
August 5, 2025 • Addison Wiggin
As we noted yesterday, big names are pulling the fire alarm:
Ray Dalio warns of an “economic heart attack.”
Michael Burry placed a $98 million short bet on Nvidia.
Jeremy Grantham expects a 50% collapse.
They’re not warning about recessions. They’re warning about systemic failure.
Jim Rickards called it “the avalanche theory.” When the snowpack is unstable, the snowflake doesn’t matter. The market doesn’t need a reason to fall—just a trigger.
Are we there yet?

August 4, 2025 • Addison Wiggin

August 1, 2025 • Addison Wiggin

August 4, 2025 • Addison Wiggin
In March-May 2023, we saw 3 of the top 5 largest bank failures in US history.
The market barely noticed. Headline financial news barely discussed it. The Fed among other Wall Street actors were credited with swooping in and saving the day, just in time. Again.
The message is: Don’t worry, in a crisis, bank losses will be transferred from the banks to the taxpayers.

August 1, 2025 • Addison Wiggin

July 31, 2025 • Addison Wiggin
August 4, 2025 • Addison Wiggin
Distress in one area of financial markets spread to other seemingly unrelated areas of financial markets. In fact, the mathematics of financial contagion are exactly like the mathematics of disease or virus contagion. That’s why they call it contagion. One resembles the other in terms of how it’s spread.
What are examples of the complexity?
One of my favorites is what I call the avalanche and the snowflake. It’s a metaphor for the way the science actually works but I should be clear, they’re not just metaphors. The science, the mathematics and the dynamics are actually the same as those that exist in financial markets.
Imagine you’re on a mountainside. You can see a snowpack building up on the ridgeline while it continues snowing. You can tell just by looking at the scene that there’s danger of an avalanche.
You see a snowflake fall from the sky onto the snowpack.
It disturbs a few other snowflakes that lay there. Then the snow starts to spread… then it starts to slide… then it gains momentum until, finally, it comes loose and the whole mountain comes down and buries the village.
Some people refer to these snowflakes as “black swans,” because they are unexpected and come by surprise. But they’re actually not a surprise if you understand the system’s dynamics and can estimate the system scale.
August 1, 2025 • Addison Wiggin
Great markets work like best-selling novels — with a plot that involves an ironic twist or two. We cannot imagine a blockbuster novel in which the dramatis personae get exactly what they expect.
Nor would we want to live in such a world; it would be as dull and earnest as a poem by Maya Angelou. “The mildness and brevity of the downturn are a testament to the notable improvement in the resilience and the flexibility of the economy,” said Alan Greenspan to a congressional committee during hearings in July 2002.
“The fundamentals are in place,” he continued (as the stock market rose) “for a return to sustained healthy growth: imbalances in inventories and capital goods appear largely to have been worked off; inflation is quite low and is expected to remain so; and productivity growth has been remarkably strong, implying considerable underlying support to household and business spending as well as potential relief from cost and price pressures.”
July 31, 2025 • Addison Wiggin
As January 2001 began, economists must have been on the edge of their chairs. Would the Fed, which had debased the currency it was supposed to protect, now turn out to be the savior of the whole economy? Nowhere in the Federal Reserve–enabling legislation is there any mention of a “chicken in every pot.”
There is no discussion of “protecting Wall Street’s commissions,” of “bailing out underwater businesses,” of “stimulating consumers to buy,” of “helping Americans go further into debt,” nor of “reinflating leaky bubbles.” Yet, those were the things the Fed now aimed to do.
July 31, 2025 • Addison Wiggin
The Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Index is the Fed’s favorite inflation gauge. Economists expect it to rise from 2.3% to 2.5% as tariff pressures bleed through. Core PCE, which strips out food and energy, is widely expected to hold at 2.7%.
Earnings season update: We’ll also hear from Apple, Amazon, Mastercard, Coinbase, Ferrari, and S&P Global, among many others. It’s a crucial read on whether this earnings rally has legs—or if it’s a sugar high.
Retail investors are likely to respond when the indexes move in a clear direction up or down. We suspect it’s going to take an exogenous event to make record retail investor sentiment come down off market euphoria.
In other words, the market remains a bubble in search of a pin… ‘cept earnings seem to be keeping a few key stocks aloft.
July 30, 2025 • Addison Wiggin
The Bureau of Labor Statistics changed the way it calculated productivity. It began to look at what it called a “hedonic” price index that took into account not just the price of computer equipment, but its computational power.
On the surface, this makes some sense. If a dollar buys twice as much computational power one year as the next, it is as if the price of computing power had fallen in half. The third quarter of 1995 was the first time this change took effect. It miraculously transformed $2.4 billion in computer spending into $14 billion of output, instantly boosting GDP by 20%, lowering inflation, and increasing productivity (output per hour).
The number for the fourth quarter, to repeat, was spectacular. Incredible. It was revised later to an even more incredible 6.9%. The only trouble was that it was not real.
It was, like the New Era that supposedly made it possible, a fraud. More computational power is not the same as economic growth. And being able to turn out more computational power for each hour of labor input is not the same as an increase in labor productivity.
July 30, 2025 • Addison Wiggin
CPI, which drives inflation, is usually based on the costs of about 90,000 goods across the economy. But with one-third of the data now based on an estimate — or worse, a guesstimate — it makes CPI data suspect.
This makes other measures, like PPI, suspect, making it impossible for the Fed to accurately determine inflation or its trend.

