Bitcoin is now sitting on its last major support after sweeping large liquidation clusters between $96K–$98K.
Last week’s dump was extremely aggressive, which makes the current structure fragile. Because of that, I’m not confident taking long positions from this level yet.
⚠️ Caution is advised until we see clear confirmation or a strong reclaim.
Sentiment has flipped fast from neutral to panic. History shows: 🔹 Extreme fear = late sellers, early buyers 🔹 Smart money usually accumulates when retail is scared
This doesn’t mean bottom is in — but it does mean risk-reward is improving.
🧠 Fear creates opportunity. ⚠️ Just don’t go all-in blindly.
🚨 Why Is Trump Threatening Canada With 100% Tariffs Over China?
Donald Trump has warned Canada that if it signs special trade deals with China, the U.S. could respond with 100% tariffs on Canadian exports. This is not just political noise. It’s an economic pressure move. Here’s what’s really going on 👇 🇨🇦 Canada’s Vulnerability Canada sends 75–76% of all its exports to the U.S. That’s over $450 billion per year. A 100% tariff would instantly make most Canadian goods uncompetitive in the U.S. market. Sectors at risk: • Autos & auto parts • Energy exports • Aluminum & steel • Manufacturing Trade with the U.S. equals roughly two-thirds of Canada’s GDP when you include indirect exposure. This makes Canada extremely sensitive to U.S. trade retaliation. 🇺🇸 Trump’s Core Fear: Trade Routing The real concern isn’t Canada itself. It’s China using Canada as a back door into the U.S. If Canada signs favorable trade deals with China, Chinese companies could: • Ship goods into Canada • Relabel or lightly process them • Re-export them into the U.S. • Avoid U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods Trump calls this using Canada as a “drop-off port.” And from Washington’s perspective, it would break U.S. trade policy against China. 📉 We’ve Already Seen the Damage From Much Smaller Tariffs In 2018–2019: • U.S. imposed 25% tariffs on Canadian steel • 10% tariffs on Canadian aluminum Result: • Canadian steel exports to the U.S. fell 41% • Aluminum exports fell 19% • ~$16.6B CAD of trade was disrupted • Production cuts, job losses, higher costs, slower supply chains And that was with just 10–25% tariffs. Now imagine 100% tariffs. 🇨🇳 Why Canada Still Wants China Canada is trying to diversify away from over-dependence on the U.S. China: • Buys major volumes of Canadian canola & seafood • Is key to EV & battery supply chains • Offers long-term growth demand From Canada’s perspective: ➡️ This makes economic sense. From the U.S. perspective: ➡️ This looks like a strategic threat. ⚠️ Bottom Line Canada is stuck in the middle of the U.S.–China trade war. If it leans toward China: • It risks massive U.S. tariffs • Severe economic shock • Market instability If it stays tied only to the U.S.: • It remains dangerously dependent on a single trading partner This isn’t just politics anymore. It’s a macro-level trade conflict that could hit: • North American supply chains • Equity markets • FX markets • Commodities • Global risk sentiment
🚨 BREAKING: Russia Is Burning Through Its Financial War Chest
Russia has now sold over 71% of the gold reserves held inside its National Wealth Fund (NWF) to finance war spending.$XAU The NWF is Russia’s emergency reserve — used when oil revenues fall or spending surges. Before the war, it held over $113B in liquid assets. Today, it’s down to ~$50B. ➡️ More than half of Russia’s financial buffer is already gone. ⚔️ War Now Costs More Than Energy Earns For the first time in decades: 💥 Russia’s military budget now exceeds its total oil & gas revenue. Oil once funded everything. Now, war spending is outpacing energy income. 📉 Energy Revenues Are Collapsing 🔻 Down 22% YoY in 2025 🔻 November alone: –34% 🛢️ Bigger discounts on Russian crude 🚫 Sanctions tightening logistics & payments 💸 Budget Deficit Is Exploding Planned deficit: 1.2 trillion rubles Revised deficit: 5.7 trillion rubles That’s a 5x jump in one year. This is why Russia is liquidating gold inside the NWF. ⏳ The Clock Is Ticking At current burn rates, economists estimate: 🕒 The liquid portion of the NWF runs out by mid-2026. That’s the real timeline markets should be watching. 🧨 What Happens Next? When the fund is depleted, Russia has only four options: 1️⃣ Cut war spending 2️⃣ Print money → inflation surge 3️⃣ Raise taxes → recession risk 4️⃣ Increase domestic debt → rising interest costs None are painless. 🌍 Why This Is a Global Risk This isn’t about financial contagion. It’s about supply shocks. Russia still controls critical commodities: ⚛️ 40% of uranium enrichment 🌾 24% of global wheat exports 🌱 18% of fertilizers 💎 40% of palladium supply ⚠️ Bottom Line Russia is running out of money. But it still controls key resources the world depends on. That combination makes this a geopolitical and commodity-market time bomb.
“Every Crash Creates Millionaires — Here’s the Proof”
Every major crash looked like “the end of the market” at the time. Yet… each one became a once-in-a-generation buying opportunity. 1️⃣ Harshad Mehta Scam (1992) 🔻 Fall: 54% | ⏳ Recovery: 2 Years 4 Months 2️⃣ Dot-Com Bubble (2000) 🔻 Fall: 56% | ⏳ Recovery: 2 Years 3 Months 3️⃣ Global Financial Crisis (2008) 🔻 Fall: 61% | ⏳ Recovery: 1 Year 8 Months 4️⃣ COVID Crash (2020) 🔻 Fall: 38% | ⏳ Recovery: 8 Months People said the same things every time: 💬 “I’ll wait for a deeper dip…” 💬 “It’s too risky to buy now…” 💬 “I missed the rally…” 📌 What history actually shows: ✅ Markets always recover ✅ Every recovery makes new highs ✅ Fear creates the best opportunities 💡 The biggest money is made when fear is high and prices are low. Don’t wait for perfect conditions. They only exist in hindsight.
The Infamous “Brown Bottom” – One of the Worst Gold Sales in History
Between 1999 and 2002, former UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown sold 60% of Britain’s gold reserves at an average price of $275 per ounce — a move now known as the “Brown Bottom.” 📊 The numbers are brutal: • 400 tons of gold ≈ 12,860,000 oz$XAU • Sold at $275/oz ≈ $3.5 billion • Worth at $5,000/oz today ≈ $64 billion That’s a difference of over $60 billion. What made it even worse? Brown announced the sales in Parliament before executing them, causing gold prices to crash immediately. Prices stayed suppressed until the UK finished selling — and then gold went on a massive multi-year bull run. A textbook example of: ❌ Terrible timing ❌ Poor communication ❌ Selling a hard asset at generational lows History doesn’t repeat… but it sure rhymes.