The Noble Update Podcast

Everyone's wrong about Gold again

3 min · 27. Juni 2026
Episode Everyone's wrong about Gold again Cover

Beschreibung

In 1971, one year of work bought you 85 shares of the S&P 500. Today that same year of work buys you only 11. Same effort and hours - but a fraction of the result. I’ve been going back and forth with Sam Kovacs on why that happened, and gold just gave us a PERFECT real-time example of people getting the whole story wrong: Kevin Warsh gets the Fed nod and market decides there’s a hawkish new sheriff in town. Then gold drops from around $5,400 to roughly $4,000, silver gets crushed right alongside it, and every financial commentator on TV is suddenly writing gold’s obituary like the story’s over. Sam runs a systematic macro fund, advises governments on policy, and he laid out exactly WHY everyone calling the top is missing the point... The mistake is thinking this was ever about one event. Trump leans on the Fed, rates get cut, gold pops, story plays out, done. But that’s not what’s happening. What’s happening has been running since the day Nixon closed the gold window in 1971. It never stopped. Not ONCE That stat I opened with - 85 shares down to 11 - that’s not inflation the way people learn it in school. This is what 5 decades of a currency slowly losing ground actually does to your paycheck. And nobody can point to the day they got robbed. The number on your statement keeps going up. What it buys keeps shrinking. So gold went vertical for a stretch. The momentum guys traded their meme stocks for GLD and SLV and rode it straight up. As we all know, vertical moves always come back down hard. And we just got the hard part. Everyone’s calling it a “healthy” correction. But here’s where it actually MATTERS: Sentiment on gold has collapsed toward zero. Everyone’s out of the pool. The miners look cheap to me right now. Sam won’t fight the tape near-term - price is price, he respects it. But stretch it out 10 or 20 years, and the only people underwater on gold are the ones who bought it yesterday. SCARCITY That’s the word Sam kept coming back to, and it’s the whole thing. Gold’s scarce because of geology. What just got mistaken for a dead trade is the same 50-year reason to own it, right on schedule. GOT GOLD? 🥇 Full interview: This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit georgenoble.substack.com/subscribe [https://georgenoble.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

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79 Folgen

Episode Everyone's wrong about Gold again Cover

Everyone's wrong about Gold again

In 1971, one year of work bought you 85 shares of the S&P 500. Today that same year of work buys you only 11. Same effort and hours - but a fraction of the result. I’ve been going back and forth with Sam Kovacs on why that happened, and gold just gave us a PERFECT real-time example of people getting the whole story wrong: Kevin Warsh gets the Fed nod and market decides there’s a hawkish new sheriff in town. Then gold drops from around $5,400 to roughly $4,000, silver gets crushed right alongside it, and every financial commentator on TV is suddenly writing gold’s obituary like the story’s over. Sam runs a systematic macro fund, advises governments on policy, and he laid out exactly WHY everyone calling the top is missing the point... The mistake is thinking this was ever about one event. Trump leans on the Fed, rates get cut, gold pops, story plays out, done. But that’s not what’s happening. What’s happening has been running since the day Nixon closed the gold window in 1971. It never stopped. Not ONCE That stat I opened with - 85 shares down to 11 - that’s not inflation the way people learn it in school. This is what 5 decades of a currency slowly losing ground actually does to your paycheck. And nobody can point to the day they got robbed. The number on your statement keeps going up. What it buys keeps shrinking. So gold went vertical for a stretch. The momentum guys traded their meme stocks for GLD and SLV and rode it straight up. As we all know, vertical moves always come back down hard. And we just got the hard part. Everyone’s calling it a “healthy” correction. But here’s where it actually MATTERS: Sentiment on gold has collapsed toward zero. Everyone’s out of the pool. The miners look cheap to me right now. Sam won’t fight the tape near-term - price is price, he respects it. But stretch it out 10 or 20 years, and the only people underwater on gold are the ones who bought it yesterday. SCARCITY That’s the word Sam kept coming back to, and it’s the whole thing. Gold’s scarce because of geology. What just got mistaken for a dead trade is the same 50-year reason to own it, right on schedule. GOT GOLD? 🥇 Full interview: This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit georgenoble.substack.com/subscribe [https://georgenoble.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

