Erik: Joining me now is Uranium Insider, founder and newsletter editor Justin Huhn. Justin, great to have you back on the show. I can't believe it's been a year since we've had you on, folks. Justin prepared a slide deck to accompany today's interview. You're definitely gonna wanna download this one. You'll find the link in your research roundup email. If you don't have a research roundup email, just go to our homepage, macrovoices.com. Click the red button above Justin's picture that says, looking for the downloads.
Justin. Wow. First of all, I want to give you credit just a few weeks ago, this correction that we saw in uranium stocks. I think you called the bottom of that exactly to the day in the newsletter.
And that was a great help to me and your other newsletter subscribers. I wanna move on though to another call that you've just made in the last few days. You guys are starting to trim some positions just because, boy, this, as much as I'm incredibly bullish, we've had such an incredible run the last few weeks.
I look at the Stochastics now that we're extreme oversold on both the daily and the weekly charts. Eh, now they're falling into overbought territory. So what do you think is are you guys trimming just because it's discipline and you've done
so well? Or is it maybe a turning point where we're about to get a swing trade lower?
Justin: It's definitely the former. First of all, happy to be back. Thank you so much for having me on. Always enjoy speaking with you. I know you guys have done a lot of work in this space so always enjoy these conversations. Yeah the space right now has had a stellar start to the year. In fact, the fast four weeks have basically been straight up for the uranium equities.
The ETFs are up 30 plus percent to start the year. It's pretty, been a pretty incredible move. We have as a trading portfolio that we established last year that did extremely well for us last year. In fact we established it in February of 2025, and it's up over a hundred percent since inception, and that involves swing trading, a basket of highly liquid stocks in the space.
So for us, this is more of a chart and interpretation as well as some influence from either the physical market and or sentiment. So sentiment is definitely heating up here. That's one sign. But the physical market is chugging along. We just had the UXC print today over $91 a pound up from the low eighties to start the year.
So it's been a solid move so far in physical, we think that move has plenty of legs. So as far as trimming positions, that primarily is the swing trading portfolio for the most part. We do have a bit of cash in both portfolios, but we're very net long here and expecting further moves. So not expecting a big trough, the broad market is not necessarily my forte, but if that, loses some momentum, we could definitely see some downside here for the equities.
But for now it's looking very strong. And Sprott here has a war chest. They're gonna end the day with over 200 million in cash and that's a lot of money to buy physical uranium. And luckily they're not the only players in the spot market right now, but we can dive deeper into that if you want.
Erik: Yeah, let's go a little deeper on that subject because SPUT, this sprott physical uranium trust. I think most investors don't understand how pivotal of a role it plays when SPUT is trading at a discount to NAV. It does not have the ability, somebody buying some more SPUT is not. Like buying uranium in the market and taking any supply, off the market.
But when SPUT trades at a premium to NAV like it is right now, every, share that somebody buys where this trust itself can issue a new share and raise cash, that's cash that you would think is immediately in the most immediate sense. In the moment that you buy that share.
You would think that's buying uranium on the spot market, but that's not really how it works. There's a lag effect there. SPUT built up a war chest, as you said. Why are they doing that and what happens and when will it happen that they start to put that money to work? Because for, for the longest time everybody was saying SPUT's not raising money.
That's the reason we're not really seeing the spot price moving. Now we are seeing the spot price, moving SPUT is raising money, but they're not putting the money to work. How come.
Justin: So they bought, the monthly average of the prior negotiated limitation of annual purchasing of 9 million pounds in January, already 750,000 pounds.
And in our estimation, they were doing this because they needed to do a couple of things before they could come back in and raise a lot more money or buy a lot more pounds, which is reestablish their ATM and renegotiate the, not only the shelf prospectus and file the shelf prospectus, which they did for 2 billion.
And their ATM now has a fresh 1 billion, but also renegotiate that annual limitation with the Ontario Securities Commission, which I believe they are in process of doing right now or if not in, in the coming weeks. Either way, they are back in the market doing some purchasing today, but leading up to filing that new prospectus.
Negotiating with the OSC, it seemed like they were treading lightly, so they weren't issuing as much as many units as they normally would when trading at a premium. And as mentioned, we've had a very equities risk on environment for the entire month so far, with the exception of a couple of days.
And so they just traded at an increasingly large premium to their net asset value. I think the highest closing nav that they had this month was pushing 9% premium. So yesterday, once we saw that their ATM had been re-up to a billion, we saw SPUT trade down pretty heavily, taking it all the way essentially back down to nav.
And what that was SPUT actually ising issuing units into the market. They raised almost 20 million yesterday. As far as we can tell, they've probably raised north of 50. I think they've raised somewhere between 60 and $70 million today alone on Tuesday the 27th as we record this. So the war chest is basically a factor of them not buying uranium because they were treading lightly prior to negotiating again with the osc.
So that is all coming to a close and they're gonna be back and it feels to me, Eric, there's a bit of a Wall Street awareness of some type of kind of uranium squeeze environment here. In fact, we're seeing multiple elements in the physical market that are resembling Q3 of 2023, which is essentially, we had a firmly established trend in the spot price and the sellers started to hold on a bit more tightly to their pounds.
And we started to see that, that dynamic over the past, let's say week or so. Wasn't there to end the year, not in the beginning of the month, but it's not just spud in there buying, we see traders in there as well. Other financials, hedge funds and banks are in there as well, and utilities also.
Some of the utilities are chasing the spot price here, and there's decent activity in the term market, so all signs are pointing to further tightness in the physical market and higher prices.
Erik: So just to recap all of that, the story of the last quarter of 2025 was basically, look the fundamentals are really terrific for the uranium market, but unfortunately the spot price just isn't moving for some reason.
And until it does, this thing can't really be unleashed. Then you get all of a sudden SPUT raising all this money. They've got the cash to buy a much more uranium, they're not allowed to do it because their agreement with the OSC limits the amount that they can buy. As a result, they're getting all of this cash built up, and despite the fact that they're not allowed to put that cash to work in the spot market, we're still up 30% on the year in January is not over yet.
So when they hopefully negotiate with the OSC and are allowed to invest the money that they're sitting on, the cash that they're sitting on it potentially is a big pushup on prices. Now, what I want to come to next, because I think it's really important for investors to think about is a lot of people have been saying, look.
If you look at the charts as much as the the uranium miners have done fabulously well, that seems to be a lot of speculation. The spot price of uranium wasn't really doing so well, and therefore, the smart money ought to not be buying any more uranium stocks. We ought to be buying SPUT and other proxies for direct investment.
In not uranium miners, but uranium itself because it's the commodity as opposed to the stocks that hasn't moved yet. So you really ought to be doing a sector rotation, if you will, out of the uranium miners into Spot and other proxies for uranium itself like YCA and the other tickers that are just uranium.
Now that's a pretty popular view. I don't agree with it. Justin, what I think is going on is the commodity market has to balance itself in real time. The stock market is forward looking. The stock market saw this coming. That's the reason you saw such a big appreciation in the miners, and I think the miners have been at a point where they can't get too far ahead of SPUT.
Is SPUT finally takes off. I think the miners are set to explode higher. Which of those views is right? 'cause there, it really affects where you're gonna put your money in this sector.
Justin: I think that the, an investment in SPUT or physical uranium, let's say here, a proxy for physical uranium is a very strong risk reward proposition.
The downside for the spot uranium market here is relatively minimal. Of course, you can have markets go risk off and SPUT can technically trade at a much larger discount to n as it has a few times in the past, pushing a 15, 16, 17% discount. I would argue the downside for spot here is, 15 to 20% maybe in a risk off environment.
But spot price is highly unlikely, at least right now, to be moving down at all, let alone, a five or $10 move down. Now we will see this move up eventually peak and eventually pull back probably to a higher low. The low of last year was in the low sixties. Then we had a floor move up into the seventies, and I would argue the floor now is probably in the mid to high eighties as we're trading 91 here.
So the confidence in SPUT moving higher is very high. And so your risk reward for spot is extremely attractive. Your downside might be 10, 15, 20% maximum, and the upside here could potentially be a hundred percent, maybe even more if things get really wild. So it's a very, it's a much safer investment.
It's very liquid. So for large institutions that don't want to take on individual mining, stock risk buying SPUT is a no-brainer. With that said, I agree with you. I think that Q4, Q3, late Q3 into Q4 of last year was the equities market for the Iranian mining stock. Looking over the valley and expecting the prices to eventually move and that was a pretty consensus type thought back then and still is.
We had the term market start to move up after 15 months of consolidation. We had the spot market slowly start to mo move up. Like I said, we saw the floors move from the sixties into the seventies. Over just a few short months, we were seeing evidence that utilities were starting to step back into the term market.
And in particular last summer, we saw large, very large utilities placing very small RFPs into the term market, seemingly dipping their toe in the water, testing the market to see where, what sort of responses they would get. And all of that tightening has, one obvious conclusion, which is a move up in price.
So are the equities technically overbought? If you're looking at unbiased view of the charts? Yeah, sure they are. But what is the backdrop? How do you value a company like NextGen, like Denison Mines these emerging producers. If you price in $120 uranium, instead of going back to their feasibility studies pricing in 50 or 60 uranium, it's a very different environment.
So I agree with you. I think the equities are looking over the valley expecting this price move that we're currently in. I would argue the early stages of. I would say yes, and I own both. I think it's a, if you're gonna buy uranium stocks, that's best to, diversify. I think that just the classic investment capital preservation tactics are, you shouldn't spare those.
If you're investing in uranium, definitely be diversified and don't go all in on one mining stock 'cause it's still mining and crazy stuff happens in mining. You can have permitting risk, you can have all sorts of things, accidents, Etc, Etc. So diversified basket of miners plus a reasonable holding in a Sprott, physically random trust or yellow cake, I think is really the way to go to allocate long hair.
Erik: Let's look at some of the charts in your slide deck, which is excellent. On the first page, you're talking about nuclear growth projections, and I think this is really important to get into because as much as you and I are both extremely bullish on this sector I think it's the trade of the decade, if if not longer than a decade.
But look, our job as professional investors is to take the contrarian side and say, how could we be getting this wrong? It seems to me like the growth projections for nuclear. We have to ask ourselves, okay, what could turn this trend around? Because as your chart on page one shows, it's just.
Crazy high projections in terms of what's likely to happen, especially if the Trump administration continues to get its way and is able to promote the nuclear Renaissance as much as Secretary Chris Wright has been seems to me like we do have a political risk here in the sense that President Trump fronts that are completely unrelated to energy is maybe starting to not have as much unified support in the Republican party for all of his policies.
Do we have a risk that maybe the Trump administration won't be able to pump this as hard as they have been, and we're going to have some of these projections come back down?
Justin: The good thing with Trump's proclamations in this particular case is that this is something that the industry actually wants.
So you're seeing utility interest in building new nuclear. You're obviously seeing the Trump admin highlight the absolute imperative to increase electricity generation capacity domestically. Not only just the growth of AI and data centers, Etc, but just the growth of electrification and demand for electricity.
Even X data centers is set to grow significantly. So they see the problem, they're trying to invest in it, they're trying to do what they can to support it. But you also have the tech companies and the tech companies have extremely deep pockets, arguably almost as deep as the government itself.
And they're investing directly in nuclear. And there's a further slide on this as well, a slide number three if you wanna jump to that. A tech company investment is huge. We're seeing meta Oracle, Amazon Microsoft, all invest billions and billions of dollars either with power purchase off takes from nuclear utilities that are currently operating or restarting island reactors like constellations deal with Microsoft to restart three Mile Island.
And we're actually seeing big tech companies make direct offtake deals like one Amazon made a deal with Rio Tinto for copper supply. And I highlight this question here, just throwing it out there, but it really is more of a tongue in cheek statement is, will big tech companies secure fuel for their nuclear investments?
I think that they will, I think that's an extreme right tail. Driver and potential catalyst for this investment for the price of uranium is to actually have a tech company make some sort of deal with a producer or an emerging producer to
secure pounds as an offtake for future production of uranium, an eventual fuel for these reactors that they're either funding to life extend or funding to build.
So how many reactors will we see the United States build in terms of new capacity is difficult to say. It's obvious. Been a, obviously been a challenge for many decades. Clearly there's support not only from the federal government, but from all the entities I already mentioned. So I think if it's going to happen, it's probably going to happen now and soon.
Will they be able to have 10 large AP 1000 reactors under construction by 2030? I think so, but it remains to be seen. And this graphic, of course, goes out all the way to 2050. That on page one here, and the big red bar is government targets. So anytime you're modeling that far out, you have to make a bunch of plugs and a bunch of assumptions.
But the, which, the World Nuclear Association, arguably, a pro-nuclear, but an unbiased analyst in terms of uranium demand, like they don't necessarily want to see more uranium demand or whatever you might say on that front, but they're taking all of the government targets and factoring those into this extremely bullish graphic.
But if you even go over to 2035, so a 10 year picture. There's barely any plugs for those government targets on that 10 year timeframe. And in our own models, Eric, just looking at what's currently operating, what is likely to be life extended or already officially approved for life extension and what's currently under construction and expected to hit the grid over that timeframe.
That's the demand We actually model out for out to 2035 with very few plugs besides China continuing on the pace they're currently at now. That's how we model it. That's what we see for demand. Obviously the WNA even going way out like this is a, this is more than a three X in global nuclear capacity by 2050, will we hit those targets?
It's hard to say, in my estimation, it doesn't actually matter for the length of time for this investment thesis, in my opinion, but. Clearly there's an enormous amount of momentum, not only in the United States, but on many other sovereigns that are looking to build nuclear here
Erik: On this theme of tech companies. I want to touch again, on another potentially bearish risk factor, and again I couldn't be more bullish on this sector, but if I think about what could go wrong, one of the things that could go wrong is Russia has a very large percentage of the enrichment capacity. So even if we can mine all the uranium that we need, and we can't, but the uranium bullish thesis is based on the idea of growing.
Demand not for raw uranium, although it can be raw, uranium can be used in just a few reactor types. Most of them require enriched uranium and we're very dependent on foreign sources, particularly Russia, for that enrichment capacity. It seems to me that if the tech boys could figure out how to help, let's say, improve the pace at which something like laser enrichment is being adopted.
By improving that technology, it could take a risk factor out of the market and it could accelerate demand dramatically. Because if I look at what the demand for the next 25 years for uranium is gonna be, it seems to me like, there's no question in my mind that there's gonna be more demand than we could possibly build mines for.
If we can figure out how to refine and enrich it, and it's that enrichment capacity that I'm not so sure about. What do you think in terms of maybe the tech players getting more involved in enrichment or investing directly in enrichment?
Justin: I think it's definitely possible. With that said, we're seeing a lot of investment at least domestically here, coming from the US federal government.
We just saw three $900 million awards to general matter centris and Orano which is ironically a French company that wants to build enrichment capacity here in the us. And a smaller award for global laser enrichment. It's certainly possible. I'm honestly expecting the tech companies to get more involved in direct investment in the fuel cycle now that they're putting billions and billions of dollars down to build out the actual new nuclear capacity for the data centers. So that has yet to really hit, we have heard kind of whispers over the past year that the tech companies have been poking around the fuel cycle and now seeing this direct offtake investment by Amazon with Rio Tinto for copper offtake.
I don't think it's a wild estimation to believe that this is going to continue to happen on the uranium front. But yeah, the enrichment capacity I think is an interesting one. We're definitely seeing some being built out in China. Russia still has the largest capacity. The French are building some, there's a bit more being built out in the United States.
Will it keep pace with the existing demand in the market? It seems to be, will it be sufficient for these lofty projections like that graphic on page one of the slide deck? No. So if we're going to meet those needs, we're gonna have to see much, much more capacity of both conversion and enrichment built out.
Assuming that this build out is largely light water, boiling water or advanced reactor designs and not heavy water, which so far it has been not a whole lot of heavy water being built besides in India. And those are smaller reactors, much smaller capacity. So a lot more of the fuel services fabrication, enrichment conversion is going to be needed to meet these targets.
Again, these targets are also based on a lot of the reactors that haven't started construction yet either. So we hypothetically need that capacity right now based on what's under construction. It does appear that we see growth of enrichment capacity relatively in line with the growth of nuclear capacity.
Erik: Ultimately what really matters the most is whether the buyers are buying and whether the sellers have enough to meet the amount they wanna buy. Let's move on to page four. Talk to me about what the history of this market has been and how it's evolving in terms of the attitude of fuel buyers.
Because it seems like for a while, the last couple of years, we just had this buyer strike where the buyers were convinced that increasing uranium prices were just a blip, that the prices were gonna go back down, and they seemed to be waiting it out. Is that changing finally?
Justin: It does seem to be changing.
It's very difficult for the investor mindset to, to fully comprehend how utility fuel buyers generally operate and think about this market. You have fuel buyers that in many cases have been working in this industry, sometimes for the same utility, for multiple decades. And the history of this market is very different from the present reality of this market.
So if you go back, go back into the nineties and the two thousands following a huge price spike in the seventies where you had a, just a gigantic nuclear build out. You had 40 or 50 reactor construction starts per year in the mid seventies. It was a huge build out and in a massive mine supply.
But you had utilities clamoring for uranium, you had the US buying uranium, you had the Russian buying uranium. It was crazy. Just an absolute huge price spike in the seventies with the oil crisis. Then you had the price crash because
we had so much secondary supply. So starting in 1993, we had a, the Megatons of Megawatts program with 20 million pounds of Russian down blended high, enrich uranium into fabricated fuel that was sent over to the United States fleet, 20 million pounds a year for 20 years.
So the history of this market is big fluctuations in price, but most of the time, with the exception of a few spikes, one in the seventies, one from oh four to oh seven, and one theoretically potentially happening now, although I wouldn't argue that this is a temporary spike being driven by either some, exogenous event or financialization.
I think the financialization is influencing things here, but I just think SPUT is buying the marginal pound. We're seeing a hundred thousand pounds, 200,000 pounds move price. It shouldn't be happening if it wasn't such a tight market, but the fuel buyer is looking back and saying, okay, forever there's been all of the uranium I need at a relatively reasonable price.
With very few exceptions. And their view of 2004 to 2007 was a massive commodities run. The Chinese did a decent amount of buying for a couple of years there we had some mine floods and we had Uranium Participation Corporation, which became SPUT in 2021, buying uranium along with some hedge funds.
It was a temporary spike, came right back down after the GFC, but it started to grind higher again because the fundamental drivers were there. So that was a contracting cycle going back, and you can see in the graphic page four, that we
had greater than replacement rates. So replacement rate essentially is how much uranium is being burned up in the nuclear fleet on globally on an annual basis.
So going back to 2005, we had 250 million pounds contracted, but we probably had about 170 million pounds burned up in the reactor fleet. So greater than replacement rate contracting, big volumes. And that really led to that big move in price. Following that, following Fukushima, Japan shut off all the reactors.
Germany started shutting them off. A few other countries had phase out plans like Belgium and Taiwan. And you had an abundant amount of uranium that was just hundreds of millions of pounds of oversupply. Liquid mobile inventory globally. The price crashed and utilities did not need to contract.
So this is long-term contracting. This is a, these bars here are utilities calling up Cameco, Kazatomprom, Uranium One, Orano and saying, I want a contract for a few million pounds a year, delivered out for a five year period, whatever it might be. They didn't need to do that because there was so much uranium floating around the spot market.
They engaged in in hundreds and hundreds of carry trades and not thousands where utilities engage with a trader and say, I want a couple million pounds delivered, let's say 2, 3, 4 years out. They're usually more midterm, usually slightly smaller volume, and the trader goes and buys that material in the spot market.
The carry trade went a long way to cleaning up that mobile inventory. Those mobile inventories are largely gone. In fact, UXC, which is the primary nuclear fuel consultant in the space. Has essentially was warning, let's see, this was August of 23, so two and a half years ago, they were warning that the age of inventory overhang is over.
The buffer is largely gone. So fuel buyers here are starting to see that liquidity in the market has largely dried up. You can still buy in small volumes in the spot market or the carry trade if the math is right, based on the forward curve. But their options are running out in terms of what else can they do besides stepping up and signing large long-term contracts with the primary producers, which is what they're starting to do.
So we saw 71 million pounds added to the long-term tally in Q4 of 2025 alone. A lot of tenders came into the market. A couple of large contracts were signed. And so how much can be bought in the spot market and carry trade? That
number is diminishing. Secondary supplies are diminishing. Inventories are diminishing.
They can only flex up on contracts so much. So the flex provisions that were in these contracts that signed back in late 20 teens, early two thousands that are still being delivered on now, those flex provisions were for contracts that were majority, if not entirely base escalated or fixed price contracts.
So if you signed a contract in 2020 for 80% fixed price and 20% market referenced at the time of delivery, and that fixed price was $40 a pound, and you're taking delivery now, you flex up, whatever's allowed in the contract, 20%, 30% flex provision, sometimes volume. Now that we're shifting to mostly, if not entirely market reference contracts, those flex provisions start to look less attractive because you end up paying the same amount as the market reference delivery for the added pounds.
So not only are there fewer flex provisions in the contracts signed last year or the year before this year and moving forward, but the types of contracts have shifted. So all of the signs are there that we're shifting from a buyer's market to a seller's market. And this is a really difficult position for a fuel buyer right now.
I'll give you one example just to finish off this thought. These fuel buyers and these utilities are signing other fuel buyers. The utilities are signing power purchase agreement off takes with electricity consumers. And oftentimes these are long-term agreements, 10 year agreements that basically fixed prices with, inflation adjustments so they know what they're going to be earning on the electricity side of things, right?
With these agreements. Then they go and they call up Cameco, whoever it might be, and say, I need to buy uranium to, to feed into this, right? So Cameco says, okay, we're here at $91 spot. We'll sign a contract at $85 floor, 150, $160 ceilings reference to the market at the time of delivery. We're talking 50, 60, $70 spread between the floors and the ceilings.
It's very difficult for utility to know what they're going to be bringing in on the revenue side of things to not know what they're going to be paying on the fuel side of things. Really what it comes down to is they don't really have a choice and they're going to have to pay that. And they're starting to come to, let's say, an acceptance.
They've moved past the denial stage. Now they're moving into that acceptance stage and signing these larger, higher price contracts that are largely referenced to the market at the time of delivery. And why are they referenced to the market at the time of delivery? Because producers want exposure to higher pricing environment, which they're all very confidently betting on.
And that really should tell you more than my pontifications, more than anyone else who's analyzing this market. What are the sellers asking for and what are they getting in their contracts? If you want stability in an uncertain market, you're going to sign fixed price contracts.
If you want exposure to what you are highly confident, it's going to pan out. You want reference to the market with ceilings that are sometimes close to a hundred percent higher than where we are here. So that's what we're looking at. Utilities are slowly coming around. Fuel buyers, from what I'm hearing that have been multiple fuel buyers for large utilities that have been largely reliant on the spot market and carry trade for literally decades are shifting their strategy and focusing on security of supply rather than pulling every lever they possibly can to get a little bit here, a little bit there, as cheap as they can.
That strategy is shifting and that's important as we go forward for term market volumes. Term market pricing, ultimately spot pricing.
Erik: I would think that the seller's confidence has also got to be increasing with just the mechanics of what we're seeing in SPUT right now. Because if you're Cameco and you're asking for those really high, a floor that's just barely below the market, a ceiling that's way above the market.
And the guy on the other side of the table is saying, don't pull this crap on us or else we're gonna pull a buyer strike. You can just say, no, you're not SPUT is just awaiting regulatory approval to unleash a huge amount of cash that they're sitting on,
which will easily support the spot market as long as we need to. You guys are not in a position to negotiate anything shut up and sign. It seems like all of the sudden Cameco and the other big uranium suppliers can engage in I'll go out in a limb here and say, Trump style negotiating tactics of you don't have a choice.
You're gonna do what we tell you to do.
Justin: Sure, yeah. The confidence in where this market is headed is very high amongst producers. And I think that the financialization of the sector is
certainly supporting what the producers are wanting. To your point and like I said, SPUT being able to buy a hundred thousand pounds here, 200,000 thousands pounds there in a highly liquid market, that shouldn't really matter, but it's that marginal pound is moving the price here.
And that, that alone is as evidence of how tight the market is. And, there's always some production coming into the spot market. It's not the static bucket that once it's gone. It's just a settlement. It's a, it's a surplus settlement market. But for the producers seeing the SPUT activity.
Seeing the pressure on the spot market is certainly something that, that supports them wanting market referenced contracts that they're signing with utilities here. And like I said, seeing how high these ceilings are going, that actually is literally telling you where they expect the price to go and who's done more work on the sector than the actual producers, especially the big producers that are having to sign these binding contracts for delivery 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, sometimes 10 years out.
This is very important to their shareholders, very important to their bottom line. And they're seeing shareholder pressure that, that wants them to capture more of the upside in the future. And you see some of these brownfield restart companies that sign base escalated contracts at 80 bucks a pound, were coming under fire from their shareholders.
Stop giving this away. We know the price is going higher. Hold out and capture that. And shareholder value is something that I think the utility fuel buyers don't really give enough attention to. These companies don't exist to break even. And they all went through hell from, 2008 all the way till, just recently.
So these companies went through ab absolute hell, shareholders had been diluted to oblivion in the 20 teens. Finally, the market is returning to bring some value to the actual producers and they're going to be beholden to their shareholders. And the shareholders want exposure to these rising prices.
And that's something that utilities definitely have to understand going forward.
Erik: Something he said earlier, Justin, was that the alignment of the industry with government policy meant that, you're not getting a lot of pushback. One place, I think there might be some pushback if we move on to page five, is the talk of a strategic uranium reserve.
Intuitively you'd think the industry would be all for that. From what I hear, the utilities don't want there to be a strategic uranium reserve. What's that about?
Justin: It's just about the government being, potentially a price insensitive buyer and adding pressure to an already tight market.
The utilities are fully aware of the financialization of the sector and that you have, very aggressive financial entities. And SPUT is just a vehicle. It's really the investors that are coming into that and providing it with the capital to raise cash. But you also have hedge funds and banks and plenty of trader commodities traders that are all positioning net long.
So the utilities are aware of all of this and they don't see a strategic uranium reserve being in their best interest. Despite the fact that the spirit of the reserve potentially would be to hold, a bunch of uranium for harder times in the future when perhaps that uranium could be sold or distributed to those utilities.
