The everything bubble is pushed asset prices like stocks, real estate and bitcoin two crazy new all time highs and the pinprick. It's coming and they're all gonna burst, and everything's gonna come crashing down. Well, at least that's what you know. Mainstream analysts like Michael Burry, Jim Rickards, my good friend, Robert Kiyosaki, Harry Dent, Mike Maloney, Peter Schiff, Jeremy Grantham, list goes on and more of those people keep telling us, keep showing us that this bubble is
going to burst. But could they all be wrong? What if the bubble they're seeing isn't really what it seems. So in this video, we're gonna look at these crazy asset bubbles. We're gonna look at the rise and fall of each, We're gonna look at the fundamental drivers of these asset bubbles, the cycles that are moving them along, and what to expect next. Now, based off my social media post over the last few days and weeks, it
seems that no one's prepared to see this data. It's gonna challenge every belief and every bias that you have. But if you want to know the truth, then stick around, and let's go all right, and real quick before we do, if you knew the channel, my name is Mark Moss. I've been investing through multiple bear market cycles. I've seen my share of asset bubbles. I started investing right before the dot com boom and the bust. I've been built
up two tech companies with big exits. I had a big, multi eight figure real estate portfolio only to see the real estate asset bubble crash in two thousand and eight, and so I've been studying these events in great detail ever since. And I've been making these educational videes for over five years to help you avoid the same mistakes and pain that I had to go through. So let's jump right in. All right, So we're going to talk about the everything bubble, and I'm going to talk really
fast because I have a ton of data. I got a ton of charts that I'm going to show you, So I'm going to go through them as quickly as I can, try to keep the ad libbing down to a minimum. All right, but we're going to talk about the everything bubble as a drome. Pal is showing us right here, and look, most people have this completely wrong. It's a reverse thinking of what most people think. It's why I've been une for about the last year and a half. You can see my record on the videos
down below. And we're going to talk about this now. The first thing, let's just frame this up. Okay, We're going to start from the beginning. What the heck is this everything bubble? It was a term that was really coined by Jennet Yellen back when she was running the FED, and it's basically an everything bubble refers to a correlated
impact of monetary easing. So in Wikipedia sort of tells you this, but for some reason, all these analysts and all these people on Twitter and social media, they don't understand it. It's a correlated impact of monetary easy We'll come back to that. It says monetary easing on asset prices. So what is monetary easing due to asset prices creates and everything bubble? The policy itself and the techniques of direct and indirect, direct and indirect of quantitative easing. Why
do I stop there? Because people are like, but Mark, we haven't been having quantitative easying. Look, the Fed's been tightening well direct and indirect. So while their official policy has been tightening. All the indrec stuff they've been doing has had the same effect of easying, like the BTFP program, for example. And it says the FED put is a modern monetary theory. So modern monetary theory means that we
can just print as much as we want. There's no limit to the amount of money that we can just create. And if we print too much and inflation is too high, then we can tax it out, sort of like a drain on a bathtub. We're gonna come back to this, but this sort of frames it up right here. But most people just don't understand this. Now, a bubble, I often say when someone says, hey, but Bitcoin, our houses
or stocks are in a bubble. Everything's always the bubble. Now, the question is at what stage in the bubble we are, right, So, if an asset price is going up, Let's imagine if we have a baseline. If an asset price is going up, that's a bubble. Now is it low? Is high? Right? So the question is what stage? So here's the stages that we have the takeoff of the bubble. If we're in this stage of the bubble, no big deal, right, then we have this first sell off. They call this
a bear trap. You know. If we're in this stage of the bubble, no big deal. It's this part, this part of the bubble that we want to be careful of. We have this enthusiasm, greed, delusion, and a new paradigm. Oh my god, a'readaet so rich, I'll never go down. And then finally denial and it crashes back down. Okay, that's what people typically see, but that's not all what it seems. Now a few notable bubbles from history. We have the tulip bubble. It's the most famous one in history.
