Macroeconomic Analysis: Powell’s “Driving in the Fog” and the Financial “Hunger Games”
The new policy framework exhibits three characteristics: limited visibility, fragile confidence, and liquidity-driven distortions.
Original Title: "Driving in Fog" and the Financial Hunger Games
Original Author: arndxt, Crypto Analyst
Original Translation: Dingdang, Odaily
The significant correction coincided with the quantitative easing (QE) cycle—when the Federal Reserve intentionally extended the maturity of its asset holdings to lower long-term yields (an operation known as "Operation Twist" as well as QE2/QE3).

Powell's "driving in fog" metaphor is no longer limited to the Federal Reserve itself, but has become a portrayal of today's global economy. Whether policymakers, corporations, or investors, all are groping forward in an environment lacking clear visibility, relying only on liquidity reflexes and short-term incentive mechanisms.
The new policy regime exhibits three characteristics: limited visibility, fragile confidence, and liquidity-driven distortions.
The Fed's "Hawkish Rate Cut"
This 25 basis point "risk management" rate cut, lowering the rate range to 3.75%–4.00%, is less about easing and more about "preserving optionality."

Due to two diametrically opposed opinions, Powell sent a clear signal to the market: "Slow down—the visibility is gone."

Due to the data blackout caused by the government shutdown, the Fed is almost "driving blind." Powell's hint to traders was very clear: Whether rates will be announced in December is still undecided. Rate cut expectations quickly receded, the short end of the yield curve flattened, and the market is digesting the shift from "data-driven" to "data-deficient" caution.
2025: The Liquidity "Hunger Games"
Repeated central bank interventions have institutionalized speculation. Now, it is not productivity but liquidity itself that determines asset performance—this structure leads to ever-inflating valuations while credit to the real economy weakens.
The discussion further expands to a sober examination of the current financial system: passive concentration, algorithmic reflexivity, retail options frenzy—
· Passive funds and quant strategies dominate liquidity, volatility is determined by positioning rather than fundamentals.
· Retail call option buying and gamma squeezes in the "Meme sector" create synthetic price momentum, while institutional funds crowd into an increasingly narrow group of market leaders.
· The host calls this phenomenon the "financial version of the Hunger Games"—a system shaped by structural inequality and policy reflexivity, forcing small investors into speculative survivalism.
2026 Outlook: The Boom and Worries of Capital Expenditure
The AI investment wave is pushing "Big Tech" into a post-cyclical industrialization phase—currently driven by liquidity, but facing leverage sensitivity risks in the future.


Corporate profits remain strong, but the underlying logic is changing: the former "asset-light cash machines" are transforming into heavy capital infrastructure players.
· The expansion of AI and data centers initially relied on cash flow, but now is shifting to record debt financing—for example, Meta's oversubscribed $25 billion bond issue.
· This shift means profit margins are under pressure, depreciation is rising, and refinancing risks are increasing—setting the stage for the next credit cycle reversal.

Structural Commentary: Trust, Distribution, and Policy Cycles
From Powell's cautious tone to the final reflection, a clear thread runs throughout: power centralization and loss of trust.
Every policy bailout almost always strengthens the largest market participants, further concentrating wealth and continuously undermining market integrity. The coordinated operations of the Fed and Treasury—from quantitative tightening (QT) to short-term Treasury (Bill) purchases—have exacerbated this trend: liquidity is abundant at the top of the pyramid, while ordinary households are suffocating under stagnant wages and rising debt.
Today, the core macro risk is no longer inflation, but institutional fatigue. The market surface remains prosperous, but trust in "fairness and transparency" is eroding—this is the real systemic fragility of the 2020s.
Macro Weekly Report | Updated November 2, 2025
This issue covers the following:
· This week's macro events
· Bitcoin heat indicators
· Market overview
· Key economic indicators
This Week's Macro Events
Last week