That's really the spirit of the potential reserve and the existence of the reserve as it is now with this tiny amount of buying needed a few years back. Our understanding is that the buying that the SUR did, let's see, I think this was 2022 when they did buy from a couple of US producers that uranium is now in possession of the DOD.
That's my understanding. So we believe that the Department of Defense actually is on the lower side in terms of their inventory, and that's not just for weaponry. That's of course with the nuclear navy and nuclear aircraft carriers. They're building multiples of these very large multi-billion dollar ships currently.
Take a lot of uranium, actually it's very highly enriched uranium that goes into these subs and these aircraft carriers, and they're fueled once and we're talking many millions of pounds for a single fueling for one of these ships. So we, we think that there's pressure coming from that, but yes, of course the utilities have
a strong lobby and I guarantee you they're doing what they can to put pressure against this establishment.
So we're not necessarily betting on it. We're just going off of what we're hearing for the administration. They did establish, or there's a proposal currently. In Congress for a two and a half billion dollars stockpile of critical minerals of which uranium is one. And we hear Christopher Wright mention multiple times that they're considering a strategic uranium reserve.
So maybe it happens, maybe it doesn't. It obviously would be intelligent for the security of the nuclear fleet of the United States to do that because the US utilities typically only hold about two years of inventory. So whether it happens or not really, not sure, but you're absolutely right, utilities don't want it to happen and are doing what they can to pressure pressure, interest in the US government to, to keep that from happening.
Erik: So the government wants to underwrite free of charge and insurance policy to protect the nuclear utility industry from hard times by providing a safe haven resource of available uranium so that those utilities don't have to absorb the cost of holding those long-term reserves themselves. And the utilities are objecting to that because it potentially interferes with what the prices are in the next three months.
Sounds brilliant to me.
Justin: Yeah
Erik: just genius. It's and about and not at all out of character, from what I've heard from Mike Alkin about these nuclear fuel buyers. It sounds like exactly their mentality.
Justin: Yeah, it's and I think the spirit of the reserve really is more of an acknowledgement of the reliance that 20% of our grid is on foreign entities.
We're mining a couple million pounds of uranium and consuming 50 highly reliant on Russia for conversion and enrichment. Highly reliant on Kazakhstan for uranium, and then secondarily Canada. So it's more of a just wanting to establish that to support the uranium miners in the United States than it's necessarily a basket of uranium for utilities.
But to your point. Utilities. Again, looking at that W&A graphic on page one, looking at the analysis that we do, that Goldman Sachs has been doing, that a number of other entities in the space have been doing, showing a clear and obvious very large growth in demand and struggling supply response.
On the uranium side of things the utilities and the fuel buyers don't really pay attention to that. And now that's speaking generally they, there are a few fuel buyers in the United States that I know of personally that are very ahead of the curve. Their utilities are very well covered. They've done their own supply and demand modeling, for example.
So they get it and they're well covered and they know and believe that prices are coming. Higher prices are incoming for most of the rest of the utilities. They buy what they need to buy when they need to buy it, and they have to get approval to do so from their upper management that has a budgeting committee and their bottom line matters.
If the US strategic uranium reserve announcement causes a $5 jump in spot, and then the actual buying causes another few dollars. Jump in spot. That's tens of millions of dollars to their bottom line that they're looking out for not only on deliveries, but for their future purchases as well.
So I understand why they're pressuring, but at the same time, it doesn't really feel like it's in line with kind of the spirit of what's happening here.
Erik: Justin, you mentioned some of the international aspects of this. Let's talk about the other side of slide number five here, where you talk about a huge amount of demand from China and India for uranium.
They're engaging with Canada for uranium supply. As soon as I saw that, I thought, well, wait a minute. Last time anybody tried to sell anything to China or India, president Trump intervened and said, no, you're not allowed to do that, or, I'm gonna hit you with tariffs.
Is there a risk that the US government in for the sake of America first policies, tries to veto or nix those deals and say, Canada, don't sell your uranium to India or China. It is only sell it to us. Does that potentially affect the market?
Justin: It's hard to say really. It's hard to really predict exactly what Trump will end up doing on this front.
Obviously he wasn't happy to see that Kearney was meeting with Xi and trying to establish a critical minerals, deal selling, selling uranium and a number of other elements to China. I think that he's trying to influence that deal, not necessarily to make more uranium and other things available to the United States, but also just to throw his weight around and influence these decisions.
And I think that there's, a lot of this stuff with Trump and in my personal opinion, there's just so much more that's going on behind the scenes that, that any of us have any idea of. So what's really behind this, I have no idea, but we do know that China is scouring the globe for critical minerals, uranium included.
China. China as a sovereign, has the largest inventory of uranium by a long shot. Their numbers are huge, like north of 600 million pounds of uranium. But importantly, that's total strategic commercial inventory. It's not just utility inventory. That also includes military inventory. So how much of that is actually allocated for the, for their new civilian nuclear program is harder to say, but they also have the more, most aggressive builds, and that uranium is never leaving the country.
This is strategic. Once it's on their shores, it doesn't leave. The only exception is that is sometimes they buy and then resell. So for example, they been buying Russian enrichment and reselling it into Europe and the United States. Those volumes are small, but they engage in that type of trading. With all of that said.
Simply seeing both the Chinese and the Indians. And most importantly to this point is that they're both sovereigns, right? The Chinese utilities state owned, the Indian nuclear operators are state owned. They are looking at Canada for supply, and Canada has been the most reliable supplier to the west by far because Kazatomprom has been perfectly reliable, but they've had trouble with their shipping routes when the West is trying to avoid shipments out of Russia.
And they've had much more business engagement with both the Chinese and the Russians. So Canada is really our best source of uranium in the western world. And to see two Eastern sovereigns start to negotiate with Canada and potentially with Cameco directly especially on the fa on the side of India, should be and is somewhat of a wake up call to multiple Western utilities that the sovereigns are stepping up because you have these private or publicly owned utilities that are.
That are hemming and hawing about large procurements and mu much more price sensitive. And then you have the eastern sovereigns just stepping up and I'm your huckleberry and let's get it done. So this is something that I think is going to be a trend going forward is, we're seeing that general trend anyways, just globally right now.
We're going much very quickly away from a multipolar world to more of a nationalization type of world. And I think that a lot of countries are starting to look out for number one in a way that we haven't seen in a number of decades forth turning type stuff. So will we see more sovereigns engage in, america first type policies for themselves. We've heard the EU talking about having a strategic nuclear fuel stockpile. I think more of this is coming. And importantly, Eric, this is all right tail. These strategic stockpiles, this secondary demand is not something that is very modeled out.
So in our own models, that secondary demand, we have a plug number of 10 million pounds a year. Last year we saw the financials do almost double that alone. That's not talking utility inventory restocking. That's not talking sovereign stockpiling, that's just the financials. So that secondary demand is a very potentially large number.
I think more of this is coming in the near future.
Erik: Now we've been talking about western supply. Let's also cover the Eastern Hemisphere supply. Russia has, as we discussed, most of the enrichment capacity, but they don't produce a whole lot of uranium in Russia. It's Kazakhstan. That's the big producer in that part of the world.
Tell us what's going on here on page six.
Justin: Yeah, this, I think, is a really interesting element of this market that is, is emerging. And, the table on the left hand side came from some analysis that came out from Ocean Hall. So I wanna plug those guys. They did some good work on this front.
So Kazakhstan is by far the world's largest producer. They produce about 40% of the uranium supply on an annual basis right now. And what happens in Kazakhstan affects this entire market. Now, the graphic on the upper right of slide number six shows their existing production profile. They expect their production to peak in the next, two or three or four years.
And that is based on a very large project, the Budenovskoye project, which is a joint venture with Russia. So Russia, like you mentioned, has the largest capacity for both conversion and enrichment and conversion is the process of turning U308 or mined uranium into a gas uranium, hexa fluoride so that it can be enriched in a gas centrifuge?
Despite the fact that Russia has the most capacity for conversion, they net buyers of UF6, the product of conversion. That's how much demand they have for their enrichment services globally and how short they are on the uranium front. So they need uranium and they need it now, and they need it badly.
So they're putting a lot of pressure on Kazakhstan to develop this large JV. If you look at the production volume ladder with these new mineral extraction tax hikes, you know that Budenovskoye project, it's max capacity, a hundred percent of subsoil use is 6,000 tons a year.
So assuming they reach that, which is possible we model out that they do, but it's no guarantee that they do, they'll have an 18% tax on that. And look at the uranium price, we're already above $90 a pound. They could potentially be paying a 20.5% tax on the uranium coming out of the country. And this of course, is a move on behalf of Kazakhstan, which is the state is 75% owner of Kazatomprom and 25% publicly floated on the London Stock Exchange.
The state is trying to do what they can to establish this taxation and ownership of the joint ventures as well to maximize what they will be earning and benefiting out of these limited deposits in the country. Yes, they're very large. They'll be able to produce for decades going out into the future, but they want to capture this lightning in a bottle.
So what this means is that the Budenovskoye project in the second largest is the Katco JV with the French, who are also very short uranium, and that can produce potentially up to 4,000 tons. So the two largest projects are gonna be hit with the largest levels of taxation coming outta Kazakhstan by the two entities that most need uranium globally.
The French and the Russians. They need it, and they need it very badly. They're both very short with pipeline problems for the uranium projects. I don't see this increase in the MET. In lowering production out of those projects, I see it affecting price, so they're going to wanna do what they can to ramp those projects, which means prices have to go higher based on that.
This is all to say that Kazakhstan is limited and you can see their own production profile going out into the future. Yes. They don't have years on this X axis, but this is about a 2050 graphic. So after peaking, you can see it declines very rapidly. Some of their existing legacy projects are already in decline, many more hit de sharp decline rates in the next 5, 6, 7 years.
So they need to invest a lot of money in establishing new deposits, which of course are less attractive than the deposits they first started to develop back in the two thousands, 2000 teens. And this all plays into, the, just the looking at this price graphic at the lower right of this slide is, this is inflation adjusted.
And so if you look back at the inflation adjusted spike, even the term price went to 150 inflation adjusted back in 2007. And now we are at $88 term with a much, much more favorable environment. And all of the elements I've been discussing today, including these high mineral extraction taxes and the increasing moves that the country is making to to increase their ownership of their joint venture projects when they renegotiate the license for the joint
ventures so that some of these projects, all these JVs that are existing now have to be negotiate renegotiated over the course of the next 10 years when they are.
Ownership goes from many cases, 50 50, 49, 51 goes to 90 10 Kazakhstan, and the new developments for the JVs is automatically 75 25. So Kazakhstan is starting to take much more seriously the ownership of their mineral wealth, and that is only going to have a creative pressure on the price.
Erik: Let's jump ahead to page eight where you talk about secondary commercial inventories.
First, let's define that term, what we're talking about, but then explain what this trend is about, where it seems like everybody had plenty of inventory and all of a sudden they don't. Why don't they?
Justin: A lot of that inventory drawdown has simply come from the lack of procurement in the long-term market and the lack of supply response.
Erik: Let's just start with a definition of what we mean by secondary commercial inventory. Who's holding what inventory of what, where?
Justin: Sure. So this is a little bit tricky because this data and this graphic comes from UXC and UXC counts inventory drawdown as secondary supply. They've come under a little bit of criticism for doing that over the years because they're technically double counting, right?
That those pounds come out of the ground and year X and that's counted as supply and then when they're draw down, that's counted as secondary supply. The reason they do that is because we're not seeing reactors actually not be able to operate because there is no fuel. So anytime you see the purchasing volumes on any given year, less than the burnout rate, that gap is quote unquote inventory drawdown and or secondary supplies.
So in this case, you see that giant orange bar in 2021 as inventory drawdown or secondary supply that was largely influenced by SPUT buying, right? We had, what did they buy? 20 something million pounds in 2021. So they were buying
excess inventories that were in the market. And so these commercial inventories is basically just any inventory that's held by any commercial entity.
And so in 2021, a lot of that came from traders who were holding pounds in carry, meant to deliver to utilities. The following year, two years, three years down the road, the spot started buying the spot price spike. These traders sold
those held pounds to spot and then went back into the midterm market to procure from a producer.
So that was this reverse carry trade. And the reason why that inventory that inventory number and that secondary supply number is so big for 2021, but secondary supplies, they're always a part of this market. And so you can put
those in two different buckets. One is actual mobile inventories that are held by somebody commercially somewhere, and the other is actual supply coming into the market.
That's new secondary supply. Now that would primarily come from enrichment underfeeding or tails reen enrichment. And without getting super geeky with this is a number that was pushing 25 to 30 million pounds annually just five years ago. This is probably closer to 10 million pounds a year right now.
And this is basically when there's excess enrichment capacity. What Enrichers will do is they'll actually spin those centrifuges down to a lower tails assay than what was. Dictated in a contract that the utility has to provide to them the feed stock for that enrichment contract. So they spin to a lower tails, they have a little bit of extra feed and they under feed the centrifuge and sell that excess feed stock into the market as UF six.
That is underfeeding tails. Reen enrichment is actually when there's really a trough in enrichment demand, they can actually take tails material and spin it back up to natural UF six and sell that into the market as well. So that is, that has literally been cut by two thirds over the past five years.
The other bucket is just these buffer inventories. Utilities hold them. In some cases sovereigns hold them, and this is just material that's been sitting around from decade of overproduction in the 20 teens. Now that material is largely gone. But utilities will always hold some inventory. And the reason they do that is because the fuel cycle takes so long for uranium to go from mine out of the ground into fabricated fuel takes at least 18 months and most commonly 24 to sometimes even 30 months.
So because it takes so long, utilities will always hold inventory and they usually hold it across the fuel cycle. So every utility will at least have one extra core load of fabricated fuel onsite at all times. But they'll also hold some uranium, some UF six at the conversion facilities. They'll hold some enriched uranium.
And then, like I said, the fab fuel. So utility inventories are kind of always there and what you're seeing when this UXC is projecting this out into the future is
that buffer inventory is gone. So all we really have is a small amount of utility inventory that can buffer some, some temporary swings in price or some temporary issues around supply, whatever it might be.
But it's not this enormous amount of material that's overhanging the market. And as you see these big numbers, 21, 22, like I mentioned, August 23, the age of inventory overhang is over. They can see that, and that's why they're projecting this out into the future. They're just no longer is that buffer and the conditions are absolutely there for this market to be disrupted.
I say this all the time, Eric, you don't really have to even know exactly what is going to be the disruptor. Just that the conditions are there for something to disrupt this market. And I'm not necessarily betting on disruption, but it's so obvious to me that something will disrupt this market. We don't know where the eventual supply is going to come from.
The balance, the market and the inventory side of things. The secondary supply side of things are so tight that. A shock to supply, whatever it might be. Whether that's the announcement of a stockpile from some sovereign, whether it's one of these large development projects like NextGen's Arrow, the entire nuclear industry is expecting this to be producing 29 million pounds a year, starting in 2031.
That isn't happening. They don't know it yet, but that's not happening. Will it be producing eventually? Absolutely. How much and how soon is harder to say. But even by their own timelines, we see 2032 as first production and that would be ramp up. And the company is already taking advantage of the power of the narrative here and the power of the story of this deposit because it's so fundamental to the supply.
Even approaching anything balanced in the 2030s, which it will maybe barely do if it comes online on time and on budget, but they're already saying, Hey, we will be producing according to the market signals. Such a low cost high grade project, they can cycle that production up and down as they see fit and essentially control that narrative and they're starting to express that to the market.
So it's just very fragile. Something's gonna disrupt it. You don't have to know what that something is, just that the conditions are there for it to happen.
Erik: Okay, so to summarize all of that, because I wanna make sure I'm interpreting this right. If I went back 10 years and I said, oh my gosh, this
uranium trade's gonna be great because boy, look at the balance of supply and demand.
If just one mine went offline, they could unbalance the market and the price could skyrocket. People in the know would've said sorry, it doesn't work that way. There's plenty of inventory hanging around. If the price goes up to the point that incentivizes those people to sell it, they'll sell it.
There's plenty of buffer to absorb something going wrong. That was how it worked until last year that it stopped working that way. Now it really is back to if just one mine went offline, we'd be screwed and it would rocket the price much higher. Is that right?
Justin: Absolutely. Yeah. I don't know if I would necessarily agree with the statement that we'd be screwed.
I do think that there's sufficient inventories out there to buffer something like that. But the price response would be massive. And, this could really happen at any time. I think the most likely disruption is these very important larger development projects not panning out exactly as the industry expects.
And the industry is basically looking at what the investors are looking at, right? They're looking at the feasibility studies. They're looking at what the company is telling investors that what they'll be producing and when, and of course, that historically speaking, especially in the uranium world just never happens.
These mines are never built on time. They just aren't. And that disruption is highly likely to pan out, but are there inventories? Yes, of course. The problem is those inventories largely are not for sale. So what are there, I remember there's a very popular uranium investor out there.
I'm not gonna mention him by name, but he basically was bearish at this moment in time over the past couple of years, basically saying there's, there's 1.3 billion pounds of commercial inventories. It's yeah, okay. Half of that's in China. The rest of it is distributed around the global nuclear utilities.
So US utilities of two years of inventory, EU utilities of three years of inventory. They don't draw those down besides maybe a five or 10% draw down here or there to try to buffer what they might feel is a temporary price spike. And that's it. They're not gonna draw them down to zero. Yes. If we go to a hundred dollars, $115, $130, $150, will we see supply shake out here and there?
Absolutely. We will see some inventory be sold in the market. We'll see some profit taking. There's a decent amount of positioning here on behalf of hedge funds. They're not holding those pounds into perpetuity. They will sell them eventually. So there's always a little bit, a tiny bit of flex, but the big buffers are gone.
There's no megatons of megawatts. Underfeeding is almost entirely gone. In fact we would expect that we'll potentially see some overfeeding in the coming years, which has the opposite effect, extra demand for that enrichment process. And then of course, commercial inventories are on the low end, historically speaking as well, because Adam proms at a 10 year low in their own inventories.
So just the general buffer is very small here.
Erik: Justin, final question. We cannot responsibly both be as bullish as we are without asking the critical question of, okay, what could happen to turn this all around? There has to be something, obviously, I guess the big one would be a worse than Fukushima sized nuclear accident that completely changes public sentiment globally around nuclear energy.
And that could happen if somebody blew one of these things up as an act of terrorism. In the world we live in it it's not at all impossible. Aside from that, what else can go wrong that could derail the extremely bullish hypothesis that both you and I share?
Justin: Yeah, the nuclear accident potential.
It's always there. I, in my opinion, the industry is. Has much, much better safety checks in place following the Fukushima Daiichi disaster. So that was something that happened, had no fatalities, but it did affect the industry. It caused Japan to shut off all the reactors and a number of other countries do the same.
So it had demand destruction effectively, 10 and eventually about 15% of global demand that was there in 2010 was gone by 2015. So demand destruction of some form or another is probably the biggest potential to turn this investment around because we don't see, at least in the near term, let's say the next five years, where supply is going to change the investment thesis.
Eventually are we above 150, $200 and it stays there for a while and all of a sudden we see, phosphate projects producing uranium and all of these marginal
producers eventually get in production. Yeah, it will be a, a natural commodity cycle. This will have a peak someday. We don't see that happening in the near to the midterm.
So the only thing that we could see that would change this thesis for us, would be some kind of demand destruction. It wouldn't necessarily be because of a nuclear accident, because that doesn't necessarily mean demand destruction depending on how the accident actually would pan out.
Certainly it'd be terrible for sentiment, at least in the near term, and probably really bad for the equities in the near term. But would we see. 50, 60, 70, 80 reactors shut off because of that. I don't really know, and I don't really think so. With that said something else, like if China all of a sudden says, okay, we're done building nuclear, we've reached our goals, if that narrative is going to hurt and if they change their actual demand projections and their growth projections for nuclear, that affects the bottom line in terms of the supply and demand calculation.
So a change in demand projections for whatever reason, is really the only thing I can see that's going to derail this in the near to the midterm. But like I said, eventually this will be a commodities trade where high enough prices for long enough incentivizes enough supply that will eventually cap that price move and eventually will turn the price down.
How soon that happens, I can say very confidently. I don't see how that happens in any way, shape or form. Assuming the demand stays as what we're projecting, which I believe that it will in the next 5, 6, 7, 8 years, I really don't see that happening. So even if we were at $150 uranium next week, it's still gonna be years and years and years down the road for these marginal projects that could be profitable at that price to actually be producing into the market.
So I think we have a strong runway here, Eric. I know that you agree with me there, but hard to say what would cause that demand destruction, but that's the only thing that we would be looking for to actually change this trajectory.
Erik: Justin, I can't thank you enough for another terrific interview.
Before we close, tell us about what you do at Uranium Insider. You publish a terrific newsletter. I quite enjoy receiving it. You got videos and all kinds of stuff. What's involved? How much does it cost and how do people sign up?
Justin: Yeah, thanks Eric. Appreciate the support on that front. So yeah, we basically cover this sector in and out on a daily basis.
We've got a small team behind us. We've been doing this since 2019. We put a lot of focus into the physical market. This, in our estimation, is the most important thing to fully understand if you're going to be invested in the sector. So we have multiple price reporters, multiple services, multiple connections in the industry, fuel buyers, traders, and we're communicating with these folks on a daily basis.
We wanna know what's happening out there in the physical market. The equities markets will definitely fluctuate. Sometimes they get way overbought relative to physical. Sometimes they get way oversold relative to physical, but generally speaking, they move. At least directionally with the price of uranium.
So that's the most important thing that we follow, and we track that and we report on that to our membership on a daily basis. We have a very in-depth monthly newsletter. We do weekly update videos for our membership. We do a daily data sheet that follows the ETF and spot flows, as well as the most important pieces of news on the physical market on a daily basis.
We do a weekly watch list that does a technical analysis of the stocks that we cover. And I do a physical uranium market report once a week. That dives much more deeply into what's happening in the spot, the term markets. And in my estimation, if you have a decent amount of money along this sector you have to have this information.
It's an absolute must to stay on top of what's happening here. And like we mentioned at the top of the interview, we have something called the dynamic model portfolio, which is a trading portfolio, which as I mentioned, we established last February, 2025. And that portfolio is up over a hundred percent.
So that aims to track physical sentiment and charting to give us trade signals buying and selling to trade this sector because even though we are directionally very bullish for even the long term, we do have very strong swings to the upside and the downside. It's a very tradable market.
So that's been a huge success for us. The newsletter is 7 99 a year, which I think is a pittance compared to what this sector offers in terms of upside potential, if you have even a small amount of money invested here.
Erik: Patrick Ceresna and I will be back as Macro Voices continues right here at macrovoices.com.
Erik: Joining me now is Craig Tindale. Craig is a private investor, longtime Macrovoices listener, and has recently penned an article called Critical Materials, a Strategic Analysis, which has gone absolutely viral. The Financial Times reported that it has gained the very direct attention of the White House and the Pentagon.
So this is really just incredibly great work that you've done. Craig, as as a long time listener, this is not. The first time that our listeners have heard concerns about how China's dominance, in terms of the supply chain has considerable strategic implications. But I think you've done a far better job than anyone else of just concisely writing about exactly what the issue is. So congratulations on that. Why don't we dive right in strategic diagnosis of what you call the end of infinite materiality. What is this article about? Why is it important?
Craig: I guess it's the ultimate genesis of state capitalism versus stateless capitalism.
You've got on one side a a state that is intent on dominating all areas of commerce internationally. And on the other side, you've got a free market. Philosophy that is gained by, price. And so the Chinese are basically the system by lower the cost of refining and smelting so that they gain control. If you look at 50 to 98% of the critical metals needed by the west to, to go forward with all their electrification, their data centers, their the EVs, just about everything, you can think of the, even the nuclear build out, it requires critical metals.
Without those critical metals, you can't go forward. And what the Chinese supply chain has done is grabbed it in the middle and directed it towards itself. And it's done that at multiple layers. The one layer is the smelting refining, which I just mentioned, the other is the Offtake agreements and the mine ownership which directs towards those smelters.
Another area is, the ownership of the actual mines. If you look at Xin Jing and, and some of the, the Chinese state owned mining conglomerates, they've gradually bought everything in the west, in particular gold, silver and copper and many of the others and then directing those outputs.
Until the last few years, those outputs haven't been used by the west. They've been used by China. They now control everything that we need to control to reshore, everything. And it's Alexander Hamilton, I think pointed out in 1791 article of manufacturers that went Congress. That liberty and freedom exists, not by itself.
It's a contingent on having a manufacturing and a supply channel that allows it. That at that stage, Hamilton was looking at the dependence on the english And I I guess I put it today that we're looking not at the English, but at the Chinese and that all his assumptions about the importance of that existing and the manufacturing existing is actually, you know, conditions precedent
For the West to be successful. And without that, we'd be, we'd become enslaved. We're almost serfs in the whole global supply chain. I guess I, I frame it like this, that we have a, financial balance sheet, and we're good at that.
Putting claims upon claims. But we've disconnected from the physical or the balance sheet that matter. And so these two things are separating as we speak and as they separate the ability for us to control our destiny becomes less and less.
Erik: You write about the feedstock paradox.
I love that terminology. You're describing this phenomenon where it seems like there's something about human nature, that people think about the raw material as the strategic asset. President Trump has clearly become aware of the importance of rare earth elements, but. He's talking about where we can mine them and the reality of the situation is China's got you've done some fantastic statistics, so I shouldn't speak for you.
Give us a perspective how much of the refining and Processing that's necessary in order to get any benefit from these raw materials. How much of that does China control today? And what would it take if the United States were cut off from that Chinese supply? What would it take for the United States and the rest of the West to recover if that event were to happen?
Craig: They've got 50% to 98% control depending on the category of the metal. 90% is, things like scandium, I'll start at scandium. Scandium is used in an aluminum alloy, and that aluminum alloy is I guess relevant to the new combat drones. And F 35 was built on the physics of G force 9 because that's all human beings can connect with
A combat drone can do 20 to 30 G because there's nobody sitting in it and the alloys required of that are a new industrial material. The whole west produces 15 tons of scandium per year at the moment, and they need hundreds, if not thousands of tons of scandium to build these combat drones.
