<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><?xml-stylesheet href="https://feeds.captivate.fm/style.xsl" type="text/xsl"?><rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" version="2.0" xmlns:googleplay="http://www.google.com/schemas/play-podcasts/1.0" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd" xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/" xmlns:podcast="https://podcastindex.org/namespace/1.0"><channel><atom:link href="https://feeds.captivate.fm/flashpoint-where/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><title><![CDATA[Flashpoint: Where Geopolitics Moves the Markets]]></title><podcast:guid>a535744d-8168-5eb9-b997-348c99e2ad9c</podcast:guid><lastBuildDate>Sun, 12 Jul 2026 15:22:18 +0000</lastBuildDate><generator>Captivate.fm</generator><language><![CDATA[en]]></language><copyright><![CDATA[Copyright 2026 Pulsar Studios]]></copyright><managingEditor>Pulsar Studios</managingEditor><itunes:summary><![CDATA[Every war, election, and trade dispute moves a price somewhere—the question is which one, and by how much. Flashpoint takes the geopolitical headline of the week and traces it straight through to markets: currencies, commodities, rates, and the sectors that quietly win or lose. Built for investors and traders who want to translate geopolitics into positioning, not just have an opinion about it at dinner.]]></itunes:summary><image><url>https://artwork.captivate.fm/7cfc6825-8974-4eef-8952-736eec900a7f/flash2.jpg</url><title>Flashpoint: Where Geopolitics Moves the Markets</title><link><![CDATA[https://flashpoint-where.captivate.fm]]></link></image><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/7cfc6825-8974-4eef-8952-736eec900a7f/flash2.jpg"/><itunes:owner><itunes:name>Pulsar Studios</itunes:name></itunes:owner><itunes:author>Pulsar Studios</itunes:author><description>Every war, election, and trade dispute moves a price somewhere—the question is which one, and by how much. Flashpoint takes the geopolitical headline of the week and traces it straight through to markets: currencies, commodities, rates, and the sectors that quietly win or lose. Built for investors and traders who want to translate geopolitics into positioning, not just have an opinion about it at dinner.</description><link>https://flashpoint-where.captivate.fm</link><atom:link href="https://pubsubhubbub.appspot.com" rel="hub"/><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:type>episodic</itunes:type><itunes:category text="Business"></itunes:category><itunes:new-feed-url>https://feeds.captivate.fm/flashpoint-where/</itunes:new-feed-url><podcast:locked>no</podcast:locked><podcast:medium>podcast</podcast:medium><item><title>How Geopolitical Alliances Shape Commodity Futures Pricing</title><itunes:title>How Geopolitical Alliances Shape Commodity Futures Pricing</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[The intricate web of geopolitical alliances can significantly influence commodity futures pricing, yet this dynamic often goes unnoticed by many investors. In this discussion, we explore how strategic partnerships and rivalries between nations affect supply chains and market expectations. By examining recent developments in trade agreements and military alliances, we reveal the underlying mechanisms that lead to price fluctuations in key commodities like oil, natural gas, and agricultural products. We’ll analyze specific case studies where shifts in alliances have led to immediate market reactions, providing insights into how traders can better position themselves in anticipation of future geopolitical events. This conversation aims to equip investors with a nuanced understanding of the interplay between international relations and market movements, highlighting the importance of staying informed about global political landscapes.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[The intricate web of geopolitical alliances can significantly influence commodity futures pricing, yet this dynamic often goes unnoticed by many investors. In this discussion, we explore how strategic partnerships and rivalries between nations affect supply chains and market expectations. By examining recent developments in trade agreements and military alliances, we reveal the underlying mechanisms that lead to price fluctuations in key commodities like oil, natural gas, and agricultural products. We’ll analyze specific case studies where shifts in alliances have led to immediate market reactions, providing insights into how traders can better position themselves in anticipation of future geopolitical events. This conversation aims to equip investors with a nuanced understanding of the interplay between international relations and market movements, highlighting the importance of staying informed about global political landscapes.]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://flashpoint-where.