An unprecedented shakeup at the very top of the Chinese military has shaken up the rest of the world. Xi Jinping didn’t just go after a longtime friend and ally, he has gone after everyone in what increasingly looks like a paranoid, Stalinist shakeup. But why? I’ve told you many times before about the economic pressure on China that has only intensified more recently. But that’s not the only thing. That’s where it starts, but where it ends is what is increasingly being confirmed as Cold War 2.0....
Jan 27, 2026•21 min•Ep. 1299
Billionaire investor Ray Dalio is warning we shouldn’t be focused on trade wars, instead the real concern is capital wars. In those, Dalio says there will be a reduced appetite for owning US government debt or any US assets. Maybe even including American stocks. The comments were made in the context of recent geopolitical flashpoints in Venezuela and Greenland. As always, there’s a lot of noise surrounding this kind of topic, but what does the evidence say? Eurodollar University's conversation w...
Jan 26, 2026•22 min•Ep. 1298
Thanks to Monarch for partnering with me! Get 50% off your first year by using my link https://monarchmoney.yt.link/xxoutOh or discount code euro50 when signing up for a free trial! Welcome to calm, confident money! #monarchpartner A huge arctic blast, the weather wedge, has sent natural gas prices soaring in historic fashion. Some futures prices surged by a whopping 75% in just five days leading up to what people are calling the storm of the century. Freezing cold. Snow. Ice sheets. Icemageddon...
Jan 25, 2026•21 min•Ep. 1297
The Japanese government bond market suffered a major meltdown this week that has shaken up a lot of people as they try to figure out what’s going on over there and how it might impact more than just government bonds as a class. One of the key factors that has emerged, however, is just how little selling it took to create these massive price swings. That has enormously profound implications. Eurodollar University's Money & Macro Analysis -------------------------------------------------------...
Jan 23, 2026•54 min•Ep. 1296
The US housing market seemed like it was moving in the right direction recently, some better results people said were lower mortgage rates finally starting to work. But then reality dropped like a hammer today when the nation’s largest realtor group reported a massive 9.3% drop in pending home sales for December, biggest monthly decline since 2020. Stunned analysts are trying to figure out why lower rates aren’t stimulating housing and what these latest results mean. Eurodollar University's Mone...
Jan 22, 2026•24 min•Ep. 1295
Macy’s is the latest retailer to admit to struggling in the current economic climate, closing several of what it calls fulfillment centers, basically warehouse facilities in Connecticut and Oklahoma and shedding thousands of those jobs. That comes in addition to even more store closings across the country. Why? Because only the wealthy are spending so the company wants to focus as much as possible on that segment. Macy’s is not alone. EDU LIVE PRESIDENT'S DAY FEBRUARY 2026 If you’re a serious in...
Jan 21, 2026•20 min•Ep. 1294
Thanks to Monarch for partnering with me! Get 50% off your first year by using my link https://monarchmoney.yt.link/eB2fzzP or discount code euro50 when signing up for a free trial! Welcome to calm, confident money! #monarchpartner Chinese retail sales just did something they’ve never done before outside of the lockdowns. At the same time, capital investment continues to legitimately crash, December was third month in a row of steep declines leading to the first yearly negative for it in China’s...
Jan 20, 2026•22 min•Ep. 1293
What is going on with Freddie Mac? The Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, which is Freddie’s official, has seen its stock utterly pummeled this past week, crashing by 25%. Since Freddie is one of the mortgage giants, this isn’t just some run of the mill equity. The story here appears to be tied up in a number of different angles, from GSE QE to its IPO, but the themes we keep coming back to are concerns over its cash and our jobs. Eurodollar University's conversation w/Steve Van Metre -----...
Jan 19, 2026•20 min•Ep. 1292
Every financial crisis generally takes place in three steps. And while there aren’t bright, clear lines of separation between them, each one does have unique characteristics that allow us to get a sense of where things stand in the process. That’s the thing, cycles are processes and as this one might go through all three steps, each one represents an escalation in that process. We’re in Stage 1, that’s just the start. Stage 2, it’s getting serious. Make it all the way to three...well, you never ...
Jan 18, 2026•25 min•Ep. 1291
Today we’re going be unpacking the latest from closely watched indicators out of China: bank lending data, household credit, the movement of the yuan, and what a single real estate developer—China Vanke—tells us about debt and payments right now. Bank lending in 2025 fell to the lowest since 2018 largely because household lending utterly collapsed. Yes, it collapsed last year. Eurodollar University's Money & Macro Analysis ---------------------------------------------------------------------...