The only source of that scandium at the moment is virtually China. And so if we wanna build our combat drones and defend ourselves and not create incentives for war, that is, there's two sides of this. One side is we have to defend ourselves. I think what people miss is if we can't defend ourself, we create a, an incentive for the more powerful nation, the foreign nation, to take advantage of that and having a good defense is, is important to creating a world piece as anything else, but copper's the same. Copper goes into almost everything, , in some of these ultra high voltage Cables per kilometer. There's about 60 tons of copper.
I read an article yesterday there's 2177 tons of copper in Microsoft's new AI data center in Texas. The US planned to build 13 to 15 of these. That's a lot of copper. Everything we look at the physical intensity of copper is apparent in it. The, and it go, and not just the copper, it goes into everything.
Siemens at the moment have 138 b euro back order on equipment, things like the major transformers the major transformers are taking four to five years to be delivered. So we can build as many nuclear power stations as we want, but if you can't put the transformers in place to actually move the electricity, and if you can't put the UHV in place that is the ability to transmit over power lines. They're stranded assets, these nuclear power stations. That's why a lot of these new these new AI data centers are being set next to nuclear power stations because they already have equipment in place and they don't have to wait.
So you end up in a situation where they control our destiny they've already licensing a double licensing program and, it was a few days ago, they decided that they work gonna supply rare earth to Japan for the defense industry. You know on, the other side of it, Siemens with their 138B Euro back order
Relies almost a hundred percent on rare, heavy, rare earth from China. The order book from China is about 15%. You can really imagine China going well, if you want your rare earth, we want our transformers first. So they, they layer upon layer the ability to dominate the supply chain just by the, their initial influence.
And, this happened in history if We look, go back to 1914. There was a thing called the zinc crisis. A company called Metallgesellschaft German company was established as the major refiner of zinc and copper and a whole bunch of the other industrial metals. They had subsidiaries in North America and they
had subsidiaries in Australia.
Ironically called Australian Metals and American Metals, and they basically took the off takes from those mines and sent 'em to Germany. And the Battle of Algiers in 1914, the French were overrun because they ran outta shells. A lot of people don't understand why the French got overrun so easily.
A lot of people say, they lost to the old generals were relying on horse cavalry and things like that. The reality is they ran outta shells. And Lloyd George the Future British Prime Minister was made minister for, munitions in those days because the fear was that they wouldn't be able to supply themselves.
So this has happened before many times. It's not actually a unique thing in history. It happened, you go back in the 16th century Spain, the Spanish had, all the gold from the Americas and silver as well. But they couldn't, eventually they couldn't buy, anything because the Dutch were making everything and Europe was making everything and no take their gold because they couldn't manufacture anything themselves.
And eventually the Spanish Empire fell, even though they had, a mountain of gold. So you, we've got rhyming right through history of this kind of thing happen. We just haven't had that happen at this scale. Now how can we fix it? That's a complicated subject. It obviously depends on will.
Whether we can optimize the political skills to do that. I think President Trump obviously sees it and I think he's probably seen it intuitively. He's almost hamiltonian in his regard of manufacturing and Reshoring the future materials and manufacturing capacity of the USA, he almost follows a complete Alexander Hamilton playbook. And Hamilton came up through, intense conflict and so he knew the importance. Eisenhower was similar. Everybody reads their Eisenhower speech and says, watch out for the military industrial complex. Eisenhower was even more interesting if you read the rest of the speech.
He was worried about the manufacturing complex and the ability to be self sustaining, and that's what he warned about. We take one message it's similar to this freedom and liberty. It's an ideal, but we forgot what the foundation of that ideal was, and that's interdependence.
If we're beholden to foreign powers. We risk that liberty and freedom right across the west because we become beholden to the supplier of our goods. And they can withdraw them. They can stop our reassuring, they can do all the things that they need to do.
Erik: Craig, I think that your focus on the midstream, in other words, it's not where the rare earth elements get mined from, it's who's got the ability to actually separate those rare earth elements and produce the final product that we need for all of these applications.
Some numbers taken directly out of your article, and by the way, I should have mentioned at the beginning, folks. Craig's article is linked in your research roundup email. It's free on his substack, and I very strongly recommend that everyone read it, start to finish. It is cover to cover, just an outstanding piece of writing.
But if you look at something like Gallium, which is essential for certain kinds of military radar and 5G networks and semiconductors and so forth. China controls 98% of gallium production, not where it's mined, but where it gets refined and produced. Magnesium smelting, 90 to 95% rear earth separation, 90%.
The high tech magnet production, which is the heart of electric vehicle motors wind turbines for for wind powered energy and so forth, and the actuators in defense mechanisms. More than 90% controlled by China graphite. Anode production for lithium ion batteries, more than 90% controlled by China.
Tungsten production, more than 83% controlled by China. And there's a long list that continues after that. Craig, what would it take? If president Trump were to get together with other Western leaders and say, boy, this leaves us exposed to where if China cut us off from all this stuff, we would be completely helpless.
We can't have that vulnerability. Let's reshore and rebuild all of that capacity so that we're not dependent on China for any of this stuff. How many years and how many dollars would it take to eliminate this dependency?
Craig: Short answer is trillions. I think it's variable because there's a lot of stuff on foot at the moment.
They can already see this, the White House and Congress and the Department of War as they call it now. I track a lot of companies who are receiving funds. You know as far back as two or three years ago to develop our capacity to refine rare earths and all these metals.
If you look at a company like UCU UNICOR I think they've received something like a hundred million dollars already to produce a rare earths capacity in Louisiana
Which has gone into initial production, I think this month or the or next month. You've got companies, an Australian company like IPX, Hyperion X. Now they're producing titanium. Outta Virginia. And they've got a new process that they took from the University of Utah from a, a scientist called Zach Fang which I is a delightful name.
He works in the University of Utah. He's like the Steve Jobs of. Of materials science, he's come up with a way of making titanium powders, at 80% less cost than the current method. There's another company that comes from Metal is also Australian lead.
It takes the, technology and the IP from James Tour outta Rice University. And they use a thing called flash dual heating, which heats everything up to 3000 joules, injects some chlorine into it. You get a methyl ox oxide out it that then can be separated into its different streams.
You know, not many people realize it but, the department of energy tend put out just before Christmas for three $25 million worth of funding to take rare earth to titanium gold and silver out of fly ash out from from coal fired power plants, for every coal fired power plant is billions and tons of fly Ashes sitting around it
that were, the output of the burning so much coal. , they all have a a significant amount of minerals still in them. They just have to be extracted. There's a number of innovations that we're doing, and it's like fits the old American, Yankee knowhow innovation cycle, that a lot of this stuff is coming to the floor But what it take is lowering the cost of capital for these projects. These projects haven't, flown in the past because, we've been funding things that give quarterly results. Like social media, like a lot of the software's gonna eat the world type stuff. You learn the code type of stuff where the cost of capitali not Not high at the start, and once you've built the software, you just have to incrementally add to it.
It's not a 10 year return and it, the return is fairly significant. So we haven't, we measure bread and milk as far as inflation, but we don't measure the asset market as inflation.
So we measure bread and mild but we don't measure the price of shelter. And so when bread and milk have gone up, we've raised the cost of capital and not notice that a lot of the industrial projects have been killed off. It be, as soon as, we go to four and 5%, the industrial projects, die on the vine. And we go back to the kind of hollowed out economy that the Fed policy.
Creates for us. And it's the Fed policy that's, at the core of the problem, the core of the problem is that industrial projects just don't get the funding that they need. Now the other one is weaponized pricing. We've gotta deal with that. Weaponized pricing is, every time, at the moment there's great example is copper melting in China is being done at negative cost. So if Peru and Chile ship their copper to china they're getting paid $50 a ton to, to process it. Now you imagine what that does to the copper refiners in the west. They can't compete. It's their method of, gaining complete control. They send us broke in the key areas that we need to evaluate.
I think one example is the chairman of Palantir has put together another startup called Epirus, and Epirus basically shoots a gallium gun, microsecond at drones drone and they just fall out of the sky. It fries their internal electrics. You put these gallium guns in low earth orbit and you can fry the electrics of an ICBM inside the silo.
So they have very consequential, you, if you take it away from us because it changes the, the pathway of our defense. You know we talked about copper, if you cannot put the copper in place. The end product it you can't build anything that we're talking about. So we need to do what we did in 1914 and what we did in different other scenarios and bring that onshore now. I think there is a pathway to do that. I've got another paper coming out on how to change the fed to do that and separate the Fed's ability to price control consumer prices, but separate out the infrastructure and industrial items so that they can survive.
So they're not measured as part of inflation. And, we may even have an interest free bond or something like that type solution where we offer. Not an interest free bond. A tax free bond where we offer pension funds, an alternative to investing where a pension fund would flow money into an industrial project and it wouldn't be paid by the treasury.
It would be paid by the industrial project and a tax free rate.
I guess the industrial project owners would be would part, would, partner with the state like the Chinese do to produce the industrial output that they need to do. There's no other way of doing it. State capitalism on the Chinese side I think is, 50 points ahead at half time.
And has got, we're not playing well enough to make a comeback.
Erik: Let's talk about how the AI trend plays into this, because a lot of military experts have opined that basically the AI race between the US and China for
leadership on AI is akin to the US Soviet arms race because AI has such profound implications in terms of its military applications and so forth. From reading your article, it sounds to me like we're headed, this is 1947. We're headed into an arms race, not with the Soviets this time, but with China, and it's about AI, and the strategy is gonna be that we'll buy our nuclear warheads from Moscow.
What? That doesn't make sense. How much of you know you gotta do two things to build an AI data center, you've gotta have all of the copper and all the materials that go into building that data center, and then you've got to power the data center. How much are we dependent on China? If China, th thought that the str, if we be ever did get into a kinetic conflict where we're actually at war with China and they decided to cut us off.
How much would that impair our ability to build AI data centers?
Craig: It could potentially totally impair, you'd end up with a situation where you've gotta do rationing on the western side to make sure that they get the materials they need, build the data centers. If we. If we start looking at AI not as a consumer device I guess Michael Burry sees it, and as a weapon system which you've just outlined then, it becomes a different equation because.
If you can't build these ai da data centers and they're weapon systems, the arms race takes a whole different feel, look, and feel, and all of a sudden, you return on investment and the various metrics that you would put on it as a con, as consumer item go out the window and it becomes a must do.
OpenAI to me is a weapon system manufacturer of the future to reconceptualization. But You know, it, it essentially is. And so a lot of this Michael Burry thing about, it's a bubble. It doesn't equate properly with where it, it actually sits. It's making it sound like it's a new Google.
Where in fact if they don't succeed. The West might not succeed either. Now, individually, they, they may or may not succeed. But I think the workloads that are potentially coming onto these, systems are so important that, we can't look at them as a consumer device Now. If you've got Transformers taking, four or five years to get to you from Siemens or Hitachi and the rare earths they're depended on, and then you're in quite a chokehold you need to find that stuff from somewhere else.
And, I think in the article I outlined. Potential areas that would probably unthinkable today, but they won't be unthinkable tomorrow. They, it's 20 grams
of silver in a solar panel. I propose that you tear all them up if you get into real desperate circumstances and use them for data centers and weapon systems.
The same goes for gallium and all the other things. Where we have to reframe the world to some extent. The world is not how we see it or how we've seen it. The world is a different place and we have to, reframe our conceptual building
blocks to, to look at the world this way because a denial by China or Russia because trust Russia control some of these, these things as well, in particular titanium.
That framing changes how we look at capitalism. We have to adopt some type of state capitalism and everyone will think that's nationalization. It's not nationalization, it's just an admittance that stateless capitalism that followed price to the point of efficiency so far that letting our foreign power supply the things that are crucial to the ongoing perseverance as, as the west, it's that important. And the density of copper is significant. The density of silver is significant as well.
Erik: Now you wrote this article, Craig, from the perspective of geostrategy and basically trying to get policymakers attention to recognize how vulnerable we've made ourselves to being cut off by Chinese dominance of supply chains, but.
You actually got to this through your own research. Not trying to research geopolitics, but research investments. So let's talk about where the trades are and where some of the opportunities are. I hate to take such a grim topic and try to make a buck out of it, but, that's what we do here on Macrovoices sometimes.
Craig: That's what I do too.
Erik: Let. Let's talk about that. I wanna start with silver, which you mentioned a couple of times. Most analysis that I've read recently about silver says, okay, look, what's going on here is silver is basically gold on steroids. We've got central banks buying up a lot of gold because they're concerned about US policy that's just causing the bubble in silver that's about to blow off.
There's really nothing substantial behind it. I think you've got a very different perspective from reading the article. Tell us about silver's atrategic importance. How does it play into the rest of everything that we're talking about? And is this a bubble that's over in silver or is it just getting started?
Craig: It's, yeah, let's just do some numbers. We've been 5,000 ton of silver short For the last four years, I think the overall it's 24,000 tons. Since 2020. When we're in deficit, we have to drag it outta vaults or people's cutlery drawers in order to pro provide it, silver is actually central to the whole electrification. The AI, there's 20 to 40 grams of silver in a major missile. There's eight tons of silver in a data center. There's almost, in the robotics world, if Elon's gonna build these robotics armies there's a good percentage of silver.
In each robot. So it becomes a substantial input. Now, 70% of our silver comes as an off take from copper, zinc, and lead refining. That's 60% happening in China. Now we are already in deficit, let's take that into account, even with the chinese output. Now just before christmas they put some licensing in that basically said that all silver would be licensed to the end supplier. I think there's 43 different Chinese companies that can output silver.
Now, what if they decided to cut all that off from us, from the west? All of a sudden the 5000 ton a year deficit turns into maybe 10000 ton a year deficit or more now they all must have to come from the cutlery drawer so one analyst says there are 200000 ton in inside people's cutlery drawer . Like I doubt that because I actually don't think anyone knows how much is in the cutlery drawers and the jewelry drawers. But we would have to drag it out the vaults and that's gonna send silver. Obviously skyrocketing because the net cost of silver in some of these products is marginal anyway.
There's a lot of silver in an EV, but, if silver doubled it's only gonna add 1% or so to the cost of the EV And then we've gotta prioritize what silver goes into what, we if we look at AI as weapon systems rather than consumer items, they would get priority over an EV.
I'll give you another thinking model. And this is triggered by what happened to BHP recently. BHP were told that they were gonna take offshore C&Y.
As payment for iron ore and BHP refused for a month. And then they decided that they would accept the offshore C&Y They were the last holdout of all the iron ore producers. What if China said to us you can have these rare earth minerals but we're gonna require offshore C&Y to pay for them. That would introduce a really weird dynamic because all of a sudden you've gotta have industrial companies in the west trying to reshore the AI companies building the data centers, the defense companies trying to sell C&Y in order to pay for these things.
I noticed there's a number of gold producers being acquired by, if you look at the quantity of that, it's getting quite significant. What if they gave for golders money and they backed the C&Y with gold and they require all of the rare earths and critical metals to be purchased under offshore C&Y. They could still run their internal renminbi. As a currency that was fiat and then they run the out outside currency as a as a reserve currency, so to speak.
All of a sudden you, the tables change. There's, doesn't mean that USD would crash or Euro would crash or anything like that because they're still required to service debt, but it would change the whole dynamics of the currency market. Still put them in a place because, you even go down to the machinery level.
Linus Metals put out a note. A few months ago, basically saying it's all well and good for us to start building these refining points in Texas. But we need the Chinese machinery to do that because we are not making in the west, the machinery to refine these metals. We're beholden to them for even the machinery.
So we've gotta learn how to do that. So that puts a lot of gap, that puts a lot of I guess risk in the west, climbing back into a situation where they enjoyed for the last four decades, and that is dominance over, Hegemony, the over the east.
Erik: As you look at this picture overall, where do you think the most opportune trading opportunities are?
We talked about silver briefly, but what else is going to get scarce? As much as the solution to this problem would be for governments to make big investments in reshoring, you've also said in the article that you don't think that reshoring will be. Profitable for a lot of American companies in the short term.
So it's not the actual reshoring that you want to invest in. You probably wanna invest in scarcity. First of all, would you agree with that? And if so, what other things besides silver that, silver's already seen a huge move. What hasn't moved yet? Where's the ripe trading opportunity?
Craig: Isaac's, the ripe training opportunities are the ones where our own form of state capitalism starting to show their face. You know, I mentioned a few of them before where, the Department of War and the Department of Energy are starting to finance some of these companies, and I think they give us, the trails to follow about the companies that will flourish in this new era
You know, the, the new scandium plays, the new gallium plays. There's some winners being picked and being subsidized with state capital from the West, and that's happening right across Canada, and it's happening in the Australia as well. And they're the, I guess they're the sense to follow to, to good returns.
Some of these companies that I'm sitting on at the moment have already had, you know, four, five hundred up to a 1000 percent near term increases in price as far as stocks. MTM for instance, I think I bought at 8 cents and it's near a dollar at the moment. I wouldn't be surprised that goes to $50 at some stage.
Now that's crazy. I know, but they're the kind of returns I think you'll get from this circular economy. IPX that I mentioned, basically uses some IP out of the Rice University. And what it does is it heats up fly ash and e-waste so all the circuit boards and that, is sitting in millions of tons in the US and it, he heats them up and injects some chlorine into it and makes a chloride, metal chloride mix outta it.
And then you can separate it at the chloride stage. I can envisage a company and then, I just don't mean this one. There's a there's a dozen of these types of companies where all of a sudden, we're processing the e-waste. They just made an agreement to take 2,500 tons of e-waste off glencorp. So they're fraternizing with the large industrials and they take that e-waste and, out a ton of e-waste is about 500 grams of gold. Out a ton of e-waste is about 300 grams of silver. I mentioned fly. The same thing is if you heat it up.
And in that add the chlorine mix, you get this chloride that all of a sudden makes it a circular economy. We can start processing these things. And this kind of fits the mode that we've used in the past in war situations under, under, under conflict where we've had to use our own resources and I think ultimately it serves us because it's gonna teach us to be innovative. There's another one Hyperion X that's gonna make titanium outta Virginia. 25% of an F 35 is titanium. I don't know. The, we're letting the, I guess the. The capabilities, even now downgrade.
But they've been given $115 million outta Department of Defense to, upscale this titanium capability so that they can produce titanium oxides. Now, this is an innovation story. We've just had the two last two decades where we've worshiped at the altar of, Zuckerberg who I guess is, main claim to fame. This is hypnotizing our attention and distracting us where we've had, real scientists developing IP that hasn't been recognized yet because they can't get it off the ground because they can't get the capital. Now if you look at some of these
places they're moving from pilot to commercialization and you've obviously got that risk element there.
But if they can make it through the commercialization stage, and they've virtually done that, certainly in the IPX case. These are the industrial companies of the future. These are the materials company that have to emerge. If the West is gonna survive. There's no other way to do it.
If you think of all the paths of doing this it's gonna be innovation and it's gonna be reestablishment of this materials capability onshore. Whether it's, whether it's in Australia through the allies, or whether it's onshore in the US. It has to be developed.
There's no other way of doing it, and you're not gonna do it the same way. That's not the American way. They'll do it in a more innovative way, to stop the pollution. One of the reasons that we offshore everything is that we didn't want the pollution tax the, we didn't want the pollution in our country.
I think Ricky, Gervais, know, made it great analogy About you, slavery being relocated to Foxcon factories with nature around them that, just because we haven't got ships and we're not bringing people over we're still enslaving them in their own countries. Now we can divert past that with innovation.
We can, I, me, I mentioned UCU. I'll mention them via symbols because I'm an investor first. There in Louisiana they're developing an amazing closed loop system that doesn't have any heavy, rare earth pollution with it. But throughput is lower costs than the old metric.
Now obviously the, the limitations on this is, we have a limited skill base. We have a limited education base. We're teach, we're telling everyone to learn to code a few years ago, and now we should be teaching them, learn to go to chemistry or learn to go to engineering in order to create the, I guess the industrial age 2.0.
There's a number of these companies I mentioned Linus, they're building a, they've got the go ahead in Texas, they had ESG problems in Texas. You've got all these I guess folks who are worried about the development of some of these capabilities in US states slowing the whole process down with.
Agreements and bureaucracy, they're now starting to be taken out the way. So you know, Linus has been trying to get this thing off the ground in Texas as a
rare earth refining project for a few years. And now they're going forward and we have to get these things out of the way for them.
But I think it's just common sense. I would go down the rabbit hole of all of these critical mineral plays, and chemical plays too. We're gonna need the chemical. There's a lot of a chemical association with critical metals plays, and, if you go down there you'll find that, that's the future of investment.
The future of investment. This era is, pivoted to a critical metal survival. Industrialization 2.0 that provides the feedstock and supply chain into the things that we've talked most about in the greater financial environment, investment environment. We keep talking about an AI bubble.
In order to do an Ai, whether it's a bubble or not, and I don't think it is. I think it's a military capability. We need to, understand the conditions precedent to creating those massive AI data centers and those, and the, all the electrification that goes with it, the energy, the gas the nuclear needs, copper.
Like I said, the, that one, that Microsoft one, I just read a report on 2,177 tons in one AI data center and there's 20 of 'em around the world. That's a lot of copper. That's but I think we have to be, careful of where this is not an automatic commodity play either because China's gaming that system too.
I put a note out yesterday about iron ore the Simon the the Guinea iron ore play. For China and Rio Tinto, they've put $20 billion into an iron all play. It's, I think, a large percentage of that goes into a railroad and, $20 billion. And it's not something that we would've risked in the west because we'd have to have a return of 20%.
If you look at what China uses, they use about a billion ton of copper a year In all their industries for 20 billion, they get, I think, stage four and five. They get up to about 60,000 ton By the, when the mine's fully operational, they get to about a hundred thousand ton per annum. But that's at 65% mineral Concentration.
You if you look at something like fmg, they're at 56% mineral concentration. Now that nets out that you've gotta process 8500 tons more. In ore, in dirt to get the same amount of via ore out, sorry, I think I said copper. You've gotta get the same amount of via ore out.
So you've got this thing where if they finance it they might lower the cost of, iron ore They might lower the cost of iron ore by 10% Say $10 a ton. And that
$10 a ton will give them an overall saving across their their iron ore usage of 10 billion dollars.
And that $10 billion gives them an ROI of 50% of their investment straight away in, inside, say, 12 to 24 months. You know that's a significant difference because if their return on investment. Also looks at the price. It means that the iron ore they, that they, them investing in iron ore production and making these mines and making an oversupply is pay pays them back.
Their ROI is differently configured to our ROI and so where we're saying the copper demand's going up. Significantly so the price will go up. That's old analysis. The new analysis says the copper demand's going up. They have complete control of the supply, so our copper costs might go up. But their copper cost, if they decide to, stop refining it for us and giving it to the, and start giving it to themselves exclusively, means that they've lowered the cost of copper from all their supplies.
And that changes everything because it changes the valuation of, a company like Escu fmg, it changes the valuation of bhp. It changes the valuation of Rio altogether because Rio, all of a sudden, even though they own 45% of the, similar, our mine, they're in a cost plus situation.
They're not in a, an iron all price situation.
Erik: And Craig, you've got an entire section in your article, which is about disruptive technologies and where some of the investment opportunities are. So again, I very strongly encourage all of our listeners to read the article. Craig, you told me off the air you're not really promoting anything as a private investor other than reading your articles.
Tell us where your substack is and if there's anything else you'd like to tell our listeners about what. You do
Craig: well, my Substack is just my name, Craig Tindale. You'll find it there. Same with my @ctindale for X. And then you can find me on LinkedIn as well because I'm publishing there as well.
Just my name again. All I'm asking from anybody. I've done pretty well at investing over the last decade and I don't really need to promote anything. What I'm really trying to promote is our own survival and awareness of what we need to do for our own survival. So it's pretty pure in that context.
I just ask you to read it thoroughly because it's important to every one of your investment portfolios out there and to forward it to other people because we need to get the word out. We need to change the way we're thinking about things in the west to so that we. We become resilient, that we survive as a culture, as a civilization.
And that if we don't do that we have a different future than I think we're all we've grown up with.
Erik: And again, folks, the name of the article is Critical Materials, A Strategic Analysis, and you'll find a link to that article in your research roundup email. Patrick Ceresna and I will be back as Macrovoices continues right here at Macrovoices.com.

Erik: Joining me now is Commodity context founder Rory Johnston. Rory boy, we live in interesting times. We've got the situation in Venezuela, and I think a bigger picture to talk about, which is overall President Trump has. Described an agenda, which is, Hey, we've really gotta get oil prices down. It's very near and
dear to his heart because it's one of the most important things for him to do in order to secure the potential of not losing the house in the midterm elections.
How would you score the the president in terms of using the best tools available to him to bring prices down?
Rory: It's a great way to kick it off and thanks for having me back on the podcast. Eric 2026 is off to quite the start. So this question about Donald Trump and using the various very real levers of the presidency in order to reduce the price of oil, I would say that the president's actually been really bad at this to date.
I think if the president did nothing. The oil price would be considerably lower today than it is right now. I think it's important to walk through why that is, because I think that's actually a fairly, this is a claim that gets me a decent amount of hate online. That people are like, no, of course listen to what Donald Trump says.
He clearly wants lower oil prices and look, he just conquered Venezuela in order to get lower oil prices. Whatcha talking about? But what we've seen is that. One of the things we've talked about, routinely, I think that we talked about this last time I was on the podcast, that the global oil market has headed in 2025, particularly the latter half of 2025, into fairly pronounced oversupply, at least on paper, that supply considerably outran demand by upwards of 3 million barrels a day, which is for those that watch the oil market, a very large glut in the oil market.
But while prices have been broadly under pressure, they are by no means under the degree of pressure you'd expect if that kind of surplus was bearing down on stocks. And while there have been a couple different things that have prevented, I think the. Full transmission of that glut into prices and term structure.
So far, I think un undoubtedly the most important variable there has been president Trump's considerable increase in both the volume and enforcement of various sanctions throughout the oil market. Both, on Venezuela, on Iran, and on Russia, and across all three of these countries you've seen considerable buildups.