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">fb409368-ccfb-42fc-b6cb-8c2dab4950d0</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/7cfc6825-8974-4eef-8952-736eec900a7f/flash2.jpg"/><pubDate>Sun, 12 Jul 2026 11:21:28 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/fb409368-ccfb-42fc-b6cb-8c2dab4950d0.mp3" length="14425905" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>10:01</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:summary>The intricate web of geopolitical alliances can significantly influence commodity futures pricing, yet this dynamic often goes unnoticed by many investors. In this discussion, we explore how strategic partnerships and rivalries between nations affect supply chains and market expectations. By examining recent developments in trade agreements and military alliances, we reveal the underlying mechanisms that lead to price fluctuations in key commodities like oil, natural gas, and agricultural products. We’ll analyze specific case studies where shifts in alliances have led to immediate market reactions, providing insights into how traders can better position themselves in anticipation of future geopolitical events. This conversation aims to equip investors with a nuanced understanding of the interplay between international relations and market movements, highlighting the importance of staying informed about global political landscapes.</itunes:summary></item><item><title>How China Devalued the Yuan and Triggered Global Risk-Off</title><itunes:title>How China Devalued the Yuan and Triggered Global Risk-Off</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[August 11, 2015: China unexpectedly devalues the yuan by 2 percent and signals more devaluation is coming. Within days, equity markets globally are down 5 to 10 percent, volatility spikes, and credit spreads widen. This episode traces how a single currency move becomes a contagion event across asset classes and geographies. The geopolitical and economic context: China's growth is slowing, exports are struggling, and the government wants a weaker currency to boost competitiveness. But the real story is about what the devaluation signaled to global markets about China's economic trajectory and policy priorities. We start with the mechanism: China's currency peg to the dollar had been gradually appreciating in real terms because the yuan was locked in place while the dollar strengthened. The devaluation was a policy choice, but the market interpreted it as a sign that China's economic situation was worse than the government had admitted. We examine the causal chain: a weaker yuan means Chinese exports become cheaper (good for China), but it also means Chinese assets become less attractive (bad for global investors holding yuan-denominated debt), and it signals that the government is willing to use currency devaluation as a policy tool (which makes investors nervous about what else it might do). The conversation lands on the step most investors got wrong: they thought the devaluation was about trade competitiveness, when it was actually a signal about regime confidence. If the government was comfortable devaluing the currency, what else was it hiding? The episode maps the global contagion: why commodity exporters got hit hardest (because a weaker yuan meant weaker demand from China), why emerging market currencies weakened in sympathy (because investors were suddenly nervous about all EM central banks), and why US equity markets sold off (because investors were recalculating global growth assumptions). We close by examining what the devaluation actually accomplished: did it boost exports sustainably, or did it just trigger a round of tit-for-tat currency weakness across other countries?]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[August 11, 2015: China unexpectedly devalues the yuan by 2 percent and signals more devaluation is coming. Within days, equity markets globally are down 5 to 10 percent, volatility spikes, and credit spreads widen. This episode traces how a single currency move becomes a contagion event across asset classes and geographies. The geopolitical and economic context: China's growth is slowing, exports are struggling, and the government wants a weaker currency to boost competitiveness. But the real story is about what the devaluation signaled to global markets about China's economic trajectory and policy priorities. We start with the mechanism: China's currency peg to the dollar had been gradually appreciating in real terms because the yuan was locked in place while the dollar strengthened. The devaluation was a policy choice, but the market interpreted it as a sign that China's economic situation was worse than the government had admitted. We examine the causal chain: a weaker yuan means Chinese exports become cheaper (good for China), but it also means Chinese assets become less attractive (bad for global investors holding yuan-denominated debt), and it signals that the government is willing to use currency devaluation as a policy tool (which makes investors nervous about what else it might do). The conversation lands on the step most investors got wrong: they thought the devaluation was about trade competitiveness, when it was actually a signal about regime confidence. If the government was comfortable devaluing the currency, what else was it hiding? The episode maps the global contagion: why commodity exporters got hit hardest (because a weaker yuan meant weaker demand from China), why emerging market currencies weakened in sympathy (because investors were suddenly nervous about all EM central banks), and why US equity markets sold off (because investors were recalculating global growth assumptions). We close by examining what the devaluation actually accomplished: did it boost exports sustainably, or did it just trigger a round of tit-for-tat currency weakness across other countries?]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://flashpoint-where.