of a bull market in metals, where your central bank credibility is lost and investors go scrambling in an effort to survive a loss of purchasing power. And I think in this case, you're also talking about ramifications that are well outside of any central bank's control, and that is geopolitical issues." —David McAlvany Kevin: Welcome to the McAlvany Weekly Commentary. I'm Kevin Orrick, along with David McAlvany. Dave, before we start, let's just remind our listeners this is the last day to submit questions for our upcoming question and answer programs over the next two weeks. So those questions can be sent to: David: Info@mcalvany.com. Kevin: Yeah, info@mcalvany.com. Well, I'll tell you what? This has been a great week. I feel like I lived a month through this week just because of your birthday. What an amazing celebration at your house, various nights. But I was very honored to be invited to meet some of the people that you knew back in college, Dave, relationships that you've kept going all these years. David: Well, actually we had friends that came into town and some of those relationships go back 50 years. So we covered every decade from when I was a wee small lad to still a truncated and underdeveloped wee small lad. I was a late bloomer, so it was about college before I actually added a little bit of height. So then the timeframe of developing college friends and then professional friends, and it was a phenomenal week. Kevin: Dave, it wouldn't surprise our listeners to know that the people who did fly in for your birthday, who you had affected earlier in life, [The Intentional] Legacy is the name of the book that you wrote about—just what we're all about. And I listened to your friends. Some of them I had heard about, but I had never met. And I listened to them each saying, "Hey, this is how you affected my life." And it was very poignant because I realized there's just been a lot to you all the way back. And at the end of the evening with these friends who had known you, well, one of them had known you since you were a child. He's a professional musician. And he pulled a guitar off the wall, very impromptu. He took the first two minutes to tune a very out-of-tune guitar—so it was very impromptu. But what he did was amazing to me. He sang the various stories that people had told throughout the night at the dinner table. He wrote a song and sang it. I could tell it truly was a gift, but talk about a poignant moment. That was completely unexpected, and I really had no idea somebody could do that. I mean, I don't think he forgot a single story. David: Yeah, it was very special. Family and friendship have played a central part in the last five decades, and I can't imagine the future much different than that. So spending time with friends from across the country, very special week. Kevin: Okay, so we're going to get into business here. This is the week of the Fed decision. And inflation hasn't gone away, Dave, and things feel awfully loose for loosening of the interest rate. What do you think? David: We are in a new world. People know who Jerome Powell is. There was a day when the Fed chief was anonymous. Nobody took the time. Nobody really cared. But this week is particularly important. The next Fed decision is here. The bond market's pricing in 97% probability of a 25 basis point cut, a quarter of a point. But the interesting trend remains that in spite of rate cuts dating back to September when this cycle started, interest rates like the 10-Year Treasury have been on the rise. So 3.63 on the 10-year was the yield then, in September, and reached a peak this week of 4.44. So 79, 81 basis points roughly,…
M
McAlvany Weekly Commentary

Rapid Middle East Re-Shuffle With Assad's Exit Invisible Hand Of Free Markets VS Tariff Strategy Send Questions For Q&A Program To info@mcalvany.com "There's a long period of status quo. It was upturned quickly. In this case, you had the Gaza conflict in Israel's engagement with Hamas and Hezbollah. And then we have the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which, you look at these two factors, and they actually inadvertently blew up the 54-year-old regime in Syria. Without Hezbollah on the ground, without Russia in the sky, Assad could not keep the reins of power. So, yeah, timing is everything. Things change quickly, and I think we have to be honest with ourselves when things do change." —David McAlvany Kevin: Welcome to the McAlvany Weekly Commentary. I'm Kevin Orrick, along with David McAlvany. Well, David, today is your 50th birthday, and sorry, I just have to betray the age, but it's pretty darned exciting to have you sitting here and realize that I've known you since, what, you were 12. David: It's been a few years. Kevin: We've had a few Taliskers together. You studied for your pilot's license over at our house when you were just— David: You taught me how to fly-fish. Kevin: Fly-fishing. That's exactly right. But I couldn't wait. I had to give it to you