There's essentially really two ways you can judge. Efficacy of these sanctions, and that's by observing both the price that these producers are getting, or essentially what price their crude is clearing the market, and also looking at oil and water, essentially. How much are their logistics getting backed up? And oil and water has surged through the latter half of last year and in the last quarter of last year. So Q4 of 25, you are building oil and water at a pace of around three quarters of a million barrels a day across the three of those sanctioned producers. That's a lot of oil and that alone takes almost a third of that of that supply glut right off the market.
And I think even though PE people will say look. Their barrels are obviously being produced, which is true. But they're not. This is the difference between production and supply. They're being produced, they're ending up on tankers, but they're not actually available to supply any piece of the market.
So you're getting that kind of double whammy of it not happening and also rising on the side. So this is preventing or blunting that supply from hitting the market, and that I think is the most direct way. The president has actually affected the oil market to date is essentially by taking off a bunch of supply that otherwise would've been there.
So to that point, I think that if you're grading him on his ability to keep oil prices low, I would say he has been to date. A bearish factor on oil prices sorry, a bullish factor on oil prices. And prices would be much, much lower if he, or, if Kamala Harris had won the presidency 'cause and presumably she would not have been quite so harsh on various angles of this sanctioned kind of buildup.
Erik: Now one of the counter arguments that you would hear to what you just said is, Rory, haven't you been paying attention to the news? President Trump just announced that Venezuela is about to hand over 32, maybe as much as 50 million barrels of oil right away, which has got to help the market. Rory does
Venezuela have 50 million barrels of oil to hand over to Donald Trump.
Rory: Yes and no. And I think it really depends on how we define what we're looking at. And Eric, I think you and I actually interacted earlier this week or I guess late last week on this question of like how much oil is actually floating around out there on Venezuela. 'cause we were talking earlier about a lot of Venezuela oil backing up on water.
That's, I think, a piece of what the president has talked about, seizing his, what I've called his kind of like pirate booty of his conquest of Venezuela. Is this 30 to 50 million barrels now. One of the things, and I think when you look at what
he said it's very clear that at least in the president's mind, part of what he will be grading himself on.
And I think what we should also be grading him on, is whether or not you have, whether or not Venezuela's oil production actually begins to recover. He's basically said that Venezuelan oil production, the industry is essentially rotted away for lack of foreign capital and because of domestic mismanagement, which is all true.
So presumably he wants that production to rebound fairly quickly, which again goes to his claim of wanting lower oil prices. So one of the issues with Venezuela and the blockade that he imposed is that you essentially backed up a lot of pressure on those systems and without tankers to get rid of the crude.
And with domestic storage tanks overflowing, you saw more and more pressure for PDVSA, the national oil company to shut in production, which is going the opposite way of what the president wants. So I think what Trump is saying or claiming here is that, while before they even figure out what's happening with all the sanctions and the blockade and everything else, we're just gonna quickly take off that, 30 to 50 million barrels to relieve some pressure on the system Now.
You can cobble together, very charitably, a way to do this, but it's unlikely we're gonna see that full volume of crude delivered to the Gulf. But I think regardless, markets are now, I think, acting in a way where that is beginning. To show up and in prices you've seen, for instance, while global Brent crude markets I, I think are rising rallying pretty aggressively.
And the backwardation at the front of the Brent Curve has turned decisively bullish. Again, WTI is lingering on a weaker back foot, not quite able to get that same bid. You've seen, especially heavy pressure on things like Western Canadian select or heavy crude oil benchmarks in the US Gulf Coast, where essentially from November levels you've rise you've widened from a differential of about $4 a barrel under WTI for WCS at Houston to roughly around 8, 7 50 $8 a barrel in WTI at Houston.
So that is, I think, is your evidence that there is some pressure coming there, but this now we can get to the whole question of what does this mean for the future of Venezuela? And is this a problem for Canada and these, incrementally, I think the future of Venezuela is probably better without Nicolas Maduro at the helm than with him at the helm.
But I think it's obviously much more complicated than just all of a sudden Venezuela and oil production's just gonna start mooning going forward.
Erik: It seems clear, Rory, from both President Trump's comments and as well as Chris Wright's comments that, the agenda is very clear here. It's going to be the government of the United States does everything possible to encourage US oil companies, if not subsidize US oil companies to make massive investments to rapidly bring that production in Venezuela back online.
And the thing that seems. I guess surprising to me is most of the other things the president has done seem to be temporarily focused on the midterm elections now, at least according to our mutual friend, Dr. Alhajji. He did a podcast or I guess a Twitter space is about this. He thinks that the most aggressive, no matter how much money you throw at it.
It would take at least three years to get just 1 million barrels per day of Venezuelan production back online. And I don't think anybody disputes that Venezuela has the, more reserves than anybody else. So over a long period of time and a huge amount of investment, there's lots and lots of oil there.
But Dr. Alhajji says. At best it's three years to get just 1 million barrels a day of additional production. What's your take on that? Does it take that long? Does it take less than that? Longer than that? What do you think?
Rory: No, I think that's about right. I think one of the big questions is where are you measuring the growth point from?
Because I think one of the things that's happened with Venezuelan supply and production in the market is that it's changed a lot over the last couple months. So for instance, whether, Trump could claim a much larger victory, a much larger growth pace if you're measuring off the low point of shut in production due to the blockade, right?
Trump can just remove the blockade and some of that will just bounce back naturally. Now. If we're talking about, say, how can we get incremental growth from say, October levels from before the blockade was really imposed, that I think is gonna be a much harder sell. And I think that's where you're gonna get, three, five plus years before you can really get a million barrels a day of production.
And again, this is talking, this is with 50 plus billion barrels of investment. This is with everyone beginning work very quickly or immediately none of which is
currently happening. But I do think that you can probably get. A piece of that, say two, 300,000 barrels a day, probably quicker than that.
Maybe, a year, maybe 18 months. That would be more mostly focused on Chevron's operations and essentially squeezing out what else you can get from the current system. But I think. After that immediate low hanging fruit is exhausted, that's when you move to this question of, okay, now we need to repair pipelines.
We need to fully begin to refurbish fields. We need full workovers, we need, all the other things. We need more diluent coming in the market. We need upgraders back up and running. This is when you start to get this really heavy. Mountain of pent up investment demand that has yet to be kinda satiated.
And the further you go down, the harder and harder it gets because eventually you run into things like the Venezuelan power market, like the power grid is deeply. Unreliable and, prone to blackouts, that's not a good way to run upgraders and refineries and various other components of the industry.
So when you get to that stage, that is obviously you need to fix like the entire country's power grid. So these are obviously extremely difficult, expensive things to do, and that I think is where you're gonna start to run into more pushback or reticence among the people and the companies that would be required to do that investment.
I think you saw that this past Friday when Trump and Wright, Etc, all had the, collection of oil industry executives gather for this press conference about what the future of Venezuela was. And you saw a fairly broad spread. You saw everyone there. You saw everyone from upstream companies, service companies, refiners, trading companies, Etc.
And I think each of those. Had a very different view of how optimistic they were coming down the line. For instance, Chevron, which most listeners would know has been in Venezuela, never left Venezuela, was able to work at a deal with the Chavez and then, and the Mado government, and was able to cut sanctions, waiver deals with, the Biden administration.
And now again, the Trump administration, they think that, I think reasonably so they can get, it's all upside for them because they've held on. Against all odds to their Venezuelan assets. That I think will be some upside for them. But other companies like Exxon is the one that coming outta that meeting had all of the
headlines about it was saying it was, the quote was that Venezuela in its current state is uninvestible.
And talking about, the long, slow work of rebuilding institutions and rebuilding the rule of law and rebuilding a culture that respects contracts and kind of continuity of government. These are obviously. Much more difficult things and things that the President can't just snap his fingers and say voila.
Other companies, I think, I'm sure, trading companies are gonna be all over this. You had Trafigura and Vitol at the meetings were very enthusiastic about, essentially acting as the White House's broker of Venezuelan, repossessed and resold Venezuelan oil. They're very enthusiastic with that.
Unsurprisingly, I think overall, refining companies seemed happy to have more heavy crude availability. But in terms of companies that were jumping over themselves to get in and really make those hard investments, no, that happens much slower. And then we get to this question of, okay would you have subsidies?
The one thing that they said in the. The meetings was, Trump committed to some quote unquote security guarantee, but obviously the next day the State Department advised all Americans to leave Venezuela because of the security situation. There's a carton that a horse and a cart situation here, and I don't think the president knows which one comes first.
Erik: Let's go back in the short term to this 30 to 50 million barrels of oil that's supposedly about to be handed over. First of all I think there's a psychological effect that we're used to talking about oil supply in barrels per day of production. This is not per day. This is a one time thing.
So if we did hypothetically get 30 million barrels all at once, okay, that's 1 million barrels a day for just one month, and that's it. And so in terms of context, it's not very much oil, but even if we said. Okay. 30 million barrels still. That's, something to throw at the market, at least short term.
Maybe that'll bump the price down a little bit and overcome some of the upside that we've seen in the last couple of weeks. But hang on, where is this oil, first of all? Does it exist? And if it exists, where does it exist? Because from the Twitter exchange that I had with you and Dr. Anas. It sounds Anas was saying there's really only about 11 million barrels is the most that they have.
And then somebody else, I don't re remember if it was you or someone else said wait a minute. No, they've got more. It's in floating storage, but it's not in Venezuela, it's in Asia. And I'm thinking to myself, oh yeah, so the Chinese are gonna say, oh, that's Venezuelan oil. Send it back. How does this work?
Rory: You know if you're looking at the barrels, actually physically off the coast of Venezuela, you're probably looking at somewhere between 10 and 15 million barrels, depending on whose estimate you're using. But it's not obviously the full 30 to 50, you've probably got another 10 or so at various stages of transit throughout the world and floating around, waiting to be delivered into China.
I think that's probably what is being referred to by the president here, mixed with some additional. Volumes that have built up on land in Venezuela as part of this attempt to not shut in production. So they've been filling onshore production and or onshore storage in production areas. So I think that's probably what we're talking about, but just again, to reiterate.
So far this, this volume of oil, it's been taken off the market by Trump in the first place. So this would essentially be a debt almost that's being repaid. So it's only a million barrels a day for a month. But that theoretical, I think you it in another way. You could say that, let's say Venezuela starts producing and flowing again, that could theoretically double Venezuela supply to the market for one month.
I think it's another way of framing the same thing, which again, to this point that right now we're feeling a lot of these weird idiosyncratic, seemingly one-off supply disruptions, whether or not it's Venezuela. We're gonna talk, I'm sure about what's happening in Kazak flows. The CPC terminal or , Russia or Iran.
These are all theoretically supplies that have been lost to the market that will. The assumption is not that they're going to be permanently offline, so eventually they're not just going to come back online. But in the case of Venezuela's floating storage or built up oil and water, you could theoretically double the pace at which that supplies for a certain number of months.
Erik: Okay, so really what we're talking about is Trump took a bunch of oil off the market with his blockade. That oil got trapped in Venezuela, and what he is really saying now is about that oil that I trapped through my military operations and prevented you from exporting that you've got. Piled up however much there
is there, and let's inflate it, then exaggerate the amount by a President Trump factor.
Whatever that number is we'll take it and you'll give it to us. And that's what's going on there. But it's probably not a full 50 million barrels. Now. Meanwhile, in other news president Trump seems to be encouraging Iranian protestors to. Continue protesting and it seems like he's almost trying to spark a bigger conflict or even civil war in Iran.
I think most people are assuming that is a precursor to some kind of military intervention from the US and Iran. Do. Would you agree with that? Do you think that's what's coming next and in what timeframe?
Rory: I think it definitely seems like that's what the market is currently assuming, and I think at this stage, given what we've seen both from.
The Prime President Trump regarding Iran as recently as last summer where they dropped 14 bunker busters on various nuclear Iranian nuclear facilities. And then we obviously saw a fairly unprecedented capture of Nicolas Maduro and Venezuela. I think at this stage, he views those two interventions is wildly successful as kind of proof of American power, which I think so far.
Has only, and I think will continue to embolden him until one of these interventions goes badly. So I would say at this stage it seems reasonably likely that the president is going to do something here. And I, and while it's still, I mean if we're just flashing back. To this past June when you had the 12 Day Israel Iran War that's when obviously prices got really spiky again, I think for a good reason.
You had act, you had missiles flying around the region. But again, I think at this stage when we, whenever we get to talking about Iran. You're talking about? I think when we're talking about the price impact, and I think a lot of what we've seen over the past, call it three, four days of trading in oil as we've rallied roughly $5 a barrel higher.
A lot of that has been a Ron risk, particularly running into a fairly overstretched short. Positioning market positioning situation in the oil market. And just for those, again, for those that don't know that, we're always talking about massive amounts of oil traveling through the strait of hormoz.
So even though it remains this like really. Minuscule tail risk. I think even a one, two, 3% move in the probability of something happening in or around the strait is worth a lot to the oil market, particularly in what we'd call this sense of like precautionary demand. So you have these companies traders, Etc, that are bidding up the front, particularly the Brent Curve, worried about.
The loss of these barrels. I think particularly coming at a moment that we're also seeing, still tightness in Venezuelan supplies tightness in Russian supplies, tightness in Kazak, supplies outta the ccpc terminal. All these things are keeping the market tighter. And now you have this worry about the situation in the, again, and all of this.
It's, if it's starting to sound a lot like 2015, I think you're paying attention. It's the same idea that. We have this overarching consensus view of. A surplus. It's about to hit the market at any moment. It's this freight train running at you. And then each single month you have some kind of shock that comes in it, whether it's whether it's a CBC terminal outage, whether it's the Venezuela blockade, whether it's before that the sanctions by Trump against Rosneft and Luke Oil, Russia's two largest oil exporting companies.
These things are still having these ripple effects to the market are keeping. All that prompt supply tied up in knots in ways that it's really not able to fully bear down on prices. So again, back to this point of is Donald Trump bullish or bearish? I would say, again, he's bullish for prices because absent these knots, we would've a lot more barrels trying to actually clear the market.
But as of yet, they're all still, wrapped up in varying degrees of logistical legal sanctions. Red tape.
Erik: Now Rory, you are based in Canada. You're a Canadian citizen. I want to ask you an awkward question, which is look it used to be that if someone said the United States sometimes engages in regime change operations for the sake.
Of taking oil from from countries by removing the government that's in charge and replacing it with a different one. That was just crazy conspiracy talk. It seems like the president's not really hiding the fact that his agenda is very much to resources and certainly the folks in Greenland are very, acutely aware of this right now, that he's not afraid to say, look, we think that we should have this. We think it's in the world's best interest. We think we've decided that it's in the Greenland people's best interest. Not necessarily checking with them to see what they think, but just deciding for them it's in their best interest.
It's best for everybody, and it's really important because it's really about the development of the Arctic, including. Oil exploration in the Arctic. What President Trump is saying is, we need Greenland because in, in it, please, what President Trump is saying is the United States needs Greenland because if they don't get it, if the United States doesn't get it.
Then Russia and China will, and it's gonna change the balance of power in a way that's unhealthy for the world. And hey, I'm just doing the, president Trump feels that he's just doing the right thing for the whole planet by telling the people of Greenland that this is in your best interest, even if you don't think so.
How do you guys in Canada feel about this, considering that you also have the other big landmass that goes up into the polar region? If you were talking about Arctic exploration acquiring Canada and President. Trump's words as the 51st state would seem to achieve that goal just as well as getting Greenland would.
It used to be crazy to think that there would ever be any overt pressure or forced action for the United States to want to annex any part of Canada anyway, for heaven's sakes. We're we excellent allies? Always have been. What are Canadians thinking these days about all of that?
Rory: It's certainly not lost on, on.
Canadians, I think what's happening? I think. In a way it's Canada is both as large heavy oil resources like Venezuela does, and it has a obviously large mining and arctic kind of territorial expanse, much like Greenland does. So there's obviously a lot of parallels here.
I think the way I think about it is a couple different ways. I think on the first. Simplest, geopolitical lens. Yeah. I think if we're, if you view kind of North America as your risk board Venezuela kind of secures your entrance to North America from the south and Greenland, from Europe.
Canada's obviously an important piece of that entire continental control. So yeah, that's obviously an obvious point of concern I think. In terms of assuming that the level, I would say that we still feel relatively safer that our, no matter what opinion you have of Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, I don't think anyone believes that he's, the head of a narco terrorist syndicate.
So I think that, you would at least need to create some other pretext there. But I think what we have seen is this discussion increasing. The next thing that's gonna be bearing on US Canada relations is going to be the renegotiation of U S-M-C-A or a Canadian call north of the border Uzma.
We put the sea at the front, of course. Which is, I think, again, your sign of how unified that that trade deal was. I think that each of the countries had their, has their own name for the same deal. But that's the, that renegotiation is what's going to be coming next. And I think one of the interesting things that's
happened over the past year it wasn't, it was just a year ago that we were talking about how, Trump was thinking about imposing tariffs on Canadian crude oil experts in the United States.
And despite. Pushback from essentially every corner of the industry. They actually did impose tariffs on Canadian crude access for a day or two until the U-S-M-C-A exemptions kicked in. But I think that, there's this feeling of, did Trump feel like reality put him in a bind?
I think there was a similar feeling of when he tried to go really hard against China and then there was this, that rare earth's kind of export ban blow up that kind of felt like he got, kinda got his hands tied by these physical mark constraints. I think one of the things that's interesting heading into these renegotiations is.
I will, I can tell you many different ways in which Venezuela does not replace Canada in terms of the US' crude slate in terms of energy security, Etc, Etc. I think what you've seen is amongst the coalition of actors underpinning President Trump, call it the broad MAGA movement, you've seen a very heavy anti Canada kind of political tone take hold, and particularly after Trump.
Captured Nicolas Maduro, last weekend, two weekends ago now. Ever since that happened, you basically, there were comments around how, oh, now we don't need Canada because we have another country with very large heavy oil resources. But just on that, just I have to do my Canadian duty to 60 seconds and say that's, you can.
You're gonna see additional competition in the US Gulf Coast, but those Venezuelan barrels, Venezuela produces less than a quarter of what Canada exports regularly to the United States. It can't get into the Midwest because all the pipelines point south, Etc, Etc Etc. But I think that what you have seen in the Trump administration is that reality doesn't always.
Bind as we've seen even with talking about Trump and and what he wants international or US oil companies to do in Venezuela. It doesn't really matter what they say. It matters more like his perceived vibe is. And I think right now there's a perception among his coalition that having Venezuela as potentially the 51st state, so Canada would get bumped to, the threat of 52nd State.
That I think becomes a, they believe that to be a point of leverage. So even if it isn't physically a point of leverage, I don't think that matters. I think that the
Trump administration's gonna come into these renegotiations with a feeling of an advantage in Venezuela they didn't have last time around.
Erik: Now one of the ideas that's been floated by Chris Wright, I think, or maybe it came from President Trump, I'm not sure, was using any oil from Venezuela to refill the strategic petroleum reserve. That actually seems like a strategically good idea to me because the oil that the US is most dependent on, in addition to the oil is produced in the United States, is blend stock.
The heavy blend stock that's needed into mix with that very light. Bachan shale oil in order to to be able to refine it in our refineries. What do you think about the idea of using Venezuelan oil to refill the strategic petroleum reserve? Is there enough supply from Venezuela to actually do that?
'cause of course, the SPR is much bigger than the 30 to 50 million barrels that they're talking about. Is that a realistic thing? And if so, is it a good idea?
Rory: I think, to your point, I think that as an example, like this 30 to 50 million barrels, I think, if we're talking about what the most strategic thing the United States could do with it.
Yeah. I think given that we've consistently talked about how one of the limitations to limiting or to refilling the SPR is the lack of congressional appropriations to do the lack of money to actually buy the oil. Suddenly. If Trump claims that, Venezuela has turned over 30 to 50 million barrels, that is, roughly market prices, two and a half billion barrels, sorry, two and a half billion dollars on the upside.
That's the 50 worth of oil, which is actually double the amount they even initially tried to get from Congress in the last, kinda a big, beautiful bill before it got hacked down to I think only a hundred something million. But yeah, I think it's actually it's not a bad idea.
The trouble is that, to my knowledge, and I've chatted with a few people that know more about the SPR than I do. But I think to my knowledge, the merry crude or your kind of heavy Venezuelan crude exports don't really match the spec well of what's in the SPR, which is typically more of a medium sour barrel,
more like your.
Mars or Poseidon Barrel your ASCI kind of blends if those that are more familiar with the US Gulf. But I think what could be interesting is there is precedent before that the, oil that has been. Let's say put into the possession of
the United States Federal government in the past that could be, for instance, through royalty in kind programs where, the government actually got physical barrels in exchange for production royalties rather than a cut of profits.
In the, in prior moments that has been essentially exchanged a barrel for a barrel or a barrel for a fraction of barrel or whatever for grades that are more conducive to the US SPR, I think that is an interesting possibility here because obviously the administration has not been very successful at getting those congressional appropriations to refill the SPR.
They've had other budget priorities whenever that's been going on. And I think this, given that the, Trump administration has so front and center frame this around oil and strategic energy security and everything else. I think that obviously makes sense from a narrative kind of cohesiveness point. But again, I think they would need to do some kind of.
Roundabout maneuver in order to do that and end up with crude, that's actually useful to the SPR.
Erik: So let's try to bring this conversation around to things that our audience can actually trade. We've got a pretty I don't know, it's the first time in how many months that we've not only.
Come off of that $55 very strong support level, but we're above 60, at least as we're speaking on Tuesday afternoon as we're recording this, when's the last time we were above 60 on WTI? It looks to me like we just barely touched it briefly sometime in Dec early December. Before that, it goes off off one of my charts I'm looking at, I'd have to look back to what sometime in October was the last time before that.
Rory: Yeah I'm looking at Brent the last time. We're at 65 40 on Brent right now, which the last time we were there was in late October.
Erik: Is this, has this rally got legs? Is this the beginning of something big? Or is this one of those geopolitical rallies that you wanna fade? Because as soon as the geopolitics come down, you know we're gonna retrace the whole thing back down to 55.
Rory: So my bias here is that it's the latter. It's this geopolitical again, this is Iran, this is CPC. And again, we, I keep mentioning the CPC pipeline. So just again, 60 seconds of what I'm talking about there. The CPC or the Caspian
Pipeline Consortium Pipeline, which is essentially the way. 80% of Kazakhstan's oil gets to market.
This was, it's a pipeline that comes outta Russian territory that has historically been safer than some of the other Russian ports. But in Nov in late November Ukraine bombed the loading points the single point moorings that the facility
uses to ship on. And essentially that's had this massive blowback effect and taken upwards of a third of kaza production off the market in January so far.
So there's also this there's a bunch of these compounding supply losses that are keeping the market much tighter than it would otherwise be. So I'd say all else equal the assumption is that those will not remain forever going forward. That,
that, right now. LA based on later number that I'm seeing, you're looking at Kazakhstan's production down to roughly a million barrels a day through the first half of January, down from 1.75 million barrels a day in November.
So that's, we're talking huge chunky losses. Presumably then Kazakhstan's gonna wanna get that back up. So as long as Ukraine doesn't continue to bomb the CBC terminal or tankers as they did today, that were heading to the CBC terminal that should normalize. But I think the challenge with saying that is that.
We've been saying that for a little while now, that these one-off things keep happening repeatedly, and I think to a degree it's useful to just think of just a, a theoretical regime to talk about how we're, how, what we're seeing right now, which is we have a fundamentally weak oil market, which in my mind has emboldened and facilitated particularly President Trump to take ever more volatile, destabilizing policy actions in the market
Yes, eventually this should all roll over and then we get the glut and the prices grind lower and we go fully into Contango on the curve. But so far, these, he's, Trump seems quite committed to continuing to pressure these various countries
and I think as we've seen him emboldened by his, at least ostensible, thus far, success in Venezuela.
How far is he gonna go? In supporting the Iranian protestors, how far is he going to go in, pushing harder on Russia. And I think all of this in the context of, I don't know if you saw Eric earlier today but Donald Trump came out and said that he really wished he could see oil go back down to $53 a barrel again.
That's a very specific target in the president's mind, which I'll note is $3 a barrel higher than his target used to be? So maybe that we can, maybe he is acknowledging his own his own bullish slant on the market over time.
Erik: Rory, could it be that? What's going on here is President Trump is trying to do a calculated, risk management move where he says, okay, what he really needs in terms of oil prices is that $53 number that he's talking about before the midterm elections.
And therefore, let's go fast and furious, bill. China shop, Donald Trump style, do all of the geopolitical upsetting that he might be inclined to do early. Get it over with in January, and then give the market time to calm down as we get, into summer driving season. And the other pressures that tend to take us back up in oil prices have it all over with so that we're in the blow off phase and we're retracing, as you said.
Could it be that he's just trying to get all of his, geopolitical upsetting, done and over with.
Rory: It's not a bad idea. If that was actually, what if there was a, a National Security Council meeting or a National Economic Council meeting and like someone said this should be the strategy.
I think it's not a bad strategy because again, I think that this is the period of the year where prices are going to be weakest when balances were weakest. That provided you additional fundamental support for doing various supply side destabilizing moves. I think even if you wanted to go one step further, even more galaxy brained here, I think there's a factor that, Trump obviously says he wants low prices speaking to that consumer sentiment around cost of living and pump price pain, Etc, Etc.
But I think what you've seen. If you're, if you wanna be purely rational about it. I, I've come to really like this theory of essentially this like parabola of political price pressure. That when you get. Over. So there's really compelling research that was done by Brookings that showed negative media mentions that essentially as you get above $3 and 50 cents a gallon for us pump prices, negative mentions in media, which I think both reflect and further drive consumer sentiment around these pump prices builds up rapidly after you hit above three 50.
But that doesn't, it basically flat lines under three 50. Like you don't get this commensurate. It's not like people get happier for $3 or two 50 gas. So that I think is interesting because it, you, your downside payoff is less it's almost like a prospect curve that the, consumers overweight their losses and they don't really give you the benefit of their upside.
If it's better than that. On the flip side, you have us producers that, if they go from $90 a barrel to $60 a barrel on crude, maybe they go from making gangbuster profits to only scraping by. That's obviously unpopular, but it's much more painful to go from 60 to say. 40 or 30 where you go from, not it, it is from breaking even to like outright bankruptcy or worrying about layoffs and winding up your company, that becomes much more painful.
