While everyone else is talking about the proposed TikTok banβ¦
So are we! But hereβs the side of this story that hasn’t been getting much attention.
- Steve Mnuchin says he is putting together a group to buy TikTok. Combine this with the $1bn NYCB investment, the rumors of Trump selling Truth Social to X/Twitter, Musk’s plan to turn X/Twitter into an βeverything app,β and the pending March 22nd shareholder vote on a merger involving Trump Media & Technology Group (Truth Social) with the Digital World Acquisition Corp (Nasdaq: DWAC), which might result in a $4bn gain for President Trumpβ¦
This story is quickly turning into something weird.Β But the other story thatβs turning a little weirder?
- Gold continues to be the story no one is talking about, despite fever pitched buying activity in China.
Thatβs what weβre talking about in todayβs issue of the Weekend Edition.
-Equifund Publishing
Steven Mnuchin Strikes Again As The TikTok Drama Continues
In our previous Weekend Edition, we devoted the entire issue to the βNYCB Story You Havenβt Heardβ βΒ a short expose on Trump Treasury Secretary, Steven Mnuchin, and his $1bn investment in NYCB.
And in a βfact is stranger than fictionβ moment, this week, we have this bizarre intersection of several different narratives weβve been tracking over the past six months.
To lead things offβ¦
Mnuchin & Friends are putting together an investor group to purchase TikTok.
For those whoβve never heard the name Steven Mnuchin, the Yale graduate joined investment bank Goldman Sachs in 1985.
After leaving Goldman in 2002, he briefly worked as vice chairman of a hedge fund called ESL Investments, owned by his Yale roommate and Goldman Sachs alumni, Edward Lampert (who would later be kidnapped in 2003, and allegedly managed to persuade his captors to let him go after two days)β¦
Then, in 2003-2004, he worked as CEO at SFM Capital Management, a fund backed by George Sorosβ¦
This was followed up by founding a hedge fund called Dune Capital Management, alongside two former Goldman partners. The firm invested in Trump International Hotel and Tower in Honolulu, as well as the one in Chicago βΒ and was eventually sued by Trump.
In 2004, Mnuchin also launched Dune Entertainment β a film production company that financed more than 75 films (like the X-Men film franchise, including Avatar, The Lego Movies, Godzilla, Mad Max: Fury Road, War Dogs, Ready Player One, and a bunch more youβve heard of).
So if this story sounds like it comes straight out of Hollywood, that might have something to do with it.Β
Since then, he pursued what can reasonably be considered garden variety private equity shenanigans, involved in the bankruptcies of both Kmart and Sears, as well as the entire IndyMac/OneWest/CIT Group saga, which the NY Times alleged βwas involved in a string of lawsuits over questionable foreclosures, and settled several cases for millions of dollars.β
In 2016, Mnuchin accepted his nomination for Secretary of the Treasuryβ¦
And then, formed his current investment fund, Liberty Strategic Capital, following the 2020 election.
For a Congress that is divided on basically every single issue there is, they moved with incredible speed and unity to pass a bill forcing the sale of TikTok.
While the official story is that this sudden interest in banning TikTok is somehow related to Chinaβ¦
President Trump, who once led the charge on the TikTok ban, via executive order β and effectively hooked up his buddy, billionaire Larry Ellison, co-founder of Oracle, to be the American server that all U.S. traffic has to run through, via the $1.5bn Project Texas β has now reversed his position in an interview with CNBC stating:
Frankly, there are a lot of people on TikTok that love it. There are a lot of young kids on TikTok who will go crazy without it. There are a lot of users. Thereβs a lot of good and thereβs a lot of bad with TikTok.
But the thing I donβt like is that without TikTok, you can make Facebook bigger and I consider Facebook to be an enemy of the people along with a lot of the media.
When asked if TikTok is a national security threat, potentially exposing sensitive data to China, Trump responded:
You know, if you look at some of our American companies, when you talk about highly sophisticated companies that you think are American, they are not so American they deal in China.
If China wants anything from them, they will give it so that’s a national security risk also.
If you ban TikTok, Facebook and others, but mostly Facebook will be a big beneficiary. And I think Facebook has been very dishonest.
I think Facebook has been very bad for our country, especially when it comes to elections.
While we donβt take political sides here at Private Capital Insider, the logic here makes reasonable senseβ¦
If the issue is China getting access to sensitive information about Americans β and they can still get that data from other American companies βΒ shouldnβt we be talking about that instead?
So what is the real motivation behind this bill? Who is really behind this bill? And more specifically, why now?
Thereβs a LOT of speculation the issue is around Gen Z, their overwhelming support for Palestine on the TikTok platform, and a desire to court their vote in the upcoming election.
Oh, and billionaire Jeff Yass β the biggest donor to the conservative organization Club for Growth β owns 15% of ByteDance (TikTokβs parent company)…
And Dave Urban, a longtime lobbyist for ByteDance, has pitched TikTokβs effectiveness as a campaign tool for some time to people around Trump.
However, because this is a finance-related newsletter, letβs get back to the potential suitors lining up to buy TikTok.
