Sunday, November 30, 2025

Orwellian Dysfunction as Government Hides Data, CME Outage Disrupts Trading Prior to Black Friday Open; Is India Pegging a 10: Gold:Silver Ratio?

Are we sensing a trend here?

A few weeks ago, the White House announced that data for October Non-farm Payrolls and CPI (implying PPI as well) was lost due to the government shutdown from October 1st through November 12.

On Monday, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) announced that they would not be releasing the advance estimate for third quarter GDP, and gave no timeline for when the report would be released.

For reference, GDP reports are usually released on the last Thursday of the three months following the end of a quarter. In this case, the initial estimate would have normally been released on October 30. Because of the shutdown, that released was skipped. Effectively, what was cancelled this week was the second estimate, which, because Thanksgiving was Thursday, would probably have been released today, Friday, November 28.

Today, the Wall Street Journal reports that the BEA will release the initial GDP estimate on December 23, just in time for Christmas. A delay of the third quarter GDP estimates is somewhat odd, given that the quarter ended on September 30, the day before the government shutdown. It all seems rather fishy, from the shutdown itself to the "lost" data, to delays in reporting important government findings.

These kinds of things happen in other countries, arguably in third world dictatorships, banana republics or communist regimes. The defunct USSR and, more recently, China, are famous for fabricating data. The current climate reeks of Orwellian doublespeak statements, like "chocolate rations have been increased from 10 grams to six."

Today's oddity comes from the CME Group, where options, gold, silver, and stock futures - among other derivative products - are traded regularly. Around 9:44 pm Thursday night, the platform went dark. Strangely enough, right at that time, silver was peaking above $54 an ounce and gold had jest beforehand been rising rapidly toward $4,200. Prices of the two prominent precious metals are the most severely suppressed of any commodity or product, the main conduit for manipulation being the CME, COMEX and GLOBEX platforms, though nobody would really imagine that the U.S. government would go to such extremes to keep the prices of real money under wraps and their precious fiat US$ afloat, would they?

Moments ago, as of this writing, the CME announced that their systems would return to normal operations at 8:30 am ET. as if by magic, NASDAQ futures popped up 83 points, Dow futures rose 80 points, and S&P futures gained 13.

So, never mind, we've (government moles) got this.

Something that came to the attention of Money Dialy was a report in the Jerusalem Post that the Royal Bank of India (RBI) had proposed new rules allowing silver to be employed as collateral for loans, alongside gold, which has for decades been a normal practice.

The intriguing message in the story was that India's regulators propose the new policy, which goes into effect in April 2026, sets collateral eligibility at 10 kilograms of silver versus 1 kilogram of gold, a de facto implied 10:1 silver:gold ratio.

Initially, our desk brushed the story off as fake news, as it was not reported anywhere else, though upon doing some sleuthing, it appears that the story is true. How deeply the collateral ratio in India will affect gold and silver prices remains obscure and yet to be seen. Currently, the gold:silver ratio has been upwards of 80:1, in the past year as high as 100:1. If the suggestion that silver should be valued at 1/10th the price of gold, it would be enormous news and shake markets globally.

Since historically, the gold:silver ratio has been anywhere from 8:1 to 20:1 it would mark a return to sanity in monetary matters, at least regarding real money: gold and silver.

One more thing: The atomic clock at Money Daily HQ, which receives its signal broadcast from station WWVB by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) in Fort Collins, Colorado, sometime last night or early this morning (we were sleeping off the Thanksgiving dinner) displaying the time eight hours ahead of the actual time. Odd.

Equity exchanges close at 1:00 pm today, so get your bets in early.

Happy Black Friday! Enjoy the show!

At the Close, Wednesday, November 26, 2025:
Dow: 47,427.12, +314.67 (+0.67%)
NASDAQ: 23,214.69 +189.10 (+0.82%)
S&P 500: 6,812.61, +46.73 (+0.69%)
NYSE Composite: 21,713.13, +161.39 (+0.75%)



Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Trump's AI Genesis Mission, Pick for Next Fed Chair Gooses Wall Street Stocks Higher

Ok, hardly anybody paid much attention to Monday's launch of the "Genesis Mission" via an executive order by President Trump, except, um, Wall Street, apparently already in holiday trading mode.

President Trump's latest "mission" is all about the AI "race" against China, seeking to combine America's scientific knowledge into one, massive database, promoted by White House tech czar Michael Kratsios, who graduated from Princeton University with a B.A. in politics and a certificate in Hellenic studies in 2008, making him uniquely unqualified in technology, but that's OK since prior to joining the Trump administration as deputy assistant to the president, Kratsios was a principal at Thiel Capital and served as chief of staff to entrepreneur and venture capitalist Peter Thiel.

OK, the Peter Thiel connection led to Kratsios recently marrying a woman who was Public Policy Manager for Google UK and is now associated with Coinbase.

This new AI and Energy grift that is being managed by Trump, for those "behind the curtain" is already HUGE. Americans will pay for all of it and the tech oligarchs will get the profits along with all the infrastructure and info-tech built with American tax dollars.

According to this article from Venture Beat:

What the administration has not provided is just as striking: no public cost estimate, no explicit appropriation, and no breakdown of who will pay for what. Major news outlets including Reuters, Associated Press, Politico, and others have all noted that the order “does not specify new spending or a budget request,” or that funding will depend on future appropriations and previously passed legislation.

President Trump has unleashed the “Genesis Mission,” a Manhattan Project-scale AI blitz designed to cement U.S. technological dominance. Signed via an executive order Monday, the plan marshals the country’s largest federal data stores, supercomputers, and 40,000 elite scientists to accelerate breakthroughs in energy, health, and national security—while leaving global competitors in the dust. White House tech czar Michael Kratsios and Energy Secretary Chris Wright hailed it as America’s “Apollo-moment moonshot,” with Wright invoking wartime triumphs and likening the mission to the Manhattan Project that helped end WWII.

The executive order frames AI as the latest frontier for scientific discovery and economic growth, demanding a historic national effort to accelerate research and innovation. The Genesis Mission will create an integrated AI platform leveraging decades of federal scientific datasets to train foundation models, build AI research agents, automate workflows, and test new hypotheses at unprecedented speed.

It pulls together the full spectrum of American innovation: DOE national labs, pioneering private companies, world-renowned universities, production plants, and national security sites. The initiative promises to harness advances in high-performance computing and semiconductors, driving faster scientific discovery, enhanced productivity, energy security, and stronger national defense—all while delivering maximum taxpayer ROI.

Kratsios emphasized the scale of the effort, calling it “the largest marshaling of the federal government scientific apparatus since the Apollo Project,” and framing it as a historic surge in U.S. power. Trump’s Genesis blitz, combining federal resources with private-sector know-how, seeks to eclipse China’s AI advances, weaponize federal data lakes for breakthroughs, and secure unchallenged global dominance in science and technology.

For Americans watching the chaos online, the Genesis Mission is both awe-inspiring and terrifying—a full-throttle, no-holds-barred sprint into an AI-fueled future where the U.S. refuses to play catch-up, turning panic-scrolling doom into a spectator sport.

Fabulous.

Stocks powered ahead on Tuesday, and look to add to gains again on Wednesday, and, after the Thanksgiving break, again on the half-session Friday. Wall Street is not waiting for any results from AI or anywhere else, satisfied that more than a trillion dollars in AI investment will lead ot massive profits. At least that's the current understanding, along with the Fed making money easier by cutting the federal funds rate by another 25 basis points at the December 9-10 FOMC meeting.

Traders are also jazzed about the prospects for Trump's pick to be the next Fed Chairman, ostensibly to cut interest rates even further. The leading candidate is the dovish Kevin Hassert.

While monetary and fiscal policies go into inflation overdrive, stocks will benefit, but gold and silver may skyrocket.

With US markets set to open within minutes, stock futures are higher across the board, along with gold and silver.

Away we go!

At the Close, Tuesday, November 25, 2025:
Dow: 47,112.45, +664.15 (+1.43%)
NASDAQ: 23,025.59, +153.59 (+0.67%)
S&P 500: 6,765.88, +60.76 (+0.91%)
NYSE Composite: 21,551.73, +280.13 (+1.32%)



Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Start Spending Americans! Are You Not Aware That the United States is the "Hottest" Country in the World? President Trump Said So

Just guessing, but Tuesday might be ripe for some profit taking. After last week's Thursday meltdown, stocks have rallied on renewed prospects for a FOMC rate cut at the December 9-10 meeting. While that's jolly good for Wall Street, it sounds just a bit inflationary for the rest of us regular folks. Heck, even bitcoin is "off the lows", which, for CNBC enthusiasts, is cause for celebration.

Nonetheless, President Trump says America is the "hottest" country on the planet, which has worried some of the leftover climate change complainers. Still, he's probably right about America being hot, because, if you touch it, you're likely to get burned.

From the "can't make this stuff up" department (courtesy of trusted news source, Yahoo! Finance):

US retail sales rose less than forecast in September as key data returns after shutdown delays

US retail sales slowed in September as investors got the first official glimpse of consumer spending in two months on Tuesday morning after the government shutdown halted a wide swath of economic data.

Headline retail sales climbed 0.2% in September, below economists' expectations of a 0.4% month-over-month increase. By comparison, sales rose 0.6% in August, according to Census Bureau data.

The control group, which excludes several volatile categories and factors into the gross domestic product (GDP) reading for the quarter, decreased 0.1% following a 0.6% gain in August. Economists polled by Bloomberg had expected a 0.3% rise.

Sales excluding autos rose 0.3% from August to September, while sales excluding autos and gas increased 0.1%.

The report arrives at the start of a crucial holiday shopping season and carries added weight as investors and policymakers continue to operate without an official read on third-quarter GDP, even with the shutdown now over.

On Monday, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) announced it has canceled the advance Q3 GDP estimate and will reschedule both the second estimate and preliminary corporate profits, which were slated for release on Nov. 26.

So, this translates thusly: Many people are broke. They were broke in September and more broke in October (if that's even possible), so we, the government, who can't accept failure, aren't going to release October data. If we eventually do, it will be 100% fake.

Third quarter GDP was so bad, we shut down the government just so we wouldn't have to tell anybody. We, the government, want to keep all you peons, muppets, and cretins in the dark, while we, the enlightened class, profits. Conveniently, we will not release third quarter GDP estimate - which we have, by the way, because the third quarter ended in September - until after Christmas. So, go out and shop, spend up to your credit card limits on worthless trash to impress people you don't like. Thank you for your attention to this matter. Happy Holidays.

Signs that there's a bubble and a recession will soon follow:

One of your neighbors drives a more expensive car than you, even though he/she doesn't have a job. Your car is paid for; his/hers is on credit. Keep eyes peeled for repo man.

You tried out AI, were not overly impressed with the results, and thought, "they're spending how many hundreds of billions on this?"

One bitcoin is worth more than what you paid for your first home back in 1985.

Two strip steaks at the local supermarket cost $38.50.

The Starbucks near your office is empty.

There's more, but we're not allowed to tell you how bad it really is, but here's a hint: 50% of retail sales is being done by the top 10% of earners.

Only one more day until Thanksgiving (whew! a day off) and then the massive half-day rally for Black Friday!

Spend!