And tulips in Holland, like the flower, they got so overbought. It created this massive peak and then they sold off. Now a lot of people like to say, oh, tulip mania, it's sort of like the doc or sort of like bitcoin. Well not really, because the tulipmania never came back. It never rebounded again. The dot com went up and down, but of course it's way higher today. Bitcoin went up and down, and of course it's way higher today. So it's a little bit different. You have to understand sort
of how these work. And I wanted to show you the dot com for example. Now, the dot com was a bubble, and it did crash. And when we talk about the bubble, we can see I drew this trend line for you right here. So this is the NASDAC right, which is represented sort of the dot com bubble from nineteen seventy seven to twenty twenty four. And what we can see is right here, this did create a bubble, right It got way over the trend line. So it crashed down, so back to the mean, back to the
trend line. It bounced around, tested the trend line again, and then it took off to new all time highs. So this right here is what we're looking for. Really, are we looking for things that are way too over extended, way too overpriced, or are they underpriced? But most people don't understand this. Okay, I know it sounds like a simple concept. Stick with me. Okay, this is very crucial you understand this. So now let's look at asset bubbles. And again I'm gonna talk fast. I got a lot
of data, Okay, so let's look at stocks. I did a poll on my Instagram and I basically asked my audience on Instagram, what do you think is the biggest asset bubble? Stocks, real estate or bitcoin or other, and almost everybody thought that stocks in real estate were the two biggest bubbles. They were about tied. So let's take a look at those bubbles. Now what we can see, and actually we're in a stocks real estate we're gonna look a bit poin. This is the tweet that sort
of kicked all this off. My good friend Lynn Alden put up this tweet on Twitter. If you're follow me, I'll linked to my Twitter down below. You can see us going back and forth on these things. It's kind of fun. This is what sparked this whole video. And she basically said that in two thousand and eight right here, the housing bubble got overextended, but today it seems to be driven by something else, which I replied, it's like a bubble in the denominator. You may not understand what
that is. I'm going to break it down for you. And this guy right here, Darth Powell. He likes to comment on Twitter a bunch. He says to me, Mark, you just don't understand how real estate is priced. Actually, he said, you do't understand how real estate is priced? Mark, Oh I don't. Well, I've been a real estate I started my career in real estate. I still invest in real estate. I don't understand. You don't typically want to tell that to people like you don't know what they know.
He says, I don't understand, which then of course I had to reply, and I said, I did it gracefully. I said, look, I just don't understand real estate. And I didn't und stay aything else. I just gave him the data. All right, I'm going to break this data down for you. But this is what sort of sparked this. You don't want to be like that guy. You want to know the data, at least if you want to make money. So let's take a look at this. So if we go back to the s and P five
hundred and are we in a bubble? Now? I drew a trend line from nineteen eight to twenty twenty four, and we see here again in the two thousand dot com bubble, it got way over extended, and then it recovered, and then it got way over extended in two thousand and eight again, and then it recovered. All right. Now from two thousand and eight, we can see this trend line going straight up. Now, if you're saying, well, Mark,
you said this was overextended. Here you might say, well, this is actually over extended, and you would actually be right. So these two areas look very bubbleish. So the S and P five hundred does look like it's in a massive bubble right now, similar to here. Okay, but that's only from the basic This is where most people go wrong. I'm gonna break this down for you. Don't worry, Okay, if we zoom in just a little bit, just so
you can see it a little bit better. Here's the S and P five hundred now just from we'll get from two thousand and eight until now, and again you can see I mean, obviously it moves up and down off this trend line, so you know from where it's been over the trend line. It's not super high. We're not super high. I wouldn't call this a big bubble, but again, it's not what it seems. This is what people are totally missing out on. Let's take a look
at the Nasdaq. The nasdack again is sort of represented by the tech stocks, and again sort of the same time period from two thousand and eight. Of course, it bounces up and down on the trend line, so it gets over extended, right a little bit expensive, a little bit cheap, little bit expensive, a little bit cheap. You know, it got a little bubbish here. It broke through the trend line here, and now it's bouncing back up. We're not high above the trend line. So everyone's like, oh
my gosh, it's a bubble. Well why why? Because we're way up from here? Is that why? Because the prices are more expensive they used to be. Is that why? Hang on, don't worry to break this down. Okay, now bitcoin, of course bitcoin's in a massive bubble. We can see this now, back to the tulip mania. It went up and it crashed, and then it came back and it crashed, and then it came up and it crashed and it came back. So it comes back over and over. Now
let's get to the homes set in the stage. Don't worry, we're going to break this down. Now, here's the home. So this is what the guy is telling me, Mark, you don't understand. See how big the bubble was here in two thousand and eight. See how far this got overextended. But look how much higher homes priced are today. They're way higher than they were in two thousand and eight. And don't you know that mortgage rates are way higher and people can't afford homes, and don't you know there's
a recession coming and people are broke. And don't you know that if mortgage rates go up, home prices are going to have to crash down. Don't you know, Mark, We're in a big bubble. You obviously don't understand real estate prices. Okay, Now there's another chart, and this is where people get misled. Okay, this is the the Case Shiller Index. And just so you don't know, the Case Shiller Index tracks the home prices across the United States.
