The Timeless Investor Show
In 1644, the Ming Dynasty—one of the most sophisticated civilizations in history—collapsed in a matter of weeks. While history books often point to rebels and invaders, the true catalyst was a global monetary trap set decades earlier.1 [https://drive.google.com/open?id=1r6unqt6FhB3C2oUFipjJVFR4KnJepgae]In this episode, Arie van Gemeren traces the "Silver Road," a 10,000-mile pipeline connecting the mercury-soaked mines of Potosí in Bolivia to the imperial treasuries of Beijing. We explore how the "Single Whip" reform tied the fate of the largest empire on earth to a metal it could not produce, leaving it vulnerable to five simultaneous global shocks that no one in China saw coming. In this episode, we discuss: * The Foundation of Globalization: The 250-year journey of the Manila Galleon and the birth of the first true global monetary system. * The Single Whip Trap: How a well-intentioned tax reform became a suicide pact for the Ming fiscal state. * Correlated Fragility: The "five shocks" of the 1630s—from European wars to Japanese isolationism—that triggered a brutal rural deflation. * The Investor’s Lesson: Why the asset (real property and silver) survived the collapse while the capital structure (Ming bonds and imperial claims) vanished. Recognizing these historical structures is the most valuable skill set an investor can develop. Position accordingly. Read the full essay and view the data on Substack [https://thetimelessinvestor.substack.com/p/the-first-global-monetary-crisis?r=d424h]
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