At the close, Monday, November 24, 2025:
Dow: 46,448.27, +202.86 (+0.44%)
NASDAQ: 22,872.01, +598.92 (+2.69%)
S&P 500: 6,705.12, +102.13 (+1.55%)
NYSE Composite: 21,271.60, +94.62 (+0.45%)



Sunday, November 23, 2025

WEEKEND WRAP: Circus and Clown Show Continues; Price Suppression, Fake Money, and Holiday Goodness

Look at it this way. Wall Street is a big circus, full of high-wire acts, dancing elephants, lion tamers, and trampoline gymnasts with a casino attached. Washington, D.C. is the clown show, led by the carnival barker on truth social.

On Wall Street, you buy your tickets, cotton candy, popcorn, and the rest. Washington doesn't move Wall Street. It's exactly the other way around. All the best grifters in the world are located in the capital. The real money is made behind the scenes, in back offices within skyscrapers and low-rise buildings in lower Manhattan and New Jersey.

In just the last two days of trading last week - Thursday and Friday - was witness to the complete fraud of AI investments (Thursday) and the comic cosmic power of the central bank (Friday), when New York Fed President John Williams, who was attending a conference sponsored by the central bank of Chile (really, Chile?) casually mentioned that interest rates could fall in the near term.

This wasn't an official speech by Williams, who just so happens to be a permanent voter and Vice Chairman of the FOMC, the committee that sets interest rate policy at the Fed. His remarks carried sufficient weight to boost markets on Friday, a counterweight to Thursday's massive selloff.

In Washington, Republican House member from Georgia, Marjorie Taylor Greene, a longtime Trump and MAGA supporter, abruptly resigned her seat after weeks of disagreements with President Trump.

In the dysfunction that is the U.S. federal government, political alliances are disregarded. Elected officials who stand up for Americans and against foreign entanglements are disposed of or "primaried." Those who support foreign governments and enthusiastically applaud leaders who commit crimes and genocide are elevated. That's just how the irrelevant clown show rolls.

Here's a link to her video statement and resignation announcement. The video is posted at the conclusion of the WEEKEND WRAP.

Stocks

Even with Friday's Fed-induced dead cat bounce, stocks were hit hard again this week, marking the third straight weekly decline on the NASDAQ, home to most of the speculative tech names.

Markets have been under siege since the government re-opened, and while that is probably merely coincidence, the effects are beginning to strike home. Just since November 12, the Dow has dropped 2,000 points, about four percent. The S&P is off nearly 300 points from its all-time high on October 29, and the NASDAQ is off by more than 1700 points since the end of October, a full seven percent decline.

With the holidays approaching, there's a split of opinion on whether stocks will regain the high ground or continue to fall for the remainder of the year. Increasingly, it appears to be the latter. Liquidity and the AI circular trading scheme continue to be the main issues in the market. The AI trade may have seen its top after Nvidia's results, under scrutiny, caused Thursday's massive decline. While there was some dip-buying on Friday, it was largely without conviction, and also came on the third Friday of the month, usually the largest options expiration date. Thus, whatever gains were made in the big tech names were probably the results of various options trades being closed out.

There doesn't seem to be a catalyst going forward, though the general mood of the markets during the holidays is upbeat, although that certainly wasn't the case in 2018, and similar issues could cause another waterfall event, as opposed to a Santa laus rally. Of course, there is the FOMC meeting on December 9-10 to consider. After Williams' suggestion the odds of another 25 basis point cut in December rose from around 33% to over 60%. If the Fed does not cut, markets will likely tank. There's always a way out for Wall Street, however. In this instance, howls of "oversold conditions" will be loud.

Prior to that, on Wednesday of next week, the PCE, the Fed's favored inflation gauge will be announced, which will have influence regarding inflation in the context of rate cuts.

Treasury Yield Curve Rates

Date 1 Mo 1.5 mo 2 Mo 3 Mo 4 Mo 6 Mo 1 Yr
10/17/2025 4.18 4.15 4.08 4.00 3.95 3.79 3.56
10/24/2025 4.11 4.06 4.02 3.93 3.89 3.76 3.58
10/31/2025 4.06 4.02 4.04 3.89 3.87 3.79 3.70
11/07/2025 4.01 3.96 3.98 3.92 3.83 3.76 3.63
11/14/2025 4.04 4.02 4.01 3.95 3.88 3.80 3.70
11/21/2025 4.03 4.01 4.00 3.90 3.84 3.75 3.62

Date 2 Yr 3 Yr 5 Yr 7 Yr 10 Yr 20 Yr 30 Yr
10/17/2025 3.46 3.47 3.59 3.78 4.02 4.58 4.60
10/24/2025 3.48 3.49 3.61 3.79 4.02 4.56 4.59
10/31/2025 3.60 3.60 3.71 3.89 4.11 4.65 4.67
11/07/2025 3.55 3.57 3.67 3.87 4.11 4.68 4.70
11/14/2025 3.62 3.61 3.74 3.92 4.14 4.73 4.74
11/21/2025 3.51 3.50 3.62 3.82 4.06 4.67 4.71

Spreads remain wide. Fed speakers are about to go into "quiet mode" prior to the next FOMC meeting, so there will be slight chance that they'll be leaking anything important. Otherwise, the treasury market is functioning, though there is crowding due to excessive issuance by the U.S. Treasury, with more than $1 trillion in refunding ongoing.

Spreads:

2s-10s
2025
1/3: +32
1/10: +37
1/17: +34
1/24: +36
1/31: +36
2/7: +20
2/14: +21
2/21: +23
2/28: +25
3/7: +33
3/14: +29
3/21: +31
3/28: +38
4/4: +33
4/11: +52
4/17: +53
4/25: +55
5/2: +50
5/9: +49
5/16: +45
5/23: +51
5/30: +52
6/6: +48
6/13: +45
6/20: +48
6/27: +56
7/3: +47
7/11: +53
7/18: +56
7/25: +49
8/1: +54
8/8: +51
8/15: +58
8/22: +58
8/29: +64
9/5: +59
9/12: +50
9/19: +57
9/26: +57
10/3: +45
10/10: +53
10/17: +56
10/24: +54
10/31: +51
11/7: +56
11/14: +52
11/21: +55

Full Spectrum (30-days - 30-years)
2025
1/3: +38
1/10: +54
1/17: +41
1/24: +40
1/31: +36
2/7: +32
2/14: +32
2/21: +31
2/28: +13
3/7: +24
3/14: +25
3/21: +23
3/28: +26
4/4: +5
4/11: +38
4/17: +44
4/25: +40
5/2: +41
5/9: +46
5/16: +52
5/23: +68
5/30: +59
6/6: +69
6/13: +67
6/20: +69
6/27: +66
7/3: +51
7/11: +59
7/18: +65
7/25: +55
8/1: +32
8/8: +37
8/15: +44
8/22: +41
8/29: +51
9/5: +49
9/12: +40
9/19: +54
9/26: +55
10/3: +47
10/10: +43
10/17: +42
10/24: +48
10/31: +61
11/7: +69
11/14: +70
11/21: +68

Oil/Gas

WTI crude closed out the week at $57.98, down sharply from last week's close of $59.81. The price of oil should continue to fall. There's slack demand and a huge glut, despite the "sanctions" on Russia, which do next-to-nothing.

The U.S. national average for gas at the pump remained the same for now three straight weeks, $3.07, according to Gasbuddy.com. Gas prices should continue to decline over the near term and through winter.

California remains the priciest, at $4.60 per gallon, down six cents, followed by Washington ($4.17), up a penny on the week. Oregon ($3.77), was up four cents. The lowest prices remain in the Southeast, with Oklahoma checking in near the lowest price in about a year, $2.46. Mississippi is next at $2.53. Louisiana ($2.55), Tennessee ($2.60) and Texas ($2.63) follow. The remaining Southeast states are all below $2.80 with the exception of Florida ($3.11) up 20 cents from last week.

In the Northeast, prices were higher. Only New Hampshire ($2.94) was under $3.00, with Pennsylvania ($3.28) easily the highest. Vermont ($3.15) and New York ($3.14) were the next.

In the midwest region, Illinois ($3.24) and Michigan ($3.12) were the only states above $3.00. At the low end were Colorado ($2.61) and Kansas ($2.67).

Sub-$3.00 gas was reported in 28 states, a gain of two from last week.

Bitcoin

This week: $87,373.34
Last week: $95,387.89
2 weeks ago: $103,678.70
6 months ago: $108,333.40
One year ago: $97,811.99
Five years ago: $17,734.38

Bitcoin fell to a low below $81,000 this week. The gains through Sunday morning is nothing but froth, occurring in thinly-traded hours, similar to how the gold and silver suppressors operate in the GLOBEX between midnight and early morning hours. There's really nothing there at all. Most people who bought bitcoin in the past year are losing money.

Nakamoto in Japanese means "Central" or middle. Satoshi in Japanese means "Intelligence" or wise. Draw your own conclusions.

Bitcoin and crypto is dead money at this point. Thank Wall Street for that.

Precious Metals

Gold:Silver Ratio: 81.33; last week: 80.79

Futures, per COMEX continuous contracts:

Gold price 10/24: $4,126.90
Gold price 10/31: $4,013.40
Gold price 11/7: $4,007.80
Gold price 11/14: $4,084.40
Gold price 11/21: $4,099.20

Silver price 10/24: $48.41
Silver price 10/31: $48.25
Silver price 11/7: $48.22
Silver price 11/14: $50.40
Silver price 11/21: $50.33

SPOT:
(stockcharts.com)
Gold 10/24: $4110.63
Gold 10/31: $3997.10
Gold 11/7: $3999.89
Gold 11/14: $4,080.00
Gold 11/21: $4,063.98

Silver 10/24: $48.59
Silver 10/31: $48.65
Silver 11/7: $48.33
Silver 11/14: $50.50
Silver 11/21: $49.97

Gold and silver were generally rangebound throughout the week. The ongoing struggle for price discovery continues between the futures and fix pricing mechanism of the Western COMEX and LBMA and the BRICS-focused Shanghai Gold Exchange in China and Russia's plans to begin trading in precious metals by the end of the year on the St. Petersburg International Mercantile Exchange (SPIMEX), which will be open to traders from around the world.

Cracks in the Western-dominated markets have begun to show signs of cracking, with the recent shortfall of silver in London vaults and the impressive gains in both gold and silver over the past two years. Additionally, dealers continue to add high premia to precious metals. A recent offering by one prominent online dealer promoted one ounce silver at $7.95 over spot, pretty much aligning with Money Daily's SOSMBP.

There may be some impetus for gold and silver to rise this coming week, as nearby futures contracts expire.

Here are the most recent prices for common one ounce gold and silver items sold on eBay (free shipping included, numismatics excluded):

Item/Price Low High Average Median
1 oz silver coin: 54.00 65.00 57.85 57.00
1 oz silver bar: 51.00 64.95 58.33 59.01
1 oz gold coin: 4,206.00 4,481.95 4,303.16 4,287.24
1 oz gold bar: 4,232.64 4,380.84 4,291.48 4,281.10

The Single Ounce Silver Market Price Benchmark (SOSMPB) made a modest gain for the week, to $58.05, up 51 cents from the November 16 price of $57.54 per troy ounce. The small-denomination, physical market continues to add premia to, and depart from, spot and derivative markets.

WEEKEND WRAP

Next week is Thanksgiving and Black Friday, a half-day session which almost always is positive. This year should be no different. If you're looking for holiday cash, buy on Wednesday, sell on Friday, as that shortened session will be the last of November, so, in keeping with the holiday spirit, there is likely to be plenty of window dressing. The stock markets close at 1:00 pm ET, so don't sleep too late.

