Do you know why I put two sets of quotation marks around the word “”markets?””
Because they are so manipulated that they bear no resemblance to your grandad’s markets. Markets are where prices are set between buyers and sellers. Manipulated “”markets”” are used by central banks to set a narrative.
Usually, that narrative is something inane like “We’re in control!” or “Gold is bad!” or “Inflation is coming down!”
The problem is that by forcing prices into unnatural places for too long the manipulators interfere with this thing we call reality. Out here in the real world, oil wells don’t get drilled if prices aren’t reflective of real-world risks and costs of capital. Copper mines don’t get opened. Farms get foreclosed upon (although, this isn’t necessarily a bad thing for the central banker’s friends who are eager, for some reason, to buy up these struggling operations).
In this deep dive I go into the explicit mechanism by which the central banks are openly and with official blessing monkeying about in markets where they have zero legitimate reason to be participating. Places such as Bitcoin futures, US Ag markets, Silver, and Oil. If after watching the video you have another more innocent explanation, I am all ears.
This is essential framing, as I call it, and therefore I have decided to make it public.
Enjoy!