I’m not in the U.S., but it’s hard not to feel the ripple effects of everything that’s happening there. One minute the headlines are screaming about recession, U.S. debt being dumped, markets in panic. The next, Wall Street’s partying like nothing happened. S&P hitting new highs. Traders bragging about billion-dollar wins. What exactly are we watching?
From here, it feels like a show. Tariffs get announced, markets drop. Then someone in Washington says “let’s delay it,” and everything jumps again. It keeps happening, almost like clockwork. Whether it’s intentional or not, it’s become predictable — and profitable, apparently. For those in the system.
S&P 500 is looking all green as I write this, by the way!
Then there’s Trump. People abroad tend to laugh him off or see him as chaotic, but watching from a distance, it’s not that simple. He’s not trying to run the country like a traditional leader. It’s more like he’s trying to trade it. Or at least, make it tradable. He says things that move markets. Then he changes his mind. Repeat. And Wall Street seems to love it.
And now with Israel and Iran flaring up again — actual military strikes, rising oil prices, tensions thick — you’d expect full-blown panic. But again, U.S. markets barely flinch. Oil goes up, sure. But there’s no sustained fear. Maybe they’ve priced it in. Or maybe they’re just trading it, too.
Sometimes it really seems like none of it’s about solutions anymore. Not in the U.S., not anywhere. It’s about positioning. Every crisis is a new trade setup. Even war. Even inflation. Even global instability. It’s all part of the game.
Out here, we feel the aftershocks — higher prices, weaker currencies, tighter capital. But the core action is still there, in the U.S., where the players have the biggest chips and the fastest access. They create the storm and sell the umbrella. And somehow, they keep winning.
Maybe I’m reading too much into it. Maybe it’s just how the system works now — volatile, global, always moving. But it’s hard not to notice that in a world full of economic anxiety, the people closest to the levers don’t seem all that worried.
They're trading it. We’re living in it. Let's not panic!
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