At the CLose, Friday, November 21, 2025:
Dow: 46,245.41, +493.15 (+1.08%)
NASDAQ: 22,273.08, +195.03 (+0.88%)
S&P 500: 6,602.99, +64.23 (+0.98%)
NYSE Composite: 21,176.98, +264.10 (+1.26%)

For the Week:
Dow: -902.07 (-1.91%)
NASDAQ: -627.51 (-2.74%)
S&P 500: -131.12 (-1.95%)
NYSE Composite: -293.28 (-1.37%)
Dow Transports: -58.66 (-0.36%)



Disclaimer: Information disseminated on this site should not be construed as investment advice. Downtown Magazine Inc., Money Daily and it's owners, affiliates and/or employees are not investment advisors and do not offer specific investment advice. All investments have risk. You should consult a professional investment advisor or stock broker or use your individual judgement when making investment decisions. By viewing this site, you hold harmless Downtown Magazine Inc., Money Daily, its owners, affiliates and employees against any and all liability. Copyright 2025, Downtown Magazine Inc., all rights reserved.

Friday, November 21, 2025

U.S. Stock Market, AI Fraud Exposed as Stocks Tank on Fake Nvidia Results; Algos Uncover Circular Cheats Involving Tech Giants

Ready for some fireworks?

Following Thursday's massive meltdown, markets are getting ready for the second round of bubble bursting as tech stocks and the entire Wall Street facade is about to be deflated.

The post and article linked below is required reading for anybody who is serious about the future of finance and global markets.

This brilliant post on X - and the detailed article on substack, linked below - by Shanaka Anslem Perera tells what happened on Thursday when the entire U.S. stock market basically got flushed:

Link to article on Substack.

The level of fraud exposed on Thursday is absolutely stunning and brings into play all aspects of the completely rigged U.S. and global trading markets. Money Daily has long been skeptical of bitcoin, crypto, and heavy-handed practices in the U.S. in particular, and Thursday's rout seems to point in that same general direction. Markets are controlled by big-monied interests and governments who wish to keep their populations satiated with an "all good" narrative.

Obvious to many thinking people, this kind of fake news leads to an eventual reckoning, which appears now to be underway in earnest.

Overnight and into the early morning hours in the U.S., bitcoin has continued to tank, hitting a low of $80,935, down another $6,000 from Thursday.

This morning Shanaka Anslem Perera has another article on substack: The Liquidity Singularity: How Bitcoin’s $2 Billion Cascade Revealed The Mathematical End of Free Market Capitalism

Even if Perera's claims are only partially true, the idea that U.S. markets ar free, fair, and functional is being severely tested and the trading reveals not just cracks in the facade, but deep holes in the $215 trillion black hole of the U.S. financial system.

If you're on the sidelines where you should be, sit back and enjoy the show. It's about to get very, very ugly.

At the Close, Thursday, November 20, 2025:
Dow: 45,752.26, -386.51 (-0.84%)
NASDAQ: 22,078.05, -486.18 (-2.15%)
S&P 500: 6,538.76, -103.40 (-1.56%)
NYSE Composite: 20,912.89, -255.39 (-1.21%)



Thursday, November 20, 2025

Stocks Down? Crypto Dying? Money Tight? No Problem. Nvidia To the Rescue; September Payrolls: +119,000

Just as the demise of one company - think Xerox during the ascendancy of the internet or Eastman Kodak as digital photography emerged - would not take down the entire stock market, one company's success should not determine the upward direction of it either.

But, that's exactly what's being suggested by the fanbois and Wall Street snake-oil-selling slugs of Nvidia (NVDA), the company at the heart of the AI and Magnificent 7 trade. The company announced blowout third quarter results after the bell Wednesday, and analysts were falling over each other to praise the company and announce the end of the vicious selling that's been taking place the past few weeks.

It's utter rubbish. Nvidia may have had a great quarter and so too, the other members of the cool kids' Mag7 gang, but how's that going to affect Christmas shopping, the real estate market, pharma, manufacturing, etc.? Sure, there will be extra big bucks floating around lower Manhattan and Silicon Valley, but, overall, the company selling chips to other companies that use those chips - and also invest in each other - isn't going to lower the price of coffee, increase occupancy in commercial buildings, or make more people shop at Target. It's just not a one-to-one relationship.

None the less, Wall Street has found its darling and will run with it, until the whole AI story blows completely apart, because, in the end, AI is about as fake and gay as Hollywood. It robs content from real providers, distributes what is often erroneous information, and, as an added bonus, threatens to shrink the available job market globally.

That last part, about jobs, dovetails directly into the other big event this Thursday morning, the delayed release of September Non-farm payrolls by the BLS, which certainly will be fake, and maybe gay, so there's that to consider as well. September NFP was delayed because of the government shutdown, which may or may not have been fake, but absolutely was gay. The usual suspect experts are looking for job gains of 50,000 or so, which will satisfy the othr horde of cheerleaders, those hoping the Fed will lower interest rates when they meet on December 9 and 10.

It all adds up to a massive buy-the-dip "because we told you so" rally today and probably on Friday as well, because stocks always go up on Friday. It's in the exchange rules, or so it's said.

All this news has been beneficial to the crypto crowd as well, or so it seems, since bitcoin and the other popular fake and... well, you know, "coins" and tokens and their associated ETFs and other derivatives were boosted on the Nvidia news. Bitcoin galloped off lows below $89,000 to as high as $92,777, though it has pulled back a bit since then.

And, apparently, AI and chip-world is bad for precious metals, though that's hardly a surprise, since any kind of news, good or bad, seems to be bad for gold and silver.

Yes, this is cynicism writ large. And, yes, Money Daily doesn't care.

At 8:30 am ET the BLS released September Non-farm Payrolls, which showed job gains of 119,000 for the month. The unemployment rate jumped to its highest in three years, at 4.4%.

For what it's worth, Nvidia (NVDA) was 5.46% higher in pre-market trading.

Just prior to the BLS NFP release, Dow futures: +257; NASDAQ futures: +457; S&P futures: +81.50.

Just after the release: Dow futures: +365; NASDAQ futures: +508; S&P futures: +100.

So, a nice boost. Strap yourself in. The takeoff is likely to be jarring.

At the Close, Wednesday, November 19, 2025:
Dow: 46,138.77, +47.03 (+0.10%)
NASDAQ: 22,564.23, +131.38 (+0.59%)
S&P 500: 6,642.16, +24.84 (+0.38%)
NYSE Composite: 21,168.28, -4.32 (-0.02%)



Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Bitcoin Continues to Struggle Along with Stocks; Dow, S&P Down Four Straight Sessions; Target Sees Troubling Holiday Season

As market participants anticipate solid earnings from Nvidia after the close Wednesday, carnage in bitcoin continues, with the favorite coin dropping to just above 90,000 overnight before bouncing back early morning to just below 92,000. On Tuesday, bitcoin fell to as low as $89,549.

Bitcoin isn't the only asset (if one can call it that) under pressure. The major averages were rocked again on Tuesday, the fourth straight decline for the Dow and S&P, and the fourth in the past five session for the NASDAQ, which popped 30 points on Friday.

From all appearances, not everybody is sold on tech. Beyond the bitcoin breakdown, the AI investment carousel is raising eyebrows across the investment world, as companies involved in the great hyperscaling race are found to be investing capital in each other, raising stock prices for all. Nvidia has investments in many of its own customers, and those customers - including names like Amazon, Alphabet, and Microsoft - and have invested in Nvidia and other companies like Tuesday's revelation of a partnership in Anthropic.

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella mentioned the quiet part out loud, saying, “We will use Anthropic models, they will use our infrastructure, and we’ll go to market together.”

Tech companies investing money in each other as they buy goods and services from the same, evokes claims of interlocking directorships from the 70s and 80s, when high-ranking executives and CEOs sat on each others boards of directors, creating a collusion of interests.

Considering the dull nature of regulation and oversight by the SEC and other bodies charged with keeping markets "fair and free", the circular carousel of investments is likely to continue unchecked until an ultimate disaster strikes one and all.

Before teeing up Nvidia's earnings, the market was treated to a trio of retailers announcing thrid quarter earnings. Two of them, TJX Companies (TJX), owners of Marshall's and TJ Maxx stores, and home improvement giant, Lowe's (LOW) delivered reports that exceeded expectations. On the troubling side, Target (TGT), which has been under pressure for the better part of the past five years, delivered distressing numbers once again.

Roughly, Target showed:

  • Net sales: -1.5% year over year
  • Gross profit margin: 28.2% vs. 28.3% a year ago
  • Diluted earnings per share: -3.9% year over year to $1.78, vs. estimate of $1.73
  • Comparable sales: -2.7% year over year, vs. +0.3% estimate

While the overall numbers were not absolutely brutal, the company's forecast for the holiday season and beyond was Grinch and Scrooge-worthy. "Guests are choiceful, stretching budgets and prioritizing value. They're spending where it matters most, especially in food, essentials, and beauty," Target chief commercial officer Rick Gomez said.

Target shares are down three to four percent in pre-market trading. The stock hit a high of 261 in July, 2021 and will likely open trading on Wednesday at 85 to 86.

Elsewhere, gold and silver were bid up overnight, with gold topping out at $4,120 and silver above $52 per ounce. WTI crude oil dropped below $59/barrel just after 8:00 am ET.

As earnings reports dwindle, Nvidia is one of the last few that will have real market impact. Stocks will need another catalyst moving forward through the holiday season, which is predicted to be somewhat choppy. There's still lots of money sloshing around, though at the lower end of the economic ladder, rents, food, and higher prices due to tariffs are reasons for concern.

Stocks seem to have crested and a technical correction may be near at hand. A recession is almost certain in early 2026.

At the Close, Tuesday, November 18, 2025:
Dow: 46,091.74, -498.50 (-1.07%)
NASDAQ: 22,432.85, -275.23 (-1.21%)
S&P 500: 6,617.32, -55.09 (-0.83%)
NYSE Composite: 21,172.59, -40.82 (-0.19%)



Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Bitcoin Breakdown Is Helping Accelerate Stock Market Crash

Bitcoin took another hit on Monday, dropping another $2,500 to a low of $91,482. The drawdown left the world's largest crypto-currency down nearly two percent for the year-to-date.

Some of the issues that plague bitcoin in its billing as "digital gold" and a store of value are wild swings up and down and the number of "whales" who own large stakes in the 21 million bitcoins that will eventually be mined.

As of today, only about five percent of the available bitcoin is left to be mined, a little more than one million "coins", which puts the mining business in a tough spot. At $100,000 per bitcoin, it's a trillion dollars of bitcoin to be mined, a tidy sum, though it is split up among a group of tough competitors, making that business model something of a moot point over time despite the last bitcoin to be mined will be in 2140. That's if it lasts that long. Mining bitcoins for $100,000 a pop is one thing. If the price continues to decline, spending millions on high speed computers, energy, and equipment to cash in on multiple $50,000 or $40,000 awards might not be such a tempting concept.