27. Juni 20263 min
Episode Regime Shift | Sam Kovacs Cover

Regime Shift | Sam Kovacs

1. Strategic Actions and Decisions * Transitioning from tactical trades to a regime framework: Evaluate currency debasement as a long-term economic regime rather than a short-term trading event to protect 10- to 20-year portfolio values. [03:15] * Targeting supply-constrained assets: Focus asset allocation strategies on structural choke points with inelastic supply and long-term demand, such as U.S. utilities or memory production. [13:14] * Monitoring aviation supply chains: Identify investment positions in aerospace part manufacturers, such as TransDigm (TDG), to capitalize on multi-year aircraft delivery backlogs and aging commercial fleets. [21:55] * Locking in cyclical margin structures: Capture revenue stability during high-demand commodity phases by negotiating long-term take-or-pay contracts with structural price floors. [26:18] * Mitigating downstream tech bubble risks: Reduce exposure to early-stage generative AI infrastructure and model providers, scaling back holdings in highly valued hardware or chip firms. [41:44] 2. Executive Summary This briefing examines the structural shift from a globalized market toward a fractured, multipolar financial regime defined by currency debasement and rising fiscal debt. Short-term volatility in gold and semiconductors highlights the necessity of shifting from speculative momentum trades to value-driven, supply-constrained assets. While secular technologies like artificial intelligence will achieve long-term economic returns, current corporate infrastructure spend mirrors past historical bubbles, risking near-term demand destruction. Leadership should prioritize capital allocation toward sectors controlling rigid, regulated, or physical choke points—such as aerospace maintenance and independent utilities—that command sustained pricing power through upcoming macro-economic volatility. 3. Key Takeaways and Practical Lessons Key Takeaways and Practical Lessons * The Nature of Debasement: Currency debasement is a permanent structural regime driven by state fiscal deficits and slowing productivity, not a brief financial media narrative. * Transition defensive allocations away from nominal cash reserves and toward assets with verified physical or geological scarcity. * Identifying Structural Moats: True commercial moats exist at physical or regulatory choke points where immediate supply cannot scale to meet surging demand. * Screen capital investments for industries with severe entry barriers, such as a 2-to-3-year manufacturing lag time or rigid regulatory frameworks. * Exploiting Supply Chain Backlogs: Delays in primary equipment manufacturing shift high-margin demand toward maintenance, repair, and replacement components. * Allocate capital to downstream suppliers that provide mission-critical parts to captive consumers who face steep daily costs for operational downtime. * Navigating Cyclical Tech Cycles: Broad secular adoption of a new technology does not protect early infrastructure investors from severe overbuilding and subsequent valuation corrections. * Implement trailing stop-losses or technical moving-average rules to systematically harvest profits from vertical, narrative-driven momentum positions. * Evaluating Capital Returns: Early corporate IT and technology spend often fails to generate immediate yield when bolted onto legacy, human-centric workflows. * Audit corporate AI and technology deployments against a first-principles, AI-first operational architecture rather than treating software as a superficial add-on. Follow Sam on X: @SamKovX Sam’s website: https://sam-kovacs.com/ Watch on Youtube: This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit georgenoble.substack.com/subscribe [https://georgenoble.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