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">episode-ep_7-88c766dc-2b68-44de-aed0-2e9c905eb6e1</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/7cfc6825-8974-4eef-8952-736eec900a7f/flash2.jpg"/><pubDate>Fri, 07 Mar 2025 15:39:35 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/674473bc-1ce3-4317-9316-a9a71eab420e.mp3" length="12010937" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>08:20</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode><podcast:episode>7</podcast:episode></item><item><title>Turkish Currency Crisis and the Central Bank Credibility Collapse</title><itunes:title>Turkish Currency Crisis and the Central Bank Credibility Collapse</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[August 2018: Turkish lira collapses 20 percent in a week as President Erdoğan fires the Central Bank governor and signals that monetary policy will be subordinated to his political goals. This episode examines how central bank independence becomes a geopolitical asset and what happens when a government burns that asset for short-term political gain. The setup: Erdoğan is facing economic pressure, inflation is rising, and he wants lower interest rates to stimulate growth before elections. The Central Bank wants to raise rates to fight inflation. Erdoğan wins the argument by firing the governor and appointing a loyalist. The market's response is immediate and harsh because traders suddenly repriced the fundamental credibility of Turkish monetary policy. We trace the mechanism: a currency's value ultimately rests on confidence that the central bank will defend it and maintain purchasing power. When that confidence evaporates, you get a death spiral—weaker currency means imported inflation, which requires even higher rates, which Erdoğan won't allow, which means more currency weakness. The conversation slows on the step that separated analysts who understood institutional economics from those who didn't: the lira's collapse wasn't really about the economic numbers—it was about the regime's revealed preference for political control over institutional credibility. We map which sectors got hit (companies with dollar debt faced margin calls, banks' balance sheets deteriorated, savers rushed to buy dollars), why the government's subsequent capital controls made things worse, and what the real cost of that credibility loss was. The close examines the longer-term damage: whether the lira ever fully recovered its credibility, how much that one week cost Turkey in terms of higher borrowing costs and capital flight, and whether other emerging market central banks learned the lesson about the value of institutional independence.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[August 2018: Turkish lira collapses 20 percent in a week as President Erdoğan fires the Central Bank governor and signals that monetary policy will be subordinated to his political goals. This episode examines how central bank independence becomes a geopolitical asset and what happens when a government burns that asset for short-term political gain. The setup: Erdoğan is facing economic pressure, inflation is rising, and he wants lower interest rates to stimulate growth before elections. The Central Bank wants to raise rates to fight inflation. Erdoğan wins the argument by firing the governor and appointing a loyalist. The market's response is immediate and harsh because traders suddenly repriced the fundamental credibility of Turkish monetary policy. We trace the mechanism: a currency's value ultimately rests on confidence that the central bank will defend it and maintain purchasing power. When that confidence evaporates, you get a death spiral—weaker currency means imported inflation, which requires even higher rates, which Erdoğan won't allow, which means more currency weakness. The conversation slows on the step that separated analysts who understood institutional economics from those who didn't: the lira's collapse wasn't really about the economic numbers—it was about the regime's revealed preference for political control over institutional credibility. We map which sectors got hit (companies with dollar debt faced margin calls, banks' balance sheets deteriorated, savers rushed to buy dollars), why the government's subsequent capital controls made things worse, and what the real cost of that credibility loss was. The close examines the longer-term damage: whether the lira ever fully recovered its credibility, how much that one week cost Turkey in terms of higher borrowing costs and capital flight, and whether other emerging market central banks learned the lesson about the value of institutional independence.]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://flashpoint-where.