So I think if you got much below 50 for any durable period, even below 60 for a durable period as we saw, I think the pushback from. Trump's base in the oil sector, which I think has felt reasonably and understandably burned, but I think still naturally gravitates towards. Coalition for, let's say the upcoming midterms.
So I think there could be an attempt to balance those competing factions and don't get too offside on either one of those kind of rising parabola of pump price pain or or barrel pain on the producer side. But I think at the end of the day, the one thing I'll say is that I think all of this we can.
Trump does so many things and says so many things that I think it's easy to overfit a theory onto him. But I do worry that this, I think the other side is that I think it's just reasonable to think that he is just winging it, that he wants pro, he wants prices to be lower and you know he says that, but he does a bunch of stuff that increases the price with sanctions and everything else without fully recognizing why.
And he'll just post about how, if you were a patriot, you would bid the price of oil lower or something like that. So I think I, I do worry about overfitting and giving him too much credit for having a consistent strategy here. 'cause I just don't know if that's the case.
Erik: I wanna get a little bit more technical here because this is where I think the best trading opportunities are in this market. Last time I had you on, I don't remember how long ago it was or maybe it was two interviews ago. You and I had both noticed something that we thought was quite unusual in the shape of
the forward curve, the term structure of WTI, crude oil, which is all, it's they call it a curve for a reason.
It's usually curved. And what we noticed, both of us was, eh, it's funny. It's like there's really, pronounced backwardation right to one specific contract. And I think it was actually right now around January of 26, and then all of a sudden there's like a, a very sudden bend in the curve and it's all contango after that.
And we were both kind of scratching our heads saying, why that specific month, why not the usual curvature that you would see there? It's happened again, Rory. If you look at the WTI curve right now it's exactly as you and I predicted at that time. You and I have said, wait a minute, that contango that you see after January of 26, that's gonna flip into backwardation, at least at the front of the curve.
That's exactly what's happened, but now it's March of 27. Just about one year out. 'cause we're just flipping from the February to the March contract and the contract role that's coming in the next week. All of a sudden, that's the inflection point. Why are these funny shaped curves happening at odd months where all of a sudden that there's that abrupt shift from backwardation to contango?
And specifically what you and I thought at that time was okay, it means the trade is. To buy the spread that started at that time in January 26th. By January 26th through January 27, that calendar spread and expect it to flip from contango into backwardation is the it would be the the H seven.
H eight the March of 27 to March of 28 one year calendar spread, which is all in contango. I, is that a ripe trade to expect that over the next year to switch into backwardation? And if so how does that compare with trading the front, the flat price on the front month?
Rory: So I think one thing that's interesting that you've seen, and you've seen this almost.
Almost every month since April, since last, since last April when Trump announced his Liberation Day tariffs. And this is, I think when this whole, at that point you got the add-on of opec adding all that, crude back to the market. This is when the global glut thesis really took hold very rapidly.
And what you've seen really interestingly, pretty much every single month since, is that for the first half of the month. The front of the curve weakens you basically flirt with flipping into prompt contango, and then something happens in the middle of the month, whether or not it's Ukrainian attacks on the CPC or it's Trump sanctions against Russian oil majors or anything else.
This, it's just the moment that you basically get the shock higher, and then basically at the end of the month you always end back and fairly pronounced. Backwardation only for that to begin sliding again the next month. And essentially it's this recycled, it's this yo-yo up and down.
Flat prices had I think a bit more of a range, like a trend to it. But if you just, if you're just looking at prompt time spreads or or even let's say the front couple time spreads along the crude curve that has been a cyclical thing every single month that it goes. Lower and then higher and lower and then higher.
And I think I've joked with some, friends, analysts that are they're watching someone in the White House is watching for when this curve is about to flip into contango. And that's when they're like, aha, that's when we'll announce the next section against against Roz n Luko or whatever.
And I think that's something that's been thoroughly consistent. Now what's interesting about this cycle is that. Got started much earlier in the month, about a week earlier than it has in prior months, and this is when Iran got started up. So I think if we were to follow this back to it, if this was to repeat itself, I would expect this, us to remain heavy and hot on the, at the front of the curve up until the end of the month.
Then begin to essentially fall back down again as the market says, okay, is this the month when we finally begin to see that surplus arrive on shore? And again, until it, it's going to happen eventually. It's just a question of how many more months we kick it down the road because each one of these crises, for most of them at least it's not a complete change in narrative.
It's just a, essentially you're either delaying that barrel from going to the market. Which means you get a double whammy down the line or you're just, preventing it from hitting right now. And I think that's what we're looking to see is that these barrels will eventually hit. We just don't know when.
So I think the market's gonna keep waiting every single month to say, is this contango month? Is this contango month? And then as soon as something happens, in this case, Iran and prior cases, it was something else. It was Venezuela. That I think is the cycle that we're gonna keep following here.
Erik: Rory, I want to come back briefly to this whole regime change question that we discussed earlier in this interview, just because of some news that's happened while we were speaking and now of course, the idea that the US would ever engage in regime change operations for the sake of getting the oil is obviously preposterous, ridiculous, crazy conspiracy talk that could never happen.
However just after the market closes on Tuesday as we were speaking, Chris Wright announces, quote, the US would happily partner with Iran on oil if the
regime ends. Now this is not a regime change operation of course, but just, hypothetically, if the regime did end, the US would happily partner with Iran on oil.
Any comments on that? And as a Canadian any concerns?
Rory: Yeah, I think I, I'm even, I haven't even seen the comment come across the line yet, but it sounds very similar to what we've heard from other what we've heard from Wright and others about Venezuela.
I think there is this definite interests, and I think we haven't even really talked about what these subsidies or, they also talked about potentially putting like equity investments into US oil companies. Like we're going down this weird. Kind of state capitalist, fusion line that I think is like very unfamiliar to more modern markets but is like very almost cliche to like imperial markets.
And I think that's what this is starting to feel like is, regime change with the kind of the catch of and will get, traffic and vitol or whomever to market your crude for whatever regime replaces you, But I think The thing that we have seen, and I think this is something that has been relatively consistent despite Trump's kind of bravado on foreign policy, is they have not like the, we're still a far ways away from, say, your Bush era neoconservative democracy, promotion, regime change kind of sentiment that.
Very briefly was the thought in Venezuela with getting rid of Nicolas Maduro. Obviously, Marco Rubio Secretary, secretary of State, has been a very long running Venezuela regime, change hawk, and I think representing a fairly core constituency of that kind of South Florida vote. Whether it's Venezuelan, diaspora or Cuban diaspora populations, but again, what we've seen very quickly there is that, very quickly Trump decided, actually no, we're, we don't, it would be harder to deal with, say, a new Democratic opposition taking power in Venezuela. 'cause that's destabilizing and that's messy and that's hard. So mine as well, just, even in Venezuela, it's, we're just dealing with Delcy Rodriguez, who is the Maduro's vice president and oil minister, notably here.
That I think is, it's easier. That's let's just deal with the people we know. And I think there's this question of like, why would that be any different in Iran? So I think right now it's taking this this sound of democracy promotion and supporting the protesters. But what we've seen historically from Trump is like a fairly, rote willingness to.
Collaborate with whomever ends up being holding the keys to power at the end of this, in which, in, in this case is, would that just be the IRGC or whomever else? It's not necessarily that the protestors going to automatically get the keys to the government, and I don't know if Trump is interested in the messy long term post conflict reconstruction work that would be involved with something like that.
In Iran or Venezuela, which is, I think right now we're in this moment where this stuff could turn into just a game of musical chairs and, the next strong man goes into power and that strong man's a little bit more favorable to Trump and a very, very familiar kind of, coup to desperate that's more favorable to Washington vibe that we've seen from the United States over prior decades.
I think that's not, at least what we're hearing from the White House right now. So it'll be interesting to see where this goes, but I don't think that he has the appetite for the kind of follow through that would be required there. And I, who else is gonna be controlling Iranian oil after the Ayatollah Falls?
Again, I don't think it's any of the protestors at this point.
Erik: Rory, I can't thank you enough for a terrific interview. But before we close, I wanna ask you to tell us a little bit about commodity context, your company, what you do there. I know that you just wrote an excellent piece, really giving your readers a, a, a.
A perspective on this whole situation in a little bit more depth than we had time to cover here on what's going on with Venezuela. Could we have your permission to share that with our listeners in the research roundup email? And if so, we will share it with them and please tell us what you do and how people can find out more about your services.
Rory: Absolutely. I, appreciate you sharing the research and for anyone that's interested, commodity context is a research outlet where I provide all of my thoughts on oil markets evolving as this market continues to roll forward. Got three main different types of research on commodity context, which is a oil context weekly, which is published every week around Friday at 4:00 PM Eastern after Markets close.
That kind of brings a roundup of essentially what nonsense has happened the week and how oil markets have begun to process it. I've got three different monthly data heavy reports, which are called data decks which are on global oil balances, opec production compliance, everything else as well as a more
detailed look around flows around North America, as well as on top of this, I also offer an advisory service to higher touch clients and a data service for those clients as well that look, they wanna provide a kind of a deeper data driven backend that drives my own research head over to commoditycontext.com. We'd love to have you and and let's keep following this market together,
Erik: and you can find a link to Rory's report on the situation in Venezuela in this week's research roundup email. Patrick Ceresna and I will be back as Macro Voices continues right here at macrovoices.com.
Erik: Joining me now is 42 Macro founder Darius Dale. Darius, prepared as always a slide deck to a company. This week's interview for our regular listeners, you already know this, but for everyone else, the way this works is Darius has a huge slide deck which he shares with his paying subscribers. He's kind enough to share the entire deck with us, with the condition out of respect for those paying subscribers that we have to redact the slides that we don't actually use.
So please forgive any blank slides that you find in the download link. You can search. Certainly get all of it by subscribing to 42 Macro. We only provide you with the slides that are discussed in this week's interview. Darius, I wanted to get you on the show, very first guest of the year because boy, back in 2022, I think we had you as the first, or maybe it was the second guest of the year.
Everybody was bullish. Boy, sounds exactly like today where everybody's all in, running it hot and you actually were bold enough to use the words crash year and say guys, I think there, there's a lot to be worried about. You've nailed that call in 2022. It turned out not to be the very positive year, everybody thought.
Let's start with the real high level. Is this gonna be a crash year or is everybody right to be all in?
Darius: Ooh, that's a great question. Way to start us off Hot Eric. So thanks again for having me. It's always a pleasure to be with you and your wonderful macro Voices community. I'll also add just one quick highlight.
We also had the same view coming into last year, 2025. Recall that we thought the Trump administration would kitchen sink the economy from a policy sequencing standpoint. And ultimately we thought the markets would crash to price that in. Ultimately recover very sharply and violently to the upside.
And that's obviously exactly what happened last year. Kudos to the team at 42 Macro for getting that getting into answering your question I'll jump right into sliders, hop right into it. We'll go to slide 115 where we show our the latest refresh of our positioning model, which we refresh daily for our clients.
And right now we're observing a historic degree of crowded bull positioning. Which makes me very uncomfortable as an investor because typically what happens when you get to this extremes, incredible positioning. You tend to have bad outcomes in financial markets. That doesn't necessarily guarantee a bad outcome in financial market, but it certainly increases the probability of one.
So when we look at, the positioning cycle indicators that correspond to the short to medium term time horizon, in which are the AI bulls bear spread and the National Association of Active Investment Manager Stock Allocation survey. Both of those the latest values for both of those time series are breaching their respective bull market peak thresholds.
Going back to the early late eighties for the AI bulls bear spread , early two thousands for the name survey. So that's that indicates that there's a high risk of a correction over a short to medium term time horizon, which in our risk management nomenclature is one to three months.
If you look at the indicators on the far right of that table, on, on the right of slide one 15 where we show the AI stock allocation survey the AI bond allocation survey, the AI cash allocation survey, we use that to proxy investment advisor positioning. We look at the S&P 500 3 month realized volatility to proxy, systematic fund exposure positioning.
We look at implied volatility correlations to proxy the gross exposure of our market, neutral hedge fund clients. And then finally we look at the S&P500 press the next 12 month earnings multiple, as well as investment grade credit spreads, and as well as economic policy uncertainty to proxy various cohorts of the broader buy side and their crowd and their crowded positioning, whether it be bullish or bearish.
And right now, the. The compendium of indicators are enough of those indicators are breaching their respective bull market peak thresholds. That suggest that there's, some bumps likely ahead of us over a short to medium term time horizon and potentially a medium to longer term time horizon as well, purely from the perspective of the positioning side.
And one final thing I'll say on this, on slide 116 if you go back and look at all those indicators and just look at them in terms of the percentile of implied crowd at bullish positioning based on the latest values, this is about the third highest crowd at belows positioning we've ever seen on a median on a mean basis and the second highest we've seen on a median basis.
And that would seem to suggest that we're gonna have to have a lot of good news accumulate for markets to power through this through this dynamic.
Erik: It seems to me that there's a lot of parallels here. Going into the 2000 trading year, boy, quarter of a century ago. I guess I must be getting old or
something, the thing that seems similar to me is everybody was betting then on the internet being a really big deal.
They were right about that, but it just got so far ahead of itself that we ended up having to have dotcom bust before we could, a couple of years later get a recovery. And of course they were still right. The internet was a really big deal. It still is. It seems to me the parallel there is AI.
It seems like it's the big driver in the market. Everybody's right that AI is gonna be a really big deal, but it also feels really overdone. So how do you see, and I guess the, the challenge there was. Almost everybody knew there was a bubble, but nobody knew how to time it. So how do you see this crowded positioning that you're describing on page one 15?
Resolving?
Darius: Yeah, that's an excellent question. I'm so glad you brought up the early two thousands market cycle. 'cause it's very akin to what we're experiencing here here in 2026. Historically when you have these CapEx bubbles going back to the 19th century railroad, build out the 20th century consumer durable goods build out as well as the 20th and 21st century internet CapEx build out.
You always tend to see those mar those CapEx bubbles tend to precede. Secular bear markets, and oftentimes, significantly adverse outcomes in the economy as well. The panic of 1873 led to the long depression. The 1929 stock market crash ultimately led to the Great Depression.
We obviously saw the.com bus lead us to the jobless recovery and then ultimately the housing bubble, which ultimately gave way to the global financial crisis. I think if you take a multi-year time horizon and perspective. Things aren't great, I'll just leave it at that. But from a medium term time horizon perspective, which is set of three to 12 plus months, three, three to 12 months in our risk management nomenclature, we do see this historic degree of bolus positioning resolving itself positively.
But this will probably the last gasp higher in that, from that perspective. If we could turn to slide 24 where we show the latest refresh of our macro weather model, which we again, alongside our positioning model. We refresh six days a week for our clients here 42 Macro. What we find is that if you look at the current constellation of the six key macro cycles that matter, with those being growth, inflation, monetary policy, fiscal policy, liquidity, and positioning.
Four of the six are currently headwinds for the market. Now again, this model is designed to help project the dispersion within and across asset markets, or really mostly across asset markets. Over short to medium term time horizon, which is again, one to three months in our risk manage nomenclature.
And so that suggests that right now we're probably due for a correction and or some violent chop to burn off some of this crowded bull positioning before we can set the stage to a meaningful move higher. And looking at what's currently a tailwind growth in inflation.
They're both currently tailwinds as determined by the the features in the model. But when we look at the things that are currently headwinds. Ultimately, we have to see these things transition to becoming tailwinds for us to, make new highs on a durable basis and really any meaningful and or explosive move higher, which still may be in the cards, by the way.
I don't think the AI CapEx cycle's done. We certainly still see a tremendous amount of fundamental support for the market, aside from this Credis position dynamic. So let's unpack the. Monetary policy, fiscal policy and liquidity cycles independently because those are headwinds that we ultimately expect will transition to becoming tailwinds over the medium term, which will support an unwind, a positive resolution to this current credit bull positioning, which is likely to remain a headwind until this market peaks.
So on the monetary policy side of things we had a strong easing impulse in the Fed funds rate. We had a weak easing impulse in the two year nominal treasury yield. Fed funds rates spread. We have a strong tightening impulse in the Fed's treasury holdings to marketable treasury debt ratio. We have a strong tightening impulse in commercial bank reserves to commercial bank assets ratio.
And then we have a strong tightening impulse in the SOFR IRB spread. So ultimately we think the fed's. Response to the tight conditions in the repo market will ultimately be one that is more balance sheet expansion, more reserve management purposes, and ultimately we expect the structural forms that the, that we've been forecasting at the Fed for years now.
We expect the advent of those structural forms will ultimately push the Fed funds rate lower. And make the market more right? With regards to established policy bias. So ultimately the monetary policy cycle, which is currently a headwind for of risk assets and broader financial market risk taking will ultimately transition to becoming a tailwind at some point over the next three to six months.
So that's why that's one dynamic that could change, that could help this credit bullish positioning resolve positively. On the fiscal policy side of things we that's currently a headwind. We have the strong tightening impulse in the sovereign fiscal balance to GDP ratio. We got a weak tightening impulse in Charlie 12 month federal revenue.
We have a strong tightening impulse in trailing 12 month federal expenditures. We have a strong tightening impulse in the church of general comp balance. The bank reserves ratio 30%, essentially an all time high. The bills. The marketable treasury debt ratio is a weak easing impulse, but not enough.
To offset the current headwind that is the fiscal policy cycle to, to broader risk taking in financial markets. Ultimately, particularly as we get past the kind of late Q1, Q2 of this year, early Q2 of this year, we're gonna start to see these these indicators transition largely as a function of the one big ugly bill and the fiscal stimulus that we're likely to see from that our math has the deficit expanding by, three to $500 billion.
This year and perhaps doing that again in 2027 as well. So we're in this kind of u-shaped fiscal policy dynamic where we've seen a tremendous amount of fiscal retrenchment in the economy, which we can unpack later. We've seen a tremendous amount of fiscal retrenchment that ultimately more of transition to fiscal easing.
And so the fiscal. Policy cycle, which is currently a headwind for the financial markets, is ultimately gonna become a tailwind, a high probability tailwind at some point. Let's haul it in the next three to six months as well. And then lastly, with the liquidity cycle, which is the other cycle that needs to to, to transition from being a current headwind to a tailwind at some point over the medium term to get us outta this awkward position that we're currently in as a function of the positioning cycle.
If you look at our global liquidity proxy that's a strong positive impulse. Our 42 macro net liquidity, that's our US liquidity model. That balance sheet, T-J-A-R P that is a strong negative impulse. Now we got a strong easing impulse in the move index, which is biomarker volatility. We have a strong tightening impulse in the 10 year treasury term premium.
And then we got a weak tightening impulse in the broad nominal dollar effective exchange rate. We got a modest head wind right now, the liquidity cycle. Ultimately we think that'll transition to becoming a tailwind over the
medium term if we're right on the transition on the inflections in the monetary policy and fiscal policy cycle, which we see as high probability outcomes.
Erik: Darius, so many things I wanna dive a little bit deeper on, on this slide 24. Let's start with the monetary policy aspects of this. Something our regular listeners know I've been stuck on for the last several weeks is it seems to me that a dovish policy error by the Fed is a near certainty this year.
And the reason I say that is President Trump is being extremely heavy handed in terms of just demanding that anybody he allows onto the FOMC board is going to have to. Vote for a reduction, a continued cutting of policy rates. And as Jim Bianco has warned, at some point if you cut too much, you end up having that blow up in your face.
I don't think the president fully understands that. And you end up with the back end of the curve revolting as the bond market starts to get afraid of runaway inflation. How does that thesis fit into your model and how does that jive with what you're thinking?
Darius: Yeah, that's, I think that's one of the key risks in financial markets.
However, I think that risk is dissipating at the margins. If you look at slide 54, where we show trends in, in, in key inflation operates, we've been declining for, a couple quarters now across the one year. Two year, five year, and 10 year tenor. Of these these inflation swap rates, which suggests that the bond market is getting less concerned about the prospect of a federal reserve that is ultimately makes a dovish policy error that reignites inflation.
If you look at slide 55 where we show various estimates of our various market based estimates of neutral and R star, if you look at the second panel on this chart here, where we show the floor Fed funds rate. At three spot 11% 3.11%. That's the market in our view.
That's the market's estimate of the neutral policy rate, which is again, the minimum value on the OIS curve about five years. Given that we're in a, given that we're in an easing cycle, we'd be using the terminal rate if we were in a hiking cycle. And if you look at that value relative to the effective Fed funds rate we're still about 64 basis points north of that in effective fed funds rate terms above neutral.
So it's highly unlikely that the Federal Reserve creates any sort of meaningful inflation without at least getting the policy rate to a easing bias. Right now
there's at least a couple, two to two and a half rate cuts, if you will between the current effective Fed funds rate and neutral.
So it's very likely that the Fed is still actually applying downward pressure upon the economy and labor markets and ultimately upon inflation. And if you got one final thing I'll say on this is the, if you look at the bond market. On slide 57 the bond market is not overly concerned about sticky inflation either.
So right now the 10 year treasury yield is currently about 4.15%. Historically with data going back to the early seventies, the 10 year treasury yield tends to be about a hundred, 120 basis points above the fed funds rate. So that's essentially saying the bond market is, it thinks the Fed funds rate should already be somewhere close to three three and a quarter.
Right now would be totally fine with that outcome based on its current pricing. And so that kind of leads me to the next few slides which says, okay, what could actually go right on inflation? We're also concerned about tariffs, which. Our math and our analysis has always suggested that tariffs were a, regressive hit to aggregate demand that would ultimately wind up in lower aggregate demand and ultimately lower inflation.
The San Francisco Fed eventually published a paper confirming what we had already signaled to our customers back in April when we were telling them to get along. The, if you look at on slide 58 if the middle panel on slide 58 where
we show Zillow rent index, strong positive, a strong negative impulse in the Zillow rent index.
With the three month annualized, we had a change of 1.8%. That's gonna continue to drag down shelter inflation and housing, housing, PC inflation to the levels that are below. Trend. They're already modestly below trend currently, and we ultimately think the trend of disinflation in shelter and housing inflation is likely to remain ongoing.
And then finally, on slides 59 and 50 and 60, we have to remind ourselves that this is a labor market, but the unemployment rate is still gradually increasing. And a labor market where the unemployment rate is gradually increasing. And you have on slide 60, super depressed low labor market turnover is evidenced by the structurally depressed private sector hires rate of 3.5%.
Below the pre COVID trend, the structurally depressed private sector quits rate at 2.2% below the pre COVID trend. And then the the structurally depressed private sector layoffs and discharges rate at 1.2%. That's below the pre COVID
trend. We know that this is a labor market that has a very limited turnover, is a labor market that also has a gradual increase on unemployment rate.
So ultimately the labor market that should, if you look at slide 59, have slower wage growth. Workers who change jobs tend to experience faster wage growth, which by definition workers who do not change jobs tend to experience a slower wage growth. So we're essentially replacing workers who are changing jobs with workers who are staying put and or being fired and put into the ranks of the unemployed.
And so ultimately we think their, the wage growth dynamic is disinflationary, the housing inflation dynamic is disinflationary and obviously we continue to see a disinflationary impulse across. The energy complex which is which is deflationary as well.
Erik: I wanna come back to slide 24 now and talk about some of these short to medium term outlooks, the one to three month traffic lights that you have in the center of the slide there.
I appreciate these are. Short term outlooks, one to three months. I'm very curious on some of these asset classes, how that compares to your longer term outlook. Because I certainly I don't have any reason to, to dispute what you say in terms of short term cycles, but it seems to me something like commodities, a lot of notable people who I respect feel that.
In the bigger picture, we're at the, maybe the ending stages or final stages of an equity bull market and the beginning of a secular commodity bull market. Obviously you've got a red light here on commodities, at least in the short term, so I'm curious about longer term. And then I look at something like gold.
Okay. It does feel like it's up an awful lot recently. Maybe it's overdue for a bigger correction than we've seen. At the same time, if I look at the fundamentals, it depends, on the reason that you think gold has been so strong. A lot of people think it's been so strong because central banks are losing trust in the US government.
And they want some independence from US Treasury paper as their primary reserve asset given geopolitical developments of late I, I don't see that trend reversing anytime soon. The other reason that. People will cite for buying gold. Is that it's really just about the size of the debt.
Reaching a point where it's unserviceable and you've got a serious concern about the long-term viability of the US treasury market. I don't think that argument's going away either. So how do these short-term signals jive with your longer term views?
Darius: Yeah, great question. I would invert them. From a longer term perspective, not even necessarily a longer term.
So just from a perspective of the median term, which again, in our risk management nomenclature is three to 12 months. Yeah, I think the next few months could easily be choppy because we don't have enough accumulated good news from the perspective of each of these six key macro cycles, namely the five that aren't the positioning cycle to cause the markets to, make us a meaningful move higher over a short to medium term time horizon.
However. If we're right that the monetary policy cycle will to inflect from a headwind to a tailwind, if we're right, that the fiscal policy cycle will inflect from a headwind to a tailwind, and ultimately both the confluence of those two things. With the ongoing tailwinds and the growth in inflation cycle persisting, then it's likely that the liquidity cycle will inflect from a headwind currently to a tailwind.
So ultimately if all that it becomes true, where you have five of the other six key macro cycles, exposition cycle all being tailwinds for asset markets, then you're obviously gonna see an inversion of the the traffic lights in the middle of the page There. You can have green light for stocks, green light for gold, green light for bitcoin, green light for commodities, and red lights for the bonds and the US dollar.
So that, that. That is what our fundamental research summary is currently anticipating. If you go to slide six in this presentation, we don't have time to unpack the, everything on the fundamental research summary, but one thing I call out on slide six is the words the color coding of the words is is associated with dynamics that are bullish for risk assets being green, and dynamics that are barriers for risk assets being red.
So from a fundamental research perspective. And this slide on slide six summarizes everything in this 160 plus slide presentation. Most of the stuff that we're, pitching to our clients and have been for since since late April, since we altered the paradigm C theme in late April of last year.
Most of the things have been bullish and are likely to become increasingly bullish over the medium term. And so that's why we have so much conviction that the monetary, fiscal, monetary policy, fiscal policy, and liquidity cycles on slide 24 will inflict from headwinds to tailwinds. Answering your question, going back to this you touched on something briefly on slide that, that is near and dear to my heart and is the guiding principle for our.