unwrapped. I got you a copy, and one of our clients actually knows about this. I've shared with him just the other day that I found a copy of The Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith, written in 1776, but this was the published date: 1818. It's an amazing copy. You can tell the people who owned it ahead of you, Dave, from 1818 on. They treasured the book because they have marginalia in there and notes to themselves and little clips from articles and magazines from the 1800s that they pasted into the book that added to the commentary of the book. So I was just extremely excited to have you see this. David: It makes me wonder what happens to the books that I've read and the notes that I've made in those books. I don't know that anyone will appreciate the conversations that I've had with the authors, the way I have enjoyed and engaged and appreciated them. Kevin: As you write marginalia in your books. David: Yeah. But I mean, there is a hope that, like this, a couple centuries later, you get to look and say, that's the point, isn't it? Here's the conversation. Here's what he picks up. There's the debate. He nailed it. This is where he engages with the author. And no, Smith's not right on that point. So the engagement, the challenge, the debate, it's pretty cool to see it in the margins. Kevin: Well, and we've been talking about, with Trump coming in there are a lot of applicable things that we can be looking at because right now there's talk here in America of tariffs. Adam Smith addressed tariffs, and you've interviewed Michael Pettis, who recently has written about tariffs, and I don't know that he necessarily agrees with Adam Smith in all occasions. And so wouldn't it be fun if the two could debate each other and actually say, okay, Adam Smith's saying, "No, it's the invisible hand, not the government." And Pettis going, "No. Sometimes the government can get away with it." What do you think? David: Yeah, well, just as a reminder, real quick before we dive in there, we have our Q&A coming up, and so if you would submit questions, would love to engage with you as best we can. Send those over to info@mcalvany.com. That's info@mcalvany.com. If there are questions of a metaphysical nature, I probably will leave those for a private conversation with you. Let's schedule some time. If it's economics, if it's finance, if it's international relations, public policies— Kevin: Scotch recommendations. David: Oh, certainly, we can certainly— Yeah, the merits of peat, let me tell you. Kevin: But talking about timing, what kind of week do we have? What kind of month do we have? We've got a new president coming in here in just a month or a little ...…
M
McAlvany Weekly Commentary

Precious metals slow down their climb, but continue to show strength after the Thanksgiving break in the US. Let’s take a look at where prices stand as of December 4: The price of gold inched up about $12 from the previous week, still hovering around $2650. The price of silver is up 4% or $1.20 from a week earlier, to around $31.50. Platinum up about $17, or a little under 2% from the previous week. Palladium about $8, or just under 1% from last week. Looking at the broader markets, most of the major indices are sitting at new, strong highs leading into the holiday season. The S&P 500 is up 81 points, or 1.3% from the previous week. The only exception is the Down Transportation index. The Dow Transports is down 470 points, 2.5%, from the previous week. They are almost back to the November 2021 all-time highs. Gold Continues Predicted Path As we discussed before, the price of gold dropped 13% during the last Republican president term in 2016. But six months later, it rebounded and caught back up to where it was trending. Now that Trump has been elected again in 2024, we are seeing a similar trend. While gold hasn’t dropped quite as much yet, the price has declined about 9% since election day. Looking back further, that’s about a 50% retracement in this last breakout pattern. And while there’s still a chance that gold will drop further in the short term, we don’t expect the lower prices to last. It’s likely that gold will rebound in 2025 and reach a new all-time high around $3,000 or higher. Trump, Musk and Spending Cuts The new administration has promised to make dramatic changes to help reduce excessive spending that’s contributed to the massive US debt. To that end, Trump is bringing in Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy for a newly-created Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). These two entrepreneurs are tasked with cutting wasteful spending and finding ways to restructure the bloated bureaucracy. It remains to be seen what they will actually cut. Meanwhile, Trump is also pushing for additional interest rate cuts to get more money back in the hands of the people. He is essentially ignoring the long-term inflation problem with a short-term solution that will make his administration look good. If they