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">episode-ep_6-b76631f7-86a8-46c8-b164-48deb7b4392b</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/7cfc6825-8974-4eef-8952-736eec900a7f/flash2.jpg"/><pubDate>Fri, 28 Feb 2025 11:59:48 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/0dc9b76a-dd96-4014-997a-db396bf2b944.mp3" length="10968337" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>07:37</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:episode>6</itunes:episode><podcast:episode>6</podcast:episode></item><item><title>When Oil Prices Go Negative and Nobody Knows What to Do</title><itunes:title>When Oil Prices Go Negative and Nobody Knows What to Do</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[April 20, 2020: West Texas Intermediate crude oil futures contract expires with a negative price—negative $37.63 per barrel—meaning producers were literally paying traders to take oil off their hands. This episode explains how a physical commodity with real storage costs becomes a financial instrument where the math breaks down completely. The geopolitical and economic setup: COVID-19 lockdowns have crushed demand, OPEC+ failed to agree on production cuts (Saudi Arabia and Russia were in a price war), and US shale producers couldn't shut down wells fast enough. But the real story is about the structure of futures contracts and what happens when you have a hard physical constraint (storage tanks are full) meeting a financial instrument (futures that must be settled). We trace the mechanism: as April contracts approached expiration, traders holding long positions faced a choice between taking physical delivery of 1,000 barrels of oil (which they had nowhere to put) or selling at any price. Storage at Cushing, Oklahoma was at 77 percent capacity with no room left. The conversation lands on the step that separated traders who understood commodity futures mechanics from those who didn't: negative prices aren't actually about the commodity being worthless—they're about the cost of storage and logistics being higher than the value of the oil itself, and that cost has to go somewhere. We examine what actually happened to traders caught long: some took physical delivery and immediately resold it at a loss, some paid to have it shipped elsewhere, and some just ate the loss. The close maps the aftermath: how exchanges changed contract specifications to prevent this happening again, what the negative oil price taught the market about the difference between price discovery and physical reality, and why this event became a case study in how financial engineering can temporarily break when it meets the real world.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[April 20, 2020: West Texas Intermediate crude oil futures contract expires with a negative price—negative $37.63 per barrel—meaning producers were literally paying traders to take oil off their hands. This episode explains how a physical commodity with real storage costs becomes a financial instrument where the math breaks down completely. The geopolitical and economic setup: COVID-19 lockdowns have crushed demand, OPEC+ failed to agree on production cuts (Saudi Arabia and Russia were in a price war), and US shale producers couldn't shut down wells fast enough. But the real story is about the structure of futures contracts and what happens when you have a hard physical constraint (storage tanks are full) meeting a financial instrument (futures that must be settled). We trace the mechanism: as April contracts approached expiration, traders holding long positions faced a choice between taking physical delivery of 1,000 barrels of oil (which they had nowhere to put) or selling at any price. Storage at Cushing, Oklahoma was at 77 percent capacity with no room left. The conversation lands on the step that separated traders who understood commodity futures mechanics from those who didn't: negative prices aren't actually about the commodity being worthless—they're about the cost of storage and logistics being higher than the value of the oil itself, and that cost has to go somewhere. We examine what actually happened to traders caught long: some took physical delivery and immediately resold it at a loss, some paid to have it shipped elsewhere, and some just ate the loss. The close maps the aftermath: how exchanges changed contract specifications to prevent this happening again, what the negative oil price taught the market about the difference between price discovery and physical reality, and why this event became a case study in how financial engineering can temporarily break when it meets the real world.]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://flashpoint-where.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">episode-ep_5-de4922bb-cd43-43cf-bc88-8d5bffedd65c</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/7cfc6825-8974-4eef-8952-736eec900a7f/flash2.jpg"/><pubDate>Fri, 21 Feb 2025 15:00:38 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/3d256e74-c1cf-4dc8-bd74-72025972aba9.mp3" length="10559573" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>07:20</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode><podcast:episode>5</podcast:episode></item><item><title>Brexit Volatility and the Pound Sterling Repricing Mechanism</title><itunes:title>Brexit Volatility and the Pound Sterling Repricing Mechanism</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[June 23, 2016: The UK votes to leave the European Union in a shock result, and sterling crashes 10 percent in the hours after the result, with the biggest moves happening in Asian markets where the initial surprise was sharpest. This episode maps how a political referendum becomes a currency repricing event and why the pound's move was so much larger than equity market moves. The geopolitical layer starts with understanding what the market had priced in before the vote: a strong Remain consensus in polling and among institutional investors meant the market had essentially zero tail risk on a Leave outcome. When Leave