1/ I've followed the IMF for 15 years now, and this is the most impressed I've been by any of their live press events. Some rare truths were shared, on a panel in front of ECB President Christine Lagarde and Fed Chair Jerome Powell.🧵 (video clips below)
2/ The truth teller in question is Kristalina Georgieva, the new Managing Director at the IMF. She grew up in and obtained her phd in communist Bulgaria & did research at London School of Econ and MIT. She co-authored over 100 papers, and previously was World Bank Pres. & CEO.
3/ First, Mrs Georgieva shares some hard facts, which is quite rare in itself for spokespeople from IMFS institutions. She talks about the exploding government debt levels—"largest increase since WWII"—, and how the current spiking rates are putting many countries in a pinch.
4/ She goes on to clarify that we're basically looking at sovereign bond defaults: many governments are staring in the face of bankruptcy and investors will have to accept a haircut on their government bond portfolios (this is what she means with "restructure debt"). Wow.
5/ After talking about some exogenous shocks like Covid and the Ukr-Ru war, Georgieva points out how governments have failed to pay down debt when they could afford to.
6/ Before I show you the last and most important clip, I think it's relevant to know that Mrs. Georgieva likely had family that lived through Bulgaria's hyperinflation in 1996. I suspect this experience informed what she said on the panel. imf.org/external/pubs/…
7/ During the last moments of the show, Georgieva, as last speaker, spoke a truth rarely spoken in an official live IMF setting; namely that IMFS institutions are often short sighted, and that monetary stimulus programs have the unintended consequence of inflation.
8/ To an audience of hardcore finance tweeps this may not sound impressive, but in a world where nearly all political leaders are pointing solely at exogenous shocks to explain rising inflation, this may be the best we can get in terms of an official acknowledgment of the truth.
9/ Some caveats in closing:
- The clips were short, so some may argue that they're taken out of context. Feel free to check out the full show on the link below.
- I do not know or endorse any of Mrs. Georgieva's positions other than those shown above. meetings.imf.org/en/2022/spring…
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1/ This new paper is a true declaration of war: the ECB claims that early #bitcoin adopters steal economic value from latecomers. I strongly believe authorities will use this luddite argument to enact harsh taxes or bans. Check 🧵 for why:
2/ Rather than praising bitcoin as a tech paradigm shift à la petroleum and the internet, the authors introduce the blatantly luddite argument that "early adopters" ... "increase their real wealth and consumption" ... "at the expense of [latecomers]".
3/ Then they go on to brazenly advocate for legislation ... "to prevent bitcoin prices from rising or to see bitcoin disappear altogether" in order to prevent "the division of society".
1/ Incrementum just dropped their MONSTER gold report. As always it has a treasure trove of global macro charts. It is remarkably friendly to bitcoin, too! A selection:
2/ Clearly the invasion of Ukraine, and the subsequent financial sanctions, marked a new era for central banks—who are now buying gold much more aggressively:
3/ But it's already since 2015 that central banks around the world have been decreasing their exposure to the US dollar:
1/ Our report from last April predicted “for bitcoin to trade in a range of $22k to $42k, until a new multi-year bull market pushes it well north of $120k.” Now that bitcoin trades at $42k, let’s review our analysis & recommendations in a summary thread.
2/ We’ve been publishing our bitcoin reports since 2012, each time in periods of significant undervaluation. Last April, with the bitcoin price at $26k—60% below the 2021 all-time high—we once again felt the time was ripe.
People find bitcoin when they're ready: "... and then I realized that bitcoin, unlike ethereum, has this finite supply that is slowly coming to an end over time. ... I did purchase a little position." HT @MikeStillBTC
@MikeStillBTC Speaker is @kevinrose, his friend/interviewer @tferriss is sitting on the left. Kevin is the founder of reddit precursor Digg and is known to have been massively bullish on ETH and NFTs for years. Imo this is how the switch to bitcoin begins—one influencer at a time.
For people who've been feeding off of Silicon Valley's horn of plenty, it's been really hard to step outside of their widget-building bubble. Some knew about bitcoin early, but never really "got" it. (E.g. Kevin's an angel at trueventures.com.)
1/ Midjourney has introduced "/describe", which will allow for much more interplay between AI text and AI image tools. Basically you upload a picture to MJ and it'll respond with 4 prompts, each describing the picture and allowing you to recreate similar images.
2/ I was excited to try it with my own work. So the first image is a drawing of mine, the others are variations created by running the /describe prompts. I'm pretty impressed.
3/ The AI can be quite easily deceived. For example here, the color pink in my drawing made the AI believe it was dealing with a flamingo. The simple remedy was to change the word for "swan".