The enemy of knowledge is not ignorance, it’s the illusion of knowledge (Stephen Hawking)

It ain’t what you don’t know that gets you into trouble. It’s what you know for sure that just ain’t so (Mark Twain)

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YOUR DAILY EDGE: 27 January 2026: From Roosevelt to Trump

My son David last week reminded me that Theodore Roosevelt’s presidency (1901–1909) marked a decisive pivot in American statecraft, moving the nation from relative isolationism toward active imperial engagement, often justifying this expansion through a lens of “civilization” and national vigor that marginalized the “weak idealists” of his time.

  • Reinterpretation of the Monroe Doctrine: While the original 1823 doctrine was passive—warning Europe to stay out of the Americas—Roosevelt (often called “The Big Stick”) inverted it with his 1904 Roosevelt Corollary. He asserted that the United States had the right to intervene in the internal affairs of Latin American nations to correct “chronic wrongdoing” or “impotence”. This effectively established the U.S. as an international police power in the Western Hemisphere, legitimizing interventions in Venezuela, the Dominican Republic, and Panama.

  • Contempt for “Weak Idealists”: Roosevelt harbored deep disdain for anti-imperialists like Mark Twain, whom he privately called “insane” and a “formidable disaster”. He viewed their principled opposition to expansion as a sign of national weakness, famously stating he would “like to skin Mark Twain alive” for his critiques.

Mark Twain became a prominent anti-imperialist, undergoing a dramatic political transformation around 1899. He initially supported American imperial expansion and called the Spanish-American War “the worthiest” war ever fought, but completely reversed his position after witnessing U.S. actions in the Philippines.(wikipedia+1)

Twain’s awakening came when he realized American intentions in the Philippines were conquest rather than liberation. In October 1900, he explained: “I have read carefully the treaty of Paris, and I have seen that we do not intend to free, but to subjugate the people of the Philippines. We have gone there to conquer, not to redeem”. He formally joined the American Anti-Imperialist League in January 1901 as vice-president, lending his considerable literary fame to the movement. (peoplesworld+3)

Then, Sunday Jan. 26, Cumberland Advisors CEO David Kotok posted

US-Venezuela Policy: Follow the Money To understand some of the US-Venezuela policy, we must follow the money. Here’s the story as we see it today.

The United States’ handling of Venezuelan oil revenue has evolved into one of the most unusual financial and diplomatic arrangements in modern American foreign policy. The core of the story is straightforward: The US government seized Venezuelan oil under long-standing sanctions authority, sold that oil on the global market, and placed a portion of the proceeds into a US-controlled bank account located in Qatar. (…)

The amount of money involved will quickly grow into the billions and may eventually reach very large sums using this monetary transfer technique.

Currently this revenue is off the congressional budget radar screen and does not fall under congressional scrutiny. Debate about it is assured in the coming days, weeks, and months. Every politician wants to try to do something with a large and growing pool of money.

But scrutiny isn’t a change in law. Trump 2.0 will defend this novel mechanism against all legal attacks. We can assume that legal actions are coming from multiple sources, as all those with claims on Venezuela will try to assert them. Lawyers in this arena are in for a field day in a new business.

The monetary implications are also substantial. This is a US government-owned fund placed in a bank. It will assuredly start out invested in US T-bills. So, we now have a new buyer of US government debt, and that development has implications for a positive monetary force that will enable the financing of some of the additional deficits that Trump 2.0 seems to be delivering if deficit forecasts come close to their marks.

Other countries besides Venezuela become targets for this innovative financial approach. It’s simple: Seize sanctioned oil or other stuff; sell it; put the money where you control it and lawyers cannot get to it.

And maybe other jurisdictions besides the United States have similar possibilities. Where this ends is anybody’s guess. But, for now, this horse has left the barn.

Global finances and indeed the international order of the global financial system have been changed with a single novel innovation. My expectation is that the changes will be huge. Here’s a single instance to consider: “US control of Venezuela oil risks debt r goews estructuring showdown with China” | Reuters,https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/us-control-venezuela-oil-risks-debt-restructuring-showdown-with-china-2026-01-23/.

In succinct form, with citations, the report that follows explains how this happened, why it happened, and why the Qatar transfer stands out as historically unprecedented. The implications of this novel approach are massive.

David goes on documenting his findings. Well worth reading his complete posts linked above.

You should also read Reuters’ account dated Jan 23, linked within Kotok’s post above. Some excerpts:

U.S. control of Venezuela’s oil exports has ensnared barrels that had been servicing debt to China, lining up another potential showdown between the two superpowers that could further complicate the South American country’s path out of default.

