DDB on dash for cash catalysts

The financial system is sending out a major distress signal. While stocks hover near all-time highs, former Federal Reserve insider Danielle DiMartino Booth warns that a systemic liquidity crisis is already here, and it will force the Fed to abandon its inflation fight. In this interview, the CEO of QI Research tells Kitco News’ Jeremy Szafron that the violent 5% sell-off in gold is a “repeat of March 2020″—a forced liquidation event signaling that the “dash for cash” has begun. She breaks down why “prime borrower” delinquencies are the new canary in the coal mine and explains how banks are using “extend and pretend” tactics to hide a brewing credit event she says will unleash “more cockroaches” into the public markets. Is the Federal Reserve trapped? Booth lays out the final indicator that will prove the system has broken and the Fed has lost control. Here is a direct video link,

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Record capital risk

Most retirement accounts and investment portfolios are designed to track broad stock indices like the S&P 500, but under the hood, there’s much less diversification than imagined.

One chip company, Nvidia, accounts for 7.3% of the S&P 500 market capitalization; the three most expensive companies—Nvidia, Microsoft, and Apple—comprise an unprecedented 21% of the index (chart below since 1980, courtesy of @CharlieBilello), while the top nine most expensive companies—all tech—presently account for 34%.

On top of today’s record company and sector concentration, leveraged equity funds that magnify volatility and downside risk have exploded in popularity (shown below since 2011), reducing market stability for all participants.
Furthermore, margin debt, borrowing against portfolios for spending and other asset buying, has increased more than 40% year-over-year–the fourth such euphoric spike since 1998 (shown below, via Deutsche Bank and ISABELNET.COM).
Kamikaze-style, the stock exposure of US households, pensions, insurance and investment funds has topped 65% of total assets, the highest on record since 1952 (dark blue line below), and surpassing the previous tech bubble top in 2000. 
Overall, US equity markets account for more than 50% of the global equity market capitalization (shown below as of February 2025, via thevisualcapitalist.com). This ensures that when US markets implode, losses and liquidation selling go global.

Andrew Ross Sorkin is making the media rounds promoting his new book on the 1929 crash and notes striking similarities with present sentiment, actors, and behaviours.

It was the moment that sent the U.S. into a panic and drew the Roaring 20s to a close. The 1929 Wall Street crash, which led to the Great Depression, was the most devastating financial collapse in history. Andrew Ross Sorkin’s new book focuses on this disaster. The author joins the show to discuss what led to the financial shipwreck and what we can learn from it nearly a century later. Here is a direct video link.

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Geothermal heat going mainstream in Toronto

Renewable energy systems keep gaining market share, because there are many different solutions for different applications and they keep getting cheaper and cheaper as well as being cleaner, more efficient, safer and smarter than traditional sources. Good news!

Read Inside the deal that’s making geothermal heat go mainstream in Toronto. Here’s a taste:

“We can get a 70 per cent carbon reduction without breaking a sweat. That’s really easy without taking on a lot of risk. Everything in the building is business as usual: The distribution system, the thermostats, the heat pumps, the entire mechanical. We’re just slapping on a bore field.”

Not just reserved for single buildings, geothermal energy has also been used in district energy systems that heat and cool multiple buildings, including U of T’s St. George Campus and a subdivision in Markham. The Enwave district energy system that heats and cools 200 buildings in the downtown core uses similar technology to cool office towers and condos in the summer, but pipes waste heat into the lake rather than the ground.

When pitching geothermal, Weber said developers often balk at the additional infrastructure necessary. But when you consider the effort and complexity that goes into natural gas extraction and distribution, geothermal is simpler, safer and better for the environment, he said.

“If you went back in time 70 years ago and said, ‘I’ve got two options for you to heat your building. One involves drilling two miles deep out west, pumping explosive vapour under pressure across the country, under your city, into your building, into a box and lighting it on fire. Or we’re going to put pipes in the ground and run water through them. Which option would you prefer?”

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