Big-Flows-0.mp3
Big-Flows-0.mp4
Big-Flows-I.mp3
Big-Flows-I.mp4
Big-Flows-II.mp3
Big-Flows-II.mp4
Big-Flows-Reggae.mp3
Big-Flows-Reggae.mp4
Big-Flows-intro.mp3
[Intro]
Less abundant reserves
The engine veers and swerves
There she goes
(The big flows)
[Bridge]
Don’t you know
(Low, low, low)
[Verse 1]
Tidal waves of cash
Watch the flow go
Hate to dine and dash
But, well… (you know)
[Chorus]
Less abundant reserves
The engine veers and swerves
There she goes
(The big flows)
[Bridge]
Resources
(Reverse courses)
Cracked our safe
(Smacked our face)
Don’t you know
(Low, low, low)
[Verse 2]
The tide’s going low
Watch the cash flow
Really hard to know
How low she’ll go….
[Chorus]
Less abundant reserves
The engine veers and swerves
There she goes
(The big flows)
[Bridge]
Resources
(Reverse courses)
Cracked our safe
(Smacked our face)
Don’t you know
(Low, low, low)
[Outro]
There she goes
(The big flows)
Don’t you know
(Low, low, low)
ABOUT THE SONG
Cracked Safe Haven: Historic Deviations in U.S. Treasury Bonds
Exceeding a standard deviation means that a data point is significantly different from the average — a statistical red flag.
In finance or economics:
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A move of 1 standard deviation is unusual but not rare.
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2 or more indicates extreme behavior — often signaling stress, instability, or systemic change.
When U.S. Treasury bonds — historically the world’s most stable asset — move multiple standard deviations, it’s not just noise. It suggests deep structural shifts in fiscal policy, market confidence, or macroeconomic expectations.
U.S. Treasury bonds — especially long-duration ones like the 10-year and 30-year Treasuries — have recently deviated by multiple standard deviations from historical norms in several key dimensions.
Why It Matters
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Bonds are usually the “safe haven” — but now they’re chaotic, cracked, and misaligned.
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This upends traditional risk models used by banks, pensions, and governments.
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It’s also a signal of fiscal fragility — markets demanding higher compensation for lending to the U.S.
The Big Question: What If the Dollar Loses Its Reserve Status?
Ultimately, the darkest scenario is no longer unthinkable: What happens if the U.S. dollar loses its status as the world’s reserve currency?
This would unleash a profound economic reset, marked by:
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Exploding U.S. borrowing costs
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A collapse in consumer purchasing power
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Global capital flight from U.S. assets
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Severe contraction in both trade and credit
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Domestic political and economic instability unlike anything in modern history