Serendipity
Registered Member
There are reports that 200 people are being evacuated from Busher. Doesn't seem like the Iranis are buying talks of a ceasefire.
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Your thoughts are mostly Twitter reposts with some occasional dialogue of "how impressed you are" with the military's performance.I’ve stated my thoughts here this entire thread. I’m updating on the progress of the war. If theres an issue with X posts, start with the 7,500 page main thread with a million X posts.
I’ve stuck to the topic, Iran-US. I don’t dish out underhanded personal insults. No reason to be coy, people don’t like my thoughts and opinions. Thats fine, I don’t care. They can stick to the other thread, that’s their choice, but this a geopolitical defense forum and all opinions should be welcomed.
No, and I read somewhere else (not on this forum) that Iran launched a wave of 10 missiles towards Israel.There are reports that 200 people are being evacuated from Busher. Doesn't seem like the Iranis are buying talks of a ceasefire.
responsiblestatecraft.org

The long-term bond yield is expanding, which is a VERY worrisome sign. It denotes that the consequences of the Iran war are long-term, and the volatility is not disappearing anytime soon. Which translate to we are going to be in a bad financial position because of this. And it's not going to be a short-term spike, that's what the bond market is telling us (which means the speculators are thinking that way)Economic impact? How about this…
This is the first time in the post WWII era that Chinese government bonds have rallied whereas US, normally the “safe haven” asset, have fallen in value -i.e, credit spreads on Chinese bonds contracted and on American Treasuries expanded. I’d hesitate to say “regime change “ in the financial markets since it’s actually the first time and the US has great and deep strengths in capital markets but Trump is taking an axe to American credibility. It’s in the Financial Times today but copyright means I cannot post the article here. You can check it if you like.
You should speak to traders in London, Mr. HighCountry. They are naturally politically conservative and commercially tied to US markets. They are all thinking about alternatives.
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