26. Juni 202651 min
Episode Earnings Bubble to Deflate | Peter Berezin Cover

Earnings Bubble to Deflate | Peter Berezin

1. Strategic Actions and Decisions * Identify structural vulnerabilities in AI valuations: Shift valuation metrics for semiconductor and AI-related companies away from standard P/E ratios and focus instead on normalized earnings using long-term margin estimates, accounting for historical cyclicality. * Prepare for a localized tech rotation phase: Maintain an active allocation to defensive equity segments such as healthcare and staples to insulate portfolios from a projected technology downturn before considering a broader exit to cash. * Reposition portfolio weightings toward scarce real assets: Reallocate capital away from growth-dominated, cap-weighted indices like the S&P 500 and increase exposure to equal-weighted benchmarks, industrial metals, and energy equities. * Monitor leading indicators of market oversupply: Track real-time alternative data—including GPU rental rates, token pricing models, enterprise adoption curves, and data center electrical supply lags—to anticipate the reversal of current chip shortages. * Establish defensive hedges against geopolitical and credit risks: Build tactical positions in precious metals like gold to serve as low-sentiment, macroeconomic hedges against escalating fiscal deficits and sticky inflation expectations. Executive Summary This briefing examines the structural instability of the artificial intelligence boom, characterizing it as an “earnings bubble” driven by unsustainable 70–90% semiconductor profit margins and massive corporate capital expenditure. As hyper-scaler capex threatens to generate a $500 billion depreciation headwind by 2030, a supply-demand normalization within the next 12 months is anticipated to trigger severe write-downs similar to the 2001 dot-com crash. Concurrently, tightening private credit and upside risks to oil prices compound macroeconomic pressures. Executive leadership should reduce exposure to market-cap-weighted indices, rotating growth capital into defensive, cash-generative value sectors, industrial metals, and precious metals. Key Takeaways and Practical Lessons Key Takeaways and Practical Lessons * AI Stocks Form an Earnings Bubble: Current semiconductor valuations are propped up by temporary supply shortages and double-ordering rather than sustainable structural shifts. * Practical Lesson: Audit portfolio holdings to remove semiconductor stocks trading on peak cyclical margins, replacing them with assets valued on normalized, long-term earnings baselines. * Hyper-scaler CapEx Faces a Depreciation Reckoning: Enterprise assumptions regarding revenue growth from data center investments risk driving a “dark compute” oversupply crisis. * Practical Lesson: Closely monitor the capital expenditure announcements of major tech firms; if rising budgets stop driving higher share prices, treat it as an immediate sell signal. * True Scarcity Shifts from Tech to Commodities: In an environment of abundant computing power, physical assets like industrial metals and energy become the primary beneficiaries of technological growth. * Practical Lesson: Pivot equity exposure away from hardware infrastructure toward industrial copper, nickel, and cheap energy producers trading at single-digit earnings multiples. * Private Credit Squeezes Economic Growth: Shifting AI infrastructure funding from internal cash flows to overvalued private credit markets echoes the savings and loan crisis. * Practical Lesson: Limit direct and indirect exposure to highly leveraged software and private debt funds vulnerable to incoming redemption gates and a credit crunch. * Open Source AI Poses Systemic Security Risks: The rapid advancement of lower-cost, open-source AI models increases the likelihood of critical cybersecurity breaches. * Practical Lesson: Hedge against sudden tech sector drawdowns by allocating capital into gold and defensive, non-correlated value stocks like healthcare and staples. Follow Peter on X: @PeterBerezinBCA [https://x.com/PeterBerezinBCA] Watch on Youtube: This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit georgenoble.substack.com/subscribe [https://georgenoble.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

25. Juni 202647 min
Episode Gold to $16,000, Oil to $300? Kevin Wadsworth Explains Cover

Gold to $16,000, Oil to $300? Kevin Wadsworth Explains

1. Strategic Actions and Decisions * Clarify investor psychology before entering positions: Determine if you are a trader, a long-term investor, or a stacker, as each profile requires an entirely different strategy for navigating market trends. * Halt new entries during overstretched cycles: Avoid entering new trades or positions when assets like gold and silver are historically stretched from their moving averages, as low-risk entry points are absent. * Avoid trying to time market bottoms: Do not try to catch falling knives or predict absolute lows in silver; instead, focus on confirmed breakouts to establish a trade. * Utilize ratio charts for tactical capital reallocation: Use mathematical indicators like the uranium-to-gold ratio to identify exactly when a sector begins outperforming precious metals before moving capital. * Monitor the ten-year U.S. bond yield support line: Watch the critical 3.5% support level closely, as the weight of evidence suggests yields are more likely to break to the upside. 2. Executive Summary This briefing examines global macroeconomic trends using technical weight of evidence to eliminate emotional bias. The current financial landscape shows striking parallels to the late 1960s and 1970s, defined by expanding macro trends in energy and precious metals. While the S&P 500 remains technically sound in a short-term bull phase, long-term indicators point to an impending multi-year capital rotation favoring commodities over equities. Long-term projections suggest gold could scale past $15,000 and crude oil could surpass $200. Executives should pause short-term trading entry points and strategically position long-term portfolios around macro commodity breakout points. 3. Key Takeaways and Practical Lessons * Market sentiment is aggregated in technical price charts: Study chart structures rather than backwards-looking metrics to view the objective, collective positioning of global market participants. * Precious metals are entering a major macroeconomic bull era: Accumulate silver and gold positions during current corrections, treating the multi-month dips as favorable risk-reward entries for long-term holds. * The Gold-to-S&P ratio acts as the Rosetta Stone for portfolio allocation: Allocate heavier capital toward commodities and hard assets when this ratio stays above its four-year moving average, signaling a decade of equity stagnation. * Energy assets and precious metals track tightly in macro cycles: Prepare for a severe parallel surge in crude oil to the $200–$300 range, moving in lockstep with the broader secular commodity bull era. * Asset allocation demands objective, rule-based mathematical parameters: Defer capital positioning in lagging assets like platinum or international equities until they clear structural resistance lines against gold. Kevin’s Website: https://northstarbadcharts.com/ Follow Kevin on X - @NorthstarCharts Watch on Youtube here: This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit georgenoble.substack.com/subscribe [https://georgenoble.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

19. Juni 202642 min
Episode Melody Wright | Daniel Frank | Nobody Special What could possibly go wrong? Cover

Melody Wright | Daniel Frank | Nobody Special What could possibly go wrong?