With about one million bitcoins remaining to be mined over the next 115 years (2025 through 2140), it breaks down, linearly, to about 8700 bitcoins a year. At $100,000 each, that's $870,000,000 a year. Not bad, if one company mined all the bitcoin. But, if there are 10 miners, that's only $87 million each. Some of the companies mining bitcoin are very highly valued. 11 of them have market capitalizations of more than $1 billion. Over 115 years, mining all the remaining bitcoin at a price of $100,000 comes to $100,050,000,000, or, just over $100 billion dollars. In today's world, that's chump change and draws into question the valuations of companies mining bitcoin like Iris Energy (IREN), Cipher Mining (CIFR), and Riot Blockchain (RIOT). The combined market cap of the top 22 bitcoin miners is $53 billion. That math does not add up.

What happens to these companies when they're mining bitcoin at $50,000, $30,000, or even $20,000. Most will go out of business, costing investors millions. The founders and executives won't care. They've made their money in salaries and bonuses, but, billions of dollars will have been eviscerated, gone with the wind.

This is the point at which bitcoiners become aggressive and defensive, arguing that the math implies a higher bitcoin price due to scarcity and the difficulty and cost of mining those remaining bitcoins. Those arguments put the cart before the horse, so to speak. Just because there aren't many Joe Nuxhall rookie baseball cards, doesn't make them particularly valuable (Nuxhall was a pitcher for the Cincinnati Reds in the 1950s and 60s). So too, the value, or price of 21 million bitcoins - not extremely rare in any sense - is tied to the desirability of ownership. Who wants to own bitcoins? And why? The obvious reason for the past decade or so has been price appreciation. Not utility. Not value. It is a pure speculation. And, if the price is going down, fewer and fewer people will want it. BlackRock and Michael Saylor could end up owning most of it. Then what?

Bitcoin needs massive adoption in order to achieve scale and utility as a medium of exchange. It hasn't happened, despite being available for buying, selling, and some payments on platforms as diverse as Stripe, PayPal, and Square. In the U.S. and Australia, for instance, less than two percent of the population uses bitcoin to transact. That's not going to cut it.

Then there's the issue of the number of large holders of bitcoin. In an ecosystem that was supposed ot be built on fairness, trustlessness, and anonymity, having large shares of the currency acts as a detriment. Who wants to hold "money" that's controlled by a small number of "whales" who could conceivably move the price of bitcoin up or down alone or in collusion? While that construct may be similar to stock ownership, it's a different situation. Stocks are assets. Bitcoin is supposed ot be "money."

Here's a short list of the estimated top 10 bitcoin holders (or "hodlers", if you prefer):

  • Satoshi Nakamoto (founder of bitcoin): 1.1 million bitcoins
  • BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT): 800,000
  • MicroStrategy (now, Strategy): 640,000
  • Binance-coldwallet: 248,598
  • United States of America: 207,000
  • Fidelity Wise Origin Bitcoin Fund (CBOE:FBTC): 205,000
  • China: 194,000
  • Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC): 173,502
  • Robinhood-coldwallet: 140,575
  • Bitfinex-coldwallet: 130,010
  • Winklevoss twins: 70,000

All told, this top 10 holds about 4 million bitcoins, or, nearly 20%. Should any one of them decide to cash out, or, worse, yet, a few panic at once, bitcoin could fall precipitously.

General ownership of bitcoin is quite top-heavy. Motley Fool estimates that 0.03% of all Bitcoin addresses hold more than 100 BTC, but those wallets control more than 60% of all Bitcoin in circulation.

That doesn't leave much for Joe and Jane Sixpack. Again, it's akin to stocks, where institutions hold most of the shares and the best individuals can hope for is to go along for the ride, which, hopefully, is to the upside.

What's been happening lately is probably mostly retail speculators cashing out as the big gains for 2025 have already been made. In fact, bitcoin's price today is right around where it was this time last year. On November 19, 2024, one bitcoin was worth $91,546. So much for getting rich quick. Bear in mind, this "digital gold" compares to actual gold, up more than 50% this year, and actual silver, up 70%.

Bitcoin might as well be called "digital hopium." Other crypto-currencies, alt-coins, etc. are doing even worse. Etheruem, or Ether, as the cool kids call it, is down nine percent year-to-date. Solana is down 30%, Cardano, down 45%; Dogecoin, down 52%.

It's all speculation, and, right now, the long specs are losing. Add in the amounts lost in various ETFs and other derivative crypto plays and you have the crypto ecosystem imploding in real time. This has happened before, and, if human nature plays out as it usually does, it will happen again. Michael Saylor will proclaim bitcoin a bargain at $35,000. Many morons will follow where fools dare to tread and buy it. They may profit. They may lose. The best thing would be for bitcoin to go to zero along with all the other fakes.

One has to wonder, if bitcoin is so awesome, why doesn't Mr. Saylor or BlackRock or the other institutional players invest in some of the other offerings? Probably because, they, like most sane people, realize that a world of crypto-currencies is a fantasy. Suppose you went to a restaurant for dinner and found out when the check came that they didn't accept bitcoin, ether, solana, dogecoin, or even fartcoin, even though you had plenty of each in your virtual wallet. The maitre'd informs you that the establishment prefers cash, as in U.S. dollars, Visa or Mastercard.

Well, there you go. Explains why crypto is "crap-to" for lack of a better term. It's numbers on a ledger, and, while it shares some similarities to dollars, yen, euros, or pounds, it's not accepted at the millions of locations that take cash or cards.

Crypto is trash. It may not have been in its infancy, but, as soon as Wall Street stuck its claws into it, it became un-ownable. Essentially, there are a lot of people in the world who don't own any and an equally large number of people who feel, "if BlackRock owns it, I'd rather not."

In real terms, 0.01 bitcoin was worth $1,243 on October 7. Today, $910, and falling. Overnight, it was a low as $89,500. That's a screaming SELL. Beware of big waves caused by whales flopping on the water. It's all been a very nice speculation. Let BlackRock and Michael Saylor eat the losses. Enough is enough. Let's move on.

The trillions of dollars being pumped into bitcoin, crypto, and all the derivatives are fueling a massively-building liquidity crisis. Paraphrasing a quote often ascribed to 1950s-60s Senator Everett Dirkson, "a trillion here, a trillion there, soon enough you're talking real money." A couple of trillion dollars suddenly vanishing from the bizarre crypto bazaar has its share of ripple effects (no pun intended), and the stock market has been exhibiting obvious signs of pain.

Monday was another day for taking chips off the table, and futures are looking very promising. Just before 9:00 am, Dow futures were off 390 points, NASDAQ futures had shed 150, and S&P futures were down 31.

Since its peak on October 7, bitcoin is down more than 26%. The slide has accelerated recently, however. In just the past week, since November 11, bitcoin is down $15,000, or about 14%. Between falling prices in general, margin calls, and forced liquidations, the amount of money leaving crypto-land is staggering. In just the past 24 hours, nearly $1 billion in forced liquidations have taken place. The outward effects are being reflected in the general markets, which are themselves wildly overvalued.

From all appearances, bitcoin is adding to the dumpster fire on Wall Street in a big way. If there's a general collapse in stocks, bitcoin's losses are likely to be even more severe. With the major stock exchanges set to open in less than half an hour, the condition appears dire.

At the Close, Monday, November 17, 2025:
Dow: 46,590.24, -557.24 (-1.18%)
NASDAQ: 22,708.07, -192.51 (-0.84%)
S&P 500: 6,672.41, -61.70 (-0.92%)
NYSE Composite: 21,213.42, -256.84 (-1.20%)



Sunday, November 16, 2025

WEEKEND WRAP: Stocks Rescued Again on Friday; Gold, Silver, Oil Make Gains, Retreat; Bitcoin Heads Toward ZERO; Economy Strong, but, Stimulus is Coming

For the second straight Friday, stocks were rescued from deep declines by dip buyers appearing from the shadows of the market to keep alive the positive vibes.

It's become almost routine for markets to perform in this manner, but it is disturbing and tiresome to witness the same plunge protection scheme over and over and over again, while precious metals are resolutely sold off at the same time. These supporters of stocks might somehow be eventually recompensed, but it is more likely that there will be money lost, integrity absent.

It's perfectly natural for this kind of behavior to occur, when the owners behind the fascist oligarchy control currency that can be created at the drop of a hat in a wink of an eye. In the end, it will be disastrous for some, a rounding error for the high and mighty. In the end, reckoning takes place. In between then and now, fraud, deception, and chaos run amok.

It's a loathsome task to have to report on the decline of Western civilization while the ultra-wealthy skim at their leisure and the captured media promotes "feel-good America" stories. The circle is amoral, without virtue. Corporations donate to campaigns of politicians who write legislation favorable to their business interests. Stocks go up, legislators and insiders profit. Everybody wins. Wash, rinse, repeat. It's a nice game if one can get into the loop, which isn't easy. It would be preferable to praise the upper crust of Americans for their wisdom and virtue, but none can be found.

The bigger picture peers beyond the facade of stocks, bonds, crypto assets, and derivatives. The value of the dollar has fallen precipitously since the pandemic scare. Food, rents, and the mundane pleasures of living in an import economy aren't more expensive. The amount of depreciating currency needed to buy the same as last month, or last year, is increasing. As the dollar - and the euro, yen, pound, etc. - approaches the status of confetti, strains on the public continue to grow, even as the political circus becomes a bizarre comedy of errors.

In the end, the currency fails, the empire is stripped bare, the world turns. The saving grace is that total debasing of fiat currency doesn't happen overnight. It takes time, decades, actually, but time, as seen in the growth of BRICS and aligned countries and the continued gains in precious metals, seems to be growing short, along with patience, trust and a trove of other treasures that used to be part and parcel of American and European civility.

Don't expect life in the United States to improve, though stocks may rally - or not - despite your personal pessimism. At this stage of the game, virtually anything is possible. Preparation - and not necessarily "Preparation H", though it may be at some point advisable - is a paramount function for transition to the post-apocalypse wonderland.


Stocks

As mentioned above, another rough week was averted by the latest in a long series of Friday rallies.

The S&P and NASDAQ closed out the week cozied down to their respective 50-day moving averages. The Dow is hanging just above its own. There's a wager that breaking lower in the week ahead could cause some cascading, though one would have to be entirely convinced that the insider rigging is over to play it. The most skeptical market observers - you know who you are - won't play the downside until there's confirmation, though the handful of still-breathing Dow Theorists take note that stocks are still in a primary bearish trend and that recent highs were sugar-coating, based on accounting trickery, stock buybacks, blind faith, and trillion in soft money needing a place to reside.

Stocks have been the choice, will likely remain the choice, and have equal potential to gain or decline in the near term, though it's becoming increasingly difficult to look past the recent foibles and failures: the government shutdown fiasco, the One Big, Beautiful Bill and its $2 trillion deficit, political infighting, bitcoin's collapse just as the government ramps up its love affair with crypto and stablecoins.

Late in the week, the White House blurted out that the government would not be releasing data on October Non-farm payrolls and CPI (implying that October PPI will go missing as well) due to the government shutdown. Taking that failure at face value would likely be a mistake. The more attuned perception sees the "lost" information more as a cover or cover-up for disastrous information, as in, inflation up, jobs down. White House Press Secretary said that the Fed would be "flying blind," which begs the question, "when were they not?"

The week ahead offers few corporate earnings reports, including the biggie, Nvidia (NVDA), after the close Wednesday, plus a handful of big box retailers.

