You Won’t Believe What the Fed Just Secretly Revealed

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Cameron Long

Cameron Long

Cameron is a seasoned CFO and CPA with 31 years in finance. He created the AI Trader's Playbook to help everyday investors use AI to find high-confidence trades — in minutes, not hours.

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57 Comments

    1. I like how secrets make their way down to youtubers. Can you imagine, the next covert meeting the head honcho is like, which one of you 5 leaked our conversation? I saw it mentioned on youtube!

    1. There seems to be skepticism amongst investors regarding the Federal Reserve’s plan to continue increasing interest rates until inflation is stabilized. As for myself, I find myself at a crossroads, uncertain whether to liquidate my $150,000 stock portfolio. I’m seeking advice on the best strategy to capitalize on this current market.

    2. Investing in stocks can be a wise decision, especially if you have a reliable trading system that can lead you to fruitful days of success.

    3. With the help of an investment advisor, I was able to diversify my $550K portfolio across multiple markets, and the second quarter, I was able to earn over $350K in net profit. Her expertise turns your vision into reality with AI-powered precision.

    1. @jonathantaylor6926which key word? Wouldn’t it, by your logic, be just as easy to fool the system with your keywords with A.I.? Just ignore it and move on to better things!

  1. This is no surprise, as the big guys on Wall Street have been told this (“sniffed it out”), as the S&P futures aftermarket is up 77 as of this writing. The narrative is NVDA earnings though; always a distraction

    1. The Bernankster, “The Federal Reserve is an independent Agency”, meaning oversight of the Fed is limited even to CONgress and the President’s only power is to replace the Chairman.

  2. That second dude talking about ‘headwinds’ had the biggest head and hair possible. I think he’s trying to sell headwinds. He is an insider. When you’ve got a melon like that, you have to watch out for wind.

    1. I laughed at this but honestly the headwind part wasn’t totally wrong. The liquidity stuff can get confusing fast I’ve been trying to follow these repo/IOR charts for a while and it’s wild how quickly sentiment shifts.

    2. Earlier this year I ended up talking to someone who actually walked me through how the lending facilities affect short term rates and it helped settle some of the panic I was having.

    3. Same here, I had to get help decoding what those cracks in the plumbing actually mean for someone who isn’t trading treasuries all day. A friend put me in touch with Lisa Edna Silva, She really helped me figure out what would fit my situation best. If you’re curious, you can find her info online.

    4. I’d be up for that. Most of us don’t have time to live inside the charts, so hearing how people translate this stuff into actual steps would help.

    5. My biggest question is how you tell the difference between noise and something that should change your strategy. If you or Lisa had a framework for that I’d like to hear it.

  3. Hi George, I would suggest that you and Jeff can see through bank reserves from the perspective of TIME and how to keep balance in the flow of TIME. Three steps for your thinking: 1. Bank reserves can be used or functioned like real money in some “selected” time period, while it can’t be used or functioned like real money in some other time periods – just depends on who is making the selection of time period. 2. During time period of growing counterparty’s risk, those “numbers (on all balance sheets)” are on the verge of losing balance, thus bank reserves are needed to “temporarily” keep the balance of “numbers” – since such status quo of a temporary balance is inevitably untenable, so those real insiders choose to sitting on the sidelines for safeguarding themselves only. 3. When the level of bank reserves become an incalculable amount (or nonsensical infinity), there is just no way to deal with such artificially-made nonsensical infinity. OK. I hope to hearing from you and Jeff soon.

  4. I think the market topped in October. The bubbles gonna pop. The Fed will do QE when we are back down to April lows. This will be in Dec. Then the market will pump, but it won’t make it to new highs. It will roll over and crash. Recession/Depression

    1. A pullback is definitely possible, especially with how sensitive the market is to Fed moves. But this is exactly where Laura Elizabeth Berg’s approach helps me. Instead of trying to predict every twist, she keeps my portfolio structured in a way that weathers these swings without getting derailed. My portfolio has snowballed from $200k to over $600k in one year.

    2. I’ve been going solo with my portfolio, but it’s not going so well. Any chance you could recommend a financial advisor? I’d be grateful for the help.

    3. Sure. Like I mentioned earlier, I work with Laura Elizabeth Berg, a highly respected CFA in the field. If you search her online, you’ll find her webpage and impressive credentials. She’s a great resource if you’re not only looking to improve your roi but also to better understand the market.

  5. Is this because the US consumer has stopped spending and have started paying back debt. They cannot really afford overseas goods due to tariffs so are doing the next best and saving? So cash is not moving at the speed it used too and banks are not making money. Dropping interest rates will “hopefully” get people to spend but that horse has bolted , people don’t care as they still cannot afford the overseas goods.

    1. My only spending has been the bare minimum for groceries, utilities, and gold/silver. I wish I could afford new hockey skates and some new clothes, but that isn’t happening. I have what I need. The economy can’t be propped up by the top 10% forever 😂

  6. George, I am so impressed. I am literally applauding you out loud 👏You are spot on with this report. Some people are still not going to understand this. A bank keeping cash on hand, costs money and causes storage issues– fees due to insurance and risk. Reputation and it’s ability to borrow overnight (whether Fed or other bank) is so important. Bankers know which banks borrow money, even if the public does not. End of year accounting has to look good. The banks have more control than the Fed, but they have to be careful to not rock the boat. I love your common sense explanation🤓

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