Research it has been for a few years now which is this geopolitically driven supply demand imbalance in the treasury bond market. If you go to slide 73, where we show the approximate next 12 month marketable treasury debt supply as a percent of global savings. You can see that we have a meaningful deviation from the long run mean of this time series in terms of the latest value of 39% of global savings in terms of how much percentage of the flow of global savings that the US government is capitalizing itself at.
From the perspective of rolling over maturing debt the the annualized fiscal year to date budget deficit, as well as the annualized divestment for the Fed's portfolio, which obviously is since is now actually a tailwind from that perspective. But a very modest tailwind in terms of 40 billion a month of arm.
It's about 223% of us the flow of us savings. And so obviously both of those are about a double relative to their long run means. So we have all this debt supply. But we don't necessarily have the same de demand dynamics that we used to throughout the great moderation. And ultimately the period of time that, we created the that created that, that featured the conditions, that created the dual broad performance of the, let's say 60 40 portfolio.
If you go to slide 95 where we show some of the foreign dynamics in the treasury market we've been losing foreign ownership for over a decade now. Foreigners peaked out at 56% of the total marketable treasury debt market. Back in back in June of oh 08'.
We're now at 31%. Currently if you look at slide 50, or sorry, my apologies, slide 102 where we show, these various cohorts of the marketable treasury debt market. We see that the fed, the blue line of the fed's share of the marketable treasury debt market has been declining for a few years now, it's now down at a lowly 14% from peaking at a route 25%.
In mid 2022 we see commercial banks. Share of the marketable treasury debt market has been pretty stable over the past couple of years, but it's still at a very structurally depressed level of 15%, which is down from a, a high in the early
two thousands of around in the low thirties. And then obviously the black line, which is foreign official sector treasury holdings.
So foreign central banks their reserve management that's declined from about 40% to 13% since peaking out in oh eight. And so the residual of all that declining flow from these price insensitive buyers. Because central banks manage buy treasuries for reserve management purposes. They buy treasuries to implement monetary policy via QE or some other form of a large asset purchase.
And then they commercial banks, they buy treasuries because of regulation, banking regulation, you are losing all these price insensitive buyers and replacing them with price sensitive buyers, which are the light blue line in this chart which are now at 58% of the total marketable treasury debt market up from 36% in late 2021.
So this is not a good dynamic and this is a dynamic that is likely to sustain this structural uptrend in term premium on slide 103 that we highlight if you had a normal level of term premium in the bond market and normal being somewhere around, let's call it just five 2%. If we had a normal level of term premium, the bond market, the 10 year treasury yield will be five and a quarter as opposed to 4.15%.
And so ultimately the excess yield that we should ultimately be having in the bond market is being replaced by gold, by the capital appreciation by gold. And this is something we explicit, explicitly forecasted and called out and helped our clients position for starting in the summer of 2023 when we first authored this fundamental research view, this geopolitically driven supply, demand and balance in the treasury bond market as part of our investing, doing a four turning regime framework.
And ultimately this is why you saw my fellow Yelly, Janet Yellen. She pivoted to dovish ne financing policy in the summer of, in the shortly after this presentation was printed. And then you had our fellow Yelly treasury Secretary of Scott Besson get on the job after you 18 months of lambasting the Dovish Financing Policy actually rubber stamp it and promise to keep it going for the foreseeable future.
Now that he's on the job. In our view, we think we're right on this supply demand. I balance and as a function, as that supply demand, I balance, we're seeing institutional investors, which is something we called for. Institutional
investors increasingly adopt gold as a diversifier away from the treasury bond market.
Erik: So if I can just assimilate everything you've said so far, it sounds like we should interpret your view as saying, look, there's some really good reasons to be cautious about, oh, let's say the first quarter of 2026, maybe as being a choppy time time for some overdue corrections to, to play out, but.
Beyond that longer term. If we go back to page six, which is your longer term fundamental outlook, really it's almost all green. So you're very much still long term bullish, but also feeling like we're overdue for some corrections before that can continue. Is that a fair summary?
Darius: That is an absolute fair summary that the relative frequency of green words on the page in slide six in our fundamental research summary relative to the red words in the page, implies that from a fundamental standpoint.
Based on everything we know today and could forecast today with any reasonable degree of precision, suggest that we have an incredibly positively skewed return distribution. With regards to the medium to longer term time horizon. Doesn't mean the market has to go up every day between now and then, or even has to go up.
It just implies that unless something changes in a material manner to, to alter the relative, frequency of red and green words on that page, it's highly likely that this. Current crowded bull positioning that we're all very concerned about right now gets resolved in a meaningfully positive manner.
When you look out, let's call it six to 12 months.
Erik: Darius, let's talk about President Trump, who has been, let's say, not bashful about implementing policies that are quite bold and non-consensus. He doesn't seem to be going too far out of his way to keep the opposing Democratic party happy.
They're getting more and more upset, it seems as we near the. Midterm elections later in the year. It seems to me the closer we get to the midterm elections, the more markets are going to start to get sensitive to, Hey, wait a minute, what happens if the Democrats take the house in November? And that really starts to weigh on the President's ability to continue to press some of the bold policies that he's been pressing.
How do you think about how politics and fiscal policy plays into the whole outlook for the next year or so?
Darius: Excellent question, Eric. I think the outlook for bold fiscal policy is one that requires a rear view mirror. If you go to slide 91, we already passed the one big ugly bill, and the vast majority of the impact has yet to be felt in the economy.
Most of it is likely to occur in 2026 in 2027, where we're likely to see a one to two percentage point positive fiscal impulse in both years. And that's a meaningful delta relative to consensus expectations. Transition from slide 91 to slide 26 here. If you look at slide 26, the our consensus short run potential real GDP growth estimate that's the blend of 26 and 27.
Right now, it's only at 2%, and I'll tell you. We're gonna go to slightly, maybe slightly above two here in or back in 2025 with a, three to $400 billion tariff shock with the highest average annual level of economic policy uncertainty as measured by the Baker Bloom Davis Index with time series back to the mid eighties ever in the time series.
And oh, by the way, a guy who can't stop tweeting changing policy every five to 10 minutes. I don't know how we don't grow at least three, perhaps even 4% in 2026 and 2027, 4% seems a bit much, and we probably need to see some sort of productivity boom, which I think we should touch on after we hit on fiscal policy.
It's very likely that we're gonna grow three, at least 3% in 2026 and 2027 as a function of what we highlighted on slide 91. And we're already starting to see it. If you look at slide 88 where we show our fiscal policy monitor if you look at the impact that the tariff policy.
And the tariff really largely, the tariff policy has had in terms of reflating the federal tax revenue tax revenues up 9% on a calendar, year to date basis through November in 2025. Whereas expenditure's only up 1%. So you've had this significant fiscal retrenchment that, led us to minus 5.4% budget deficit versus in 2025 on a calendar year to date basis versus 6.8% for 2024.
So we've had 130 ish percent basis point fiscal retrenchment in, in, in 2025, which is pretty meaningful. It's very meaningful. The thing about, looking ahead with, in, with regards to the impact of the one big ugly bill that's going to reverse and reverse meaningfully in 2026 and 2027.
If you look at slide 89 where we show the our fiscal policy monitor on a fiscal year to date basis. So we have a couple of months of fiscal 2026 in the data already, we're gonna, at the bottom there that one of the bottom rows there, a federal budget balance. We're going from a 5.8% deficit to GDP ratio in fiscal 2025 to a 9%.
Deficit to GDP ratio in the first two months of fiscal 2026. Now, it's not gonna say at 9% it's gonna go down from 9% to something that's probably closer to 7% or maybe even seven point half 8%. But this is a meaningful fiscal expansion that's taking place. As a function, partially as a function of the one big ugly bill, but also as a function of what our friend, our mutual friend Luke Groman, over a forest for the trees caused the the true interest expense.
The runaway freight train that is true interest expense. If, and that's for those who may be new to the framework. That's the aggregated sum of Medicare national defense, debt interest and social security. Together, they're about, on a fiscal year to date basis. They're about, four point $7 trillion annualized two thirds of the federal budget.
They're 16% of GDP and they've been compounding growing at about nine 10% per annum. Whether you look at, on a, a fiscal year to date basis on a calendar, year to date basis, so we have double digit growth in two thirds of federal expenditures. Which we know are, have a low probability of ever being legislated down, let alone flat, or, sorry flat, let alone down.
In fact the signal that we got from the one big ugly bill legislative process was that these things are untouchable, and then when they do get touched, they go up faster. And so in our view this is a runaway freight train from a fiscal policy standpoint from a messy and uncomfortable fiscal policy standpoint that will ultimately require some very creative solutions and erosion of a further erosion of central bank independence, which is something we've been explicitly forecasting since we altered.
That investing doing. Afford attorney regime presentation back in the summer of 2023, which featured that geopolitically driven supply demand imbalance in the treasury market. Analysis.
Erik: Let's continue on that topic around central bank independence and go more into monetary policy since we've been talking fiscal policy here.
It seems to me like there's a lot of room, especially as we get to potentially a changing mix. If the Democrats take the house, if there's confirmation
difficulties after that of the President not getting his way with who he wants to put in various, FOMC positions and so forth what could happen with respect to fiscal policy if we have a revolt, if you will, against some of the president's bold policies.
Darius: Yeah, look, in our view, it's highly unlikely that we get a revolt partially as a function of our jobless recovery thesis. We are of the view that AI is productivity enhancing and ultimately will be job replacing maybe not at a, at an alarming rate, at least in 2026, but on a multi-year, taking a multi-year time horizon.
And it's very likely that this technology causes some meaningful societal disruption in the form of a higher unemployment. And if we're right on that view, or even partially right on that view, you're talking about a federal reserve that's going to see a just a consistent and persistent threat to its maximum employment mandate in a way that essentially forces it to do what the president wants.
If you throw slide 79, pre fed chair, Powell already started alluding to this at the December FOMC press conference. Where he highlighted, some of the structural changes in the economy. He didn't say what I just said, but I'm not even sure the fed chair or anybody the Fed is allowed to say what I just said.
But the reality is, what I just said is, in my opinion, in our opinion of, 160 slides of research that we pump out every month to our customers it's a high probability outcome. So let me walk you through that thesis here over the next couple of slides. So the slide slide 80.
Shows the blue line in slide 80 shows labor share of national income where we show nominal employee comp compensation divided by gross domestic income. That's down at an all time low of 51.3%. We show capital share of lash national income at the red line, which is corporate profit using corporate profits as a proxy for that as a share of gross domestic income.
That's up at 13.2% an all time high. We've had a secular downtrend in labor share of national income. Without AI, a technology that can replace people. Just due to globalization, just due to among other things, the neoliberalism era and the various forms of tax treatment that caused this, that, that have contributed to this dynamic.
Obviously things like NAFTA and China joining the WTO as cause of this as well. We've had a secular bear market and labor share of national income
without a technology that can literally replace labor. It's already replacing labor. If you look at the youth unemployment rate, it's already replacing labor.
If you look at slide 41, the bottom panel is slide 41, where we show the long term unemployed as a percentage total. We're up at a structurally elevated 24.3% which compares to a long run mean of this time series of 16.4%. When you get fired now or you lose your job, for whatever reason, it's very difficult to.
To find a new job. And this is because every company in the world is incentivized to wait and see, to see how much of their biggest cost expense. The biggest, expense in most businesses is labor. To see how much of that expense they can take down with the with the development and adoption of ai.
And so ultimately, if you go to slide 81, where we show how this is likely to impact the economy. Know this top panel shows the the time series of non-farm productivity in, in, in, through meth annualized six month annualized, and you rated change terms. And then in this kind of the third to fourth panel show, the third panel shows the time series, the same dynamics of unit labor costs inflation.
The light blue horizontal line show, the pre COVID trends of each and you, we somewhere around 2% for both. The promise of AI is that we go from a trend 2% productivity economy to a trend. A 3% productivity economy, which ultimately implies that we're going from a trend 2% unit labor cost inflation economy to a trend 1% unit labor cost inflation economy.
And so ultimately we're talking about a significant tailwind for corporate profits. We're talking about a significant headwind for inflation in terms of how in productivity has historically impacted both of those cycles. And every company, whether they implicitly understand what I just said or what, they all inherently understand this as business owners and as business operators.
And so ultimately we just think this, low, higher low fire environment, whether unemployment rate continues to gradually rise, particularly as more and more companies that throughout the economy adopt ai and find creative ways to use AI to, to hold back labor their most their biggest expense.
We think this dynamic is gonna be ongoing. It's a secular dynamic that will ultimately require. The Fed to implement dovish monetary policy regardless of how politicized they may appear to be in the context of what the signalling that's coming outta the White House.
Erik: Darius, let's pull all of the things that we've talked about together into, okay, where are the trades for our investor audience?
Because we've talked about monetary policy, fiscal policy, there's so many different things you're talking about. Really, a very. Bullish longer term outlook with some serious cautions about the next three to six months. So how do we position for that?
Darius: Yeah, that's a great way to put it. I, maybe not even the next three to six months, I think by, but certainly by six months and probably by three months, we're, it's likely that we could be resolving our way through this uncomfortable setup from a crowded bull's positioning standpoint.
But again, that does imply we're probably gonna chop around perhaps violently in the interim, if not even correct. Again, when you're in this. When you're at this extreme in terms of incredible Bullish positioning terms, it doesn't take much. A squirrel could get hit by a bus and markets could correct.
So I want investors to be aware that, just because the, frequency of green words relative to the frequency of red words and the fundamental research summary on slide six is over overwhelmingly positively skewed from a return distribution perspective. It doesn't necessarily mean that, we're outta the woods yet.
However, when it comes to how we think investors should be positioning for these emergent and developing market risk, the fundamental research has no bearing on that answer for us at 42. Macro as you know from our previous discussions, Eric, we're systematic investors.
We rely exclusively on our institutional grade risk management overlays to help our clients and myself as someone who uses our KISS model portfolio to manage his entire liquid net worth. We rely exclusively on that as it relates to what investors should be doing in their portfolios at any given time.
I'll just briefly touch on kiss and ultimately touch on the KISS system itself. And then I'll conclude with where KISS is currently allocated. So if you jump to slide eight, just real brief kiss, there's three core elements of our KISS model portfolio, which is short for keep it simple and systematic.
Number one is our factor selection. So this is a 60 30 10 quantitative trend following strategy that is designed to expose investor portfolios to productivity growth. And it's also designed to help investors outperform outrun financial oppression and monetary debasement via allocations to gold and bitcoin.
And where KISS really shines is in its risk management. We use our market regime now casting process to incorporate volatility targeting into the strategy. And then we use our volatility, just momentum signal to incorporate dynamic position sizing into the strategy. And the, anybody on the buy side understands that, volatil targeting and an AM position sizing.
These are the two of the core hallmarks of institutional risk management that KISS uses. To create a positively or skewed return distribution in investor portfolios and in my own portfolio. So if you look at, jump ahead to slide 12. A couple numbers I'd hit on in this, on this back test is rolling out a sample back test.
If you look at KISS relative to 60 40 60% stocks, 30% gold kiss has an upside capture ratio of about 300%, and a downside capture ratio of about 60%. So you're essentially getting. 60% of the downside of 60 40, 300% of the upside effectively. If you wanted to compare KISS to a naked long portfolio, 60% stocks, 30% gold, 10% Bitcoin, which is what KISS is when it's maxed out, it's not always maxed out, but that's what KISS is.
When it's maxed out you'd have an upside capture issue of about 90% and a downside capture ratio of about 50%. So you're essentially getting 90% of the return you would have in these high beta asset classes. With only about half of the downside which obviously creates an incredibly positively skewed return distribution from the set of investors with a very minimal max drawdown, particularly relative to the frequent crashes that we've seen in 60 40 and 60 30 10 stocks go Bitcoin naked long.
So where we are today in Kiss. Kiss is 10% cash on slide 13. It's at 10% cash. It's at a hundred percent of its maximum exposure of 60% stocks. Both the top down and bottom upper manage and overlay are giving it a green light to be fully invested in the equity market here. Gold. It's at a hundred percent of its maximum exposure of 30% in gold.
Both the top down to bottom upper percent over there, giving it a green light to be fully invested in gold as well. And then it's at 0% of its maximum social of 10% in Bitcoin. Neither the top down risk manage overlay's, giving Bitcoin the green light, but the bottom up risk manage overlay, which again, we use to feature dynamic position sizing into the strategy that's giving it a red light.
And right now KISS is, more or less, let's call it 90% invested. We think that the gold position can do reasonably well in a choppy market environment.
Obviously if stocks are choppy and or correct, that's not gonna feel so great. But ultimately we think the kiss is.
What markets, what the risk management systems that feed into KISS are likely looking ahead to is where we started this conversation on slide 24, which is four of the key six key macro cycles that influenced the momentum and dispersion within and across asset classes are currently headwinds.
Ultimately we think based on our fundamental research, which again is summarized on slide six, based on our fundamental research, we think three of those four which are currently headwinds, will eventually transition to tailwinds and ultimately make Kiss right over a medium term time rise of perspective, which again is three to 12 months.
And our risk manager nomenclature, I think all bets are off when you get beyond 12 months. Like I said, when we started this conversation, it's highly likely that this bull market. Concludes or transitions to a secular bear market as we've seen historically at following all these major technological revolutions that you know, that feature CapEx bubbles.
Erik: Darius, I can't thank you enough for a terrific interview. As we close, tell us a little more, this slide deck that our listeners have seen a snippet of that's actually more than 160 pages. You send this out to who this is for, what kind of investor, who's your service for how do people find out more about it?
Darius: Yeah, I wanted Eric thank you for this brief opportunity to embellish what we do. I'm, one of the things I'm most proud of in my entire life is the breadth and depth of our customer base. When we started 42 Macro, half a decade ago, it was done, designed with the express intent that, I just, I don't we don't believe that the gatekeeping exercise that is institutional insight and institutional risk management process.
That is either kept via prime brokerage gates, or, two and 20 or three and 30 accredited investor gates. We just don't think those gates are appropriate in a kha society, of which, I come from the very bottom of that K-shaped society. So we, we built 42 macro to break down those gates and supply an institutional grade insights and more importantly, institutional grade risk management of portfolios to every investor on the world.
In the world, and we do so at price points that meet people where they are in terms of what they can afford, as opposed to what we would prefer to charge, what could, what we easily could charge if we wanted to, gate this thing up and
turn it into a hedge fund. And we're very proud to say that many of the world's top financial institutions across the asset manager, pension fund, insurance fund spec cyber wealth fund space, or customers of ours in so much that, the your barber could be a customer of our, your Uber driver could be a customer of ours. And they very likely are we're very proud to say we work with some of the best investors in the world, and we work with many of the ver more, most novice investors in the world.
They're all here benefiting from built. And I'm incredibly proud of that. As someone who, like I said, comes from the very bottom of the bottom. I wanna make sure that, we're lifting everybody up with these insights and these risk management signals.
Erik: We'll look forward to having you back on later in the year after.
We see how the this choppy period that you're anticipating plays out Patrick Ceresna and I will be back as Macro Voices continues right here at macrovoices.com.
Erik: Joining me now is Mark Williams, who is a partner with Lane Neave. Mark is not only an immigration consultant who processes investor visas, but he's actually one of the architects of New Zealand's Active Investor plus Visa program. So Mark, it's great to have you on the podcast. I wanna start at the high level.
We've heard a lot of news stories and so forth about famous people, Hollywood movie stars flocking to New Zealand to get residency there. A lot of our investors are familiar with Peter Thiel, a very high profile fund manager who didn't just get a in an investor visa. He actually got citizenship in New Zealand leads some people to wild-eyed conspiracy theory, speculation. Do these people know something? Are they going there to survive World War iii? I don't think that's what it's really about. So why don't we start with why are all of these people flocking to New Zealand for investor visas?
What is the appeal and what's driving the sudden rush of interest?
Mark: Typically, this seems to be two trains of thought around looking at New Zealand as an option. First train of thought is that a lot of family offices that we deal with identify that it's probably good to have assets or funds outside of one single jurisdiction.
So it's seen as a way to diversify. Investment holdings into an alternative jurisdiction where there's maybe potential jurisdictional risk. Basically, I guess the old adage is just not having all your eggs in one basket as they say. And the second common piece advice that our clients seem to be receiving from family offices.
Is that it's wise to have a Visa option banked in the event it becomes necessary or desirable in the future to be able to utilize a visa like New Zealand at relatively short notice without having to go through what can sometimes be a bit of a lengthy process.
Erik: Let's talk about how this process works, what it takes to qualify for it.
There's two different ways to qualify different investment levels depending on what you're investing in. Suppose that I want to get myself a New Zealand visa and I think it's important to point out this is not just a, something that lasts for a
year. If you. Go through this program after a couple of years, you get a New Zealand permanent resident visa.
That's good for life, if I'm not mistaken. What does it take to do that? How do you qualify? What's involved?
Mark: Yeah, there's two subcategories under the Active Investor plus policy. The first is what's called the balance category, and that's for investors who wish to take a fairly soft entry into New Zealand's economy.
It requires. An investment of 10 million in New Zealand dollars in the country for a period of five years. That investment can be placed into fairly passive investments such as New Zealand government bonds and the main applicant in a family filing is required to spend 105 days physically in New Zealand during that five year investment term.
So that's the first general category balanced. The second category is the growth category. That has by far been the most popular. Around 80% of filings have been moved into that category. That requires investments that are of a higher risk in nature. Things like venture capital, private equity, private credit, and direct investments into New Zealand companies.
That's a three year investment commitment, and the main applicant is only required to spend 21 days in New Zealand during that three year term.
Erik: Okay, so for a lot of our audience who thinks in US dollar terms, that works out. If you convert those New Zealand dollars to US dollars, a choice of either about 5.8 million US dollars equivalent in government bonds or some other very low risk investment, or much more likely about 2.9 million US dollars into some kind of either venture capital fund or something that invests in growth in New Zealand's economy.
After two years, if you spend I think it's 21 days of visiting New Zealand in those two years, you end up with a permanent resident visa. That's good for life. Is that just for the investor? Does it cover their family as well? If so, is it just the spouse? Is it children? Who gets this thing?
Mark: The growth category's a three year commitment, so it's 21 days over the three years, so it works out to be on average, say a week, a year.
But you can clock up all the days in one single visit if you wish. The policy focuses on a main applicant who is required to make that time commitment. Secondary applicants such as a person's partner and dependent children can also be included in the application. They the secondary applicants are required to
come in within the first 12 months of residency to activate their residency, and then after that, they have no time obligation whatsoever.
So as long as the main applicant. Spends those 21 days here, in that three year term, they're able to then upgrade their residency visa to a permanent visa. And you're quite right now that can include all the individuals who are included in the application. And the permanent residency visa is indefinite, meaning there is no ongoing investment commitment or any other commitment required.
So in theory, if someone invests them for their funds for that three year period. Subject to what they invest in. At the end of that period, there are no immigration restrictions. So they could technically take all of the funds out of New Zealand, never return and then 10, 20 years later decide to buy one way ticket travel in here as permanent residency visa holders.
So a lot of the people we are dealing with. Like securing the option because not only does it right, create a setting or a visa for the entire life of the, individual investor, but also children included in the application will have this permanent re residency visa for their entire lives. So a lot of our clients are looking at long term succession and like the fact that they can secure a permanent visa for their children, even at a very.
Early age that will be valid for their entire lives.
Erik: So let's talk a little bit more about the 21 day visit and so forth. Basically, if I want to get myself, my spouse, all my dependent children, the right to move to New Zealand anytime they want to. So it's a call option if the world really were to take a turn downhill if there was a risk of a global war or something. New Zealand is one of the safest places on earth because of its physical location. It also has a ratio of people to natural resources that's very low. So in terms of competition for natural resources, if you really got to a Mad Max kind of situation, it's a very good place to be.
You can basically, for a. Little less than a 3 million US dollar investment over a period of three years. You can earn that unlimited lifetime call option for you and all your family members. And the only thing that the government asks of you beyond that investment is to visit the country and kind of check the place out.
That can be a single visit of three weeks, or it could be several visits that, you know cumulatively. Total up to 21 days. What's the rationale, what's the reason for having that and how do people usually spend that time?
Mark: Yeah. The rationale for having that a desirable setting around 21 days is to make it manageable.
Many people obviously have poor time at hand and it's just, it's New Zealand kind of sneaks up on people. People would say 21 days is not too significant time. They come in. What the data shows us in New Zealand and perhaps also a reason why we issue a permanent residency visa at the end of the investment term without, demonstrating any ongoing obligation or commitments is that the money tends to stay here.
It grows over time. It diversifies, and the more time that people come into the country, the more integrated they get and the more the typically more funds flow and they increase their commitment. Into the countries. So it's seen as desirable from an external point of view where you can commit and obviously move funds.
But typically what we do see is we do see the money re remaining here and people actually spending more time as they integrate in New Zealand society, enjoy their time here and spend, have, an incentive to spend more time. I think it's fair to say too that the, if you look at the categories, people tend to score success in these categories in terms of the amount of capital that's be coming into the New Zealand economy. What's missing from that is the extent of the human capital or the value of that to New Zealand. So we're talking about obviously some very sophisticated.
Often very influential investors who not only invest their capital but integrate into our society. They have offshore international connections, which New Zealand can utilize. And we have quite a few people who are venture capital investors who are making quite significant contributions to, early stage companies down here just because of their experience and their capability.
Erik: Mark, I want to congratulate you and the New Zealand government for the design of this program. I've evaluated quite a few of the Golden Visa programs around the world. I think this program is superior in many ways to almost all the others that I've looked at. There is one wrinkle, though in the design of this that I want to ask you about, which is a story I've heard a couple of times now from immigration consultants who help people get these visas is the investor applies for this thing. They make their investment. They're granted the visa they now have to make their their 21 day visit. A lot of them will do that in a single visit to knock it off, as you said. And frankly, from what I've heard, many of them come with an attitude coming in of, okay, this is a burden.