really want to get the problem under control, they’ll need to do what no one wants to admit needs to be done — and that’s cutting spending AND raising taxes. When to Buy Gold? Given the geopolitical situation and the US financial situation, it makes sense to begin dollar cost averaging ounces of gold with cash sitting on the sidelines. Gold is not affected by inflation, and it allows investors to preserve the purchasing power of their hard-earned money. Purchased consistently every two weeks, it allows investors to stockpile ounces of gold over time. Build Your Gold “Retirement Annuity” How many ounces do you feel like you need to have set aside when you come to retirement? Do you expect to need a 10-year or a 20-year “gold annuity”? For example, if you know that you’ll need two ounces of gold each month to cover expenses, you can plan how many ounces you will need to accumulate. Now is the time to start stacking ounces of gold. The easiest way to do it is to automate your gold and silver investments through our Vaulted app. Get Guidance from an Expert If you haven’t had a meeting with an advisor at McAlvany Precious Metals to talk through your financial objectives, now is a great time to start. Our advisors have decades of experience investing in gold and other precious metals, and they can help you find the best strategy to meet your unique needs. They are happy to speak with you about your strategy for investing in gold and other precious metals. Reach us at 800-525-9556.…
M
McAlvany Weekly Commentary

1 Broken Signals: Bonds Say Stop, Stocks Say Go 38:28
38:28
Na później
Na później
Listy
Polub
Polubione38:28
Falling Yields Globally May Be Signaling Concern Rising Stocks & Cryptos Show Bulls All In Send Questions For Our Q&A Programs To: info@mcalvany.com "I think there's perhaps too many currents swirling together today, just under the surface, to sort out precisely what's happening in the markets. What is undisputable is that credit markets globally have moved to unsound levels, and a variety of pressure points and vulnerabilities, areas of uncertainty, exist in the spheres of public policy, of fiscal policy, and international relations. And so, on the surface, you have a host of catalysts for consequential movement within the markets." —David McAlvany Kevin: Welcome to the McAlvany Weekly Commentary. I'm Kevin Orrick, along with David McAlvany. David, before we get started, let's just announce to our listeners that we would love to hear their responses, their questions. Every year, toward the end of the year, we ask for questions. We ask that you keep them short, something that we can actually read in a short way, and then answer. And so we would ask our listeners to just send that to info@mcalvany.com, and over the next few weeks we'll gather those. And Dave, I know you put a lot of time and effort into every question, so it's very much appreciated. David: Every year gets a little harder. I feel like it's a competition of stump the chumps. The questions get better and better, the answers get thinner and thinner. Now, we'll do our best to put something together that's coherent and reflective. Thanks for sending the Q&A material over. We'll do that on Christmas Eve and New Year's Eve. Just send your questions to info@mcalvany.com. Kevin: Yeah, and just to reiterate, please do keep the questions just to a few lines, because we try to get through everything in several weeks. You know, Dave, you and I, when we were sitting down—and I love the fact that we have our meetings at Table 30—we're 17 years in, but they were out of Talisker last night, but we had Lagavulin instead. So we sat down at Table 30, we had our Lagavulin, but I think we both were on the same page. There's a lot of noise going on right now, and some of it's information with meaning, some of it's information without meaning, and it's an exciting time because there is a change in the wind. But a lot of times when you have changes like that, it's hard to analyze the data. David: Yeah. Times we can stretch our limits in terms of inputs, and for the child with Asperger's, sensory inputs can aggregate and then overwhelm. For the average inquiring mind, my own included, there's a lot of complexity embedded in price trends today, pick your market. There's a lot going on. Not all of it is cohesive and coherent. A lot of it is contradictory or at least sufficiently complex enough to keep you second-guessing real hard conclusions. So what we do on a weekly basis as an asset management team, we review—twice weekly, actually—a spreadsheet with over a hundred financial market variables. These oscillate minute by minute, and they indicate all the nuanced shifts within the financial markets. They provide us with a mosaic very much like the tiled art with a million pieces that in aggregate create a theme. And some days the theme is clear. Other days, all we have is movement with the meaning piece remaining a little bit elusive. Kevin: You and I were talking about Doug Noland last night, that he's got some disciplines, models, that he follows. That can be very, very valuable in an environment of noise. And I remember, Dave, you and I for decades read a wonderful market analyst named Richard Russell. He also had a model that he used called the Dow Theory, and there were times when he disagreed with what his model was saying, and there was still the human element. In other words, it wasn't just an algorithm everybody followed. I think Doug and the team do the same thing, don't you? There's models that you follow that tell you certain things to do.…