Third quarter earning announcements of note:

Monday, November 17: (before open) VerifyMe (VRME), Freightos (CRGO); (after close) Gladstone Capital (GLAD), Trip.com (TCOM), HP (HP)

Tuesday, November 18: (before open) Bidu (BIDU), Klarna (KLAR), Home Depot (HD); (after close) Dolby (DLB), LazyBoy (LZB)

Wednesday, November 19: (before open) Target (TGT), TJX (TJX), Lowe's (LOW), Williams-Sonoma (WSM), Viking Cruise Lines (VIK); (after close) Nvidia (NVDA), Palo Alto Industries (PANW), Jack-in-the-Box (JACK)

Thursday, November 20: (before open) Walmart (WMT), Warner Music Group (WMG), Shoe Carnival (SCVL); (after close) Gap Inc. (GAP), Copart (CPRT), Intuit (INTU), Webull (BULL), Ross Stores (ROST)

Friday, November 21: (before open) BJ's Wholesale (BJ), Frontline (FRO)


Treasury Yield Curve Rates

Date 1 Mo 1.5 mo 2 Mo 3 Mo 4 Mo 6 Mo 1 Yr
10/10/2025 4.19 4.16 4.10 4.02 3.96 3.81 3.60
10/17/2025 4.18 4.15 4.08 4.00 3.95 3.79 3.56
10/24/2025 4.11 4.06 4.02 3.93 3.89 3.76 3.58
10/31/2025 4.06 4.02 4.04 3.89 3.87 3.79 3.70
11/07/2025 4.01 3.96 3.98 3.92 3.83 3.76 3.63
11/14/2025 4.04 4.02 4.01 3.95 3.88 3.80 3.70

Date 2 Yr 3 Yr 5 Yr 7 Yr 10 Yr 20 Yr 30 Yr
10/10/2025 3.52 3.52 3.65 3.83 4.05 4.60 4.63
10/17/2025 3.46 3.47 3.59 3.78 4.02 4.58 4.60
10/24/2025 3.48 3.49 3.61 3.79 4.02 4.56 4.59
10/31/2025 3.60 3.60 3.71 3.89 4.11 4.65 4.67
11/07/2025 3.55 3.57 3.67 3.87 4.11 4.68 4.70
11/14/2025 3.62 3.61 3.74 3.92 4.14 4.73 4.74

There is compression in the middle of the curve, with all yields rising over the past week. It's probably difficult for anybody to make money on spreads so thin, within a percentage point of the funding and lending rates, which is why mortgage rates remain stubbornly high and credit card and auto loan interest rates have gotten to the point of just plain stupid. Nobody should be borrowing at 20-25% or higher, but, since the banks lobbied hard enough to have usury laws eradicated decades ago, that is where we are.

Under present conditions, borrowing is strained. Lending is a last resort. A four percent natural rate, if that's really where it is, aligns with the general inflation, making for a zero-sum game. The U.S. government has to borrow and in the long run, the Fed buys most of the paper, i.e., prints money. That's not zero-sum. That's a road to perdition. Proof is the mountains of debt. $38 trillion on the government end. Even more for business and consumers.

The next wave of stimulus will be soon, but it will manifest in various shapes and forms, first, with government handing money to individuals with which to purchase health care, rather than extend the ridiculous construct of Obamacare subsidies because the cost of "keeping your doctor" is escalating premiums, fattening the coffers of the insurance providers. Talk is already growing toward direct payments to consumers, a shot directly into the arm of the economy to placate millions at the expense of millions more.

After that, $2,000 tariff "stimmies" for taxpayers at the outset, until the cries of "unfair" overwhelm the narrative and everybody gets a check.

In the past week, DHS Secretary Kristi Noem endeared herself to 47,000 airport fondlers otherwise known as TSA, air traffic controllers and other department employers by promising $10,000 bonuses to all who stayed on the job during the shutdown. That's nearly half a billion bucks to people who mostly stand around and when they're busy, are generally in the business of abusing people who frequent the "friendly skies." Ordinary people outside the Beltway and government largesse, in private businesses, never stoped working for a second and get $2,000 and higher prices.

The full spectrum 30-days-to-30-years spread hit a new high of +70, which is likely to be eclipsed within six months, as the Fed cuts rates (December rate cut odds are about 50/50 for a 25 basis point cut) once Jerome Powell is replaced with a more dovish Chairman. Borrowing will be at the short end, with the 30-year rising beyond 5.00%, as long-dated maturities are increasingly shunned by foreigners.

Spreads:

2s-10s
2025
1/3: +32
1/10: +37
1/17: +34
1/24: +36
1/31: +36
2/7: +20
2/14: +21
2/21: +23
2/28: +25
3/7: +33
3/14: +29
3/21: +31
3/28: +38
4/4: +33
4/11: +52
4/17: +53
4/25: +55
5/2: +50
5/9: +49
5/16: +45
5/23: +51
5/30: +52
6/6: +48
6/13: +45
6/20: +48
6/27: +56
7/3: +47
7/11: +53
7/18: +56
7/25: +49
8/1: +54
8/8: +51
8/15: +58
8/22: +58
8/29: +64
9/5: +59
9/12: +50
9/19: +57
9/26: +57
10/3: +45
10/10: +53
10/17: +56
10/24: +54
10/31: +51
11/7: +56
11/14: +52

Full Spectrum (30-days - 30-years)
2025
1/3: +38
1/10: +54
1/17: +41
1/24: +40
1/31: +36
2/7: +32
2/14: +32
2/21: +31
2/28: +13
3/7: +24
3/14: +25
3/21: +23
3/28: +26
4/4: +5
4/11: +38
4/17: +44
4/25: +40
5/2: +41
5/9: +46
5/16: +52
5/23: +68
5/30: +59
6/6: +69
6/13: +67
6/20: +69
6/27: +66
7/3: +51
7/11: +59
7/18: +65
7/25: +55
8/1: +32
8/8: +37
8/15: +44
8/22: +41
8/29: +51
9/5: +49
9/12: +40
9/19: +54
9/26: +55
10/3: +47
10/10: +43
10/17: +42
10/24: +48
10/31: +61
11/7: +69
11/14: +70


Oil/Gas

WTI crude closed out the week at $59.81, an imperceptible move last Friday's close of $59.84. Futures zig-zagged across $60/barrel for WTI until finally settling on the under at week's end. There's still too much oil to support weakening Western economies. Prices need to fall further. Short term noise on the COMEX is speculation and gaming the system. $50 a barrel is a more rational level that may become real during the winter.

The U.S. national average for gas at the pump remained the same as last week, $3.07, according to Gasbuddy.com. Gas prices should continue to decline over the near term and through winter.

California remains the priciest, at $4.66 per gallon, down five cents, followed by Washington ($4.16), lower by another eight cents on the week. Oregon ($3.73), was also down eight cents. The lowest prices remain in the Southeast, with Oklahoma checking in with the lowest price in about a year, $2.43. Mississippi is next at $2.56. Louisiana ($2.57), Arkansas ($2.58) and Texas ($2.59) follow. The remaining Southeast states are all below $2.80 with the exception of Florida ($2.91).

In the Northeast, prices were higher. All except New Hampshire ($2.91( and Rhode Island ($2.99) were above $3.00, with Pennsylvania ($3.29) easily the highest. Maryland ($3.11) and New York ($3.12) were the next-highest.

In the midwest region, Illinois ($3.23) was joined in the $3.00+ club by West Virginia ($3.01), Indiana ($3.03), Ohio ($3.07), and Michigan ($3.00). At the low end were Nebraska ($2.68) and Kansas ($2.69).

Sub-$3.00 gas was reported in 26 states, a drop of two from last week.


Bitcoin

This week: $95,387.89
Last week: $103,678.70
2 weeks ago: $110,406.10
6 months ago: $103,298.00
One year ago: $90,318.17
Five years ago: $18,697.88

Anybody who can't see the problem with bitcoin and crypto in general needs to wipe the grime from the past month off their rose-colored glasses or maybe take them off and actually smell the stench of dead roses, because that's what bitcoin and crypto are becoming, wilted flowers from a romance gone bad. The "hodlers" have been filing divorce papers via ETFs and elsewhere, with record-setting outflows since the beginning of October and this week, the granddaddy of crypto, Satoshi's own love child, bitcoin, dipped to lows not seen in six months. Notably, the price is only $5,000 higher than it was a year ago. Other than a brief period from the end of February through the beginning of May, bitcoin has been above $95,000 and mostly over $100,000, with everybody from Michael Saylor to Max Keiser predicting new highs of $200,000, $400,000 or more, just as the crypto world began to crater.

This is how Ponzi schemes and other scams end, badly, with recent investors selling out, maybe a few dollars to the good, most taking losses. If you had a bitcoin, it was worth upwards of $124,000 on October 7. Today it's just above $95,000.

Here are some questions and (answers) for anybody who hasn't yet sold their bitcoins or other cryptos (which have performed even worse):

Is there a chance that bitcoin will go back up? (NO)

Is bitcoin a store of value? (NO)

Is anybody using bitcoin to buy essentials? (NO)

Are bitcoin and other cryptos widely adopted in developed countries? (NO)

Is bitcoin still legal tender in El Salvador? (NO)

Should I keep the faith and do like Michael Saylor says, HODL? (Hell NO).

Bitcoin will eventually decline until it gets close to its intrinsic value, which is ZERO, and it may happen rather suddenly. Other "coins" will simply disappear, along with investor money, lots of it. There's already been $1 trillion dilution. More to come.


Precious Metals

Gold:Silver Ratio: 80.79; last week: 82.76

Futures, per COMEX continuous contracts:

Gold price 10/17: $4,267.90
Gold price 10/24: $4,126.90
Gold price 10/31: $4,013.40
Gold price 11/7: $4,007.80
Gold price 11/14: $4,084.40

Silver price 10/17: $50.63
Silver price 10/24: $48.41
Silver price 10/31: $48.25
Silver price 11/7: $48.22
Silver price 11/14: $50.40

SPOT:
(stockcharts.com)
Gold 10/17: $4250.59
Gold 10/24: $4110.63
Gold 10/31: $3997.10
Gold 11/7: $3999.89
Gold 11/14: $4,080.00

Silver 10/17: $51.88
Silver 10/24: $48.59
Silver 10/31: $48.65
Silver 11/7: $48.33
Silver 11/14: $50.50

Gold and silver spent most of the week ramping higher, with silver making a double top at a record price around $54.50. Gold hit a high of $4,245 on Wednesday, but, since stocks were nose-diving, the riggers at the Exchange Stabilization Fund (ESF), saw to it that precious metals were taken out of favor, because, of course, when risk assets fall, non-risk assets should too. Sarcasm aside, the rulers of the currency rathole in the West can't stomach much higher prices for gold and silver, which they've suppressed for decades.

This tampering with the machinery of economics and global finance is not going to end well for the U.S. and its cohorts. Every central bank in the world has been buying gold for the last three years and longer, except the Federal Reserve of the United States and some of the Commonwealth and EU nations. That speaks volumes about the direction of global finance, money, and credit. It's now too late for the West. China, Russia, India, and many other countries are increasing their wealth while the U.S. and Europe continues its moronic sanction regime.

Keep stacking is the advice offered by those most in the know. Sounds like good advice.

Here are the most recent prices for common one ounce gold and silver items sold on eBay (free shipping included, numismatics excluded):

Item/Price Low High Average Median
1 oz silver coin: 53.00 64.00 56.98 56.00
1 oz silver bar: 51.00 68.95 58.73 58.46
1 oz gold coin: 4,260.97 4,625.16 4,406.34 4,404.65
1 oz gold bar: 4,200.00 4,362.71 4,303.79 4,304.91

The Single Ounce Silver Market Price Benchmark (SOSMPB) gained positive ground over the week, to $57.54, a gain of 88 cents from the November 9 price of $56.66 per troy ounce. The small-denomination, physical market continues to add premia to, and depart from, spot.


