Where has Honor Gone?
Where honor disappears, behavior is governed not by principle but by opportunity and power.
Where honor disappears, behavior is governed not by principle but by opportunity and power.
In speculative markets, value is often determined less by fundamentals than by the strength of the narrative.
Disorder persists while incentives reward it—but once they shift, order returns with force.
Markets reward those who look beyond official narratives and understand the incentives shaping what is said—and what is not.
Education does not guarantee judgment; without moral clarity, it often becomes a tool for status and rationalization.
Latin America does not lack opportunity—it lacks the institutional and investment framework to convert it into sustained growth.
Silver is not just a monetary metal—it is an industrial input, and China sits at the center of both demand and pricing.
Profitable investing often requires the willingness to think independently—and to act before consensus catches up.
In China, markets do not move independently—policy direction reshapes sentiment, capital flows, and ultimately pricing.
Discrimination does not disappear when renamed; it often returns through new moral language and institutional rewards.