Jan 16, 2026•20 min•Ep. 1290
The Japanese yen keeps tumbling and as it does it is tanking the bond market over there. What we have is the first case of a currency value setting interest rates, with, of course, the Bank of Japan helplessly caught in the middle. That helplessness is reinforced by the fact Japan’s currency is being closely paralleled by South Korea’s and others across Asia. The tumbling won and yen have led to government calls for stringent action, including from Treasury Secretary Bessent today. Eurodollar Un...
Jan 15, 2026•21 min•Ep. 1289
JP Morgan missed on its earnings after failing to sell as many bonds as it was expecting for its customers. At the same time, Jamie Dimon, the bank’s CEO, he of cockroach fame, was forced to acknowledge how the labor market had softened before then going on to describe Goldilocks anyway. This is something that has come up in a couple of other sources already, not Goldilocks though that is the Fed’s official position, too. No, bond issuance is looking weak heading into 2026, another one of those ...
Jan 14, 2026•22 min•Ep. 1288
Almost 40% of Canadian real estate funds have restricted access to investor funds, and that includes potential payouts. It’s a sign of how deep the housing bust in Canada has gotten to be, but also applies to the situation that’s spreading across global markets where it comes to the shadow bank matter. In fact, the UK’s house of lords urged the Bank of England to look into private credit risks “as a matter of urgency.” Eurodollar University's Money & Macro Analysis --------------------------...
Jan 13, 2026•19 min•Ep. 1287
Call it GSE QE. The same day it was reported US housing construction fell to the lowest since 2020, the Trump administration announced it was going to direct the housing GSEs, Fannie mae and Freddie Mac, to buy $200 billion in mortgage securities. The idea is that those purchases will reduce mortgage borrowing costs and offer some aid to struggling households who might then consider buying a house previously out of their reach. Eurodollar University's conversation w/Steve Van Metre -------------...
Jan 12, 2026•21 min•Ep. 1286
US consumers have basically stopped using their credit cards. According to the Fed’s latest data, revolving consumer credit declined again, the third time over the last seven months. And one of those other three was basically zero. There has been a clear change in attitude which means Americans aren’t just feeling pessimistic, they’re taking action about it. That is why consumer revolving credit is a critical cyclical signal, it draws together all the major components. Eurodollar University's Mo...
Jan 11, 2026•21 min•Ep. 1285
Blue Owl, a name we’ve gotten to know for all the wrong reasons, has been forced to come clean after getting sued by pretty much every class action securities lawyer in America, not only into admitting there was a wave of withdrawals but also promising to accommodate them over and above what it normally would. Not only does that further confirm the First stage of the credit cycle reverse, it actually sets up the second stage. In this video, we’re going to cover where everything in the credit cyc...
Jan 09, 2026•21 min•Ep. 1284
This is simply insane – new car sales among American households making $75k or less have crashed by 30% since 2019. Car prices soared. Incomes didn’t. They can’t afford a new car. But it’s not just the lowest incomes. Those making between $75k and $150k have bought 7% fewer cars than in 2019. This is a lot more than the K-shaped economy and to call it an affordability crisis seriously understates the problem. Eurodollar University's Money & Macro Analysis ------------------------------------...
Jan 08, 2026•18 min•Ep. 1283
Loss of momentum isn’t just happening in the US, it is very well synchronized globally with practically the same pattern showing up everywhere. Updates from neighbors Canada and Mexico show a deepening downturn at the end of last year, especially Mexico putting up its deepest contraction since April. Over in Europe, Germany fell back bringing Italy down with it. Plus, global bellwether Switzerland experienced its own “unexpectedly” sharp setback. Eurodollar University's Money & Macro Analysi...
Jan 06, 2026•22 min•Ep. 1281
Commodities are going nuts right now, with copper now parabolic joining silver on the crazy train. Gold is lagging behind both, which is not a good sign for each’s ability to stay on the upside. Meanwhile, at the complete other end of the commodity spectrum is oil, not just in terms of prices but key spreads in Middle East markets. One of those just flipped for the first time in years, signaling growing worries about global demand. Eurodollar University's Money & Macro Analysis -------------...
Jan 06, 2026•21 min•Ep. 1282
The number of legendary investors calling this an AI bubble continues to climb, with Howard Marks, co-founder of Wall Street giant Oaktree flatly stating if AI isn’t conforming to the historical bubble pattern, it will be a first. But there are some key differences within that pattern that just aren’t being fully appreciated. Starting with how this AI bubble isn’t actually about the stock market. Eurodollar University's conversation w/Steve Van Metre ---------------------------------------------...