WEEKEND WRAP

Good luck. After next week comes Thanksgiving and Black Friday, then onwards into the holidays. The claims of the ruling class about affordability and the strength of the economy will not be drowned out by the Salvation Army bells seeking charity. The narrative is about to go into overdrive, just in time for Christmas!

At the Close, Friday, November 14, 2025:
Dow: 47,147.48, -309.74 (-0.65%)
NASDAQ: 22,900.59, +30.23 (+0.13%)
S&P 500: 6,734.11, -3.38 (-0.050%)
NYSE Composite: 21,470.26, -64.14 (-0.30%)

For the Week:
Dow: +160.38 (+0.34%)
NASDAQ: -103.95 (-0.45%)
S&P 500: +5.31 (+0.08%)
NYSE Composite: +61.70 (+0.29%)
Dow Transports: -136.66 (-0.84%)



Disclaimer: Information disseminated on this site should not be construed as investment advice. Downtown Magazine Inc., Money Daily and it's owners, affiliates and/or employees are not investment advisors and do not offer specific investment advice. All investments have risk. You should consult a professional investment advisor or stock broker or use your individual judgement when making investment decisions. By viewing this site, you hold harmless Downtown Magazine Inc., Money Daily, its owners, affiliates and employees against any and all liability. Copyright 2025, Downtown Magazine Inc., all rights reserved.

Friday, November 14, 2025

Bitcoin, Crypto Crashing; Stocks Sliding Badly; Government Won't Release October Payrolls, CPI, PPI; Fiat Currencies Are Dying

Just in the past few days, the mood on Wall Street has begun to change and not in a good way. Despite the propaganda that everything is fine, that AI will solve everything, that bitcoin is going to the moon, the reality that U.S. manufacturing isn't reenergized, that tariffs are causing inflation, that the U.S. government - despite ending the ugly, longest-ever shutdown - refuses to tackle its deficit problems, and that the conflicts in the Middle East and Ukraine are going badly for the "good guys", meaning the U.S., Europe, and Israel.

Add to those issues the burgeoning collapse of households struggling with excessive debt, high prices, rising delinquencies on car loans, student loans and credit cards and the makings of a massive liquidity squeeze and a recession are beginning to take shape.

The White House confirmed yesterday that because of the shutdown, October Non-farm payrolls and CPI data would not be released. White House Press Secretary, Caroline Leavitt said Thursday at a press briefing, "The Democrats may have permanently damaged the Federal Statistical System..." which, of course, is pure bunk. The data is out there. The government just doesn't want everybody to know just how bad things are. Leavitt didn't just leave it there, continuing to say, "All of that economic data released will be permanently impaired leaving our policy makers at the Fed flying blind at a critical period."

OK, we get it. The government, other than Democrats, isn't going to be blamed for the collapse of everything because the data is all corrupted or lost. The Fed is off the hook as well. Americans might as well try paddling a rudderless raft upstream through rapids. The government is lying, as usual, covering up what are sure to be horrible economic numbers. They have the data. They just don't want you to know how badly you're being screwed.

And then, there's bitcoin, and the imploding fraud of the crypto universe.

Since October 7, bitcoin is down 23.6%. Ethereum is down 34%. That is just in the past month, and the declines appear to be accelerating.

Crypto-linked equities were hit hard once more, especially miners with heavy AI infrastructure and data center exposure. Bitdeer (BTDR) plunged 19% and Bitfarms (BITF) dropped 13%, while Cipher Mining (CIFR) and IREN lost over 10%. The rest of the crypto equity sector also saw steep losses: Galaxy (GLXY), Bullish (BLSH), Gemini (GEMI) and Robinhood (HOOD) were all down 7%-8%. - Coindesk, 11/13

Top and trending altcoins XRP, Binance Coin (BNB), Solana (SOL), Cardano (ADA), Zcash (ZEC), and AI coins tumbled 5-12% over the past 24 hours. Meme coins including Dogecoin (DOGE), Shiba Inu (SHIB), and Pepe Coin (PEPE) further erased their earlier gains, with PEPE now down 80% year-to-date (YTD). --Yahoo, 11/14 (Full Story)

Ok, so what is Pepe Coin, anyway? Who is using it? Will my mechanic accept it?

This is the problem. Once blockchain technology became ubiquitous, every scam operator and quick-buck grifter saw the opportunity for ridiculous returns on pure speculation. People like Michael Saylor, Anthony Scaramucci, and the monstrosity that is BlackRock became heavily invested in the bitcoin/crypto myth machine.

Saylor, CEO of Stategy (MSTR, rebranded from Microstrategy), settled with the SEC in 2000, paying $350,000 in penalties and a personal disgorgement of $8.3 million for inaccurate reporting of financial results. In 2024, Saylor settled a tax evasion lawsuit brought by the Attorney General of Washington, D.C. by paying a $40 million fine.

Anthony Scaramucci, probably best known for his 10-day stint (July 21-31, 2017) as White House communications director before being abruptly fired by President Trump, became involved in crypto with his fund, SkyBridge Capital, which invested heavily into various crypto ventures as Scaramucci (the "Mooch") made outrageous pronouncements about bitcoin going to a million dollars or more.

As of March 2023, Skybridge's assets had dwindled to about $2 billion from a peak of $9 billion in 2015. Investors lost about 30% from the beginning of 2020 through March 2023. The fund had reduced the ability of investors to withdraw funds and reduced staffing. Scaramucci recently told investors of a New Orleans hotel that they were facing a 100% loss.

Bitcoin, and the thousands of altcoins, memecoins, stablecoins, and other crypto-related nonsense are based on an "asset class" that has nothing more than a white paper authored by a shadowy figure known only as Satoshi Nakamoto as a basis. There is nothing backing any of it except blind faith and a healthy dose of stupidity. Bitcoin and crypto are likely to go down in history as the greatest scam ever perpetrated, involving trillions of dollars in the "coins" themselves and trillions more in derivative bets.

There's a growing likelihood that the losses in bitcoin and crypto-related endeavors will feed directly into stocks, sending everything down the tubes in a torrent of paper losses, which, at the end of the day, result in real losses to stock portfolios, endowment funds, sovereign wealth funds and every other kind of investment.

Stocks, for what it's worth, have been overvalued for a very long time, probably since the recovery off the lows of the 2008-09 financial crash, and especially since the disastrous events of 2020 and 2021 with COVID.

Now, with investors worried that AI is simply more pie-in-the-sky promises from the usual hucksters and tech barons, a reckoning is underway. At the back of it all is the fractional reserve, fiat monetary system itself, which has reached its ultimate end, the U.S. dollar having lost more than 98% of its purchasing power.

Skeptics will note that gold and silver are being sold off as well. That's a normal function during a liquidity crisis. They will recover. For now, and it's very early, the declines in gold and silver represent buying opportunities for anybody interested in sound money.

Things are heating up...

At the Close, Thursday, November 13, 2025:
Dow: 47,457.22, -797.60 (-1.65%)
NASDAQ: 22,870.36, -536.10 (-2.29%)
S&P 500: 6,737.49, -113.43 (-1.66%)
NYSE Composite: 21,534.40, -272.93 (-1.25%)



Thursday, November 13, 2025

Longest Government Shutdown Ends; Gold, Silver Soaring

Counting Wednesday, the longest-ever U.S. government shutdown lasted 42 days, ended after the House rubber-stamped the amended continuing resolution (CR) sent back to them by the Senate, which will keep the lights on until January 30. Some areas were separately funded through what's being called a "minibus", which will guarantee funding for the Department of Agriculture (which administers SNAP, aka food stamps), FDA, military construction, veterans affairs and the legislative branch through Sept. 30, 2026 and also includes a reversal of federal layoffs that the Trump administration executed during the shutdown.

It's worth pointing out that most Democrats in the Senate and the House voted against the measures, which illustrates just how divided the parties are in Washington. The political posture on both sides has become almost dogmatic. Views on how best to operate the government for the good of the American people - or whatever else they may have in mind - are skewed violently by ideology.

Six House Democrats — Reps. Jared Golden (D-ME), Adam Gray (D-CA), Don Davis (D-NC), Henry Cuellar (D-TX), Tom Suozzi (D-NY) and Marie Gluesenkamp Perez (D-WA) — and two House Republicans — Reps. Thomas Massie (R-KY) and Greg Steube (R-FL) — broke with their caucus on the vote. The votes of Cuellar and Suozzi stand out. They are tools of the deeper state and do the bidding of their supporters and donors rather than representing their local constituencies. That's just how business gets done in D.C.; all it takes is a few sheep straying off the meadow. No doubt there will be finger-pointing and endless recrimination in the Democratic caucus.

Getting on to the business of business, the Dow Industrials have been bid to record highs the past two days while the S&P and, more so, the NASDAQ, have taken a snooze. While the Senate was busy playing footsie the past week, the AI narrative has come under pressure, as more and more analysts are sounding the alarm over enormous sums of money pledged to build out data farms and associated power plants to spread a technology that so far has been short on results, both in its application and revenue production.

Questioning of the financial super-structure underpinning the massive AI rollout has led to recent declines in Mag7 and AI-related stocks. META Platforms (Facebook) has been the hardest hit; others are only slightly below all-time highs.

As the opening bell approaches, stock futures are sliding. Dow futures are off 105; NASDAQ futures down 95, and S&P futures lower by 20 points. Could this be a case of "buy the rumor, sell the news" concerning the shutdown?

Brighter prospects appear for precious metals, which have been on a tear since Monday morning. Silver is up more than 10%, hitting a high on spot markets this morning of $54.45. Gold has been bid as high as $4245.60 this morning.

WTI crude oil was smacked back down into the 50s, hitting a low of $58.22 late Wednesday, but has rallied this morning above $59.

At the Close, Wednesday, November 12, 2025:
Dow: 48,254.82, +326.86 (+0.68%)
NASDAQ: 23,406.45, -61.844 (-0.26%)
S&P 500: 6,850.92, +4.31 (+0.06%)
NYSE Composite: 21,807.33, +90.60 (0.42%)



Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Widespread Optimism that U.S. Government Will Re-Open on House Vote; U.S.S. Gerald R. Ford Heads to Venezuela; BlackRock Loans Gone Bad

There is widespread optimism that the U.S. government will resume normal operations, as members of the House of Representatives return to Washington, after nearly two months of loafing in their home districts or vacationing on the taxpayer's dime.

While that development may be encouraging, especially to the 42 million Americans waiting for their monthly stipend of food stamps to arrive. Payments have been stalled as the Agriculture Department first ran out of money, then discovered it had contingency funds but wasn't allowed ot use them. After that two separate district courts ordered the Trump administration to disperse the funds, which would ostensibly only cover about 65% of the normal allotment. Since then, last week, there's been no movement, as now, fully benefits are likely to be restored. Any day now.

While Wall Street focuses on the government re-opening story there's a few no so "feel-good" issues developing.

Bloomberg reports that China abruptly halted its promised buying of 12 million tons of soybeans this year, with farmers saying there haven't been any purchases since an initial rush of orders in October, following President Trump's "deal" with China for this year and 25 million tons each year for the next three years.