won, the repricing was violent because it wasn't adjusting from 50 percent probability to 60 percent—it was adjusting from 10 percent to 100 percent. We then examine the specific vulnerabilities that made the pound so sensitive: the UK's current account deficit, its reliance on foreign investment inflows, and the fact that a Leave vote created genuine uncertainty about whether those inflows would continue. The conversation slows down on the step that separated professional traders from casual observers: the difference between the immediate spot market move (the panic) and the forward market repricing (the actual economic repricing). In the spot market, sterling crashed because of algorithmic selling and forced liquidations. In the forward market, the real repricing happened as traders recalculated the UK's medium-term economic trajectory. We map which sectors got hit hardest (exporters benefited from a weaker pound, but financial services faced genuine structural uncertainty), why the Bank of England's initial response was to signal accommodation rather than defense, and what that signaling told the market about how bad they thought the situation was. The close examines the longer-term repricing: how much of the initial pound weakness persisted, which parts of the economy actually benefited from currency weakness, and whether the market's initial panic repricing was actually justified by subsequent economic reality.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[June 23, 2016: The UK votes to leave the European Union in a shock result, and sterling crashes 10 percent in the hours after the result, with the biggest moves happening in Asian markets where the initial surprise was sharpest. This episode maps how a political referendum becomes a currency repricing event and why the pound's move was so much larger than equity market moves. The geopolitical layer starts with understanding what the market had priced in before the vote: a strong Remain consensus in polling and among institutional investors meant the market had essentially zero tail risk on a Leave outcome. When Leave won, the repricing was violent because it wasn't adjusting from 50 percent probability to 60 percent—it was adjusting from 10 percent to 100 percent. We then examine the specific vulnerabilities that made the pound so sensitive: the UK's current account deficit, its reliance on foreign investment inflows, and the fact that a Leave vote created genuine uncertainty about whether those inflows would continue. The conversation slows down on the step that separated professional traders from casual observers: the difference between the immediate spot market move (the panic) and the forward market repricing (the actual economic repricing). In the spot market, sterling crashed because of algorithmic selling and forced liquidations. In the forward market, the real repricing happened as traders recalculated the UK's medium-term economic trajectory. We map which sectors got hit hardest (exporters benefited from a weaker pound, but financial services faced genuine structural uncertainty), why the Bank of England's initial response was to signal accommodation rather than defense, and what that signaling told the market about how bad they thought the situation was. The close examines the longer-term repricing: how much of the initial pound weakness persisted, which parts of the economy actually benefited from currency weakness, and whether the market's initial panic repricing was actually justified by subsequent economic reality.]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://flashpoint-where.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">episode-ep_4-0f759e3e-daf1-4987-8222-f181b0e5bd3e</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/7cfc6825-8974-4eef-8952-736eec900a7f/flash2.jpg"/><pubDate>Fri, 14 Feb 2025 06:31:41 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/1bd34929-d675-4cb3-832d-4819c2843891.mp3" length="11182751" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>07:46</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:episode>4</itunes:episode><podcast:episode>4</podcast:episode></item><item><title>How Sanctions Architecture Broke the Russian Ruble in Real Time</title><itunes:title>How Sanctions Architecture Broke the Russian Ruble in Real Time</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[February 24, 2022: Russia invades Ukraine, and by day three, the ruble has collapsed 30 percent against the dollar despite the Russian Central Bank's emergency rate hike to 20 percent. This episode examines why traditional monetary policy tools failed to defend a currency when the underlying geopolitical shock was total regime isolation. We start with the actors and incentives: what Putin's team actually believed about the durability of the ruble (spoiler: they were wrong), why they thought capital controls and rate hikes would hold the line, and what they misread about how modern sanctions architecture works. Then we trace the specific mechanism of the collapse: SWIFT exclusion meant Russian banks couldn't settle dollar transactions normally, so anyone holding rubles faced a choice between holding a currency they couldn't convert or dumping it for anything else. The Russian Central Bank's 20 percent rate hike was mathematically irrelevant because the problem wasn't yield—it was convertibility. We walk through the step most analysts got wrong: they thought the ruble collapse was about economic fundamentals (inflation, growth, capital flight), when it was actually about the plumbing of international finance being turned off. The conversation pivots to what happened next—how Russia's forced capital controls actually did stabilize the ruble artificially by preventing outflows, why that stability was illusory, and what the real cost of that repricing was to Russian economic capacity. We close by examining the precedent this set: whether other sanctioned regimes (Iran, North Korea) could learn anything from Russia's experience, and how future sanctions architecture might be designed to be even more effective at currency destruction.