By Neil Winward | June 13, 2025
Policy Paralysis or Calm Before the Storm? Markets Watch the Senate, Warily
Washington’s back in session and markets couldn’t be more bored. The Senate’s version of the One Big, Beautiful Bill trades blunt force for precision, thanks in part to Parliamentarian McDonough’s “Byrd Bath” rules, which require every provision to speak strictly to budget reconciliation. Her rulings may ultimately shape the bill more than party leaders themselves.
Senate Priorities Amid Los Angeles Unrest
With thousands of National Guard troops and Marines deployed to quell nationwide protests in Los Angeles sparked by aggressive federal ICE raids, the Senate is fast-tracking two controversial measures in the reconciliation framework:
Medicaid for undocumented immigrants is being stripped from the package—cleanly excised under pressure to align the bill with budget reconciliation rules.
ICE recruiter incentives are heading in the opposite direction: U.S. agents will receive $10,000 bonuses for meeting enforcement targets—an effort to bolster staffing amid rising political unrest.
Clean Energy in Limbo: Senate Holds the Balance
The clean-energy portion of the One Big Beautiful Bill hangs by a thread as the Senate prepares its version. The House’s version would sharply curtail key Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) credits—pulling IRA clean-credits like 45Y and 48E unless projects begin construction in 60 days and are completed by 2028, while slashing residential and tech-neutral incentives.
That rollback triggered swift backlash: bipartisan senators led by Utah’s John Curtis are urging relief—advocating phased timelines, credit transferability, and preserving support for nuclear and geothermal—even as fossil-fuel friendly Republicans push methane fee reductions.
Major tech players (Microsoft, Google, AWS, Meta) are lobbying to save clean-power credits critical for AI data centers. Meanwhile, over 175 mayors and local leaders cautioned the Senate that axing these incentives could jeopardize jobs, raise energy costs, and stall $14 bn in projects already planned.
Bottom line: Without Senate amendments—targeting start-date flexibility, rescued transferability, and maybe foreign-entity sourcing fixes—the clean-energy agenda risks collapse. And that means more policy paralysis, not progress.
Empire Wind Approved—Pipelines Quietly Resurface
In a quiet but telling trade-off, New York Governor Kathy Hochul has signed off on the long-delayed Empire Wind offshore project—a major win for clean energy advocates. But in the background, two previously blocked natural gas pipelines—Constitution and NESE—are now quietly advancing through state permitting channels.
Neither Albany nor Washington is calling it a deal, but the sequencing tells the story: offshore wind moves forward, and fossil fuel infrastructure gets a second wind.
The takeaway: In U.S. infrastructure, progress doesn’t always follow market signals—but political symmetry gets results.
U.S.–China Trade Talks Pivot to Swaps Over Sanctions
In a sharp departure from the tariff wars of years past, Washington and Beijing are quietly crafting a resource-for-access deal:
China needs U.S. ethane to fuel its petrochemical and plastics industries.
The U.S. needs Chinese rare earths for electric vehicles, wind turbines, and advanced defense systems.
The contours of the deal:
China resumes rare earths exports.
The U.S. loosens select chip and equipment controls.
Visa restrictions for Chinese students and researchers ease.
Beijing steps up enforcement on fentanyl precursor production.
The only thing missing? Signatures from Xi and Trump.
Markets aren’t waiting—they’re pricing in détente, not disruption.
A Shifting Global Order: Welcome to the Age of Monsters
Antonio Gramsci once warned, “The old world is dying, and the new world struggles to be born. Now is the time of monsters.”
That moment may be here.
Multilaterals like the IMF, World Bank, UN, and WTO are losing authority as geopolitical fractures deepen.
Globalism is in retreat, replaced by nationalist trade policies and mercantilist rhetoric.
Populist waves are reshaping leadership across Europe and the U.S.
Central banks face creeping fiscal dominance, their independence tested as deficits balloon and political pressure mounts.
The investor takeaway: This is no longer a market that responds to earnings or inflation prints alone. It’s a market reacting to regime change—political, monetary, and structural. Adapt accordingly.
Market Takeaways: Stay Nimble, Avoid the Crossfire
Amid rising volatility and political noise, the smartest play may be to sidestep the ideological battles and focus on positioning:
U.S. equities still anchor economic growth and help close the fiscal gap via capital gains and retirement distributions.
Gold and Bitcoin are beneficiaries of dollar weakness and tightening liquidity.
Precious metals offer asymmetric upside during regime shifts.
And beware: Bearish narratives are often monetized—fueling trading volumes, subscriptions, and fear-based positioning.
As the main character, Gordon Gekko, famously said in the 1980s movie, Wall Street:
“If you want a friend, get a dog.” And remember, you don’t need to outrun the bear—just the guy behind you.
Central Banks Under Scrutiny: William White’s Warning
A former central banker himself, William White pulls no punches:
Inflation targeting is a slow leak, not a precise tool
Debt addiction has governments hooked on easy money
Models won’t save us—economies don’t operate like machines
Quantitative easing is akin to sugar—good short-term, bad long-term
Next step? Fed and other central banks must stay hawkish while urging fiscal stimulus—politicians must carry the fiscal torch
Market Update: Resilience in the Midst of Noise
Stocks shrugged off early turbulence—cleared within weeks.
Bond volatility (MOVE) and VIX spiked briefly, now calmed.
Silver held firm—watch for:
Sustained $35–$40+ range.
Potential short squeeze.
High premium on physical supply.
Even Tesla rebounded from its X/IPO spat.
Reality check: Many bearish narratives serve brokerage and hedge fund fee revenue. But fundamentals? Strong balance sheets, low unemployment, business deregulation, and decent policy offsets suggest recession risks remain distant.
Narrative Busting
CPI fell below expectations this week.
Bond auctions— showing less stress: $120 billion priced in 3, 10 and 30-year at lower rates than pre-market.
Tariffs: once inflationary, now increasingly benign.
Rate cuts from Powell? Markets are virtually unanimous: “No” next week.
Final Word
Markets may be in a summer lull—but beneath the surface, tectonic shifts are underway. If you’re not navigating fiscal and political regime change with intent, you’re drifting.
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