So we have the Case Shiller index, and we also have an inflation adjusted Okay, so this right here is the charge. I just showed you the Case Shiller index, and again you see it went up in two thousand and eight, it came down, went back up, and so we're way above the two thousand and eight level. Now.
But you might say, but Mark, I know we have inflation, right, because the Feds printed all this money and prices go up naturally, right, So if we adjust this for inflation, you can see that we went up in two thousand and eight, they came down. But because of all the money printing. This isn't real. These prices aren't real. Right here, this is the actual real price, as it says, real Case Shiller index. And again if you draw a trend line boom boom boom, boom boom, you can see that
we're actually above that as well. So even if you adjusted for inflation mark, it looks like the Case Shiller index is up. Well, that might be your guess, but that would be wrong as well. Don't worry, We're gonna break this down. The reason why is because the government reported CPI data. Inflation isn't the number you should be looking at this where everybody goes wrong with all your investments,
with all your loans, with everything. Okay, So the first one I have to understand is that game on the reason why we have been seeing a rally and the reason why we have this asset bubble goes back to the very first slide I showed you from Wikipedia, which is it's monetary easing. Okay, So I have jer own Powell here right here, and we see that it all starts from monetary policy. If monetary policy is loose, the expansion of the money supply is fast. Asset prices go up.
If they tighten things, things slow back down. Now we know, if you've been following my channel, you've been paying attention, you know that November around October November of twenty twenty one mark the top of the last cycle. It was the peak for the Nasdaq, it was the peak for the for bitcoin, the peak for housing, all of those things.
Now they've gone onto rebound since then. And the reason why is because in November twenty twenty one, the Federal Reserve FED announced that it would begin to taper, or tighten the monetary base. So it had been easying, they decided to taper, popularly known as quantitative. They're going to taper the quantitative tightening. So we're going from easing into tightening. Okay, and we can see that. So we have the FED
funds rate. You may know, some of this stuff will go through it quickly, and basically the Fed is just knee jerking reaction. Lay lower interest rates, they raise interest rates. They lower rates, They kept them low for a very long period of time. They tried to raise them, they crashed the economy, they lowered them again, and they raising them back up again. Are you getting the point? So we watch FED policy to see what's going on there. Okay, now the other thing we want to take a look
at is the money base. So when they lower rates, for example, right, like an iPhone whatever, it's fifteen hundred bucks. Do you think if Apple put their iPhones on self for one hundred dollars more people would buy iPhones? Right? So, when loans are expensive, less people get loans. When loans are super cheap, more people get loans. And remember weren't a debt based monetary system, so money is created through debt issuance. So when rates are cheap, more people get loans,
more money is created. We look at the FED. This is the M two money supply chart, So this is the amount of money that's been created through all that debt expansion. Now, what we can see is this trend line going back to about two thousand and five, two thousand, I don't know is that two thousand and three ish. And you can see this trend line that I've put here. Now I circled this right here because this was the
two thousand and eight housing crash. Now, as you remember from the housing chart, the houses went up like this and came down, but there was really no reason to because the money supply wasn't really expanding, but you can see the money supply kind of continued this trend trend trend, trend, trend, trend trend. And right here in twenty twenty, when the Great Pandemic happened and they printed all that stimulus, you can see the balance sheet went to the moon. Now
I circled this right here. This is right when monetary base actually started to dwindle. So remember about October November of twenty twenty one, the Fed said they were going to do it. They didn't actually start doing it till the beginning of twenty twenty two. The reason why is the Fed is always trying to project out months in advance what's going to happen, like Jerome Powell's press conference talking about the potential rate cuts coming. We'll come back