The U.S.S. Gerald R. Ford, the world's largest aircraft carrier, along with its entourage of battleships, destroyers, fighter jets and a nuclear sub, has entered Caribbean waters and is steaming toward the coast of Venezuela, the maneuver designed to frighten Presidente Maduro into resigning and/or give up vast reserves of its oil to American producers. Meanwhile, two Russian naval ships, the frigate Admiral Gorshkov and the oil tanker Akademik Pashin, recently docked in Venezuela's La Guaira port after conducting exercises in the Atlantic Ocean. Good thing the government is open. Those sailors and airmen like to get paid.

In finance land, BlackRock recently wrote down $150 million in lending by one of its affiliates on loans to failed companies, Broadband Telecom and Bridgevoice. Additionally, BlackRock zeroed out $150 million loan to home improvement firm, Renovo. The company has filed Charter 7 bankruptcy, liquidating its assets.

Hey, but, AI, right? Gonna save the world.

Plates are still spinning...

At the Close, Tuesday, November 11, 2025:
Dow: 47,927.96, +559.33 (+1.18%)
NASDAQ: 23,468.30, -58.87 (-0.25%)
S&P 500: 6,846.61, +14.18 (+0.21%)
NYSE Composite: 21,716.73, +150.32 (+0.70%)



Tuesday, November 11, 2025

Federal Government to Re-Open, Possibly Today; Veteran's Remembered; Gold, Silver Resume Rally

Who knew that reopening the government was such a great thing?

Apparently, allowing congress, the president, and the enormous bureaucracy to get back to the business of bankrupting the country and continuing to devalue the currency has plenty of backers, including, not just Wall Street stock market enthusiasts, but hoarders and stackers of precious metals as well.

With the Senate apparently on course to resolve the shutdown dynamics and keep the lights on until at least the end of January, the federal government should be back humming right along as early as today if House Speaker Mike Johnson can assemble enough members for a quorum and a vote on the cosmetic changes to the continuing resolution they passed back in September.

There are some added details, such as reversing President Trump's firings of furloughed workers along with back pay, a 'minibus' that would fund military construction, the VA, the legislative branch, agriculture, and the FDA, funding for food stamps (SNAP) through fiscal 2026 (September 30, 2026), and a promise to vote on extending Obamacare subsidies sometime in December.

The general consensus among the punditry is that the Democrats caved once food riots didn't take place, but the nation's airlines began to suffer delays and cancellations at various important destinations. It wasn't a complete takedown, however. The only Democrats willing to cross the aisle and make a deal were those not running for re-election in 2026.

The breakdown:

  • John Fetterman, Pennsylvania
  • Angus King (Ind.), Maine
  • Dick Durbin, Illinois
  • Maggie Hassan, New Hampshire
  • Jeanne Shaheen, New Hampshire
  • Tim Kaine, Virginia
  • Catherine Cortez Masto, Nevada
  • Jackie Rose, Nevada

Dick Durbin and Jeanne Shaheen are retiring. Fetterman and Cortez Masto aren't up for re-election until 2028. The remaining four aren't up for re-election until 2030. Surely, their constituents and donors will have completely forgotten about this episode of putting pragmatism over politics by then.

So, with a whimper, the longest government shutdown in America's glorious history will end roughly around the same time as World War I, on the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month, or, something like that.

Positive prospects for the re-opening of the government pushed stocks forward, but were surprisingly bullish for gold and silver. Gold was up more than $140 on the day, with silver advancing more than four percent, with spot prices rising from $48.33 to $50.50. Both metals are higher Tuesday morning, as the reality of a resumption of overspending by congress strikes home.

With stocks having recovered most of the losses from last week in one fell swoop, traders may be taking a break on Tuesday. Stock futures are lower for the NASDAQ and S&P, Dow futures showing a slim gain of less than 20 points as the opening bell approaches.

Crude oil prices are slightly higher, but WTI continues to gravitate towards $60/barrel or lower. Good news for home heaters and auto drivers.

So, with the shutdown apparently nearing an end and the AI blowout having reached terminal madness, what will they think of next to get the muppets to buy more stocks?

At the Close, Monday, November 10, 2025:
Dow: 47,368.63, +381.53 (+0.81%)
NASDAQ: 23,527.17, +522.64 (+2.27%)
S&P 500: 6,832.43, +103.63 (+1.54%)
NYSE Composite: 21,566.41, +157.85 (+0.74%)



Monday, November 10, 2025

WEEKEND WRAP: Friday's "Dip and Rip" and the Myth of Free Markets; Patience Equals Prosperity for Precious Metals Stackers

Stocks were being sold off like ten-cent tarts at a church bake sale Friday, until heavy-handed market manipulators came to their rescue, turning what looked to be a washout into a minor loss on the NASDAQ and a plus-side finish on the Dow and S&P.

Not that this was the first time stocks reversed course or at all unusual. The practice of pumping stocks when they seem to be falling into a void has been a feature of equity exchanges in Europe and the U.S. for decades. The practice of "supporting your stock" is as old as the 1929 crash and puts the lie to what are supposed to be "free and fair" markets.

The harsh reality is that there's absolutely nothing free nor fair about equity markets. They are controlled by the biggest banks and brokerages, giant holding companies like Berkshire-Hathaway, BlackRock, Vanguard, and State Street, and given additional support by the New York Fed's trading desk, the government's Exchange Stabilization Fund (ESF) and the President's Working Group on Financial Markets (colloquially known as the Plunge Protection Team, or PPT), created by President Reagan after the 1987 stock market crash.

Individual investors that haven't been bankrupted by the antics of the big money rollers can only hope to pick stocks they believe will do well and go along for the ride. Fundamentals and valuations have not mattered for a very long time. The ultimate goal of the stock market insiders is to keep stocks going higher and higher, and to keep everybody in the game by projecting strength and vitality in American - and European - enterprise.

Friday's "dip and rip" was just another in a long history of sudden reversals. It should be noted that stocks almost never make similar moves off highs intra-day. In other words, stocks don't normally zoom up and then reverse to the downside. That goes against the narrative and doesn't benefit the financial industrial complex that controls Western economies. Stock markets are inexorably tied to nations, as if the health and wealth of mega-corporations are the only things that matter. It's complete bull hockey and probably will never end. The Federal Reserve pumps money into financial markets on a regular basis and the entire structure of the Western financial system has become dependent on keeping stocks elevated and going forever higher and higher, just as the purchasing power of the underlying currencies - euros, pounds, dollars, yen - collapses.

As hyper-inflation becomes embedded into daily life, expect stocks to just fly to new levels of exhilarating excess. It happened in Weimar Germany and Zimbabwe. It will happen in Europe, Japan, the UK, and the United States. It's nearly a mathematical certainty and why short-sellers regularly are carried out on stretchers during the rare, brief downturns in the markets. There hasn't been an actual bear market since 2008, which, incidentally, was when the entire global financial system imploded for good. Since then, it's just been fraud after fraud, control freaks freaking and geeking, and stocks to the moon. Meanwhile, the economies of Western nations have been crumbling. Standards of living have fallen. Housing has become unaffordable. Food costs are now threatening to bankrupt the middle class.

Wealth disparity is at levels never seen before, not during the gilded age, the 1920s, or any other time in recorded history. The top 10 percent of the population in the U.S. owns 87% of all stocks. 42 million Americans are on food assistance (SNAP) and the government is doing its level best to deprive them of that.

The average interest rate on credit cards is now 24%, but, corporations can borrow at 3-5% and banks, well, 0.50%. Outstanding student loans are now $1.8 trillion. Those loans are federally-mandated and federally administered, but, college degrees, outside of engineering and the sciences, are virtually worthless. The same federal government has decreed that those loans are not dischargeable in bankruptcy. Thank Bill Clinton for that.

Not choosing sides, the current government shutdown is now in its 40th day, the longest in history. The whole thing is a psy-op. Both sides, both parties were in on it from the start. The goal, whatever it may be, is probably not going to be to the liking of most Americans. The government is conditioning the populace for something bigger, much like they did with COVID. Maybe martial law. Maybe something worse.

On the Sunday talk shows, not a word was spoken about the delayed SNAP funding. That 42 million Americans rely on government aid in order to eat is a national disgrace, but, the government conditioned these people, over generations in some cases, to expect a monthly stipend, a hand-out, and now it's been delayed and soon will be denied. Meanwhile, reducing air traffic by 10% borders on a national disaster according to the media. Oh, people can't travel? Boo-hoo. Try not eating for a few days and see how that works out.

If you're not already fully disgusted with the U.S. congress and the entirety of the federal government - the president and the courts included - you're either willfully ignorant, probably suffering from TDS or normalcy bias that is keeping you from seeing the reality of the situation. The U.S. government, like the government in the UK, EU, Japan, Canada, Australia, and elsewhere, isn't there to protect or enforce your rights or to provide for the general welfare of the people. These governments are there to feed off your wealth, to impoverish you for the benefit of the elected officials and the donor class, to further the beaurocracy,and to keep the open wage and tax slave plantation operating. It's as simple as that. Wake the F-- up.

Financialization has destroyed Europe, the UK, Japan, South Korea, Canada, Australia, and the United States.

The BRICS are thriving while Western nations shrivel up and die. Deal with it.

Stocks

The Friday dip and flip kept stocks from suffering severe damage, scaring investors, and possibly causing further flight from the AI bubble, tech bubble, all-stocks-all-the-time bubble. What caused stocks to turn on a dime and head higher was purported to be some kind of deal in the Senate to end the government shutdown. Even though the news was out by 2:00 pm ET that the Republicans had rejected the Democrats' proposal without so much as a vote, stocks continued to rally through the end of the session.

The Democrat proposal to vote for to fund the government if the Republicans agreed to a one-year extension of Obamacare tax credits wasn't even close. It was more theatrics. There was nothing real about the Friday afternoon rally. It was 100% fake.

On Friday, the Dow was down more than 400 points just after noon, but rallied to finish 74 points to the upside. The S&P had dropped 89 points. It closed up eight. The unlucky NASDAQ was down 490 points. It closed down 49, effectively cancelling out 90% of the day's losses. It was an object lesson in the lie of free markets and the financial equivalent of saving face in front of the whole world.

Generally speaking, stocks are so wickedly overvalued only those with a vested interest in keeping their valuations at nose-bleed levels for their own satisfaction should own them. People who hold them in 401k plans or otherwise should run, full speed, away from these corrupt markets and nver look back. Going along for the free ride is only going to end in tears and recriminations.

For anybody still interested, a number of stocks will be reporting third quarter earnings this coming week. While that's all well and good, whatever profits or losses are reported should bear in mind that the longer the government shutdown extends, the more horrific will be fourth quarter results.

Keep in mind that the first estimate of third quarter GDP was not reported as it usually is, on the last Thursday of October, because the Commerce Department's Bureau of Economic Analysis isn't working because of the shutdown. Thus, there's no indication of whether the third quarter was good, bad, or indifferent. It was probably bad, which is yet another reason the government chose to shut itself down. After a while, it should begin to become obvious that the government shutdown isn't about funding the government for another few weeks or subsidies for families stuck in the (un)Affordable Care Act maelstrom. It's about taking a wrecking ball to everything the government touches and turns into fecal matter. This is a shutdown unlike others. Americans better get used to not relying on Uncle Sam to be there in times of need or even in normal times. Normal has been eliminated. There is no normal. There is only chaos, sown by the government to the detriment of the people.