M
McAlvany Weekly Commentary

Top Execs Selling 5x More Stock Than Buying Goldman Sachs Calls For $3,000 Gold In 2025 Will Powell Drop Rates Again? "The Wilshire 5000 to GDP, this is a modified Buffett ratio. It touched 202% last week, which is an all-time high. It's a measure like the Buffett ratio, covers the aggregate of 5,000 companies, telling us something. There's notable insider selling. Five to one is the ratio. Actually, just above five to one. Historically, to be fair to the executives who are doing this, they're not making a market call today. They get to a period where they're comfortable and they want to get liquid, and they're usually two to three quarters early before a major downturn. When you see a significant uptick in insider selling, that's two to three quarters. You're on notice." — David McAlvany Kevin: Welcome to the McAlvany Weekly Commentary. I'm Kevin Orrick along with David McAlvany. Well, David, you did it. You did it. You're down in Texas and you told me you were going to do a Spartan race, but I haven't seen you training like I had in the past. How'd it go? David: Not training like I have in the past. How about not at all? It's been a nice 18-month break. The annual pilgrimage to Texas, it's here, it's arrived, like other holidays we spend feasting and celebrating together as family. The special highlight for this one is my second son's birthday. He turned 16 over the weekend. Kevin: Wow. David: On his birthday, he requested that we race together something called an OCR or obstacle course race. You mentioned it, the Spartan race to be exact. Kevin: Okay. If he's turning 16, you're just about to turn 50, aren't you? David: This is a huge year for us. My oldest turned 18; the next, 16; the next, 13; the next, 10, so we're out of single digits. My wife and I celebrate our 25th anniversary, and it's my 50th birthday in about 10 days. Yeah, this is a big year for us. After watching the Tyson-Jake Paul fight a few weeks back, I figured we might have another version of the old lion being surpassed by the young lion. Again, maybe I'm just feeling a little unenthused turning 50, but we did both bleed a little. It was not a competitive race between the two of us. It was just a great day. We ran, we suffered a little, we started and finished as a team, and we hopped over prickly pear in quantities I've never imagined, working through the 25 obstacles over the course. And then the course is about six and a half miles. We got to the end and they gave us this interesting pitch as we crossed the finish line, "Do you want to do an extra mile?" It was like one of those fear of missing out moments. He was like, "Sure, I guess we'll just run an extra mile," but it was a great memory maker. Kevin: And you did that. You did that. Well, that's awesome. I remember one of the people here at the office, Dave. I won't name them. When we were doing the Half Ironman on the big island in Hawaii, the last part of the run was looped. I remember we all had to run two loops. Remember that? David: Oh, yeah. Kevin: You patted me on the back and you passed me quickly. But one of the members of our team thought the loop was just once, not twice. When she got to the finish line, they said, "Oh, no, you need to loop again." That was a miserable feeling. Running that extra mile, I can see that, but if you recall, I think that was an extra six and a half miles for her. David: That's right. That's right. Kevin: Yeah. Let's take it to the economic side of things, talking about running the extra mile. Dave, we were doing this commentary back in 2008, but after the global financial crisis was really playing itself out to look like it was going to be a depression, there was a choice to be made. Do we let the depression happen—which usually is the best thing to happen because you come back out of it? We've talked about other depressions in the past where, if left alone, you come back healthier, not in bad shape.…
M
McAlvany Weekly Commentary

1 Metals Bounce Back Amid Market Volatility 17:38
17:38
Na później
Na później
Listy
Polub
Polubione17:38
