Grabbing A Piece Of The New Money Order

Inside today’s Daily Journal

  • Essay: You’ll Miss The Fed

  • OPEC spigot runs dry

  • OpenAI shares not good for collateral

  • Google gets fluent with Gemini

  • Chart Of The Day… Coca-Cola (KO)

  • Today’s Mailbag

Editor’s note: Porter has turned the Journal over to E.B. Tucker, publisher of The Tucker Letter – a biweekly financial newsletter that helps investors navigate today’s shifting modern economy.

There’s a New Fed in the works. Once you cozy up to it, you’ll definitely miss the old one.

It only took people about a hundred years to figure out the structure of the U.S. Federal Reserve – the one with the exclusive right to print money. The same money many people do unconscionable things to get.

Sure, there were people who tried to point it out. We called them kooks, or worse. Any truthful discussion about the Fed during its first century only landed with a fringe audience, with the few who really understood it.

That’s about to change. And it’s not good. In fact, when you hear people rant about the Fed, tell them they don’t know how good they have it…

Controlled Demolition

Think of the transformation of the Fed like a controlled demolition – one of those dramatic moments where they turn a seemingly healthy 10-story building into a neat pile of rubble in about 30 seconds.

Extensive planning is why those controlled demos go so well. Engineers spend days strapping blast packs to load-bearing pilings. They remove things like glass and shrapnel. They sort of turn the whole thing into a dramatic, yet choreographed show.

That’s how the Old Fed may go down. With mobs of citizens stomping outside the D.C. headquarters.

You’d see a 60 Minutes profile… “Who Stole Our Money?” They’d interview some lady in Shreveport, Louisiana, who can’t afford her blood-pressure meds anymore for some monetary reason.

Whip up the public rage and topple the old institution like that statue of Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein they pre-strung a rope to and had cameras standing by ready to capture the moment.

Think back to any crisis event. There’s always a pre-cooked solution ready to go. There’s even unified talking points on how to sell it to the intelligentsia. You know, the kind of people who like to really study prison before they go, so they feel like it was their decision.

Every time though, it seems like the solution is worse than the problem.

For instance, the U.S. Patriot Act is something no patriot would tolerate. The 2008 financial reform legislation made it virtually impossible to build a large business without greasing up a thousand hands in Washington and New York. And the healthcare fix… well, just try going to an American doctor and see for yourself.

Yet in all those instances, people demanded these changes. They insisted on them… and it makes you wonder if whipping up the public mob is part of the plan.

Either way, there will be a New Fed. There has to be. The old one doesn’t work anymore.

Lost Its Effect

The first Fed had sort of spigot control on the U.S. economy.

To satisfy the public, the Fed organized the bank with regional branches. The idea was that the Atlanta branch watched over the South. The governor of that bank reported back to HQ.

HQ looked like it was in Washington, with all the “elected” leaders. But it wasn’t…

The New York branch of the Old Fed had all the power. Coincidentally, the key New York banks owned shares in that Fed branch.

That worked well for about a century. People completely ignored the arrangement… they sweated it out in factories for money created and controlled by New York banks. Totally unaware of the setup.

Behind the scenes, the bankers at first used interest rates and bank lending ratios to control commerce. Too hot, turn the spigot to the right. Too cold, turn it to the left.

Commerce is hard to contain. For a while, sure, but over time, it’s a living organism. We all collectively make it up. Millions of personal decisions, risks, avoidances, and steps we take in life all factor into it. It’s why, after a few decades, things got a little wonky.

The Fed of the 1970s pushed buttons like a teenage passenger being asked to emergency land a Boeing jetliner. Fed Chair Paul Volcker did the 1980s thing, and it was the first successful “managing” of things through Fed action.

Then they kept the levers going for a while, and things got insane. Fast-forward to today and we’re swimming in cash.

We all sort of know the state of money is not normal. Trillion-dollar IPOs, a family office for everyone, and many people at rock bottom on the happiness scale.

Something has to give. And it will. The issue is, we’ll panic our way right into a new chapter. A much darker one.

