Let Them Trade Tits. We’ll Trade Trends.
How staying focused on macro and ignoring the noise leads to real returns.
We don’t need to catch stocks off guard.
We don’t need to guess which celebrity will spark the next meme frenzy.
And we sure as hell don’t need to follow whose tits showed up in a denim ad.
That’s not a process. That’s entertainment disguised as investing.
While most of the market is glued to viral headlines and Reddit threads, we’re focused on something else entirely: compounding capital through structure, discipline, and signal-based decision-making. While American Eagle jumps 12% because Sydney Sweeney wore jeans in a commercial, we’re riding trends in gold and silver miners, shorting bonds, and staying long global stocks and currencies that are delivering 30–100% returns based on price, flows, and relative strength—not based on cleavage.
The truth is, most traders are still trying to impress someone. They want the story. The rush. The screenshot. But when you trade like that, your P&L is at the mercy of attention spans and meme cycles.
You’re not investing. You’re gambling—and praying someone clicks before the music stops.
We do something different.
We ignore the noise.
We stick to the process.
And that’s why we’re outperforming 90% of traders right now.
We don’t FOMO into hype. We position into strength. We don’t swing at every pitch—we wait for setups that align with our system, then size accordingly.
That’s it. No opinions. No emotions. Just signals.
That’s what most people can’t stomach. It’s boring. It doesn’t feed the ego. But it works.
This isn’t about being smug. It’s about creating something better. I’m not here to critique what others are doing—I’m here to show traders there’s another path. One that doesn’t depend on virality or volatility or the latest celebrity endorsement. One that doesn’t end in burnout, blown-up accounts, or broken confidence.
The phrase “Let them eat cake” was never about generosity. It was a sign of detachment—of a ruling class too drunk on spectacle to see the rot underneath. Today’s market has its own version of that. It’s meme trades. It’s celebrity news. It’s performance without process.
I’m here to teach people how to think for themselves.
Let the others trade headlines.
We’ll stick to trading truth.
Inflation, Yields, and the Slow Death of the Last Regime
Two Charts. One Message. Yields Are Ready to Explode.
To understand where we are today, you have to look back—specifically to the 1970s.
Back then, inflation wasn’t a bug—it was the system.
Oil prices spiked. Wages soared. Gold exploded. And yields? They didn’t creep—they surged.
The Federal Reserve lost control. Policy lagged while price action led.
And by the time the narrative caught up, the damage was done: the cost of capital had completely repriced. Stocks collapsed. Commodities entered a secular boom. And the 10-year yield? It didn’t stop climbing until 1981.
This wasn’t an event. It was a regime shift.
Fast forward to now.
Chart One: CRB Index (Commodities
If you want to understand where yields are going, don’t start with the Fed—start with commodities. Real assets move first. And right now, the CRB Index is sitting inside one of the tightest monthly Bollinger Band squeezes we’ve seen in decades.
The last three times this happened—2002, 2009, 2020—commodity breakouts followed.
Each one paired with rising yields and rising inflation expectations.
This isn’t noise. It’s compression.
And compression always precedes expansion.
Chart Two: 30-Year Treasury Yield
The 30-year yield broke its downtrend in 2022. That’s over four decades of falling rates—gone. And now? It’s building higher lows, coiling just beneath multi-year resistance.
This isn’t a head-fake. It’s structure.
One chart shows pressure building.
The other shows direction.
This Feels Like the ’70s Again—But Faster
In Fight Club, Tyler Durden says:
“It’s only after we’ve lost everything that we’re free to do anything.”
In markets, that moment comes when the old playbook stops working.
The low-rate, low-inflation, tech-dominant world of the 2010s and 2020s is cracking.
The illusion of control is breaking.
The Fed isn't the protagonist anymore—price is.
Just like in the 1970s, the crowd still clings to the last regime—believing inflation is “transitory,” that yields will fall, that the cycle will behave.
It won’t.
The signals are already here. Commodities are coiling. Yields are rising.
This isn’t chaos. It’s transition.
And if you’re still trading like it’s 2012, you’re on the wrong side of history.
By the time the crowd notices, the move will already be halfway over.
Don’t miss it.
Macro is back—but the truth is, it never left.
The problem is most traders did. They abandoned the framework that actually moves capital across borders, rotates flows between asset classes, and creates the trends that matter. They chased narratives, worshipped single stocks, and outsourced their thinking to momentum and crowd psychology. Meanwhile, the real game kept unfolding—quietly, methodically, and globally.
While investors fought over seven tech names in the S&P 500, we were positioned in countries most couldn’t point to on a map. . Brazil. Poland. Japan. Columbia. Hong Kong. Places where returns weren’t theoretical—they were compounding. Thirty, forty, sixty percent. Not in a decade. In 6 months.
That’s the power of macro. It doesn’t rely on predictions. It follows flows. It listens to price. And it acts with discipline when the world is still fixated on yesterday’s winners.
This isn’t a victory lap. It’s a statement of purpose.
Because I’m not here to play guru or chase clout. I’m here to do one thing: teach traders how to think for themselves. Not to sound intelligent. Not to impress anyone.
But to survive—and win—in a world where most don’t.
The philosopher René Descartes wrote, “Cogito, ergo sum.” I think, therefore I am. For traders, that idea is more than a metaphysical principle. It’s a command. If you can’t think independently—if your views are just regurgitated headlines or recycled sentiment—you don’t exist in this game. You're not trading. You're following. You're reacting. You're trapped in someone else’s regime, someone else’s logic, someone else’s outcome.
My goal is to break that cycle.
To build a future where traders operate from clarity, not confusion. From process, not prediction. Where every trade is rooted in alignment—with price, with flows, with macro context. No judgment. No opinions. Just decisions, made deliberately, based on reality as it is—not how we wish it to be.
Because in the end, this isn’t about being right.
It’s about building something real.
And if we do it well, the returns will speak for themselves.
And when the dust settles, we won’t just have the stories.
We’ll have the results.
Against All Odds Research
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Twitter: Jason P (@jasonp138)
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HAHA great headline
Based