Precious metals continue to follow the playbook laid out by our analysis of a Republican presidential win. Let’s take a look at where prices stand as of November 20: The price of gold is up about 4.3% or $108 to $2,650 from last week, a really nice bounce up in a week. The price of silver is up 3.9% or around $1.15 at $30.86 from a week earlier. Platinum is up about 3.6% or $33 to $958 from a week earlier. Palladium is up 12.5% or $113 to $1,024 from the prior week. That’s a nice recovery from last week’s dip of 5.3%. Copper's up about 15 cents, or around 3.8% to around $3.80. There’s a good chance copper will reach $4 in the next few months. Looking at the equities markets… The DJIA is down 1.5% or 670 points to around 43,200. The S&P 500 is down 80 points or 1.3% to around 5,920. The Dow Transports is off 600 points or 3.5% since last week. The US dollar index is up 7% since October, or 3.5% since the election with a strong bounce off the trading range floor. It’s now pushing up against the ceiling. The Meteoric Dollar Rise The rise in the dollar right now is insane. What’s driving it higher? When you look at where it’s going, it’s knocking on that ceiling right now. This rise isn’t just an influx of money from Asia because of Chinese concerns. And it’s not just the average American thinking Donald Trump will be better for the US dollar. It may also be the flight of capital coming out of Europe due to fear. While the BRICS alliance is trying to put up a strong front for a new BRICS currency, it is not a done deal. It takes a long time to compete with a global reserve currency. Just look back at how the Euro evolved. It was proposed in the 70s and 80s, but it didn’t become the powerhouse currency that it is today until the mid 2000s. With respect to BRICS, there was some infighting between India and Russia and China about how India would pay for their oil. China demanded it be settled in Yuan. Instead, India left the deal to settle it in dollars with the US. So there’s no real agreement yet with the BRICS currency. Gold Doesn’t Follow The Dollar There may be investors out there that believe that gold will correct and go lower — and that will be their entry point. But that’s not what we’re seeing from our years of analysis. Gold isn’t supposed to follow the dollar. But with the dollar at $107 right now and gold at $2,650 per ounce, it’s because of the sheer magnitude of money printing over the last decade. It represents the number of dollars in circulation. The velocity of money is picking up the US dollar. If there’s also economic stimulus with a Trump economic plan, we’ll likely see the dollar rally and gold would follow suit if this is driven by geopolitics. Don’t Miss Out on Gold While China and other international markets have been heavily investing in gold, Americans have been missing out. If you don't own gold yet, now is the time. Get your position now. If there's pullbacks, buy a dip. But the bottom line is you don’t know what gold's going to do. Trump is not the save-all cure- all in these markets. The McAlvany advisor team is here to help guide you. With decades of experience in precious metals investing, they are happy to speak with you about your strategy for investing in gold and other precious metals. Reach us at 800-525-9556…
M
McAlvany Weekly Commentary

Trump Is Not In Yet & He's Already Being Blamed Pre-Election October Deficit Largest Ever Ukraine Strikes Into Russia With U.S. Approval & Hardware "I think without tariffs as negotiated and leveraged on other items we lose the power to encourage energy imports from the US. It's the art of the deal. Economists may worry about the inflationary impacts of tariffs, and to the degree that we see it—see that inflation—I think it's going to indicate that Trump didn't get what he wanted. What he really wants is to address the balance of payments deficits via exports, not via penalizing imports." —David McAlvany Kevin: Welcome to the McAlvany Weekly Commentary. I'm Kevin Orrick, along with David McAlvany. David, I did something sort of strange this weekend. I really focused on a year, 1818, because I had heard about the second US central bank tightening credit when inflation was running away. The American economy was booming at the time. People were taking huge debts and buying land, and they were exporting produce to Europe, which was war-torn because of the Napoleonic Wars. So America was booming, but the problem was the debt was creating a lot of growth that wasn't real, that could not be sustained, and it was creating inflation, to be honest with you. And so the head of the second US central bank—we've had three tries at the Federal Reserve in one way or another—went in and just basically tightened credit, and he said, "No more loans." And he called his debts in, and it created what I had not really paid much attention to. It created what they call the Panic of 1819, and a very, very severe depression after that. So we went from, it was called the Era of Good Feelings at the time, to actually one of the worst depressions America's ever been through. And I'm thinking right now, you had a call this morning with an international client who said, "You guys actually are looking like you have a pretty strong economy." But is that being run by a