July 30, 2025 • Addison Wiggin
Margin debt just hit a record $1.01 trillion, jumping $87 billion in June alone—the largest monthly increase in history. That surpasses the peaks seen before both the dotcom bust and the 2008 crisis. Relative to M2 money supply, it’s the highest since 2018. Risk appetite is off the charts.
Meanwhile, in the real economy: housing defaults just hit their highest level since 2011, and credit card defaults at small lenders are at record levels.
These pressures explain Trump’s desperate push for rate cuts… but if Powell resists, the fallout could be swift and severe.

July 29, 2025 • Addison Wiggin
Never in the history of man had any people been able to get rich by spending money . . . nor had investment markets ever made the average buy-and-hold investor rich . . . nor had paper money, unbacked by gold, ever retained its value for very long.
In the late 1990s, however, all these things seemed not only possible, but inevitable. Everything seemed to be going in Americans’ favor. Then, suddenly, at the beginning of this new century, everything seemed to be going against them.
How could US consumer capitalism, which had been phenomenally successful for so long, fail them now? It can’t, they will say to themselves. Why should they have to accept a decline in their standards of living, when everybody knew that they were getting richer and richer? It cannot be.
Besides, said Americans to themselves in early 2003, if there were problems, they must be the fault of others: terrorists, greedy CEOs, or policy errors at the Fed.

July 29, 2025 • Addison Wiggin
While meme stocks sound innocuous, there is a critical factor that causes these names to get sudden interest from retail investors: a high level of short interest.
After all, if you’re short a stock and it starts to rise, you start to lose money on the trade.
That means if investors can engineer a move higher in a heavily-shorted stock, a squeeze could trigger as shorts buy to close.
That’s why heavily-shorted stocks, often unprofitable has-beens in the business world, have periods of strong performance.

July 29, 2025 • Addison Wiggin
Against the earnings backdrop, the Fed begins its two-day meeting. Given Trump’s open desires for lower rates, Jerome Powell and the Fed governors are under political scrutiny as much as they usually are under the watchful eye of Wall Street.
While most big analysts expect no change in rates, one voice is warning markets that the Fed might… raise rates.
Raise rates…what?! Now?! Sacrilege!
“The unemployment rate is low, but the rate of inflation is somewhat elevated,” economist William Silber argues in The Wall Street Journal.
“That suggests, if anything, the target interest rate should be higher to push down inflation.”
Inflation is still running hot — 2.7% in June, up from 2.4% in May — and unemployment ticked down to 4.1%. Despite pressure, the Fed hasn’t budged since December, holding rates steady at 4.25–4.50%.
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