Around a tenth ​of Venezuela’s $150 billion foreign debt pile is estimated to be loans from China that the OPEC member was paying in oil cargoes – until the U.S. seized Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro earlier this ‌month.

Debt experts said the ramifications of China’s claim on the cargoes and any clash with the United States could make it tougher for Venezuela to restructure its debt after a 2017 default and put at risk Beijing’s cooperation in restructuring deals for other developing nations.

“Even under the best circumstances, this was going to be very messy – trying to disentangle where all these creditors stand in the credit hierarchy,” said Christopher Hodge, chief economist with Natixis and a former U.S. Treasury official.

“The fact that now America is controlling all the finances into and out of the country…this seems to be unprecedented to me, that we’re going to have such entanglements, such opacity about the finances of a government,” Hodge said. (…)

The Trump administration has now said that proceeds from the sale of Venezuela’s oil will go into a Qatar-based account controlled by Washington, potentially giving the U.S. President himself substantial leverage over which creditors get paid, and when.

Beijing condemned the redirection of Venezuelan oil exports during a January 7 news conference, adding “legitimate rights and interests of China and other ⁠countries in Venezuela must be protected”. (…)

The Trump administration is allowing China to purchase Venezuelan oil but ‍not at the “unfair, undercut” prices at which Caracas sold the crude previously, a U.S. official said on Thursday. (…)

“All of these things will have the practical effect of subordinating the claims of legacy debtholders,” said global sovereign debt expert Lee Buchheit, adding it was unclear if Trump had the legal right to determine who gets paid first.

Some $60 billion of Venezuela’s bonds tipped into default in 2017, and a restructuring agreement is ⁠essential to enable it to borrow again and attract ⁠new investment.

In a typical restructuring, bilateral lenders come ​together and agree what losses they will accept, usually via the Paris Club of creditor nations. This sets the bar for the “comparable” losses private lenders – bond investors, banks and others – must take.

“Comparability of treatment will be a real challenge, particularly if the U.S. controls the use of oil revenues,” said Mark Walker, a longtime sovereign debt advisor who previously worked on potential Venezuelan restructurings. (…)

China has little immediate leverage. Countries typically do not take other nations to court or arbitration over lending claims, Walker said, and would need to settle the situation “on a government-to-government basis”.

But ramifications are possible: China ​is the largest bilateral lender to the developing world and its cooperation with the Paris Club has been crucial over the past ‍decade. Beijing agreed restructuring terms via a platform called the Common Framework during Ghana, Zambia and Ethiopia’s debt restructuring talks.

“China’s obvious leverage is to refuse to cooperate in future Common Framework sovereign debt workouts until it feels that it has been treated fairly in Venezuela,” Buchheit said. “And ​that threat would have some force.”

Many issues from this, mostly problematic to say the least. A non-exhaustive list:

  • The US has seized Venezuela’s critical source of revenues and is keeping the money in a “safe” place owned by the USA.
  • How good this proves to be for Venezuelans remains to be demonstrated.
  • Congress is kept on the sideline.
  • Trump is the sole banker and decision maker. More leverage.
  • China is importantly impacted:
    • Trump controls the spigot for the servicing of its Venezuelan debt.
    • The US says China must pay Brent prices, even though Venezuela’s heavy crude, like Canada’s, always sells at a $5-10 discount to light crude because of high transportation and processing costs.
    • China was buying around 50% of Venezuelan oil production. Where else could this heavy crude go?

It seems to me that just about everything is getting messy, and messier.

The Roosevelt Corollary and “Big Stick” interventions set precedents for repeated U.S. involvement in Latin America, leading to cycles of occupation, backlash, and long‑term instability that later required further interventions.

Roosevelt’s “Big Stick” Foreign Policy

(…) Roosevelt believed that in light of the country’s recent military successes, it was unnecessary to use force to achieve foreign policy goals, so long as the military could threaten force. This rationale also rested on the young president’s philosophy, which he termed the “strenuous life,” and that prized challenges overseas as opportunities to instill American men with the resolve and vigor they allegedly had once acquired in the Trans-Mississippi West.

Roosevelt was often depicted in cartoons wielding his “big stick” and pushing the U.S. foreign agenda, often through the power of the U.S. Navy.

A cartoon, captioned “The Big Stick in the Caribbean Sea,” shows a massive Roosevelt marching through the Caribbean Sea holding a stick labeled “Big Stick.” Various nations are labeled, including Santo Domingo, Cuba, Mexico, and Panama. Roosevelt pulls a boat labeled “The Receiver” behind him on a string. Sailing around the perimeter of the Caribbean is a group of ships labeled “Debt Collector” and “Sheriff.”