basis of something that can be sustained or is it just purely debt, Dave? David: Well, that's the key. I think when you look at GDP growth, the Atlanta Fed puts their GDPNow number together. It's been coming down a little bit, but it's still, say 2.5%, and the larger figure compiled is 2.8%. So GDP growth just shy of 3%. Now the question is, what would that number look like if you sucked out $2 trillion in deficit spending? Because government spending is a factor in GDP, and there's no distinguishing between debt spending—deficit spending—and just regular old spending. It's economic activity. So it does look pretty good. It reminds me of many years ago. I lived in Los Angeles, and I tell you what, at least 50% of the people who owned BMWs and Mercedes lived in really cheap apartments. They could not afford those cars, but it was what they had to impress the ladies, and they lived on a larger scale with perhaps an ulterior motive. They needed to prove something. And so you live beyond your means so that you can make an impression. Kevin: Well, and a lot of times you can afford something you can't afford for a little while just based on monthly payments. William McChesney Martin, who basically said it's okay to pull the punch bowl back before the party gets out of hand, and we really have left the punch bowl out continually, haven't we? David: Yeah, absolutely. So you've got today the run-up to unsustainable valuations in the stock market. These valuations, it's pretty easy to ignore them because mainly people are making money and they're playing the momentum game, which packs a lot of euphoria into a little bit of time. And we share a good deal in common with the late '20s euphoria, with the year 2000 as well, what you described—was that 1818, in the era of happy feelings? Kevin: Oh yeah, yeah, good feelings. David: Good feelings. Kevin: The Era of Good Feelings, but boy, you take the punch bowl away. But this is why what you brought up last week was so...…
M
McAlvany Weekly Commentary

This week it’s more than just a weekly recap but also a bit of a look ahead. There’s been a lot of price action in the last week. So let’s take a look at where prices stand as of November 13: The price of gold is down about 3.9% or $85 from last week. It is down $211 or 7.6% from its high on October 30. The price of silver is down 2.7% or around $0.83 from a week earlier. It is down $4.50 or 12.9% from its pre-election price on October 29. Platinum is down about 5.3% or $52 from top to bottom over the week. It is sitting down 11% or $115 since it reached its peak. Palladium is down 5.3% or $105 from where it was last week. It is down $322 or 25.8% since October 29. The S&P 500 is up 40 points or 0.6%, sitting just under 6,000. It is up 264 points or 4.6% since the election. The Dow Transports are up 62 points or 0.3% since last week. And they’ve risen 1222 points or 7.5% since election day. The US dollar index is up 1.3 points or 1.3% since last week, at around $106.5. They’re up 2.8% since election day. Short-Term Prediction for Gold Looking at the 200-day moving average chart for gold, it appears that gold will likely drift down from its record high levels. It would likely land around the $2,400 per ounce level. This downward movement would likely happen within the next 4-6 weeks. However, this short-term dip will not last long. We are still in the midst of a multi-year bull market that will continue. You can see it when you zoom out a few years to when it started. Gold’s Stair-Stepping Bull Market Looking back, gold had hit a bottom around December 2015. Back then, it was trading just around $1,050 per ounce. Gold continued to trade sideways for the next couple of years, but the floor was slowly rising. And finally it had a breakout point in May 2019. That’s when it had clearly entered a bull market, and it was trading around $1,280. Gold then traded within its 200 day moving average. The only exception was at the start of the pandemic, when the uncertainty took over as no one knew what would happen when the world shut down. But since then, gold has been slowly stair-stepping higher and finding new floors. What we see happening throughout this period is gold has a breakout and reaches a new high, and then the exuberance wears off. There’s a natural selloff and recalibration. So for example, gold went from $1,200 to $2,000 in the beginning of the bull market. The emotional high wore off and gold dropped back down to around $1,700 — a more “reasonable” price. Now that the election has happened, gold has again rallied to a new record high, breaking out from its 200 day moving average. And with this most recent sell-off, we expect it again to drop down even further to sell off the exuberance of knowing who the next president will be in the White House. Build Your Nest Egg No matter what happens in the short term or long term, gold will continue to retain its value. That’s why it is the perfect asset to preserve your purchasing power