I have to go and spend these 21 days. I don't really want to, it's a long ways away. I'm gonna do it. About halfway through those 21 days, their immigration consultant gets the phone call that says ok we can't believe this. We've discovered this place called Queenstown. We just can't imagine any place being more beautiful.
We've got to have a home here, but the realtors must be confused 'cause they're saying we can't buy one. Call 'em and tell 'em who we are. We've got these active investor plus visas. Surely, even though we don't intend to become tax residents, because we're really doing this for optionality now that we've seen what a beautiful place this is, we wanna buy a home here.
So we've got that home ready to go if we ever decide to move here, and we'll just use it as a holiday home, spend a week or two a year here, they're not allowed to buy it. That actually is the truth there. The realtor's not confused. That's the law. Why in the world if the government is frankly trying to seduce people into falling in love with New Zealand, by having this 21 day requirement, why wouldn't they allow them to buy a home?
Mark: Yeah it's a. I guess a long, complicated history in terms of New Zealand's restrictions around buying residential property in 2018. Due to some offshore speculative investment into the country into our residential property market restrictions were put in place where individuals could only purchase a residential home here if they had a residency visa, and they either were or had intention to become tax resident here within 12 months.
We, however, when the government was looking at mechanisms to increase foreign direct investment in the country. They ask a simple question, what mechanics are missing or what do we need to change to facilitate, increase foreign direct investment and there were three inputs from the private sector on that.
The first one, what was the visa or the previous Visa was not up to spec to be competitive international, in international stage. So that was the first thing that was reviewed, changed, and this is the current policy we've got in contemplation of that. The second part of it is that we advised that people, if you're wanting to integrate people into New Zealand society, encourage them to spend more time in New Zealand.
Then they really should have the comfort of having their own home here. Two rationales for that. One. If you've got a property in New Zealand, you're likely to spend more time, so therefore the chance of integrating is higher. And also,
of course, if you're investing in New Zealand, you want to be comfortable in terms of your stay here rather than having to move around hotels.
Second rationale around that was that if individuals have got property here, they're likely to invite friends and those friends coming to New Zealand for the first time may also fall in love with the country. And that may lead to a visa application made. So the current policy has been reviewed and that is about the change as legislation being introduced in Q1 next year, which will basically confirm that if individual holds one of these active investor visas they will be permitted to purchase a single residential property in New Zealand or buy land and build a home in New Zealand as long as the price is in excess of 5 million New Zealand dollars. And they do not need to become a tax resident to do
Erik: okay. So this podcast is going to air on New Year's weekend. So from a planning standpoint, anybody who's starting now, if they're about to go through the process of evaluating New Zealand working with you or another firm in order to get that active investor plus Visa, by the time the Visa's been granted and they're making their trip to New Zealand.
The law will have been changed and they will have the option. At least that's what's expected. If the law goes through that they will be able to buy one home, but they're not allowed to buy a dozen homes and flip houses and do that kind of thing. You don't want that sort of speculation. But to buy your own personal use residence, that's going to be changed, it sounds
Mark: yes. That's more or less a certainty so the coalition government have reached a deal in terms of this legislation coming in. Those requirements have been set. The legislation was supposed to be introduced into the house in November. However, this is a very busy government. They're introducing a lot of legislative changes at the moment.
So it's been delayed. It's likely to come into force in, in Q1, so yes, if you've got someone who's say starting on January, by the time they've moved through the process. Completed the investment. Then we're expecting this policy to be in place where they can then access New Zealand's property market.
Conservatively what we are thinking is that the policy should be in place by one April. However, it just depends on the legislative priorities. It's already, it's been bumped back a little bit because of the priorities. However, discussions with. Has recently indicate that this certainly is something that's going to be introduced in Q1, and it's designed to actually accelerate.
And further incentivize further applications under the policy. When the government made the announcement, they're making the changes and stipulated what they were you, within a week of that notice, we onboarded quite a few new applications from people who saw, the ability to purchase a home was a trigger for them to actually commit and invest under the setting.
The theory around. Having that property as a draw card has been proven already and we've got multiple investors who are at various stages. Some of 'em already have their residency visas. Some of them we're still preparing filings, but they all have the intention to purchase a home here once the legislation is in place and they're able to do
Erik: and listeners stay tuned. Later in this podcast, I'll have another interview where we'll go into the real estate aspects of moving to New Zealand in much more detail. Mark, I wanna come back and stay focused on your specialty, which is the visa itself. I want to talk about how. Long it takes to do this, and frankly, I think you guys are doing a fantastic job because I've been through this a couple of times myself with other golden Visa programs.
Normally there's a lot of red taping, bureaucracy, and just a mountain, a ridiculous mountain of KYC background checks. Private investigators have to be hired. All kinds of things have to be involved in getting a golden visa in a lot of countries. When I talked to another immigration consultant and they told me they were turning these visas around, in some cases in three or four weeks, I said, no, don't tell me the date when they first acknowledge the application. When you actually get the visa and they said, no, we're actually getting Visas issued in a matter of a few weeks. Is that really true? And how are you guys managing to do this? Frankly, so much more efficiently than most of the other countries that offer Golden Visa programs?
Mark: When the policy was set through and worked with the government, one thing we raised is that, if you're aiming to create the best investment visa product available internationally, then you have to have a very swift process to do that. So the government actually scaled up personnel internally before this policy released on the 1st of April to achieve that, generally speaking.
It takes around two to four weeks for the documentation to be prepared and we typically file applications, which we term decision ready. So really there should be a few questions, if any, coming back. When we were filing in April and May, I can tell you we could file one of these applications from a a good jurisdiction and we were getting approvals within as little as three to five working days from submission.
That has pushed out a little bit due to the volume coming into the system. So it's fair to say at the moment, from filing, I think people should expect preliminary approval. Within one to two months. And assuming there's no other complexities and then from there, individuals have six months to actually transfer their funds to invest, to then secure that, that visa.
So a lot of resources at the government side have been put in place. To actually create what is hopefully a very efficient, fast process. And if you think about that, it's logical because if you are wanting foreign direct investment to come into the country, then the quicker you process those applications, the quicker that money lands and goes to work.
So the, yeah, the processing times at the moment, it pushed out a little bit because of the demand Now that's come into the system. However, it's still fairly fast in our view based on alternative jurisdictions.
Erik: I predict that backlog is going to get even bigger because I think it is the best program that exists anywhere worldwide, and it also happens to be a country that's absolutely a beautiful, amazing place.
So just to summarize all of that, if a listener of this podcast, here's this New Year's weekend, says, wait a minute, $3 million US investment, actually less than that. I put that to work for three years in a venture fund where I'm gonna actually make a decent return, hopefully, and I end up with my entire family having a lifetime call option to move to New Zealand if they want to.
If they call you after listening to this podcast, they want to go with that program, it sounds like by April 1st, when the law is expected to change around purchasing real estate, they've probably got the visa in hand by that point. Is that realistic timeframe?
Mark: It's realistic if they move quickly.
However, if we take a step back in terms of looking at the design of this policy. The prior duration of this policy a few years ago brought in around a billion New Zealand dollars into the economy per annum. And that was the aim was to achieve that standard and that work, the math works out to be around 200 applications.
Per annum. However, as of the end of November, eight months in, there's been just over 450 applications already made. So it's well subscribed. If we continue
to see that momentum, we do believe applications all tend to slow. That said, we've had some very fast approvals through recently aswell.
So I think the, this Visa product hasn't reached maturity in the market. And what I mean by that is when you design investor visa products like this internationally, it takes around two years for that to reach maturity, where it's very well known. Internationally. So we think we see the demand is actually increasing over time and will continue to increase over time.
But we're hoping, the people that are applying Q1, they should. Expect quite swift processing times, but that certainly does depend upon how many applications are being made. We've got multiple applications under management here, which we're preparing to file. We're onboarding weekly and we just don't see that demand stopping.
It's been extremely busy, pretty much from the 1st of April.
Erik: Mark. One more point I want to cover is we've discussed the immigration law requirement, which is a three year commitment to this program. Over that time, you've gotta spend 21 days in the country. But if you're choosing the growth option, it's probably gonna be something like an investment in a venture capital fund.
Now, most venture capital funds, as our investors already know, have a longer. Commitment period than that. Is that true in these investments? And what do people need to know in terms of, I suppose if they went for the larger investment in government bonds, they would be done after three years.
I'm guessing that although they may have met. The government requirement to get the visa after three years, they probably still have a longer lockup than that if they chose a venture capital fund. Is that right?
Mark: Yes, that's right. So taking the growth category as an example, it's a three year immigration related commitment, however. It depends. The actual investment commitment depends on the instrument entered into. So if you're, if people are looking at venture capital, obviously those legal investment commitments will exceed that three year term. There are, however. Alternative instruments within the growth category, which do offer liquidity, around year three or four.
Private credit, for example is one of them. But it is a common misconception where people confuse the fact that what's just a three year commitment, that's it.
But it does depend on what you are committing you are committing to. But like I've said there, the growth category is designed to channel funds into various investment options.
We have people who are focusing just on venture. We have people have a spread venture private equity. And then we've got, private credit and some other development funds where infrastructure developments are being put into the country, which have liquidity options. Most people look for liquidity at the end of the investment term if they're not familiar with the country.
That said. I've said previously very few people end up withdrawing once they've got, confidence in the system. They've spent some time here. So the investment class under the growth category is always under active review. It may well be, by the time list is prepare and file applications.
There may be other more diverse investment assets available under the system. It's an ongoing piece of work around that. But definitely it is. Yeah. A common misconception that people have is that it's three years in and out. It certainly does depend on the investment instrument that you're entering.
Erik: Well, mark, I can't thank you enough for a terrific interview, but before I let you go, obviously some of our listeners may be interested in this program. Your firm, Lane Neave is not only a, an advisor who helps people get these visas, but you're one of the designers of the program. So needless to say, you're highly expert on this.
If someone is interested in pursuing this, how do they contact you?
Mark: Yeah, certainly probably email is the best contact for us. But yeah, we are, I'm an immigration partner, so I'm actually a I guess an attorney in New Zealand, so a little bit different than licensed immigration advisors. And we're a full service law firm in addition to the immigration aspects. We also handle property transactions, commercial, corporate investments, the whole suite of services typically required to manage one of these applications. Yeah, like I said, email is probably the best. My email address is
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Happy to hear from everybody, anybody who wants to discuss this further. And we tend to set up teams or Zoom calls with people to get 'em across the details to allow them to make fully informed decisions before they move forward with with the process.
Erik: And we'll put that email contact in the research roundup email, so listeners, you'll be able to find it there.
Or if you don't have a research roundup email. Again, it's
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. listeners, I was surprised in talking to Mark off the air to learn that really the main reason that people are flocking to this visa, there's quite a few of them. It's primarily about the interest in New Zealand.
It's a beautiful place. It's a potentially, if the world took a turn in the wrong direction, it would be a great place to move to with your family. They don't seem to be pursuing this visa for the sake of the four year tax holiday that's offered by New Zealand to new immigrant investors. I think the reason for that
is nobody knows about it.
We're going to break that story next In my interview with Graham Lawrence, who is a tax advisor in New Zealand, will find out about that four year tax holiday, which I don't think most people pursuing this visa are even aware of. That's coming up next.
Joining me now is Graham Lawrence, managing tax partner for New Zealand at Acclime, which is a global tax advisory firm.
Graham, it's great to have you on. Our listeners have heard about the active investor plus Visa from Mark. A lot of people as Mark described, are really not intending to move to New Zealand full-time. They're going to New Zealand or they're making a visit to New Zealand for the purpose of obtaining what eventually becomes a.
Permanent resident visa that would allow them to come to New Zealand anytime they want to. What, if any, tax implication is there just to getting the visa? Is there a tax obligation if they don't move to New Zealand and they've got the visa?
Graham: Yeah. Thank you Eric. For putting, for inviting me onto the show.
I guess to answer that question, if people are looking to apply for a Visa and not move to New Zealand. The tax implication is essentially nothing. New Zealand just taxes their investments that they make in New Zealand and they don't seek to tax their worldwide income.
Erik: Okay? So if they made an investment in order to qualify for the active investor, plus they took $5 million, put it in a New Zealand fund.
The income that they make from that investment will be taxable in New Zealand, but any of their other global income is not taxable in New Zealand. Is that an accurate summary?
Graham: Yeah, that's correct, Eric. And the tax rates are relatively low and in some instances the tax can actually be a 0% tax rate.
Erik: Okay, now I wanna move on for people that would consider moving to New Zealand to something as far as I can tell, very few people know about, which is New Zealand offers a four year tax holiday to what are called transitional residents. What's a transitional resident who qualifies for this, and what are the details of this four year tax holiday?
Graham: Yeah, that's a good question, Eric. So a transitional tax resident person is essentially someone who has not come to New Zealand and become a New Zealand tax resident for the previous 10 years. And what the rule seeks to do is exempt your worldwide assets in liabilities for a period of four years, really just to enable you to come to New Zealand, settle in.
And give you four years to reorganize your affairs so that you don't get essentially a tax surprise.
Erik: Okay? So that's the intention. But I'm gonna go out in a limb here and say I think that there's a profound value for some global investors. Now, I don't think this helps Americans or Japanese or.
Eritrean very much. I'm not sure there's a whole lot of wealthy Eritrean to worry about, but those are the three countries that are going to tax those investors global assets or global income based on their citizenship, regardless of where they live. So for those people, I don't think that this particular rule has any profound advantage, but for Canadians or Western Europeans.
If you are willing to move to New Zealand, physically, take up residents in New Zealand, pick up and leave the country that, that you were born in. As I understand this, for the first four years, you would have essentially the same benefits as moving to a territorial tax jurisdiction where any income that you make in New Zealand, you get a job there.
Sure. You gotta pay income tax on that like everybody else. But all of your global income from investments would be completely exempt from taxation for the first four years. That seems to me like a really big deal, and I was expecting,
when I spoke to Mark, I was expecting to say this is the reason everybody's flocking to New Zealand.
It's because of this tax holiday. Mark said, no, actually, that's very uncommon. A lot of people don't even know about it. Most people are. Pursuing the active investor plus Visa because they wanna have optionality to come to New Zealand later, or because they want their kids to have that lifetime visa grant, which, would hopefully benefit them, give them more flexibility of what they might do in life.
Is this an undiscovered gem here and am I understanding it correctly in terms of its implications for people, let's say from Canada or Western Europe who could move to New Zealand and essentially be, tax exempt on their global investment income outside of New Zealand for the first four years?
Graham: Yeah, let's, that's a great summary, Eric. Look, I'd love to say as a tax guy, this is the reason why people are coming to New Zealand but it isn't, mark is absolutely correct. People are coming to New Zealand because of the, you know, the friendly environment, the open spaces, the beautiful landscape.
But then what they do understand is there is actually a significant tax advantage to actually moving to New Zealand. And, the four years is a hidden gem. And then post those four years, there's even more surprises. New Zealand does not have. A broad based capital gains tax.
It doesn't, tax shares, doesn't tax a lot of real estate. Obviously there's some exclusions around that, but we have a very good tax system here in New Zealand.
Erik: Now this is something I was really fascinated to learn about because my first thought being a skeptic and something of a cynic at heart was, okay, if they're teasing you with this four year tax holiday, there must be a real Gotcha.
Afterwards, in the fifth year they're gonna, they're gonna nail you with a really heavy tax. Actually, the opposite is true, is, I understand that it's called FIF it's not really a capital gains tax. It's not really a wealth tax. It's a hybrid between the two. But the Effect of it, as I understand it, is you are fully taxed on the first 5% of gains on your global income.
So if you're a, an aggressive investor and you have a great year and you make 40%, yeah, you're gonna pay a 39% tax on the first 5% of gains that you made
in New Zealand. But. The next 35% of gains if you had a 40% year is, I understand it is basically tax free. Am I in, am I interpreting that right?
Graham: Yeah it's a really complex area, this FIF or foreign investment tax regime.
But if I would've taken an example, someone who's moved to New Zealand, you post their four years and let's to say they've got some shares in Apple. So the way the rule looks at it is on the 1st of April, you take the market value of those shares. You just return 5% of that as taxable income.
So you pay tax on that 5%. You don't pay tax on any gains, any dividends. And so essentially, if you're making more than 5% on those Apple shares during the year being capital gains or dividends those are all tax free. From a New Zealand point of view.
Erik: Now what happens if at the beginning of the year you take that 5% and it's not a tax of 5%, it's you take 5% of the value of those Apple shares.
That's the presumed return that they think you might make, and you would be paying tax of whatever your marginal tax rate. The maximum is 39% on that. That 5%. So it really works out to about 1.95% of the asset value of the Apple shares is the maximum tax you're gonna pay. What happens if it's a down year
and you lose 10% because Apple shares go down that year, do you still pay tax on that 5%?
Graham: Yeah, that's where it hurts Eric. We are talking about a paper tax here, so in down years. Irrespective whatever the value those shares is on the 1st of April. So if it's down 10% compared to the year before you're still paying tax.
Erik: Okay, so it is effectively a form of wealth tax, but it's not on all of your assets.
It's on stocks and certain other qualifying assets. And if you know it sounds like it's 5%, but if you multiply the 5% by the mo, maximum marginal tax rate of 39%, which you actually get is a 1.95%. Wealth tax on your overseas stock shares. What about things like overseas real estate and other types of investment that are not directly in financial markets?
Graham: From a New Zealand point of view, we do not have a capital gains tax across the board on real estate. So the first premise is that you won't be taxed on gains point of view. A couple ways to explain when you do get taxed
on them would be if you're in the business. So if you're in the business of buying and selling real estate, you will get taxed on it.
Or if it is residential real estate. If you are buying and selling within two year period, at the moment, you will get taxed on that game. But outside of that, New Zealand does not seek tax capital gains on real estate.
Erik: Okay. So it really is, and I'm gonna make a prediction here. I think what's going on is New Zealand is such a beautiful place that people are flocking to New Zealand because it's, it's an amazing place to go and see the countryside.
I don't think people know about this. I don't because I, when I lived in Hong Kong full time, I met lots of Canadians, lots of Western Europeans both Hong Kong and Singapore because their territorial tax jurisdictions, meaning that they don't tax your offshore income. A lot of people were moving. To those countries just because they were high net worth investors, most of their income WA was essentially tax free.
They only had to pay tax on the income that they had inside of Hong Kong, which was typically minimal. I don't think that community of global high net worth private investors knows that there's a deal in New Zealand. On, it's an English speaking first world country where you can live in an absolutely beautiful place and really not be taxed at all for the first four years.
And after those first four years, it still sounds to me like it's one of the best tax regimes anywhere in the world. Am I overstating that?
Graham: Look, I don't think you are. We are, New Zealand is one of the few countries without a broad-based capital gains tax for starters. We offer this four year exemption that you've explained really well.
I think to add to that when I travel and present on this matter, people are surprised that, we don't have a wealth tax, we don't have an inheritance tax, we don't have a payroll tax, we don't have a social security tax, and on top of all of that, New Zealand has a vast network of what we call double tax agreements with other countries.
From a, an exit point of view. A lot of the high net worth people that we look after, they're looking at, when they come to New Zealand, that's great, but these people are really smart and they wanna understand if they exit, what does it mean also? So these double tax agreements allow us to plan really easily in
terms of if they do potentially exit, how do we exit and how do we minimize any implications on that side?
Erik: And that would be particularly relevant. As I said before, the real benefit of the four year tax holiday is mostly for people who are not American or Japanese, but for people who are American or Japanese, you don't want to have to pay tax in two countries. So you've got the agreements with both of those countries that you're not gonna get double taxed if you're paying US taxes and New Zealand taxes there, there's gonna be a deduction on one side or the other, so you don't get taxed twice.
Graham: Yeah, that's right Eric. And we look after a lot of American Japanese clients and what I would say is you bang on those agreements, allow those investors to be taxed relatively low rates and rates that allow a full tax credit back in their home country. So there is no double taxation so long as you look at what you're investing in properly and apply the appropriate rates.
Erik: Now, I heard a rumor that the government has looked at this and has realized that the four year tax holiday is such a good deal, that there are some people that have come for four years and left just. Before the end of the fourth year, there's a rumor that the government may be revisiting the rules, trying to figure out how they could encourage those people to stay permanently, maybe making the deal even better than it is now.
Any truth to that or do you know any more about that?
Graham: There is some truth to that and we've been working with the government on those rules. So those rules are currently contained in a tax bill, and that will be passed. At this stage in probably March 26, there's still a bit of discussion going on.
We've, we've gone one step forward and a couple steps back, if that makes sense. So we've made a positive step forward on the rules but there's still some work to be done. Around those rules. But really what they're looking to do is, instead of the 5% tax that we talked about earlier in this interview, they're looking to bring in a realized taxation.
And the question is, does that realized taxation provide a better result, for the individual as compared to the 5% taxation under the foreign investment fund rules. So this is a little bit of wait and see, but we are making positive steps.
Erik: Is there any consideration for making it a 5% cap so that you would have a 5% maximum?
But if it's more than that, you don't get taxed on it,
Graham: so that cap will still stay. So the old rules will still stay. It will just be more a realized basis. We have suggested a cap. At this stage there is no cap. And I guess to give the example. In comparison, I talked about the Apple shares.
So under the proposals, as they are right now, you would essentially be taking an individual who's moved to New Zealand. They've done their four years, so we're now a full New Zealand tax resident. So at the end of those four years. A value on the Apple shares would be made, which would just be on the date, and then if that individual sold those Apple shares, the difference between the opening and closing value would be taxed at the New Zealand marginal tax rate.
But only 70% of that gain is actually taxed. I guess in a roundabout way, the tax rate on the gain is about 27%, which is, still relatively high. But you need to take into account that the valuation of it is the date that the individual finishes their four year tax holiday, and when they sell the gains.
So the cost base could actually be quite, low in comparison to what the individual bought the Apple shares at some time ago.
Erik: Let's imagine that international high net worth private investor from Europe, from Canada, someplace other than Japan and the United States where they don't have to deal with citizenship based taxation, they move to New Zealand.
What about the part of, you're still taxable obviously on your income in New Zealand? What about other taxes? Terms of real estate taxes social security taxes, Medicare taxes Etc. What is the tax regime like if you were considering moving to New Zealand to live there and be a private investor there?
Graham: Pretty simple, Eric. We don't have, any of the payroll, social security. We don't have any real estate, capital gains tax. We do have, real estate taxes in terms of local councils. From a, I guess an insurance point of view you are to what we call a CC and that will come out of your wages, essentially.
Or if you're a contractor you make the payment yourself to the government. And that is to co that covers you for, personal. And also business injury outside of
that really we just have a form of sales tax called GST guess it's just really a simple system, Eric.
Erik: It certainly I think is a fantastic opportunity for people who can live anywhere, who derive most of their income from investments and are not burdened by being Japanese or American and having the the citizenship based taxation. It's one of the most beautiful countries in the world. Fantastic place to be, and at least for the first four years, all of your offshore income from capital gains, from interest, from dividends, whatever is completely tax free. I don't think most people know about that. You heard it first here on Macrovoices.
Folks. Graham, I can't thank you enough for a terrific interview, but before I let you go. Please tell our listeners how they could contact your firm if they're interested in learning more about the tax implications of either just getting the AIP visa or investing in New Zealand or moving to New Zealand and being a private investor based in New Zealand.
Graham: Yeah, thank you Eric. It's been a pleasure to be on your show and in a hope I'll being able to distill some of the matters around taxation. Look, we've been doing this for about 25 years. We've got a team of people that help investors from all around the world move to New Zealand.
If people do want to get in contact for a discussion, please go to Newzealand.acclime.com, and my details will be on there. Or alternatively I'm on LinkedIn under Graham Lawrence. I'd be really happy to help you, think about. What this means in terms of New Zealand.
And once again, Eric, thanks for being on your show.
Erik: You're very welcome, Graham, and we tremendously appreciate your perspective. Listeners, stay tuned. We've got one more interview coming up with Brendan Goodwin, who is a realtor slash lawyer slash jack of all trades and concierge to high net worth in individuals migrating to or considering migrating to New Zealand. That's coming up next.
Erik: Joining me now is Brendan Goodwin. Brendan, your background and career history is a little bit confusing. Why don't you walk us through it?
Brendan: Eric, thanks for having me on the show. Yeah, so I'm a Auckland born and bred, and I actually started my career as a lawyer, which is a little bit unusual. I practiced property law with DLA Piper in New Zealand, Australia, and Auckland.
So I spent a lot of time on the legal instruction side of commercial real estate transactions before I ever actually sold a house. About a decade ago, I moved into the family business at Auckland, which is good ones. A multigenerational real estate firm, but over time I've specialized more and more in high-end property and I'm looking after international clients.
Who are trying to make New Zealand home either part-time or full-time. So that's ultimately led to what I focus on now, which is dedicated offering for high networth clients under my new brand called Unique, which has felt a little differently. UNIQ
Erik: I certainly can attest personally that you approach real estate quite a bit differently than most realtors I've encountered.
In the interest of full disclosure, I do wanna let our listeners know that I do have a business relationship with Brendan when I was looking to set a second home in Auckland. I I ended up meeting Brandon. He told me basically what I was looking for didn't exist in the market, but he thought it would in about six months, he went out of his way to basically.
Call in a favor with a developer he knew. He showed me a penthouse that was, I think it's probably the most elaborate penthouse in Auckland, if not the entire country. A little bit overkill for what I was looking for, but he set up a short term lease on that property for me, even though it wasn't listed for for rent, it was only for sale as a holdover until I could find the property I was actually interested in.
Turned out I never got to stay in that amazing penthouse because he was able to accelerate the availability of the property that was a fit. So I definitely, my, my hat's off to you, Brendan, for making that all come together. I never got to stay in the cool penthouse. But other than that, it worked out fine.
Brendan: Yeah. Yeah. And it's still available for sale, just quietly. But yeah, anyway, yeah, it was a good experience.
Erik: So I want to get into what really is going on in terms of this people flocking to New Zealand. To my surprise, I thought it was gonna be about this tax holiday thing and people being interested.
For that reason, Mark Williams told us in the first interview, no, that's really not it. Almost nobody that he encounters is coming for that reason, most people are coming because, it's a beautiful. Full countryside, English speaking, first world,
country and so forth, and they're setting up a backup plan, having a place for them and their families to have a lifetime call option on residency, which is fairly easy to obtain with this new active investor plus Visa.