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[February 24, 2022: Russia invades Ukraine, and by day three, the ruble has collapsed 30 percent against the dollar despite the Russian Central Bank's emergency rate hike to 20 percent. This episode examines why traditional monetary policy tools failed to defend a currency when the underlying geopolitical shock was total regime isolation. We start with the actors and incentives: what Putin's team actually believed about the durability of the ruble (spoiler: they were wrong), why they thought capital controls and rate hikes would hold the line, and what they misread about how modern sanctions architecture works. Then we trace the specific mechanism of the collapse: SWIFT exclusion meant Russian banks couldn't settle dollar transactions normally, so anyone holding rubles faced a choice between holding a currency they couldn't convert or dumping it for anything else. The Russian Central Bank's 20 percent rate hike was mathematically irrelevant because the problem wasn't yield—it was convertibility. We walk through the step most analysts got wrong: they thought the ruble collapse was about economic fundamentals (inflation, growth, capital flight), when it was actually about the plumbing of international finance being turned off. The conversation pivots to what happened next—how Russia's forced capital controls actually did stabilize the ruble artificially by preventing outflows, why that stability was illusory, and what the real cost of that repricing was to Russian economic capacity. We close by examining the precedent this set: whether other sanctioned regimes (Iran, North Korea) could learn anything from Russia's experience, and how future sanctions architecture might be designed to be even more effective at currency destruction.]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://flashpoint-where.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">episode-ep_3-5ca15d92-243c-4d8d-bc41-5c4586c2f7e5</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/7cfc6825-8974-4eef-8952-736eec900a7f/flash2.jpg"/><pubDate>Fri, 07 Feb 2025 11:25:21 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/2e4c80ec-c99a-40ed-aa05-d894145a2241.mp3" length="13735645" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>09:32</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:episode>3</itunes:episode><podcast:episode>3</podcast:episode></item><item><title>Taiwan Semiconductor Tension Crushes Chip Stocks in Hours</title><itunes:title>Taiwan Semiconductor Tension Crushes Chip Stocks in Hours</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[August 2022: Nancy Pelosi lands in Taipei, and within 24 hours, semiconductor stocks across Asia and the US are down 4 to 8 percent. The SMIC (Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation) specifically gets hammered because traders suddenly priced in the real risk of a Taiwan strait crisis. This episode works backward from the stock collapse to understand what actually shifted in market pricing. The geopolitical layer: why Pelosi's visit was a deliberate escalation, what it signaled about US commitment to Taiwan's independence, and how Xi Jinping's domestic political timeline (consolidating power at the Party Congress) made him more likely to act rather than less. Then we examine the semiconductor supply chain vulnerability—why TSMC's dominance in advanced chip manufacturing made Taiwan a chokepoint for everything from iPhones to fighter jets, and why the market suddenly repriced the probability of that chokepoint being disrupted. The conversation zeroes in on the step traders initially misjudged: they thought about Taiwan risk as a binary (conflict or no conflict), when the actual market move was about repricing tail-risk premiums across the entire semiconductor complex. We map which stocks got hit hardest (foundries and equipment makers, not fabless designers), which regions' supply chains looked most exposed, and why the move was so sharp and fast—because the market had been underpricing geopolitical tail risk for years. The close focuses on what changed in market structure after this: how much geopolitical risk premium stayed priced into Taiwan-exposed names, and whether that premium has actually persisted.