to that in a minute. But they tell us months in advance what's going to happen, so they don't shock the market. And so we can see they announced they would start rate tapering, and they did and the monetary base started coming back down. Now, the other thing we want to look at is not just the money supply, but we want to look at the fed balance sheet, all right, So this is how much assets are keeping on their books, because there's not just money on their books,
it's assets. It's mortgages, mortgage backed securities in some cases, bonds, other securities, things like that. Now we see again in two thousand and eight how fast their balance sheet went up. In twenty twenty, how fast their balance sheet up. And this is the taper that we've been talking about, almost kind of getting us back to the start, all right, So you can see that's what they're doing. Now. The question is what's going to happen with the US debt
and the US borrowing. That's the big question. Now. I want to just make one more point before we move into that, and that's that all eyes don't need to be on the US. I mean they should when the US is the global reserve currency of the world, the
US is the financial market of the world. However, when it comes to liquidity, we want to be looking at global liquidity at least the main central bank, So at least the US, the European Central Bank, the Bank of Japan, China, the PBOC, We at least want to be looking at those major central banks. And what we do when we look at that, we can see a different picture. So what we have here, the green is the rate of change.
This is more liquidity, more monetary easing. This is restriction of easing, increase of liquidity, decrease of liquidity increase, right, you see that. And what we have here on this blue line, so the green is the is the money supply growth change, the year over year change in the money supply. The blue line is the actual m too money supply. So when it goes down, we see there's a dip. As it goes up, it goes back up. Right, when there's a dip, this goes down, but the money supply,
the base has continued to go up, up up. Now, put a couple of lines here. Why is this Well, what we can see is these are moving on four year cycles. I'm going to come back to this. You watch my videos on a regular basis, you know what that means. I'm going to come back to this in more detail. But you can see this is happening on a four year cycle. Now right here, this arrow is when the Fed announced they were going to start tightening. This little peak in that arrow is when the Fed
actually started tightening. Remember I said it was a couple months later. Now you can see as soon as they did that, we plunged off of a cliff. Now I put this arrow right here because that was about October of twenty twenty two. And if you go back on my channel and scroll back to about October twenty two, you'll see I made a video that says there is no crash coming. And here's why. I proceeded to make several videos explaining that, and we have been expanding the
liquidity base ever since, again on four year cycles. We're going to come back to that in a minute. Okay, So we looked at the asset prices, we looked at stocks, and we looked at real estate. They're all in massive bubbles, right, They're all at new highs homes even adjusted for inflation, or at new all time highs. They must be overpriced. They must be over expensive, especially considering where rates are and all those things. Right. But then we looked at
the FED and how the FED eases and tightens. All right, now, we're going to get to the real data. This is what most people are missing. So let me explain now. I do want to say just real quickly before I break down the real data and when everybody's missing. I am going to have a live event next week. I'd love for you to come hang out. If you think there's a lot of charts, I have even more, and I'm going to show you where the only place to
invest in is. I'm going to give you probably the top five or six ideas and picks that I'm looking at right now, and we're going to do it live, and I'm going to take all your questions live so we can really get this figured out where you can figure out how to implement this. If you'd love to come in with me, and it's all free, there's a link down below. I'd love to see you there if you want to really learn this stuff and actually apply it and make a lot of money over the next twelve,
you know, fifteen months coming out. It's free. Okay, So now taking another look? All right? So now let's take another look at the stocks. We'll look at the S and P five hundred and the NASDAC and here's where it gets really interesting. So I showed you that the S and P five hundred is a new all time eyes. Its surpassed the two thousand and eight high, the twenty twenty high, and it's way above the trend line, right right. Okay,