Jan 05, 2026•20 min•Ep. 1280
Bull steepening on the Treasury curve, falling energy prices especially gasoline, the final look at the US economy in 2025 shows it losing momentum again as the new year begins. In fact, even mainstream Economists, the most optimistic bunch you’ll find, they’re growing concerned again, with Moody’s chief economist saying, quote, “nothing else can go wrong” because in his words, we’re already on the edge of recession. Eurodollar University's Money & Macro Analysis ----------------------------...
Jan 04, 2026•22 min•Ep. 1279
There was an explosion, a record spike – and it’s not even close - in lending by European banks to European shadow banks in October and November. This spike in European bank lending wasn’t some newfound enthusiasm to take on risks. It was emergency lending, a shadow bank shadow bailout which was every bit the other side of the US$ repo tightness I’ve been telling you about. This surge in shadow bank borrowing in euros shows how widespread and global funding pressure has already been. Eurodollar ...
Jan 03, 2026•20 min•Ep. 1278
The Fed is going to need some more not-QE and fast. We’ve got the year-end surge in repo borrowing at its window that is already way more than expected. At the same time, front end Treasury bill yields tumble in what is looking more like collateral scarcity along the lines of repo fails. Plus, the rest of the yield curve spent the entire fourth quarter – doing nothing. Literally nothing - and that’s huge. Eurodollar University's Money & Macro Analysis ----------------------------------------...
Jan 01, 2026•21 min•Ep. 1277
Massive protests have broken out in Iran as the economy there implodes. This is no longer an uncommon occurrence as we’re seeing more signs of the most dangerous phase of the economy. Spurred largely by younger generations who have born the brunt of economic suckitude their entire lives, political upheaval is spreading and intensifying – maybe presenting opportunity but either way it is, by far, the greatest risk the world faces in 2026. Eurodollar University's Money & Macro Analysis -------...
Dec 31, 2025•21 min•Ep. 1276
Repo fails just exploded, coming in at the highest weekly total since 2022. And this isn’t even year-end. This is mid-December. It’s the flat Beveridge economy that is exposing cracks in the credit markets. And along those lines, we’ve got an update on the Tricolor debacle and how it was actually uncovered that will knock your socks off u But it also does a really good job of explaining why there is so much risk aversion exploding throughout the monetary system. Eurodollar University's Money &am...
Dec 30, 2025•21 min•Ep. 1275
CarMax is back as a microcosm of the entire consumer economy. The company stumbled back in the spring then at the end of summer declared – no big deal - everything was turning around. Instead, not long after management eventually admitted it didn’t turn around which, this past week, was totally confirmed when CarMax reported sales that had basically crashed during the quarter. Eurodollar University's conversations w/Steve Van Metre ----------------------------------------------------------------...
Dec 29, 2025•21 min•Ep. 1274
The Bank of Japan keeps hiking its policy rate, Japanese bond yields continue to rise, yet no matter how high interest rates go over there the weaker the Japanese yen seems to get. And no one can figure out why. The government is stumped. Central bankers can only complain. And the yen is not the only one, but is a critical example of what everyone leaves out because they don’t really know what they’re looking at, or even looking for. Eurodollar University's Money & Macro Analysis -----------...
Dec 28, 2025•21 min•Ep. 1273
Repo fails, a measure of collateral flow throughout the entire financial system, soared to more than $300 billion as of the middle of December. It was the highest for any non-quarter end week going back to June 2023. At the same time, borrowing from the Fed’s repo facility is way up again as investors refuse to buy the spin from private credit that their portfolios are just fine and from central bankers who say the same thing about the economy. Eurodollar University's Money & Macro Analysis ...
Dec 27, 2025•22 min•Ep. 1272
US GDP utterly crushed it in Q3 and that was following Q2 when output supposedly was well more than expected, so two quarters in a row of booming numbers. So why isn’t anyone buying it? To begin with, just look at gold and silver. Safe haven buying is literally off the charts. Bond yields didn’t react at all. And consumer confidence keeps falling deeper into recession territory. Eurodollar University's Money & Macro Analysis -------------------------------------------------------------------...
Dec 24, 2025•23 min•Ep. 1271
Back in October, foreigners sold a massive $61.2 billion in LT UST assets, the most since April. While that may sound like the “sell America” and Treasury rejection narrative from the summer, it’s actually proof that the Fed’s bank reserves are irrelevant. Remember October? Repo rates soaring. Use of the Fed’s repo facility skyrocketed. Cockroaches and garbage lending. Eurodollar University's Money & Macro Analysis -----------------------------------------------------------------------------...
Dec 23, 2025•21 min•Ep. 1270