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[August 2022: Nancy Pelosi lands in Taipei, and within 24 hours, semiconductor stocks across Asia and the US are down 4 to 8 percent. The SMIC (Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation) specifically gets hammered because traders suddenly priced in the real risk of a Taiwan strait crisis. This episode works backward from the stock collapse to understand what actually shifted in market pricing. The geopolitical layer: why Pelosi's visit was a deliberate escalation, what it signaled about US commitment to Taiwan's independence, and how Xi Jinping's domestic political timeline (consolidating power at the Party Congress) made him more likely to act rather than less. Then we examine the semiconductor supply chain vulnerability—why TSMC's dominance in advanced chip manufacturing made Taiwan a chokepoint for everything from iPhones to fighter jets, and why the market suddenly repriced the probability of that chokepoint being disrupted. The conversation zeroes in on the step traders initially misjudged: they thought about Taiwan risk as a binary (conflict or no conflict), when the actual market move was about repricing tail-risk premiums across the entire semiconductor complex. We map which stocks got hit hardest (foundries and equipment makers, not fabless designers), which regions' supply chains looked most exposed, and why the move was so sharp and fast—because the market had been underpricing geopolitical tail risk for years. The close focuses on what changed in market structure after this: how much geopolitical risk premium stayed priced into Taiwan-exposed names, and whether that premium has actually persisted.]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://flashpoint-where.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">episode-ep_2-f42f350e-64f6-4174-839f-e305fa64563a</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/7cfc6825-8974-4eef-8952-736eec900a7f/flash2.jpg"/><pubDate>Fri, 31 Jan 2025 01:13:00 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/2dbafb19-4f34-4579-bf59-a27ba5cc03a9.mp3" length="11476158" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>07:58</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:episode>2</itunes:episode><podcast:episode>2</podcast:episode></item><item><title>When Russia Shut Off the Gas and Europe Froze</title><itunes:title>When Russia Shut Off the Gas and Europe Froze</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[June 2022: Gazprom cuts Nord Stream 1 flows to Europe by 60 percent, citing maintenance issues nobody believed. Within hours, natural gas futures in Amsterdam spike 30 percent in a single session—the largest one-day move in the contract's history. This episode traces exactly how a political weapon becomes a pricing mechanism. We start with the geopolitical setup: why Putin weaponized energy after the Ukraine invasion, what leverage he thought he still held, and why Europe's energy minister gambled that Russian gas would flow again anyway. Then we pivot hard to the market mechanics—why TTF (Title Transfer Facility) gas futures became the price discovery engine for all of Europe, how storage levels and LNG import capacity created a hard ceiling on how much pain the market could absorb, and why the real trade wasn't betting on gas prices but on which countries would break first and restart Russian imports. The conversation lands on the step most traders got wrong: they thought this was about supply shock, when it was actually about political signaling and the credibility of European unity. We close by mapping what happened next—the speed at which Europe actually did break energy ties, the role of LNG redirects from other markets, and why energy prices eventually normalized while the geopolitical fracture remained permanent.]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[June 2022: Gazprom cuts Nord Stream 1 flows to Europe by 60 percent, citing maintenance issues nobody believed. Within hours, natural gas futures in Amsterdam spike 30 percent in a single session—the largest one-day move in the contract's history. This episode traces exactly how a political weapon becomes a pricing mechanism. We start with the geopolitical setup: why Putin weaponized energy after the Ukraine invasion, what leverage he thought he still held, and why Europe's energy minister gambled that Russian gas would flow again anyway. Then we pivot hard to the market mechanics—why TTF (Title Transfer Facility) gas futures became the price discovery engine for all of Europe, how storage levels and LNG import capacity created a hard ceiling on how much pain the market could absorb, and why the real trade wasn't betting on gas prices but on which countries would break first and restart Russian imports. The conversation lands on the step most traders got wrong: they thought this was about supply shock, when it was actually about political signaling and the credibility of European unity. We close by mapping what happened next—the speed at which Europe actually did break energy ties, the role of LNG redirects from other markets, and why energy prices eventually normalized while the geopolitical fracture remained permanent.]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://flashpoint-where.captivate.fm]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">episode-ep_1-970f6f2a-6b46-4511-816b-57cf8f9b2d36</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/7cfc6825-8974-4eef-8952-736eec900a7f/flash2.jpg"/><pubDate>Fri, 24 Jan 2025 06:52:55 -0400</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/22fd995b-7893-4788-bf48-e11ad646545b.mp3" length="12204034" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>08:28</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:episode>1</itunes:episode><podcast:episode>1</podcast:episode></item></channel></rss>