so here's another chart. Now what we have here is what I've done is I've taken the S and P five hundred in a massive bubble, and I've now adjusted it for the money supply growth. You see, every asset has a nominator and a denominator. So a home priced in US dollars, right, bitcoin priced in US dollars. So what if it's not Bitcoin that's going up. What if it's the denominator, the US dollars that are pushing it up. That's the question I posed on the Twitter thread that
started this whole video idea. And let me show you the proof of that now. So what we do is we adjust it for the dominator. Again, I have the S and P five hundred adjusted for the dominator, the M two money supply, and what we can see is that the S and P five hundred is down twenty two percent when adjusted for the money supply since the year two thousand. So it looks like it's in a massive bubble, but again it's being pushed up. This is why in your retirement account or four o'kay mutual fund,
you look on paper nominally like you're getting rich. However, your standard living is going down because your dollars don't buy as much stuff. They buy you twenty two percent less stuff when measured this way. Another way we could look at it is we'd look at the S and P five hundred priced in gold the same exact period. It's down sixty percent when priced in gold. So the S and P five hundred is not in a bubble. As a matter of fact. You can see it's been
almost completely flat right here. I mean it did have a dip right here, but it's been almost completely sideways. There's no bubble at all. As a matter of fact, prices crashed and have never come back. Okay, that's the S and P five hundred. Now the Nasdaq covers the tech stocks. They've been much more explosive. So let's take a look and see what's been going on there. What
we can see here is about the same thing. Now, we did have this massive dot com boom and bust, and since that time, we take the Nasdaq, we adjusted for the into the money supply growth, and we can see that the Nasdaq is also down twenty percent. Now this period has been sort of flat. We have this long prolonged period here. Now it is up. It is up, granted, but it's still down twenty percent. It has not reached its previous all time has not even really come close.
We can take a look at the same way. We take the Nasdaq and we price it in gold, and we can see about the same thing. In the same time period, the Nasdaq is down sixty percent to goal nowhere near all time highs nowhere, exceeding all time highs and moving sideways in this whole sector right here, Let's keep going. Let's go back to real estate. This is the one that started all because as that guy Darth what's his name, Darth Powell, I think it was told
me Mark, you just to understand real estate prices. So if we take real estate prices, which again even when adjusted foreignflation, look like they're higher than two thousand and eight, But again they use the wrong number. They're using just for inflation, as in CPI consumer price inflation, which is a completely wrong, completely manipulated, completely fabricated but number by the government. The real number is the rate of debasement. It's the rate of the monetary based expansion. That's the
real number. It's your hurdle rate. Okay, So now I've taken in this case, what do we have? Okay, So in this case we have homes divided by the money supply adjusted not for inflation, adjusted for the debasement. And what we can see is a very similar thing from the year two thousand. We can see that homes are actually down forty seven percent, nowhere near bubble, nowhere near
back to an all time high. Like it shows when you adjust for inflation, or when you don't adjust for inflation, when you adjust it for the real inflation, which was the definition of inflation, like previous nineteen fifty, when you adjust it for the monetary based expansion, we're actually down by forty seven percent. What about if we do homes priced in gold, well, we see a very similar thing. As a matter of fact, it's even worse. Homes are
down seventy percent. They have moved completely sideways. There's no bubble, they have not gone up at all. It takes more dollars to buy those homes today. You have to understand this if you're ever going to make money, because that is a completely different game. Now. What a lot of people tell me then is mark. What you don't understand, though, because that may be true, and that might be right, but the price is still going up and it's unsustainable.