Roosevelt believed that while the coercive power wielded by the United States could be harmful in the wrong hands, the Western Hemisphere’s best interests were also the best interests of the United States. He felt, in short, that the United States had the right and the obligation to be the policeman of the hemisphere. This belief, and his strategy of “speaking softly and carrying a big stick,” shaped much of Roosevelt’s foreign policy. (…)

Roosevelt wanted to send a clear message to the rest of the world—and in particular to his European counterparts—that the colonization of the Western Hemisphere had now ended, and their interference in the countries there would no longer be tolerated. At the same time, he sent a message to his counterparts in Central and South America, should the United States see problems erupt in the region, that it would intervene in order to maintain peace and stability throughout the hemisphere. (…)

Roosevelt states that the United States would use military force “as an international police power” to correct any “chronic wrongdoing” by any Latin American nation that might threaten stability in the region. Unlike the Monroe Doctrine, which proclaimed an American policy of noninterference with its neighbors’ affairs, the Roosevelt Corollary loudly proclaimed the right and obligation of the United States to involve itself whenever necessary.

Roosevelt immediately began to put the new corollary to work. He used it to establish protectorates over Cuba and Panama, as well as to direct the United States to manage the Dominican Republic’s custom service revenues. Despite growing resentment from neighboring countries over American intervention in their internal affairs, as well as European concerns from afar, knowledge of Roosevelt’s previous actions in Colombia concerning acquisition of land upon which to build the Panama Canal left many fearful of American reprisals should they resist.

Eventually, Presidents Herbert Hoover and Franklin Roosevelt softened American rhetoric regarding U.S. domination of the Western Hemisphere, with the latter proclaiming a new “Good Neighbor Policy” that renounced American intervention in other nations’ affairs.

However, subsequent presidents would continue to reference aspects of the Roosevelt Corollary to justify American involvement in Haiti, Nicaragua, and other nations throughout the twentieth century. (…)

History rhymes, Twain said. Not necessarily in a poetic way.

YOUR DAILY EDGE: 26 January 2026

Airplane Note: I am travelling with limited equipment and internet access. Postings will thus be sporadic. Airplane

DEFLATING INFLATION!

US Inflation has further dropped to 1.20% today. Main drivers of this latest in a series of disinflationary coolings were: – Food – mostly Eggs – Household durables – particularly housekeeping supplies – Alcohol & tobacco – mostly alcoholic beverages

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While the US debt crisis intensifies

~26% of US federal debt is set to mature within the next 12 months, one of the largest portions this century.

By comparison, the peak was ~29% in 2020, when interest rates set by the Fed were at 0%. Between 2010 and 2020, this percentage remained below 20%.

Currently, interest rates stand at 3.75%, with the market pricing in 2 cuts this year. This means ~$10 trillion in debt must be refinanced at significantly higher interest rates over the coming year.

This comes as the US Treasury has shifted toward issuing shorter-dated bonds to minimize interest costs in the near term. Who is going to buy all of this debt? (@KobeissiLetter)

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EARNINGS WATCH

From LSEG IBES:

64 companies in the S&P 500 Index have reported earnings for Q4 2025. Of these companies, 79.7% reported earnings above analyst expectations and 12.5% reported earnings below analyst expectations. In a typical quarter (since 1994), 67% of companies beat estimates and 20% miss estimates. Over the past four quarters, 78% of companies beat the estimates and 16% missed estimates.

In aggregate, companies are reporting earnings that are 7.0% above estimates, which compares to a long-term (since 1994) average surprise factor of 4.4% and the average surprise factor over the prior four quarters of 7.6%.

Of these companies, 68.8% reported revenue above analyst expectations and 31.3% reported revenue below analyst expectations. In a typical quarter (since 2002), 63% of companies beat estimates and 37% miss estimates. Over the past four quarters, 71% of companies beat the estimates and 29% missed estimates.

In aggregate, companies are reporting revenues that are 1.0% above estimates, which compares to a long-term (since 2002) average surprise factor of 1.3% and the average surprise factor over the prior four quarters of 1.7%.

The estimated earnings growth rate for the S&P 500 for 25Q4 is 9.2%. If the energy sector is excluded, the growth rate improves to 9.6%.

The estimated revenue growth rate for the S&P 500 for 25Q4 is 7.3%. If the energy sector is excluded, the growth rate improves to 8.1%.

The estimated earnings growth rate for the S&P 500 for 26Q1 is 12.4%. If the energy sector is excluded, the growth rate improves to 13.3%.

The 64 companies having reported had earnings up 17.1% on revenues up 8.0%. Beats were widespread.

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Trailing EPS are now $273.21. Full year 2026e: $313.04. Forward EPS: $311.89. Full year 2027e: $360.61.

