Trillions flee to Switzerland, Norway, India, and Brazil; interest rates and minerals laugh at Uncle Sam. Crypto amplifies with Asian SOL/ETH and BTC mattress. BlackRock trimmed the swollen empire — diversify in BTC/tokenized gold or bury your house of fiduciary cards.
Larry Fink says: "unsustainable" debt, migrate to global reais. Dalio: USA at "imperial terminal", dollar melting confidence. Escape single jurisdictions. Bitcoin, native digital gold, laughs last.
In the "Thucydides Trap" USA-China, gold (65%) and silver (144%) laugh at the dying fiduciary. PAXG mocks States; BTC/gold hybrids: hard money buries weak kings.
Mar-a-Lago whispers toxins to Wall Street: dollar deflated by "patriotic" inflation, rescuing industrial rust. Pensions dance the tango of dread, watching monetary sanctuaries turn into presidential latrines
BlackRock trimmed the Treasuries like a funeral barber: subtle cuts to inflation duration. China and Japan evaporate billions; Europe flees. BTC and stablecoins laugh, gobbling flows from the Yankee collapse.
BlackRock escapes the Titanic of Treasuries — US$38 trillion in ruin, interest devouring everything. Global debt: US$251 trillion of farce. BTC laughs last, the gentleman of fiduciary bankruptcy. Diversify or sink with elegance.
BlackRock Buries US$ 2.1 Trillion, The Elegant Funeral of Treasuries.
In the global capital chess game, BlackRock plays with surgical precision. The largest manager in the world — discreetly withdrew US$ 2.1 trillion from U.S. public debt, a volume that mirrors the annual growth of Treasuries. It's not panic but risk management: the "safe havens" of the U.S. show cracks, with annual interest consuming US$ 1 trillion — more than defense and health combined. For crypto-assets, this is a green light: diversify into BTC and digital gold before the fiat card castle trembles.
Gold Against All Fiat, the Slow and Glamorous Suicide
We are at the epicenter of a macroeconomic earthquake that history books will call "The Week of the Golden King." By the end of January 2026, gold explodes above $5,100 an ounce, silver flies to $110, while the DXY sinks to 96.8 — the thermometer of the dollar melting like ice in a crisis-stricken Greenland. For the crypto investor, this is not noise, it's the alarm to reposition in hard assets, where BTC and tokenized gold devour the fiat in agony.
Weak Dollar, Sneaky Trump The DXY broke 97 points, echoing Washington's cunning: Trump seeks an anemic dollar to inflate exports and cut deficits, including backing Milei's Argentine peso. It's no accident — it's strategy, with the Treasury injecting allies in the "Capital War." Crypto assets like USDT shine here, anchored to the dollar but ready to leap when the house of cards trembles.
The United States — this beacon of financial freedom that, after years of fighting between agencies and congressmen in search of headlines, finally illuminated the path with the GENIUS Act. A name as modest as the ambition to regulate something that, until yesterday, seemed more nebulous than the balance sheet of a crypto bank. Now, payment stablecoins gain their own status, neither securities nor commodities — a rare kind of digital citizen with regulatory CPF. Congress, in a flash of lucidity or desperation, finally decided that tokenized dollars deserve a legal home. The market applauds, lawyers salivate, and the taxpayer, this unwitting spectator, watches the play without knowing if the act is a comedy, tragedy, or pure American genius.
Davos concluded its 56th Annual Meeting on January 23 with a twist worthy of a global political comedy script. The once temple of the 'Green Deal' turned into an informal symposium praising fossil fuels — because, apparently, the future is made of oil and irony. Donald Trump stole the show (or the spectacle), mocking European wind turbines — 'spinning failures' — and proclaiming that American gas and oil are the true stars of modern sustainability. Amid discreet applause and incredulous glances, the former president basically renamed the World Economic Forum to 'International Hydrocarbon Club.'
The Last Toast to Long Peace, The Apocalypse Makes Its Presence Known
We live in a statistical illusion. For billions, the calm between superpowers is the norm of civilization. Geopolitics, however, whispers an uncomfortable truth: this is a historical anomaly. Eighty years ago, great nations have avoided direct wars — the longest interval since Rome. It was no coincidence, but post-trauma engineering: leaders, haunted by two world wars, erected barriers against the unthinkable. The risk? This triumph blinded us, paving the way for our ruin.
Stablecoins projected $6T global in 2026, but regulation stalls, Tether freezes vs. MiCA rigor. From DeFi to cross-border payments, onchain > traditional fiat. Sarcasm: central banks wake up late for the banquet.
The Senate postpones the markup of the Clarity Act for the umpteenth time, leaving crypto in regulatory limbo while Sacks and Armstrong fight over scraps. Promises of "bipartisan clarity" sound like the laughter of hyenas in Davos. Globally, the EU is advancing with MiCA while the US is stalling – who said democracy is efficient?
Standard Chartered, the prophets of Davos, predict XRP to $8 by the end of 2026, thanks to regulatory clarity and ETFs – oh, if it were that simple. With Ripple quiet about predictions in Davos, the token dances around $1.95, while bulls dream of $12.50 in 2028. In the real world, where regulation stumbles, XRP is the eternal underdog, will it rise or be yet another victim of American bureaucracy?
American senators, in yet another episode of political theater, postponed the markup of the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, leaving the crypto sector in the same regulatory fog as always. David Sacks, the crypto czar of the White House, promised progress, but Coinbase withdrew support and voilà, the circus was postponed for "bipartisan negotiations". Sarcasm aside, while Trump attacks the Fed, Congress plays at selective regulation, ignoring that DeFi and stablecoins deserve real rules, not empty promises.
The dollar, this tired veteran that was once the rockstar of global reserves, is now giving way to gold — the metal that never goes out of style. China and India have decided that enough is enough of financing the American deficit while Washington prints money as if it were a flyer for a student party. It is almost poetic, gold, a millennial symbol of stability, surpassing Treasuries for the first time since 1996 — the year when 'internet' still seemed like a passing trend. For the BRICS, getting rid of Treasury bonds is less a divorce and more an 'open relationship' with the global financial system. Let the new era begin, less paper, more metal.
While Davos melts in caviar tears over obsolete jobs, crypto assets blink like the wise clown in the circus of the damned. Blockchains and DeFi cry out for genius hybrids — AI + tokenomics —, shielded against fifth automation. BTC does not fire: it buries the moldy fiat and the "growth of empty souls". Velvet halls ignore the obvious, but the market scoffs: invest in P2P before robots eternalize memes.
The barons of AI, in refined autofagia, confess: the monster growls at home. Demis Hassabis (DeepMind) murmurs about "deceleration" of interns — humans, for what? Dario Amodei (Anthropic) laughs: half of the juniors disappear in years. IMF warns "tsunami" — 40% of jobs on the line. Nadella (Microsoft) poses: reshaping workflows, fossils, or turning into an appetizer. Crypto, the lifeboat?
AI paraded in Davos as a tragic diva that elites pretend to idolize. In the 56th farce of the WEF, global titans mooed: "Share the tech profits, or inequality becomes an eternal carnival." Larry Fink, BlackRock oracle, prophesied the massacre — AI bursts white collars just as globalization did to blue ones. "Bubble? Yes, fiascos, not loser foam." Brave ones, face the abyss.