Next week



Bitcoin Heat Indicators
Market Events and Institutional Developments
· Mt. Gox has extended the repayment deadline to 2026, with about $4 billion in bitcoin still frozen.
· Bitwise Solana ETF reached $338.9 million in AUM in its first week, setting a new record, even as the SEC remains deadlocked in approval.
· ConsenSys plans to IPO in 2026, with underwriters including JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs, targeting a $7 billion valuation.
· Trump Media Group launches Truth Predict—the first prediction market co-developed by a social media platform and Crypto.com.
Financial and Payment Infrastructure Upgrades
· Mastercard acquires crypto infrastructure startup Zerohash for up to $2 billion.
· Western Union plans to launch the USDPT stablecoin on Solana in 2026 and has registered the WUUSD trademark.
· Citibank and Coinbase jointly launch an institutional-grade 24/7 stablecoin payment network.
· Circle launches the Arc testnet, attracting over 100 institutions including BlackRock and Visa.
Ecosystem and Platform Expansion
· MetaMask launches multi-chain accounts, supporting EVM, Solana, and soon to add bitcoin support.
Global and Regional Developments
· Kyrgyzstan launches a stablecoin backed by BNB; meanwhile, Trump pardons CZ, paving the way for Binance's return to the US market.
· US SOL spot ETF (excluding seed capital) saw $199.2 million in inflows.
· Japan launches a fully compliant yen stablecoin JPYC, aiming for an issuance scale of $65–70 billion by 2028.
· Ant Group registers the "ANTCOIN" trademark, quietly re-entering the Hong Kong stablecoin track.
· AWS and Microsoft cloud service outages cause market chaos, with conflicting statements from both sides.
· JPMorgan Kinexys blockchain completes its first tokenized private equity fund transaction, further promoting institutional adoption.
· Tether becomes one of the largest US Treasury holders, with $135 billion in holdings and annualized returns exceeding $10 billion.
· Metaplanet launches a stock buyback program to address declining net assets.
· Privacy asset trading heats up, ZEC price breaks the 2021 high, but this week's gains still lag behind DASH.
· Sharplink deploys $200 million ETH on Linea to earn DeFi yields.
· As sports betting becomes a hot sector, Polymarket plans to officially launch its product in the US by the end of November.
· Securitize announces a $1.25 billion SPAC merger to go public.
· Visa adds payment support for four stablecoins and four blockchains.
· 21Shares files for a Hyperliquid ETF, with more crypto funds entering the market.
· KRWQ becomes the first Korean won stablecoin issued on the Base chain.
Market Overview
The global economy is shifting from inflation risk to confidence risk—future stability will depend on policy clarity, not liquidity.
Global monetary policy is entering a phase of limited visibility. In the US, the FOMC cut rates by 25 basis points to 3.75%–4.00%, exposing widening internal divisions. Powell hinted that further easing is "not a given." The ongoing government shutdown prevents policymakers from accessing key data, increasing the risk of policy misjudgment. Weakening consumer confidence and a slowing real estate market mean that market sentiment, rather than stimulus measures, is now steering the path of a "soft landing."
Among G10 countries: the Bank of Canada completed its final rate cut, the European Central Bank kept rates unchanged at 2.00%, and the Bank of Japan paused cautiously. The common challenge is how to curb economic growth amid persistent service sector inflation. Meanwhile, China's PMI has fallen back into contraction, indicating weak recovery, sluggish private demand, and signs of policy fatigue.
Adding to political risk, the US government shutdown threatens the normal operation of welfare programs and may delay the release of key data, undermining confidence in fiscal governance. The bond market has already begun to price in lower yields and slower economic growth, but the real risk lies in the breakdown of institutional feedback mechanisms—data delays, policy indecision, and declining public trust intertwine, ultimately brewing a crisis.
Key Economic Indicators
US Inflation: Moderate Rebound, Clearer Path
The inflation rebound is mainly supply-driven rather than demand-pulled. Core pressures remain under control, and weakening employment momentum gives the Fed room to continue cutting rates without triggering an inflation rebound.
· September inflation was up 3.0% year-on-year and 0.3% month-on-month, the fastest since January this year, but still below expectations, reinforcing the "soft landing" narrative.
· Core CPI excluding food and energy rose 3.0% year-on-year and 0.2% month-on-month, indicating price stability.
· Food prices rose 2.7%, with meat up 8.5%, affected by agricultural labor shortages due to immigration restrictions.
· Utility costs rose significantly: electricity +5.1%, natural gas +11.7%, mainly driven by AI data center energy consumption—a new driver of inflation.
· Service sector inflation fell to 3.6%, the lowest since 2021, indicating that a cooling labor market is easing wage pressures.
· Market reaction was positive: stocks rose, rate futures reinforced rate cut expectations, and bond yields remained stable overall.
US Demographics: A Critical Turning Point
Net immigration turns negative, posing challenges to economic growth, labor supply, and innovation capacity.
The US may see its first population decline in a century. Although births still outnumber deaths, net immigration is negative, offsetting the 3 million population increase in 2024. The US is facing a demographic reversal, not due to declining birth rates but to policy-driven immigration cuts. Short-term impacts include labor shortages and rising wages; long-term risks focus on fiscal pressure and slowing innovation. Unless this trend is reversed, the US may repeat Japan's aging experience—slower economic growth, rising costs, and structural productivity challenges.
According to AEI forecasts, net migration in 2025 will be –525,000, the first negative value in modern history.
· Pew Research Center data shows that in the first half of 2025, the foreign-born population fell by 1.5 million, mainly due to deportations and voluntary departures.
· Labor force growth has stalled, with agriculture, construction, and healthcare facing significant shortages and wage pressures.
· 28% of American youth are immigrants or children of immigrants; if immigration drops to zero, the under-18 population could fall by 14% by 2035, worsening pension and healthcare burdens.
· 27% of doctors and 22% of nursing assistants are immigrants; if supply falls, automation and robotics in healthcare may accelerate.
· Innovation risk: immigrants have contributed 38% of Nobel Prizes and about 50% of billion-dollar startups; if the trend reverses, America's innovation engine will be damaged.
Japan's Export Rebound: Recovery Under the Shadow of Tariffs
Despite being dragged down by US tariffs, Japan's exports have rebounded. September exports rose 4.2% year-on-year, the first positive growth since April, mainly due to reviving demand from Asia and Europe.
After months of contraction, Japan's exports returned to growth, up 4.2% year-on-year in September, the biggest increase since March. This rebound highlights that despite new trade frictions with the US, regional demand remains strong and supply chains have adjusted accordingly.
Japan's trade performance shows that although the US has imposed tariffs on automobiles (its core export category), external demand from Asia and Europe has initially stabilized. The rebound in imports indicates that, driven by a weaker yen and restocking cycles, domestic demand is also seeing a mild recovery.
Outlook:
· Exports are expected to gradually recover, driven by normalization of intra-Asian supply chains and energy prices
· Persistent US protectionism remains the main obstacle to maintaining export momentum in 2026.
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
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