You have the benefit though, of talking to people, not when they're considering this, but after they've already done it and they've come to New Zealand and you find out what their reactions are, tell us a little bit about who's doing this and also with respect to what they're doing, give us the rundown for people who don't know the country well, north Island, south Island what's it all about?
For people who are considering real estate, what are their options?
Brendan: Geez, Eric, that's a good question. How long do we have? I guess I've been lucky enough to travel a little bit globally and New Zealand really is a stunning. Even by global standards. So essentially we are three small islands located in the Pacific Ocean.
We are never far away from the water and obviously a lot of stunning coastline. So recreational boating, scuba diving and fishing are all world class. But we have snow cap mountains with amazing hiking trails or lakes. Rivers for freshwater fishing. So there really is something for everyone who loves the outdoors.
And the convenient part for me, when you think about, big larger countries like the US we've got a, a huge continent. You can pretty much drive the length of New Zealand and under about 30 hours. You can drive from Auckland three hours depending on the season and be either skiing or snowboarding or deep game fishing up north.
So I think that's a pretty unique feature and Stunning part of the country. But ultimately I think there's, New Zealand does have a few layers. 'cause I think probably a lot of people globally just think of the natural beauty. But actually, we do have true city living in, in Auckland that, that's our commercial hub to a lesser extent, Wellington and Christchurch.
But in, in Auckland, you have a very international walkable lifestyle. You've got city and harbor apartments, you've got character inner city homes. So I think that's something that could appeal to a lot of your listeners. And then you've got the lifestyle destinations. People might have heard of places like Queenstown, Wanika, parts of the Bay Islands, Waihiki Islands.
That's where you see the classic postcard, scenery, lakefront Vineyards, big Land holdings, coastal estates. You raise an interesting question. So in terms of is it restricted, to purchase those types of properties for overseas people? The short answer is no. So New Zealand has a concept called sensitive land, which simply means some types of property, like larger rural blocks, coastal land, or islands like Wahiki, which is a 45 minute ferry from downtown Auckland, need extra consent if you're an overseas person. But that doesn't mean they're off limits, you can still buy them. There just is an overseas investment office consent process, which you'll hear people referred to as OIO Consent. But most high-end urban homes and places like Central Auckland aren't classified as sensitive at all. So many buyers proceed without any additional approvals.
If someone is looking at coastal estate a vineyard, a lifestyle block for example or anything on Waihi the OI consent is required and we help clients navigate that from day one. So the takeaway really in that sense is simply awareness, not alarm. The rules aren't a barrier, they're just part of the buying premium off an iconic New Zealand property.
Erik: Brandon, as someone who's very well traveled, I can certainly attest that New Zealand is the only place I've ever been that really outdoes Hawaii in terms of natural beauty.
It really is a strikingly beautiful place for people who are interested in that kind of real estate. There's lots and lots of it. Personally, I happen to be more of a city dweller myself, so I can't speak from personal experience to to living in that part of New Zealand or wanting to. And, despite the fact that Mark said that's probably what most people are are looking for.
I'd like to talk a little bit more about this idea of mine, which. I don't think the offshore world knows about this tax deal yet. The combination of the four year blanket tax holiday where there's no tax, whatever on your offshore income, and then after that, it's capped at 5% of your gains under these FIF rules.
Now it doesn't help Americans or Japanese very much, but for everybody else. All the people I met in Hong Kong, the guys that were either high high-end private investors or running hedge funds and so forth, they moved to Hong Kong and Singapore because of the territorial tax doctrine, not having to pay tax on.
Offshore sourced income. There's a huge community there, and I think frankly, that's the reason it costs 50 million US to buy a decent apartment in Singapore is because so much wealth has moved in because of Singapore's golden Visa
program. I think. Frankly, the New Zealand's program is pretty darn close to as good as Singapore's, and it's an English speaking first world country that's more beautiful than Hawaii.
It's an amazing deal, and from the sense I get from Mark, either I'm the only person who thinks that or a lot of other people haven't figured it out yet. Out yet. So what's your take? You talk to people after they've come to New Zealand, after they're down this process. Is that part of this or is it just unknown so far?
Brendan: Yeah, from my experience it's unknown. And I guess one of the challenges that we have for those, involved with the AIP Pathway program is to really get it out there into forums like this with people like you who are able to understand how much of a good opportunity this is, not just in relation to tax but lifestyle.
As you say. We, we've got a beautiful, generally a pretty beautiful climate and it's a really big opportunity, which when I think it gets out there, will potentially cause some issues with the amount of stock. And that is in the market to meet the demand. So I think it's a really interesting time at the very beginning of the program.
Erik: The other thing that occurs to me is Australia, a couple of years ago, canned their significant investor visa program, which was Australia's golden visa. In terms of English speaking first world countries, where else can you go besides New Zealand to get a a golden visa that allows a path to permanent residency the way that you can get in New Zealand?
I'm not sure if there is any.
Brendan: Yeah, Australia closing what they called their SIV has definitely made New Zealand more interesting in the English speaking world. Particularly for people who like the idea of this part of the world and wanna safe. Rule of law of jurisdiction. I from what I hear from clients, which I guess is where you're asking me on the coalface, very few people will say, Hey, I'm moving to New Zealand solely for tax.
Normally it starts with lifestyle, sort of safety. Education for children is a big one. Political stability, quality of life, and then the tax and the investment framework reinforces the move. Once they learn more about what is globally a pretty good. Financial framework as you've identified yourself, and I think for the European and Asian investors, once their tax advisors explain those
transitional rules and how New Zealand treats offshore investment income, it becomes a much more compelling package.
And I guess, you touch upon the Americans in the Japanese as your market discussed, that picture is different, but they're still very active because the value of the lifestyle and that diversification. That has value. So I would say Mark is right, that sort of people don't lead with the tax conversation.
It absolutely features in the decision making for a lot of families once they dig deeper.
Erik: I'm going to posit a hypothesis that New Zealand has a serious marketing problem because I don't think that the community of high net worth global investors who have based themselves in Singapore and Hong Kong, and much less so Hong Kong now because of the PRC complications.
I don't think they know about this because if they did, I don't know why you would be paying 50 million US for a small apartment in Singapore when there's a better deal here. And I suppose the counter argument to that is Hong Kong and Singapore are both major financial centers. So there's a lot of people who came from banking.
In those financial centers and are staying in the town that they know. But frankly, I met a lot of people in Hong Kong Europeans, Canadians people who were able to relocate and escape from their home country's tax regime to a much more favorable tax regime with territorial tax jurisdiction.
And I think maybe because New Zealand is not technically a territorial tax jurisdiction it doesn't get considered. I didn't. Know about it. I was curious as to why Peter Thiel and other people were relocating to New Zealand. I had absolutely no idea that I would ever consider it myself until I got curious about this.
For the sake of this, we needed something to fill the year end special on Macrovoices. This year we did nuclear energy last year. I was looking for something to do when I found out about the difference in quality of life and. Cost of living. The penthouse that you showed me at 51 Albert Street in Auckland is ridiculously expensive by New Zealand standards, but it's dirt cheap by Hong Kong or Singapore standards.
The thing that I think you've got a problem with though, if I imagine that community coming to Auckland is. I think a lot of those people like myself are
city dwellers. They're people who are used to living in a big city with walking distance to lots of really good restaurants and so forth. I'm actually very impressed with the restaurants in Auckland based on the size of the city, but.
In terms of housing you showed me one very impressive penthouse. How many more of those do you have? Because if this was Hong Kong and I said, look, I wanna see at least, 30th floor or higher luxury condo and, priced it, say 3 million US or higher. They would say it's gonna take six months to look at all those properties.
I think you could look at all of the properties like that in Auckland in about six minutes or maybe six hours. How much inventory is there? Could you support a community of let's say, metropolitan, the high net worth investors? Because frankly, I think that once this story breaks, maybe this podcast will be the catalyst.
I think that if people discover the tax deal, you're gonna see an influx of the same people that moved to Hong Kong for that reason.
Brendan: Yeah and I agree with you. I think that once the offshore world really understands the combination of the AIP pathway, the transitional tax rules and general quality of life proposition, New Zealand should be on a lot more shortlist than it is, for city dwellers.
Sorry. Like yourself, people are used to Hong Kong and Singapore and London. Auckland is interesting because it gives you, a reasonable sized city. We're not huge, but it has lovely food, good restaurants, as you have attest to, the public transport connectivity is improving in the city, and it's only 20 or 30 minutes from beaches and vineyards.
It's not trying to be Hong Kong. It's a different scale, but that's exactly the point at the end of the day. So I guess on the inventory piece I am a little bit nervous around, hopefully people do engage with us around moving to New Zealand through this pathway and I think there's gonna be a real shortage because as you said, right now, there's one full floor luxury apartment on the market and it's sitting around 8 million USD.
And behind that. There's, part floors or there's apartments being built on the city fringe. But I think there's gonna be, I'm hoping a shortage of stock because this is gonna be such a popular program, which will be a good problem to have. But I think that marketing piece in getting it out so they understand the opportunity
in New Zealand, not just from, the tax implications and the financial structure, but the quality of life.
I think this, there should be a really. Sound based to, to launch this program or encourage it to keep growing.
Erik: I suppose something else that I don't know is my own personal preference as a city dweller. I'm not sure the other people who are in Hong Kong and Singapore for those reasons, share that value.
They might prefer to be in, an oceanfront home someplace. There are a few of those in Secco and in Hong Kong, but it's it's quite expensive on that side of the island. What about the not way down in Queenstown and snowboarding country, but around Auckland? Is there plenty of housing, high end housing?
If you did have an influx of high net worth migrants, is there enough inventory to support that outside of the city?
Brendan: Look, I think a lot of the high-end real estate in New Zealand and in and around Auckland particularly, it's around those networks and having someone plugged into to unveil those off market opportunities.
Short answer, there's probably gonna be a struggle of in inventory, but there's increasingly developments that are people, the listers might have heard of the golf enthusiast. There's a couple of becoming now pretty world famous golf courses called Tara Iti and Te Arai You know, there's more and more development.
There's helicopter rise from Auckland. Direct almost to those golf courses where there's international standards and there's an ever-growing presence of those type of properties. But I think, the window for people to be able to purchase those type of properties is definitely closing.
And for our Australian friends or Singaporean friends, or even the expats, Kiwis that might be listening, this change is coming legally where people under this program will be able to purchase one residential property. At a minimum of $5 million, and I think we've already touched on it, that window is closing and the reality of what's happening in the market, I can tell you for certain, there are already real estate transactions that are happening that are subject only to the change of the rule where one of these people down the pathway can buy a property over 5 million.
For those that are considering, that's changed in the new year when this airs, the sooner people can reach out. The better because I think the stock is gonna become a problem. There is not enough properties to service a potential surge. So I think the best way to either grab that opportunity is to reach out as soon as possible because I think there's gonna be fewer and fewer good quality properties to purchase.
Erik: That's an interesting point 'cause when I heard Mark's interview I was thinking, boy, come April 1st when they pass this new law, you better move quick if you want to get property in New Zealand. 'cause it'll get, I should say, if you want to get city property, it seems like there's plenty of countryside in New Zealand and I don't think you're gonna run out of that.
I do think you're gonna have an inventory problem in downtown Auckland. So you are saying it's not a question of hurry up as soon as you get to April 1st, you're saying? Put an offer on a property that's contingent on that law passing and lock it up in a contract before the law changes. Is that, did I get that right?
Brendan: That, that's what I'm saying. So it's December, 2025 for those listening and those contracts are already happening subject to the law changing. So for anyone who's considering it or thinking about it, when you think about an investment of, I think just under 3 million USD to get into the program, and then you're looking at properties, which as you say globally.
Really dirt cheap. When you think about the US dollar currency and those other global currencies, I think there's a real good chance that people are gonna miss out if they don't act really quickly.
Erik: Brandon, I am still convinced that there is just an untold or unbroken story here, and I hope that this podcast will break it, which is for that global investor community, and especially if you trade US markets and you're living in Hong Kong or Singapore, I've been there before.
Trying to get up at three o'clock in the morning to catch that last hour of trading in New York. That all happens late morning in Auckland. So the time zone is way better for trading US markets if you're a trader and it's a way better quality of life. The real estate is dirt. It's not dirt cheap.
Compared to other places, but compared to Hong Kong and Singapore, it's dirt cheap. I really think that this tax deal for non-Japanese and Americans is gonna bring all of the Canadians and Europeans that I met in Hong Kong, many of which have already moved to Singapore flooding in. And frankly, I'm fascinated
by the idea of a market to create, I'm thinking of a residential tower that is designed to accommodate that community in Auckland and frankly, if the influx of high net worth investors because of the tax reason, which is, nobody seems to be doing that yet. I think it's 'cause nobody knows about it.
If that influx happens, dude, I'll partner with you to build that building.
Brendan: Look and I think what you're describing is very plausible, right? The same type of people who moved to Hong Kong 20 years ago because it was a well run territorial tax jurisdiction, and who now want this plan B, that's geographically boring in the best possible way, we'll eventually look at New Zealand very seriously.
And to touch on what you mentioned before, if the government keeps the settings sensible. Particularly around FIF in the absence of a broad capital gains tax, then yes, I can see a future that is defined where a global community of investors who base themselves and then around Auckland live very well, and they run their offshore affairs from here.
You, you raise a funny point around time zone because I think for active investors and traders, that time zone is actually a quiet superpower. You can trade US markets from here and still be functional human being the next day you are not annihilating your sleep to watch the market open. And then when you wake up, you're in objectively a pretty easy place to live.
So it's a nice combination. That tower concept is something that is really something edit, that, that tail concept you mentioned is exactly where I see this going. If the material the demand materializes, it's about. Something that was be built to specific design requirements, a bespoke offering for people that have, full double floor residences, lock up and leave Security concierge services designed for frequent international travel.
Connectivity to the rest of those amazing places that we've talked about, the golf courses and the ski resorts and, who knows, maybe a pretty cool helicopter hanger on the roof for those that are inclined to that sort of travel. But yeah, if we get a dozen like-minded financially qualified people aligned with that sort of vision, then I think we could definitely get a building marketed to a very defined audience.
And that's the sort of projects that I think Auckland. Has the opportunity to, to harness and create and like you say, create a hub of people of like-minded opportunities.
Erik: I've lived in a building like you're describing before, where it wasn't just the penthouse, but every floor was a full floor apartment.
And it, it really created a community of, people of similar high net worth who, who worked well together. And the helicopter idea is amazing because the traffic from the Auckland International Airport is not exactly ideal. That's a five or 10 minute helicopter ride with helitrans.
But the thing is, the heli trans heliport is a good 15 minutes outside of the CBD if you had the helipad on the roof, so the concierge in the building could just get ahold of Heli Trans and say. Pick my resident up in 15 minutes and take him to
the airport. That would be at a pretty amazing lifestyle, and the cost of that building compared to Singapore or Hong Kong would be nothing compared to those other markets.
I think it's a really fascinating idea. I don't know, maybe it's just me, but I don't think anybody knows about this yet because there's a lot of people that go in Singapore and Hong Kong used to have a a golden visa program called CIES that was decommissioned years ago. And frankly, with.
The PRC kind of taking over Hong Kong. I don't think anybody really wants to go there anymore. But Singapore's program which is called GIP, is still extremely busy. That's I think a $25 million golden visa if you invest in a fund as opposed to 5 million in New Zealand.
And then the cost of real estate here is so much less. I think probably the reason it's not on anybody's radar is technically speaking, it's not a territorial tax jurisdiction, but when you consider that there's basically no broad based gains tax, so what you're paying.
Taxon is your global interest in dividend income. That's not that big of a deal for most investors, and it certainly is possible to structure your investments to optimize around that. So I'll be very fascinated to see what kind of reaction we get to this podcast. I think there, there's a real potential for a significant influx of of high net worth international investors who would come here for the same reason as you said that they went to Hong Kong 20 years ago.
Brendan: Yeah. And my role in all of this is essentially to make it easier for people who are thinking seriously about New Zealand to help them understand their options on the ground, from where to live, what to buy, and who to speak to, introduce 'em to the right people in relation to tax advice and lawyers, and how to buy a boat.
And, I shared with you a contact to, to buy a car because I think a big part of any transition to a new country is about. Dealing with trusted people and let's be honest, not a lot of people have a lot of time these days, and when you're based offshore, before you move, having someone locally to help navigate that and save you time is an essential part of making that journey. More palable or even enjoyable, which is I think we, you've got to over the last few weeks. So I think that's an important part of that connectivity, that trust network, having someone plugged into those off market opportunities. So I'm on your page. I'm excited about this. I think there's a lot of opportunity, not just for Auckland and the country, but also for people that are listening to the podcast that are thinking, Hey, where do I go next?
Or What are the other opportunities to have a nice quality of life for my family when, let's be honest, globally. Things are a little bit shaky. The good thing about New Zealand is we're so far away, and that's probably the first time that people have seen that in such a positive light. And with air travel the way it is now, we're a lot closer to the rest of the world.
I'm helping people at the moment from the US and they're getting here in less than half a day. So I think that whole piece for people around thinking that we're so isolated, actually we're not as isolated as you might think. And I think once people get here and they experience that lifestyle and that community, as you say, I think it will be high on, or it should be high on a lot of people's wishlists of where to base themselves.
Erik: That's an important point that you just made, and I guess most of our listeners probably already know this, but for anyone who doesn't, the face of long haul international air travel has changed radically in the last 10 or 15 years as a result of lay flat seats in first class or in business class.
Make no mistake traveling to New Zealand from anywhere in economy class sucks. It's just not a fun experience. But I've gotten to the point, Brendan, where I actually much prefer a 12 or 13 hour flight over an eight hour flight because on an eight hour flight you don't really get to sleep. And I should actually correct that statement.
I prefer a 13 hour flight with prescription sleeping pills over shorter flights. And the reason is with lay flat seats, you just sleep through the whole thing. I'm awake for the first hour on my laptop, checking email. I'm awake for the last hour and a half, two hours to make sure I'm ready to put my sleep back and tray table forward so I don't get yelled at for landing.
Everything that happens for those, 12 hours in between I'm zonked out on on Ambien. It is so much better than it was 15 years ago. So I really am sold on this and like I said, I had no idea until I started researching this podcast episode that I would actually end up with a second home in New Zealand.
And I'm actually recording this episode from Auckland New Zealand in real estate that Brendan helped put me in. So it's it's been a real discovery for me and I'm gonna be fascinated to see what kind of reaction we get because, maybe the. People in Hong Kong and Singapore feel like they would only want to be in a place that is a major banking center.
Although, frankly, if you're running the kind of fund that most of the guys that I knew in Hong Kong were running I, I think it's much nicer here.
Brendan: You have been a really interesting test case or I guess scenario of people that were probably less than super positive or motivated about the move. People make different moves for different reasons and I've had clients that have come to New Zealand from all around the world for various motivations, but I think once people get here, they really do enjoy the environment and the lifestyle and the way things move relatively easily through we're not a perfect country by any means, but I think globally, again, what we've thought is something that people should look really strongly at and all those reasons you've highlighted for those high net worth individuals.
Again, the 21 day scenario of people coming through the country, we can help put together a curated. 21 day tour to give people a feel for all those parts of New Zealand that they might be interested in, in, in exploring, before deciding, Hey, look, yeah we would like to make New Zealand a second home or a primary place and we would like to buy a property.
And one of the other things that I do, which in New Zealand is not. Commonplace is I'm a buyer's agent, so I represent the interest of those people coming in to the country. And that right now I'm acting for various nationalities. Back to your point earlier in the conversation, I'm helping someone from China, I'm helping someone from Switzerland, I'm helping someone that's just coming back from Ireland.
I'm helping someone that's from the us. So I think more and more having people and networks that you can plug into quickly. Will make that experience so much easier. So yeah, I'm really excited about the opportunity for New Zealand and I think we should be sitting in a very different space talking about this maybe in 12 months time and looking at what impact, hopefully Macrovoices has had on
this program, which I think is a really exciting, smart, and essentially well played out program, like you say, so long as they keep it sensible and don't make huge changes to the taxation piece, then we should be good to go.
Erik: That was something that I was concerned about from Graham's interview is even though the tax holiday doesn't really do much for Americans and Japanese, although it's extremely valuable to everybody else, the FIF rules around capping capital gains tax at 5% is important to me long term for sure.
If they were to. Undo that and turn it into a realized capital gains tax, which sounded like maybe is under consideration that would completely sabotage the whole thing that would guarantee that everybody moves out after the first four years. What have you heard about that? Are they actually dumb enough to think about doing something like that?
'cause frankly, I was a little bit disappointed in the government. We reached out to them several times to offer them the first interview on this episode, and we couldn't get a reaction out of them. I think that they're not really that good at marketing.
Brendan: And I've had heard that from various people coming in that are high net worth, that similar to yourselves, they just didn't realize the opportunity that was here.
So I think that's one of the areas that the government can improve. And I know that there's a lot of people putting in a lot of time and effort, but ultimately, if people don't hear the story as clearly as what we are talking about with Graham and Mark, I think that there's gonna be really. A lot of trouble punching through the noise that's potentially out there with a lot of these countries trying to attract the high net worth.
You touched on the American and Japanese clients, and even though that tax holiday isn't as transformative for them, as I said, there's still strong interest. They're looking for political stability, English speaking jurisdiction, a safe base for family access to good education. So I think New Zealand is often about diversification and quality of life rather than headline tax.
Implications, but as you've said, they're actually globally very good. They may not be the, essentially the best, but those other jurisdictions come with lifestyle differences or you don't get to drive 30 minutes to the beach, into the pristine water you do in New Zealand. So I think they may keep their primarily fi,
financial institutions in the US or Japan but they want a well, structured foothold.
That they can genuinely call home and have a happy time. So I think that's how. That's how ace up the sleeve for sure. Down in New Zealand.
Erik: As you were talking a minute ago, I realized I should have asked you earlier, let's imagine the high net worth investor who is contemplating, maybe they're motivated by the tax holiday, maybe they're just motivated by the fact that it is an amazingly beautiful place, and they come to you and they're saying, okay, Brendan, I don't know anything about New Zealand other than I've heard it's a beautiful place.
I don't share Eric's. City dweller obsession with having to live in walking distance to lots of restaurants. I wanna see the smorgasbord. Can you recommend, since I've, I'm gonna do this 21 day thing, I'm gonna get my AIP visa I've gotta do 21 days visit of New Zealand and I wanna optimize that to see as much of the country as I can to get a sense of if I was ever to move here, where I would move to.
So I wanna do the tour of the country for the purpose of seeing all the different lifestyle options from. Golf courses in the Bay of Islands all the way down to ski and snowboard retreats in Queenstown. What's the itinerary? What would you recommend for someone if they just wanted to see the whole thing?
Brendan: Yeah, look, so what I do essentially is act as a single point of contact for those high net worth families who wanna explore New Zealand seriously. So luckily we are past that post COVID. Era where or during COVID era where you just had to buy from overseas. But now we have the benefit of, yeah, that practically looking around for 21 days.
So what I help people do is essentially tailor a tour. I might not be the person driving the bus or driving the plane, but we try and work together with the, with essentially at that point, are a guest, what are they interested in, what do they like to see? What things, so it's not a, it's not a cookie cutter.
Type operation that we run for our business. But it's about understanding do they like golf? Do they like fishing?
And try and tailor a package, which let's be honest, sells New Zealand in its best possible light for that particular person. And then moving forward from that, it's
that sort of trusted, safe pair of hands, whether it's, a concierge type service to say, Hey, if this is what you need to do, go and speak to this person.
I help introduce people to trusted tax advisors. You heard from Mark and the team around immigration, but there's banking, there's private healthcare. There's cars, there's boats private shifts. I even help people with things like memberships and relocation, logistics. So these are all the pieces of the puzzle that when you probably look at a move for yourself or your family.
Even though they may have done it many times, it can still be intimidating. It can still be time consuming, and you're still not sure if you're talking to the right people or paying too much money. So I think the idea of what I do for this type of client is essentially instead of having to deal with what, five or six providers across various industries, they can come to one place and then I can curate or orchestrate that for them.
Typically when they're overseas. I do a lot of. Teams and Zoom calls with videos at various times of the night to help those clients. Make that transition and coming up in, in this Christmas holidays I've got clients coming over from the US where we're organizing what cars they're gonna drive, how they're getting over to Wahiki.
In that particular case, I had a, a Mercedes-Benz parked in the, of the basement of a client 12 months ago because he arrived on Boxing Day and had a pregnant wife and two other children. Just trying to make things as smooth as we possibly can for people to have the best experience. Is where we position our sales under that unique brand and cater to these types of people that we are hopefully gonna see more and more of in the near future.
Erik: If anyone wants to reach out to Brendan particularly if you're interested in that idea of a themed building just for an investor community, which I think is a fascinating idea, it's Brendan, at unique UNIQ.nz or nz if you're American. In closing, if anyone listening decides to pursue an Active Investor Plus Visa, please tell 'em you heard about it on Macrovoices.
As I mentioned, we were a little bit disappointed that the government didn't respond when we in invited them to participate in this podcast, and particularly tell 'em not to screw this up by changing the the 5% FIF rule, because that would completely sabotage what I think is a fantastic deal that I think has the potential.
To attract a huge amount of capital into New Zealand and to really maybe change the face of Auckland's business community because I saw what happened in Hong Kong, all the people who moved in because of the the tax opportunity that existed there. As far as I can tell, New Zealand is a better deal when you consider the cost of housing and the lifestyle and everything else. Anyway, we'll see what happens. That's gonna be a wrap for our 2025 New Year's Holiday special. We'll be back to our regular show format next week when Patrick Ceresna and I will welcome a regular format guest to the show.
Happy holidays everyone.
MACRO VOICES is presented for informational and entertainment purposes only. The information presented in MACRO VOICES should NOT be construed as investment advice. Always consult a licensed investment professional before making important investment decisions. The opinions expressed on MACRO VOICES are those of the participants. MACRO VOICES, its producers, and hosts Erik Townsend and Patrick Ceresna shall NOT be liable for losses resulting from investment decisions based on information or viewpoints presented on MACRO VOICES.