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FYI, the Russell 2000 is at 22.4x forward EPS expected to jump 54% over the next 12 months! Also note that the R2000 P/E is calculated after eliminating losing companies. Convenient since some 40% of the R2000 companies are losing money ((S&P 500 = 6%).

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The S&P 600 only includes profitable companies. Ed Yardeni shows that their 16.5x P/E is at its historical median. Can they grow earnings 12.5% in 2026, when being large seems to provide several advantages (e.g.: AI, tariffs)?

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From Callum Thomas:

Election Cycle Seasonality: I don’t know what’s more concerning about this chart — the fact that seasonally mid-term years tend to see downside, volatility, and ranging in the stockmarket… or the fact that it’s only 2-years until the next Presidential election!

Source:  @RyanDetrick

Mid-Term Seasonality During Bulls and Bears: here’s an interesting follow-on, my conditional seasonality chart shows that even in a rising market (years where the market closed up for the year), you still tend to see a bit of extra volatility and ranging [the green line] all the way until Q4.

The other interesting statistic from this analysis is that mid-term election years have historically not had a great track record: across 15 mid-term years since 1964, 8 were up years and 7 were down [i.e. markets closed the year down 47% of the time] — this compares to all years where the market closed down 16 times and up 46 times [i.e. down 30% of the time, and down 19% of the time in all years excluding mid-terms].

So just on the statistics, the reality is a 47% historical probability of down in a mid-term year vs 19% in all other years is a statistical edge for the bears.

Source:  Chart of the Week – Bear Market Seasonality

Meanwhile, as documented previously, sentiment is running hot — and here’s the latest sentiment snippet showing speculative splurging into equity ETFs.

Source:  @chigrl via @DonMiami3

Valuations vs Profit Expectations: this is a good follow-on because it shows how we are sitting at extremely elevated levels of valuation — but also extremely elevated levels of profitability. The bulls will say this is good, it’s expensive for a reason. The bears will say this is bad it’s expensive for a reason… and specifically that the profitability expectations might be just as overinflated as the valuations.

Source: Jurrien Timmer at Fidelity via Sandbox

While on profit margins, some costs are rising rapidly:

Ed Yardeni:

Metal prices got another shot in the arm at the start of this year, when President Donald Trump proposed setting military spending at $1.5 trillion in 2027, up from $906 billion this year, citing “troubled and dangerous times.” He did so in a January 7 Truth Social post: “This will allow us to build the ‘Dream Military’ that we have long been entitled to and, more importantly, that will keep us SAFE and SECURE, regardless of foe.” In the same thread, he claimed that tariff revenue would be sufficient to fund the military boost, pay down the national debt, and provide a “substantial Dividend to moderate income Patriots.” (We doubt that, especially if the Supreme Court soon declares that Trump’s tariffs are unconstitutional!)

Trump called for the massive surge in spending days after a US military operation successfully captured Venezuela’s leader, Nicolás Maduro. This past week, the President negotiated a framework deal that would grant US sovereignty for American military bases in Greenland, deemed necessary for national security and the construction of the Golden Dome, an anti-missile defense system. The President recently said that an “armada” would arrive close to Iran in the waters of the Persian Gulf or the Strait of Hormuz. It will probably get there by the end of this month.

The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget has warned that Trump’s proposal could add nearly $6 trillion to the national debt over the next decade. No wonder that the 10-year US Treasury bond yield has been edging higher this month. (We are on alert for an attack on the US by the Bond Vigilantes, who have been busy in Japan in recent months.)

Also, no wonder that precious metals prices have continued to soar so far this year. The price of gold is at a record high just below $5,000 per ounce. We are still targeting $6,000 by the end of this year and $10,000 by the end of 2029.

Ed believes that the bond vigilantes might turn their attention to the US after Japan…

Democra$$y

@FredLambert

Recently:

Elon Musk recently donated $10 million to a super PAC supporting Republican Nate Morris in the Kentucky U.S. Senate race. This donation, made in January 2026, is his largest to a single federal candidate, excluding Donald Trump.

Other recent financial involvement in elections:

  • Kentucky Senate Race: Musk contributed $10 million to the “Fight for Kentucky” super PAC, which backs tech entrepreneur Nate Morris for Mitch McConnell’s former seat. The large, unlimited donation to a super PAC (which operates independently of the campaign) has reignited debates over the influence of wealthy donors in elections.
  • 2026 Midterms: This donation signals Musk’s intention to be a significant player in the upcoming 2026 midterm elections, aiming to help Republicans defend their majorities in Congress. He has made approximately $42 million in political contributions since June 2025 to various GOP PACs.
  • 2024 Presidential Election: Musk was the single largest individual political donor in the 2024 election cycle, spending over $290 million (primarily through his “America PAC”) to support Donald Trump and allied Republicans.