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BEN SISKO

Podkast av Ben Sisko

engelsk

Nyheter og politikk

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A radio news and documentary series, available on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.

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129 Episoder

episode Currency Crossfire cover

Currency Crossfire

The dollar and the yen are locked in a quiet tug-of-war that could reshape global finance. Washington’s “Big Beautiful Bill” injects trillions in tax cuts, forcing Treasury to sell a wave of bonds while the Fed holds rates high to curb 7 % inflation. The goal: weaken the dollar, boost exports. Yet every cent the greenback slips slashes returns for foreign holders who fund those auctions. Japan is sliding toward stagflation: rice prices have nearly doubled, subsidies lapsed, GDP contracted. To ease households the Bank of Japan is relaxing yield control, letting the yen rise. A stronger yen erodes the hedged carry Japanese insurers and pension funds earn on Treasuries, encouraging them to buy at home just as America needs their cash. They are still buying—for leverage in tariff talks—but carry is thin and officials hint at a rate hike by year-end. Auction data already show tepid demand for twenty-year bonds, an early tremor. If Tokyo tightens while Washington floods markets with debt, Asian savings could reverse, driving U.S. yields higher, the dollar lower, and inflation back to Main Street. Weakening a reserve currency is easy; guiding its fall without breaking the system that depends on it is the real test.

27. mai 2025 - 1 min
episode Forecast Fragmentation cover

Forecast Fragmentation

The 2025 economic crystal ball now contains six different reflections, and none match. Goldman Sachs pictures a steady 2.7 % global climb, the U.S. gliding at 1.7 %, and China still sprinting near 4.5 %. JPMorgan grimaces, penciling in a shallow U.S. contraction and warning that tariffs could turn stagflation from theory into headline. Deutsche Bank splits the difference, betting on 0.9 % American growth yet insisting inflation’s embers stay hot. Across Pennsylvania Avenue, the IMF trims its global hopes to 2.8 % and labels Washington’s tariff barrage the single biggest drag on momentum. Brookings hears the gears of finance grinding, fearful that volatility, not demographics, could stall the recovery engine. Heritage looks inward, declaring the United States less economically free than at any point since it began keeping score. The gaps aren’t academic—they are road signs for capital. If the banks are right, U.S.-centric equities may lag while supply-chain migrants prosper. If the think tanks hold the sharper lens, fire-breaks—balanced budgets, new trade lanes, and targeted deregulation—could decide who earns the next growth dividend. Either way, 2025 asks a simple question: when forecasts diverge, whose future are we really investing in?

26. mai 2025 - 1 min
episode Dollar on the Edge cover

Dollar on the Edge

Donald Trump’s newest thunderbolt is a 150-percent tariff on any BRICS nation that even talks about escaping the dollar. Behind the roar lies anxiety: America’s financial edge is slipping. The dollar once held 71 percent of global reserves; now it sits in the high-fifties. China and Russia settle most bilateral trade in yuan and rubles, India buys Russian oil in rupees, and Saudi Arabia weighs yuan sales. A cross-border digital-currency test called mBridge is wiring energy deals outside SWIFT. U.S. clout—sanctions, cheap Treasury funding—depends on keeping those pipes dollar-only. Tariffs try to freeze change, yet history warns of blowback: the 2018 trade war cut farm exports by \$27 billion and raised U.S. prices while China rerouted supply lines. A 150-percent wall would magnify that pain, stoke inflation, and spur BRICS to finish alternative rails like CIPS, SPFS and a mooted gold-linked “BRICS Clear.” The bloc need not unveil a single new currency; every local-currency deal erodes the petro-dollar a little more. America can keep the dollar first among equals by projecting stability, not shock tactics—because the harder you squeeze a system already shifting, the faster it slips from your grasp.

25. mai 2025 - 1 min
episode The Slow Farewell to the Dollar cover

The Slow Farewell to the Dollar

In 2008, as Wall Street buckled, Beijing began stitching its own safety net. It shaved its Treasury hoard, stuffed vaults with gold, and laid CIPS rails beneath the dollar-ruled streets. Trump’s 2018 tariffs jolted the plan forward: swap lines spread across Africa, letting Nairobi dealers quote solar panels in yuan and clear through PAPSS—no New York needed. Central banks once wed to green paper added euros, Aussie notes, and bullion, bracing for the day sanctions might target them. By 2024 the mBridge CBDC corridor made settlement near-instant; a tap in Abu Dhabi paid a factory in Shenzhen in seconds, outside SWIFT’s gaze. Yet Beijing kept US \$700 billion of Treasuries—short-dated, liquid, and still a lever over Washington. Now a mooted 145 percent tariff risks replaying 2020-style supply shocks, giving every exporter and finance minister fresh motive to hedge. Gold at record highs and quiet euro buying write the score of this transition. The dollar still anchors more than half of reserves, but its grip loosens millimetre by millimetre—until a single policy jolt could turn millimetres into metres. The real question is not if an alternative will exist, but who will be quickest to recognise when it quietly becomes the easier choice.

24. mai 2025 - 1 min
episode Decoupling in Real Time cover

Decoupling in Real Time

Washington barred the world from touching Huawei’s silicon, betting Huawei would choke and China’s AI surge would stall. Tencent answered with foresight, not fury: it quietly hoarded a million Nvidia H20 chips—enough compute to train several generations of models—then rewrote its code so each GPU does double duty. Across the Pacific, TSMC broke ground on three Arizona megafabs and vowed that advanced packaging, not just smaller transistors, will keep Moore’s Law alive; by 2028 its 1.4-nanometre wafers will roll out beside the desert saguaro. Huawei refused to beg for Android’s return; Harmony OS leapt onto a billion devices and, with a pure-blood PC version, threatens the long marriage of Windows and Mac. Japan and China, meanwhile, trimmed a hundred-plus billion dollars of Treasuries to fund stimulus and defend the yuan, hinting that capital may decouple next. Tariffs now raise U.S. prices less than half as much as they did in 2018, proof that supply chains learn to bend around walls. From fab domes in Arizona to Tencent’s glowing Shenzhen tower, every player is stockpiling, redesigning, or re-shoring for an era where code, chips, and money obey new borders. The question is no longer whether the tech-finance split is coming—it’s which side will master the art of thriving inside smaller worlds.

23. mai 2025 - 1 min
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