1. Strategic Actions and Decisions * Monitor Private Credit and Multifamily Paper: Private credit funds fueled 25% of new CRE lending, mostly in multifamily, and these loans are being securitized into pensions and mutual funds without proper reporting. Review portfolios for this hidden and accumulating risk. [16:41] * Steer Clear of BNPL Exposure: Major BNPL players claim 2.5% delinquency rates despite lending to subprime borrowers with non-recourse debt—implausible when credit cards run 4-5x higher. These numbers likely hide real losses via accounting tricks. Avoid this paper entirely. [25:18] * Reduce Risk and Move to Cash: The consumer is deteriorating, housing is frozen with “rage delisting,” and AI companies are burning free cash flow while racing to issue equity. Investors should significantly cut risk exposure and prioritize cash positions as liquidity becomes increasingly valuable. [50:12] * Avoid Fixed Income and Index Funds: Rising yields and a potential bond market breakdown make traditional fixed income dangerous. Broad market index funds are over-concentrated in overvalued AI and tech names facing a financing crunch. Cash and precious metals are preferred. [52:36] * Do Not Chase Space or AI IPOs: The Space IPO ($75B) and massive AI equity raises ($40B-$85B each) are desperate liquidity grabs from cash-burning firms. With retail being aggressively recruited as the last buyers, avoid participating entirely. [01:01:58] 2. Executive Summary I convened this discussion with my longtime friend Danny, Melody, and Jack to cut through the market's single-minded focus on AI and geopolitics. What we uncovered is alarming: the housing market is frozen with "rage delisting" and prime delinquencies appearing off-season, the consumer is tapped out with record auto and credit card defaults, and the AI/data center buildout is a liquidity Ponzi burning through free cash flow while companies race to issue debt and equity. Energy faces a refined product crunch, and the upcoming Space IPO looks like a classic late-cycle liquidity grab. My view is that while indices hover near all-time highs, the smoke is becoming impossible to ignore—investors should reduce risk, hold cash, and avoid being the last fish in the game. 3. Key Takeaways and Practical Lessons 1. Housing’s Real Story is Hidden by Headlines: The media reported a “surge” in existing home sales, but the reality is a frozen market with record delistings and prime delinquency appearing off-season. * Practical Lesson: Ignore headline monthly sales changes; track “rage delisting” rates and 30-day prime delinquency trends as leading indicators of price declines. 2. The AI Buildout is a Liquidity Ponzi: Despite the narrative of robust tech earnings, giants like Oracle reported negative free cash flow and are now racing to issue $40B+ in equity and debt to fund data centers. * Practical Lesson: Monitor free cash flow and secondary issuance announcements in tech. A flood of equity sales signals underlying earnings are insufficient to fund CapEx. 3. Energy Risk is Shifting from Crude to Refined Products: While crude inventories draw down, the real tightening is in diesel, jet fuel, and gasoline, with Russian and Middle Eastern refining capacity being destroyed. * Practical Lesson: Track refined product inventory levels, not just crude oil prices. Refined product shortages hit consumer wallets (transport, heating) faster and harder. 4. The “Fish at the Table” is Retail’s Pension: Losses from commercial real estate and private credit are not disappearing; they are being quietly parked onto unsuspecting retirees’ mutual funds and pension plans. * Practical Lesson: When you cannot identify who holds the toxic paper, assume it is in your own retirement account. Review fund holdings for private credit and multifamily exposure. 5. Token Price Collapse Signals AI Demand Trouble: OpenAI is drastically cutting token prices, which is not a sign of “insane demand” but rather sticker shock from metered usage, causing the AI economic model to fall apart. * Practical Lesson: Watch for price cuts on core AI services (tokens, API calls). Falling prices indicate weakening demand and margin compression, not a healthy growth market. Follow Melody on X here - @m3_melody Follow Nobody Special on X here - @JG_NukeWatch on Youtube Below - This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit georgenoble.substack.com/subscribe [https://georgenoble.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

12. Juni 20261 h 4 min