and build a solid foundation for retirement. Gold’s average is almost 10% a year over time, regardless of the period of time. An ounce of gold will buy in 20 years, what that ounce of gold buys today. So for the sake of your retirement planning, it is smart to include gold in your portfolio. Gold is the guaranteed income when you need it. Buy Gold on The Dip How many ounces of gold can you accumulate on price dips to meet your objective of a secure retirement? It’s best to prepare in advance, because price dips are typically short lived. Speak with a McAlvany financial advisor to put together a strategy so you’ll be ready to buy on the dips. Reach us at 800-525-9556, Monday - Friday. Call or email us, and an advisor will get back to you shortly.…
M
McAlvany Weekly Commentary

Left Cannot Ignore Electoral & Popular Sweep Head Of $11 Trillion BlackRock Likes Hard Assets When Will Western Investors Move To Gold? "The adjustment is beginning in their investors' minds to a higher-for-longer environment, an adjustment to debt and deficits which are not quickly resolved, not by a person, not by a party, but this is a dedication to resolving an issue which may take decades. And that's partially through economic growth, that's partially through an increase in revenue, that's partially through a reduction in deficit spending. But until we get to those long-term solutions, we deal with critical issues. And Rieder is saying, avoid the long end of the curve. Rieder is saying, take a look at hard assets." —David McAlvany Kevin: Welcome to the McAlvany Weekly Commentary. I'm Kevin Orrick, along with David McAlvany. David, a lot has changed in a week, but I can't help but think of a man named Onoda Hiroo, who after World War II, Japanese soldier, he fought on 29 years. He was on a Philippine island, and he absolutely refused to believe that the war was over, even when Japanese generals and commanders would come and try to talk him out. He could not believe that. I can't help but think that that's a lot like Arizona and California right now. My wife and I turned on Jimmy Kimmel, and instead of him being funny, he was just standing and crying and talking about the end of the world. And we watched Saturday Night Live on Saturday night, the opening skit, we thought it might be funny, but instead they just really stood and cried and talked about the end of the world. I'm just wondering, is the war over or is it just beginning? David: Yeah, it's a great question. Well, yes, a lot has happened in the last week. We've got President-elect Trump in line for another four years. The cabinet positions are being lined out, and yet a full week later, they're still counting ballots in Arizona and California. Kevin: Yeah, it's like the Japanese soldier on the island. Why are they still counting, Dave? David: It's hard to believe that in states like Florida you can finish the count the day of the election, while states home to Silicon Valley and some of the greatest hardware and software inventions ever, they can't figure it out. The vote count a full week after the election day is still going on. In my mind, election integrity has a black eye from that kind of incompetence. Kevin: Well, and last week you were critical of both parties, and had a little bit of cynicism going, but there seems to be an overwhelming message that's being sent to the United States right now. David: Reflecting on my pre-election comments, I think they were adequately critical of the parties running, maybe overly cynical about the American public. Whether you regard the election outcome as a good thing or a bad thing, there was uniformity in the political shift. It was across ethnic and socioeconomic lines, all swing states, a significant shift in the African-American and Latino communities. There was a sea of red on the American map, 49 out of 50 states shifted red with a wide margin, enough margin in the popular vote to give Trump an unambiguous mandate to fix a few things. The exit polls noted that inflation, immigration, and a fixation on cultural issues which don't help the middle class were top of mind, and threats to democracy ranked high as well, with a good number of those citing that concern voting for Trump, interestingly. So, the shift towards Trump included a surprisingly large college-age contingent, and of course the minority contingents I just mentioned. But maybe minorities have figured out that rhetoric is insufficient to make your life better. And that a strong economy—that tends to lift all boats. The opposite, if you're looking at strong inflation, that uniformly sucks the tide out from under those same vessels. Kevin: Yeah, Dave, the question was asked of Kamala,…
Zapraszamy w Player FM
Odtwarzacz FM skanuje sieć w poszukiwaniu wysokiej jakości podcastów, abyś mógł się nią cieszyć już teraz. To najlepsza aplikacja do podcastów, działająca na Androidzie, iPhonie i Internecie. Zarejestruj się, aby zsynchronizować subskrypcje na różnych urządzeniach.