The Covered Call Podcast Podcast

Louis-Vincent Gave: Energy Is the Dark Force Behind the Global Economy

1 h 34 min · 12 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio Louis-Vincent Gave: Energy Is the Dark Force Behind the Global Economy

Descripción

In this episode, Louis Vincent Gave discusses macroeconomic shifts, energy markets, geopolitical risks, and the impact of AI on the economy. He shares insights on China's role, energy diversification, and the evolving global power dynamics, providing a comprehensive macro perspective. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit podcast.thecoveredcallpod.com [https://podcast.thecoveredcallpod.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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episode Trader Ferg: Energy, China, and the Future Nobody Wants to Discuss artwork

Trader Ferg: Energy, China, and the Future Nobody Wants to Discuss

Friends, Trader Ferg is back. When we first spoke with Ferg over a year ago, he laid out a series of ideas that sounded unconventional at the time: Energy shortages were being underestimated. China was far stronger than most investors believed. And some of the most interesting opportunities could be found in sectors everyone else hated. A year later, we wanted to revisit those ideas and see how they’re holding up. The result was one of the most thought-provoking conversations we’ve had this year. We discuss: • Why Ferg believes the world is entering a more inflationary era • The growing disconnect between energy realities and political narratives • Europe’s ongoing energy challenges and why the story may not be over • Why China continues to surprise both investors and policymakers • How capital flows may be shifting away from the United States and toward emerging markets • The commodity supply constraints that few people seem to be paying attention to • Why patience remains one of the most underrated advantages in investing and in life One observation from Ferg stuck with me. He pointed out that many of the biggest opportunities begin by feeling uncomfortable. They often live in places where sentiment is terrible, headlines are negative, and most people have already moved on. The challenge is having the conviction and patience to stay with a thesis long enough for reality to catch up. Whether you agree with his conclusions or not, Ferg has a remarkable ability to zoom out, ignore the daily noise, and focus on the trends that may matter over the next decade rather than the next week. We enjoyed this conversation immensely and think you will too. — Lovis & Jason This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit podcast.thecoveredcallpod.com [https://podcast.thecoveredcallpod.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

Ayer1 h 44 min
episode Adrian Day: Why Gold Is Only the Beginning artwork

Adrian Day: Why Gold Is Only the Beginning

A few months ago, Lovis joined Adrian Day for dinner in San Juan, Puerto Rico. At the time, most investors were talking about AI, rate cuts, and the usual market narratives. (This was Feb 27th… and then Iran happened.) A lot has changed since then. Today, energy security is back on the front page. Supply chains feel less certain. Geopolitics is no longer background noise. And questions that once seemed theoretical suddenly matter again. In this episode, we sat down with Adrian to discuss what may be a much bigger story than gold itself. While Adrian remains bullish on gold, his most interesting argument might be that gold is only the first phase of a much larger shift. He believes we may be entering a period where hard assets, commodities, and undervalued international markets outperform the areas that have dominated investor attention for the last decade. Some of the topics we explore: * Why gold may still be in the early stages of its bull market * Why copper, uranium, and energy could outperform gold over the coming years * The growing importance of resources, energy, and physical production * Whether we are moving toward a bipolar world dominated by the United States and China * Why Adrian sees compelling opportunities outside the United States * How families and investors can position themselves during periods of major change One of Adrian’s observations stood out to me: “We’re much closer to the beginning than the end.” Whether he’s right or wrong, it is hard to ignore that many of the assumptions that shaped the last twenty years are being challenged all at once. As always, our goal is not to provide investment advice. It is to learn from people who have spent decades thinking independently and navigating uncertainty. We hope you enjoy the conversation! Lovis & Jason PS.: Toward the end of the conversation, we lost Jason for a bit, so we don’t hear him asking his final question, but Adrian gives an answer that pretty much explains itself. See if you can spot it. :) This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit podcast.thecoveredcallpod.com [https://podcast.thecoveredcallpod.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

1 de jun de 20261 h 23 min