There's no way the government can maintain this level of debt. There's no way that people can continue to pay those prices. It's unsustainable, they say. I mean, haven't you seen that interest payments on the debt have now exceeded the military mark. Of course I have, I reported on all the time. Now ding ding Ding is the first video we've done where the national debt clock to the United States debt clock has exceeded thirty five trillion dollars just a couple
days ago. I think, amazing number. Now to make it even more amazing, and we've already added twelve billion under the back of that. I mean, we were going up at an astronomical rate, adding about a trillion about every
quarter at this point. As a matter of fact, the government, the Treasury just put out the funding requirements, or I should say, the debt borrowing requirements just for the rest of the year, which is where, you know, not even half the year left, and I think it was like one point seven trillion they need to borrow just to get through the rest of the year. We're going up at an astronomical rate. So what we know is that this is unsustainable. Suppose that's what people tell us. Now,
why why is it unsustainable? Let's just we'll come back to that. But we know the Fed is going back to easing. So there was a FED FOMC meeting that just happened, and we can see that the fm WASC does not change rates, but it sets the stage for September cuts. So we know that President Biden said that there would be in his words, there would be a rate cut before the election, which is November. This says
for September. The Betting Markets CME, for example, shows that there's about one hundred percent probability that rates cuts will be there in September. And really the language that Jrome
Pal used set the stage for it. I won't go into the details of it to keep this video short, but basically, when you study what he says, he basically set the stage for that to happen, which is why markets are pricing one hundred percent, which means we go back to easing, which means lower rates means more credit expansion, means more monetary based expansion, It means more debt to
roll over. Now, why is that you might remember at the last debt ceiling debate, every year we have to haggle over will we raise the debt limit, and of course we always do every year President Biden. This is directly off the White House website remarks by President Biden on the need to raise the debt ceiling. And here's what he said. Raising the debt limit comes down to pain what we already owe, what has already been acquired,
not anything new. Raising the debt limit comes down to not get anything new, Like he said, like, look, we need more debt. Give us more debt. Don't worry though, We're not going to go buy new stuff with the debt. You know, new stuff that would be productive that maybe we make more money with. We're not going to buy new stuff. We need new debt just to pay off the old debt. So I said, it's literally the definition of bunks. We need more debt to pay off the
old debt. And the reason why I make that point is you have to understand that the debt never gets paid. The debt only gets rolled over. And because debt is issue or money grows through debt issuance. In order to roll over the debt, we have to print more money to roll over the success. So the debt doesn't get smaller, it gets bigger every single time. But again, but people say, but Mark, you don't understand this is unsustainable. I mean,
look at the rate of interests going up. I mean, who who is going to continue People won't build buy debt, and who's going to continue to buy the treasuries. No one's going to buy them from the government. Right well, the government can just buy their own. The Fed can just buy the governments. We see this all the time. There is no example in history currently right now, Lebanon, Turkey, Venezuela, Argentina,
you name it, right now today. Nor is there any historical precedents of a government going well, boys, that was a great run, pack it up, let's just go home. Never never once, never, once in history, nor in current times, have we ever seen that as long as there's ink to put in the money printer, they will continue to print. That's it. Period. As Biden said, we need to get more debt to keep paying the old debt. That's it.
So when you think it's unsustainable, I mean, sure, eventually eventually this ends, but not anytime soon, nine time, probably not at least in the next decade. I mean, it's gonna be sustainable for a long time. I would imagine this number is going to get too well over one hundred trillion before we see any big problem. So when you see all those videos about this doom and gloom, maybe eventually, yes, of course. Uh, but I'm gonna have made a lot of money and retired before then. Okay,
let's get to what the real bubble is. As I already said, the real bubble is in the denominator, not the top number, right, It's not in bitcoin or nasdak RESMP. It's in the bubble, the denominator of the dollars being printed.
But really, what the real bubble is we have to think about like prices compared to what Well, when we think about prices compared to pay that's the problem because what we have is we have asked price is going up like this while your payer wages are going up like this, and so every year you fall further and further behind. You can see it in this chart right here. So this is growth of the stock market versus us
household income. So what we have here, unfortunately, this orange line going back to two thousand and five This orange line is your household income, and notice it's stayed basically flat. The patient's on flatline. What we have here is the S and P five hundred Right here, stocks are going up faster, faster, faster, and now they're going up like this. This is only twenty nineteen. And then we have the
NASDAC that's going up like this. So right here you could buy the S and P five hundred NAS that you buy cheap here, but you're getting further and further and further and further behind. That's the real asset bubble, which maybe goes back to the point where mark, who's going to buy this stuff? Well, the richer still getting richer. Why are the rich getting richer? And how do you get richer with them? Well, before I answer that question, let me just go back to this four year cycle
I teased out earlier. So remember the debt never gets paid. The debt can't get paid. I have videos on this will link to them down the show notes down below if you want to go watch them to understand why I can't get paid. So we have to get more debt to roll over the new debt so it gets refinanced. And as I showed you that chart earlier. These four year cycles. Basically there's this metronome phenomenon. I have a
whole video on this breaking it down. I'm gonna link to it down below if you want to go watch it. And basically, the entire global debt solution the situation got refinanced in two thousand and eight. You know, if you're a mortgage company called you and say hey, we're gona give zero mortgage, like you would refinance. So when rate strup to zero in two thousand and eight, the whole
world refinanced at once. What we can see in this chart is about seventy five percent of global debt is within about a five year period, most of it in about four years. And that four year period just happens to align with an election year, which we're in right now, and it also happens to align with a bitcoin having year, which again we're in right now. That's the importance of four year cycles. Now we can see this not just with debt cycles, but here's a four year business cycle.
