🚨WARNING: MONDAY COULD BE THE WORST DAY OF 2026 → The Fed j…

Eyon ·

🚨WARNING: MONDAY COULD BE THE WORST DAY OF 2026
→ The Fed just confirmed further rate hikes.
→ The US-Iran peace agreement has been OFFICIALLY POSTPONED.
→ SpaceX's IPO absorbed a massive amount of liquidity from the market.
→ JP Morgan could unload up to $165 BILLION in US stocks on Monday.
If you have assets in your portfolio right now, you need to read this:
When the markets open next week, it won't be "just another drop."
Stocks will fall.
Bonds will fall.
Gold and silver will fall.
And Bitcoin could fall even more sharply.
Meanwhile, the major players are already preparing.
They are not increasing the risk.
They are reducing their exposure and positioning themselves for what could become the biggest sell-off of the year.
And the pressure continues to mount across the global financial system.
China continues to reduce its exposure to US Treasury bonds.
The Japanese bond market is facing an increasingly precarious situation, and the Bank of Japan is forced to intervene constantly to support it.
When the world's largest creditors begin to withdraw from sovereign debt markets simultaneously, liquidity begins to dry up.
→ Global bond markets are under immense pressure
→ Japanese debt yields continue to soar
→ Demand for US Treasury bonds is weakening
→ Liquidity conditions are tightening across the system
→ Volatility is spreading to virtually all asset classes
→ Energy markets remain extremely volatile
→ SpaceX's IPO absorbed billions in liquidity
→ Fund managers are reducing risk and selling stocks
This is no longer an isolated problem.
We are seeing systemic tensions building up in multiple sectors simultaneously.
And now there is the added element of geopolitical risk.
The US-Iran peace agreement has been officially postponed.
And this is how energy markets can become uncontrollable.
Oil prices don't rise gradually.
They skyrocket.
Inflation is rising again.
Central banks are keeping interest rates high for longer.
And what about risky assets?
They aren't correcting.
They're collapsing.
This is how many chain reactions begin in the financial system.
Because when the market starts to price in structural instability instead of temporary uncertainty, everything changes.
Liquidity is already withdrawing from multiple layers of the system.
It's no longer just a question of positioning.
It's about how financial stress spreads from one market to another.
And when a major component fails, it rarely remains isolated.
The contagion effect spreads rapidly.