The government and the propaganda mainstream media want the public to believe that reopening the government will be an improvement over it being shut down when the exact opposite is true. The government and its $38 trillion in debt needs to be permanently put to rest, power returned to the states and to the people. Holding faithfully onto financial assets, as opposed to hard assets like silver, gold, machinery, self-owned business assets, and real estate (which is actually only rented from the government - see your local tax bill), is sheer lunacy.

Here are the big, publicly-owned (where 1 share equals 1/10,000,000,000th ownership or worse) companies reporting in the week ahead:

Monday, November 10: (before open) Instacart (CART), Vonage (VG), Barrick (B); (after close) Plug Power (PLUG)

Tuesday, November 11: (before open) Orla Mining (ORLA); (after close) Oklo (OKLO)

Wednesday, November 12: (before open) Autolus (AUTL), Innovis Technologies (INVZ); (after close) Cisco Systems (CSCO)

Thursday, November 13: (before open) Walt Disney (DIS), Canadian Solar (CSIQ), JD.com (JD), Gambling.com (GAMB); (after close) Applied Materials (AMAT), Beazer Homes (BZH).

Don't expect life in the United States to improve, though stocks may rally - or not - despite your personal pessimism. At this stage of the game, virtually anything is possible.

Treasury Yield Curve Rates

Date 1 Mo 1.5 mo 2 Mo 3 Mo 4 Mo 6 Mo 1 Yr
10/03/2025 4.24 4.17 4.11 4.03 3.96 3.82 3.64
10/10/2025 4.19 4.16 4.10 4.02 3.96 3.81 3.60
10/17/2025 4.18 4.15 4.08 4.00 3.95 3.79 3.56
10/24/2025 4.11 4.06 4.02 3.93 3.89 3.76 3.58
10/31/2025 4.06 4.02 4.04 3.89 3.87 3.79 3.70
11/07/2025 4.01 3.96 3.98 3.92 3.83 3.76 3.63

Date 2 Yr 3 Yr 5 Yr 7 Yr 10 Yr 20 Yr 30 Yr
10/03/2025 3.58 3.59 3.72 3.90 4.13 4.69 4.71
10/10/2025 3.52 3.52 3.65 3.83 4.05 4.60 4.63
10/17/2025 3.46 3.47 3.59 3.78 4.02 4.58 4.60
10/24/2025 3.48 3.49 3.61 3.79 4.02 4.56 4.59
10/31/2025 3.60 3.60 3.71 3.89 4.11 4.65 4.67
11/07/2025 3.55 3.57 3.67 3.87 4.11 4.68 4.70

Honestly, interest rates don't really matter much under current conditions unless you're an active bond trader and they are subject to tinkering by the Federal Reserve and Treasury Department exercising what might be called "yield curve control" or YCC. The separate bodies can work in unison to achieve certain results. Under the current regimes, there is an ongoing attempt to lower rates, though the long end, dominated by so called "bond vigilantes" has not complied, with rates moving higher even in the face of back-to-back FOMC rate cuts. The Fed has surrendered its integrity and continues to be torn between saving the economy and saving the currency. It is currently losing on both fronts. The general economy is in tatters and the currency has lost 98% of its purchasing power since 1913. The rising spreads are indicating expectations for improving financial conditions, but a return of high inflation along with it.

For what it's worth, 2s-10s spreads expanded to +56 while full spectrum ripped up to +69, matching a double high in June. The instant indication is toward improvement in business conditions along with inflation at the consumer and producer level. Regionals banks are finding out how fragile their commercial real estate portfolios are with defaults and write-downs on financed real estate continuing to escalate.

Spreads:

2s-10s
2025
1/3: +32
1/10: +37
1/17: +34
1/24: +36
1/31: +36
2/7: +20
2/14: +21
2/21: +23
2/28: +25
3/7: +33
3/14: +29
3/21: +31
3/28: +38
4/4: +33
4/11: +52
4/17: +53
4/25: +55
5/2: +50
5/9: +49
5/16: +45
5/23: +51
5/30: +52
6/6: +48
6/13: +45
6/20: +48
6/27: +56
7/3: +47
7/11: +53
7/18: +56
7/25: +49
8/1: +54
8/8: +51
8/15: +58
8/22: +58
8/29: +64
9/5: +59
9/12: +50
9/19: +57
9/26: +57
10/3: +45
10/10: +53
10/17: +56
10/24: +54
10/31: +51
11/7: +56

Full Spectrum (30-days - 30-years)
2025
1/3: +38
1/10: +54
1/17: +41
1/24: +40
1/31: +36
2/7: +32
2/14: +32
2/21: +31
2/28: +13
3/7: +24
3/14: +25
3/21: +23
3/28: +26
4/4: +5
4/11: +38
4/17: +44
4/25: +40
5/2: +41
5/9: +46
5/16: +52
5/23: +68
5/30: +59
6/6: +69
6/13: +67
6/20: +69
6/27: +66
7/3: +51
7/11: +59
7/18: +65
7/25: +55
8/1: +32
8/8: +37
8/15: +44
8/22: +41
8/29: +51
9/5: +49
9/12: +40
9/19: +54
9/26: +55
10/3: +47
10/10: +43
10/17: +42
10/24: +48
10/31: +61
11/7: +69

Oil/Gas

WTI crude closed out the week at $59.84, a $1.04 decline from last Friday's close of $60.88. Futures were lower every day except Friday, catching a tailwind from the stock-buying binge. Remember how Russia was going to suffer from the new sanctions on their two biggest oil companies? That's all been relegated to the trash heap of history. The U.S. and Europe don't actually control any markets anymore. The BRICS, especially India, China, Russia, Iran, and increasingly, Indonesia, are taking hold of the global economy and shaping it to their liking.

The U.S. national average for gas at the pump was up a nickel, to $3.07, according to Gasbuddy.com, though that number would appear to be an anomaly. Gas prices should continue to decline the longer the government shutdown continues, the economy contracts, and demand is slashed.

California remains the priciest, at $4.71 per gallon, up five cents, followed by Washington ($4.24), lower by another five cents on the week. Oregon ($3.81), was down another four cents. The lowest prices remain in the Southeast, with Oklahoma, Louisiana, and Mississippi sharing the low price point at $2.53. Tennessee ($2.56) and Texas ($2.58) follow. The remaining Southeast states are all below $2.84 (Florida).

In the Northeast, prices were higher. All except New Hampshire ($2.93), Rhode Island ($2.97) and New Jersey ($2.99) were at or above $3.00, with Pennsylvania ($3.24) easily the highest. New York and Maryland are the closest ($3.11).

In the midwest region, Illinois ($3.27) was joined in the $3.00+ club by Indiana ($3.02), West Virginia ($3.05), Ohio ($3.07), and Michigan ($3.11). At the low end were Colorado ($2.68) and Missouri ($2.72).

Sub-$3.00 gas was reported in 28 states, a sharp drop of seven from last week.

Bitcoin

This week: $103,678.70
Last week: $110,406.10
2 weeks ago: $113,471.40
6 months ago: $103,161.70
One year ago: $78,990.80
Five years ago: $17,734.38

In case the diamond-handed haven't noticed, bitcoin first crossed over $100,000 in early December of last year. Those who bought at levels above $103,000, have made no gains for the past 11 months, and are, instead, losing bitcoin. All of crypto will eventually be discarded. It only serves the master-slave arrangement as a ready depository for dodgy funds and criminal activity, much of which is carried out by banks and governments. Bitcoin hasn't been legal tender in El Salvador since February of this year and isn't legal tender anywhere else, except maybe the Maldives or Pago-Pago or places where nobody actually lives.

With liquidity becoming a real issue, bitcoin and other cryptos will be sold off for greenbacks and stocks, but the smart money will go into gold and silver.

Precious Metals

Gold:Silver Ratio: 82.76; last week: 82.16

Per COMEX continuous contracts:

Gold price 10/10: $4,035.50
Gold price 10/17: $4,267.90
Gold price 10/24: $4,126.90
Gold price 10/31: $4,013.40
Gold price 11/7: $4,007.80

Silver price 10/10: $47.51
Silver price 10/17: $50.63
Silver price 10/24: $48.41
Silver price 10/31: $48.25
Silver price 11/7: $48.22

SPOT:
(stockcharts.com)
Gold 10/17: $4250.59
Gold 10/24: $4110.63
Gold 10/31: $3997.10
Gold 11/7: $3999.89

Silver 10/17: $51.88
Silver 10/24: $48.59
Silver 10/31: $48.65
Silver 11/7: $48.33

(Kitko)
Gold 10/19: Bid: $4,250.80; Ask: $4,252.80
Gold 10/26: Bid: $4,111.20; Ask: $4,113.20
Gold 10/31: Bid: $4001.10; Ask: $4,003.10
Gold 11/7: Bid: $3,999.60; Ask: $4,001.60

Silver 10/19: Bid: $51.86; Ask: $51.98
Silver 10/26: Bid: $48.53; Ask: $48.65
Silver 10/31: Bid: $48.60; Ask: $48.72
Silver 11/7: Bid: $48.23; Ask: $48.35

Gold and silver were under pressure, though not significantly. Gold remains stuck right around $4,000, and silver just below $50. As most hardened advocates of hard money understand, patience equals prosperity. These levels provide solid entry points for accumulation of real money. Eventually, prices will not be expressed in dollar amounts, but in ounces, which is all that matters.

It's fairly evident that the gold stored in Fort Knox and elsewhere in the United States is not unencumbered, having been lent out and re-hypothecated quite frequently over the past 80-odd years. The United States has not added to its gold stores in many, many years and will soon reap what it has sown. In terms of ounces of gold and silver held by the government, businesses, and individuals, Western nations are among the poorest on the planet. This fact will become self-evident in coming years. The current government shutdown is merely a symptom of the underlying monetary problem of fiat currency and fractional reserve banking, which are failing.

Here are the most recent prices for common one ounce gold and silver items sold on eBay (free shipping included, numismatics excluded):

Item/Price Low High Average Median
1 oz silver coin: 53.61 59.99 56.80 56.50
1 oz silver bar: 54.02 59.95 56.75 56.59
1 oz gold coin: 4,116.87 4,466.30 4,314.36 4,343.22
1 oz gold bar: 4,106.00 4,272.79 4,212.57 4,225.00

The Single Ounce Silver Market Price Benchmark (SOSMPB) gained positive ground over the week, to $56.66, a a gain of 48 cents from the November 2nd price of $56.18 per troy ounce. The small-denomination, physical market continues to add premia to, and depart from, spot.

WEEKEND WRAP

This quote by Samuel Adams seems an appropriate way to wrap up this week in the evolving Age of Delusion.

“If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than the animating contest of freedom, go home from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your chains set lightly upon you, and may posterity forget that ye were our countrymen.”

At the Close, Friday, November 7, 2025:
Dow: 46,987.10, +74.80 (+0.16%)
NASDAQ: 23,004.54, -49.46 (-0.21%)
S&P 500: 6,728.80, +8.48 (+0.13%)
NYSE Composite: 21,408.55, +120.11 (+0.56%)

For the Week:
Dow: -575.77 (-1.21%)
NASDAQ: -720.42 (-3.04%)
S&P 500: -111.40 (-1.63%)
NYSE Composite: -51.03 (-0.24%)
Dow Transports: +319.05 (+2.01)