So businesses are on the same four year cycle, and we can see the liquidity cycle of the world oscillates on a four year cycle. It's important to understand that, so you know when you should be investing, pressing, and when you shouldn't. This is a chart of the global liquidity. If you watch my channel regularly, you've seen me use this before and again we can see that the amount of money, the debt, the money supply went up for four years, and it went down, went up for four years,
and it went down, went up for four years. Oops. And remember that date October twenty twenty one they started going back down when the Feds so that they're gonna start tightening. And remember the other date, October twenty twenty two, they started going back up again. Starting to see the pattern here. Okay, so now that you know all this, what do you do about it? How do you protect yourself? More important, how do you get ahead and make a
lot of money during this? Well a couple of number one, As I showed you, wages are going like this while asset prices are going like this. That's not good. So the first thing is the rich are able to get richer because they control their income. So hopefully you're a business owner. If you're not a business owner, you probably should be because you need to be able to control your income as this goes up. The second thing is you need to buy assets. Remember, asset prices are going
like this, your wages are going like this. So if all you do is depend on your assets or your wages, you're never going to make it. You need to get onto this track. This is the track you want to be on, not on this track. So you have to start buying assets. The next question is, well what assets should I buy? Well, I already showed you that houses, the S and P five hundred are actually down when you adjust them for the monetary supply, which means they're
not really that good of investments. Now, the reason why real estate is a good investment is because of the Well, there's four reasons why the leverage. The loan is one of them. If you can put ten percent down, right, I'm not gonna go to the other ones. If you want a whole video on why real estate is a better investment than most people realize, leave me a comment. I can do a whole video on that. So which assets should you buy? Well, we know that back to the S and P five hundred, and we ad just
for the money supply, it's not really up. We can look at it another way. So here we have the black line. I'm sorry. The gold line is the global equity. You're basically the money monetary based expansion. The black line is the S and P five hundred, and you can see that they move in almost perfect lockstep. And so that means the SMPO five hundred is just going up with the rate of monetary expansion, which is okay, you're keeping your head above water. You're not losing money, but
you're not getting ahead. But we can look at this chart right here, and this is now gold and bitcoin, and we can see that for every time the monetary base goes up by ten percent, gold goes up by fourteen percent, and bitcoin goes up by ninety percent, it's is sense to be ratio eight point nine. Okay, So these are the types of assets that we want to buy, the ones that are more sensitive to liquidity. Now bitcoin is moving up nine times for every one time that
the liquidity moves up. But then there's bitcoin derivatives that are moving up even faster. It used to be cryptocurrencies, but now cryptocurrencies are dead, and now there's new bitcoin derivatives that are going up two three, four hundred percent more than bitcoin itself. So watch out for those. I did a whole video on that. I'm gonna link those down below, so I'm not gonna go into that right now.
And if you'd like to come hang out with me next week live, I'll break this down for you, and I'm gonna show you the top five positions that I'm paying attention to and putting on my by list right now, and you might want to as well. I'm gonna give those two so coming out, it's all for free. I'll show you the charts to give the names, and you can ask me all the questions you want. And if not, no worries, check out the other videos that help you
understand this. And I'm gonna put this one investing black Hole. Watch this video right here now. If you like this video, give me thumbs up. If you don't, you can give me a thumbs down, that's okay, but at least tell me why in the comments down below so I can make better videos for you. All right, subscribe if you're over subscribed, and that's what I got to your success. I'm out