The New Fed needs new tools. Just try visiting a traditional bank branch… it’s like a city utility office in there.

A new business owner might never need a traditional bank. Modern borrowers rarely do either. And investors certainly have better options.

The ability to control commerce moved away from the Old Fed’s mechanisms. If you can’t steer the economy through bank reserves and rates anymore, you need a new steering wheel… one wired directly to the money itself.

The New Fed might include the largest banks. You know the names… but it’ll have a new class of owners. Stablecoin issuers. You watch.

I’ll admit, the first time I heard about a stablecoin I thought it was the dumbest idea ever. Digital dollars pegged at a value of $1.00 instead of just regular dollars… it made no sense to me.

Slowly, I watched these stablecoin issuers grow. They somehow had a regulatory pass. That made even less sense. People wrote about them harshly. Yet they got bigger… much bigger.

And it was only in the dollar system. Stablecoins are a U.S. thing… the Fed is a U.S. thing.

Plus, the business of issuing a stablecoin fascinated me.

People hand over large sums of old-fashioned dollars. The issuer in return gives them digital tokens worth $1.00 each.

Meanwhile, the issuer buys U.S. Treasuries, stocks, gold, whatever else, with the money. People apparently rarely want the dollars back.

That turns the stablecoin issuers into the world’s most enviable hedge funds.

Seat At The Table

The more you look, the more obvious the whole thing seems.

The regulatory pass was all about letting the private market develop this technology quickly. Regulators could hijack it later once perfected.

Governments love control, and they’ll have it at a level George Orwell never dreamed of in 1984. These closed-loop blockchains track, trace, and trap every single currency unit living on them. Once compliance is mandatory… you’ll be left trading baseball cards on the black market if you opt out.

The New Fed might have a mix of banks and stablecoin issuers. It looks like the savages at the top of the heap already see it coming. And they want a seat, and realize the cost of not having one.

You see, there’s a provision in the U.S. Senate’s proposed CLARITY Act that would allow crypto firms to offer yields on stablecoin holdings.

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong supports the CLARITY Act, arguing that allowing stablecoin yields is necessary to foster innovation, compete with traditional finance, and keep the U.S. at the forefront of digital assets. Banks, he says, oppose it simply because it threatens their historical lock on deposit yields.

Traditional bankers like JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon warn that unregulated stablecoin yields without federal protections could lead to systemic failures and deposit flight from traditional banks.

And the fight is getting nasty…

You see who’s lobbying whom and it’s clear this is coming down the pipe ASAP. The stakes are huge. While the stablecoins themselves are of little speculative use… there are a few companies behind them that might be.

We’ve Made The Bets

The world keeps turning. There are always winners in the next chapter, however radical it might seem on the cusp. At The Tucker Letter, we’ve made some key bets around this big change.

This isn’t the kind of thing that plays out in a week or a month. We’re talking life-altering changes. The battleship turns around slowly. When it slams into the dock, it only feels fast.

There’s one key stablecoin issuer already trading publicly. We like it. It trades on the NYSE and sits at 1/20th the valuation of a private peer trying to list soon. That feels like a lot of upside… time will tell.

There are other ways to play it. Some should work – others won’t. That’s how investing in tomorrow goes. You see the setup, but the play unfolds in its own time. Getting it close to right is usually profitable enough to outrun everyone else you know.

It worked out well on a big gold call years ago… But that’s sort of ancient history now. Gold has a value of $32 trillion today… Bitcoin for instance has a value of $1.22 trillion.

While it’s great to own some gold, the future is digital. The bets are already placed.

E.B. Tucker
The Tucker Letter

Keep in mind, we at Porter & Co. only publish guest essays from publishers we know to offer well-researched ideas vetted by a legal team, excellent customer service, and reasonable refund policies. The Tucker Letter is one such partner. We do not, however, under any circumstances, make any representations about their investment ideas or strategies, nor will we warrant them as equal to our own. We do recognize that the markets are tempestuous and, at times, ideas that we may not endorse prove valuable.

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Presented By: The Golden Portfolio

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