- Steven Mnuchinβs Liberty Capital, which has made a number of investments in Israel β including Cybereason, a shadowy tech firm with ties to Israel intelligence, running doomsday election scenarios β not to mention copious amounts of capital raised from Japanβs SoftBank, the sovereign wealth fund of Saudi Arabia, and Abu Dhabi-based sovereign wealth fund Mubadala.
- Rumble, a βfree speechβ online video platform that is popular among conservatives, shared a statement from its CEO, Chris Pavlovski, on X on Tuesday. Pavlovski addressed TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew, and offered to βjoin a consortium with other parties seeking to acquire and operate TikTok inside the United States.β
Rumble has high-profile investors including Peter Thiel (of Palantir, alleged to be a CIA front, among other things) and Senator J.D. Vance, R-Ohio.
- Former Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick has expressed his interest in buying TikTok to ByteDance co-founder Zhang Yiming and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.
- Kevin βMr. Wonderfulβ OβLeary has tossed his hat in the ring, because why not?
While itβs unlikely Microsoft, Alphabet (Googleβs parent company) or Meta (Facebookβs parent company) could purchase TikTok, due to antitrust concernsβ¦
Hereβs where the story gets even weirder:
According to some guy on Twitter, this entire thing could be some set up for what I can only describe as a MAGA/QAnon bingo square βΒ a massive merger between Truth Social, TikTok, Rumble, and X/Twitterβ¦
And who knows, for good measure, letβs just throw in NYCB too, and now we have a super bank app controlled by Elon Musk.
Or, what might be considered a more sober β but alarming βΒ theory, according to Whitney Webb, a tour de force in investigative journalism:
As William Shakespeare once said, βAll the worldβs a stage, and all the men and women merely players.
They have their exits and their entrances; and one man in his time plays many parts.β
So I guess the only question remains is this βΒ how will you play your part in todayβs market conditions?
For one idea, letβs take a look at our favorite story no one is talking about βΒ Gold.
China Gold Buying Fever Sending Prices Higher?
Weβve been covering gold on a regular basis here in the Weekend Edition for one simple reasonβ¦
In many respects, outside of your own private credit, gold (and silver) are the origin of money.
And even though the media attention has overwhelmingly focused on the price action in Bitcoin βΒ sometimes called βdigital goldβ β which has a tiny market cap in comparison to goldβ¦
How is it possible that there is an asset class that is hitting all-time highs in every single currency, and almost no one in the mainstream media seems to care?
Especially with the looming commercial real estate crisis, regional bank failures, and persistent inflation⦠something that should be an overwhelming reason to talk about gold?
One potential answer βΒ investors just donβt care about commodities anymoreβ¦
And they especially donβt want to own precious metals. According to Daily Chart Book, 75% of advisors have little to no exposure in gold (<1% of assets) β the highest since 2019 β and 90% showing no interest in the metal at all.
But what makes this even stranger? The fact that as gold is hitting record highs, there is basically no demand for gold mining stocks βΒ which are trading at what might be record discounts to net asset value (NAV).
Why? Because hereβs the truth about the stock market βΒ share price is based entirely on supply and demand.
And with AI stocks and Bitcoin capturing the world’s attention, there arenβt many people out there looking to buy miners (except Stanley Druckenmiller that is).
The relative valuation of βold schoolβ companies (many of them commodity producers) is reflected in their discount to technology and other asset-light sectors.
The bifurcation that we have seen over the last 18-months across the broader markets has pulled capital away from these essential sectors even more.
Even stranger, the price of gold is climbing DESPITE net outflows from ETFs.
How is it possible that gold is continuing to climb higher in the face of this selling pressure? China.
Yes, there are plenty of central banks buying goldβ¦ but thatβs been going on for years now, and it hasnβt put much upward pressure on price.
This means that what is driving up the price of gold IS NOT demand for paper gold, but for physical gold.
And so much so, itβs forcing the price of gold higher in the West, as there is likely some obvious arbitrage happening in the markets.
Chinese people have started a gold rush as property crashes.Β
Sales of gold, silver, and jewelry have been brisk for months, defying wobbles in the Chinese economy centered around the protracted crisis in the property market.
While many Western investors sold gold as interest rates rose last year, worldwide demand was supported by significant purchases by central banks in emerging market countries, led by China.
Regular people are also buying β despite the high prices, Chinese consumers stockpile coins, bars, and jewelry to protect their wealth against volatility in the countryβs stock market and property industry.
βWestern investors have not driven the gold market,β said Bernard Dahdah, a commodity analyst at Natixis. βChina, so far this year and through last year, has been the engine behind gold prices β but not necessarily behind this spike.β
As usual, we donβt make predictions, buy/sell recommendations, or provide individualized adviceβ¦
But if the key to being a successful investor is to be contrarian and right βΒ and then have the rest of the market agree with you (i.e., a new consensus)…
Is there any other asset class that shows more obvious signs of market sentiment being more asleep at the wheel than gold?
Hit the poll below and let us know your thoughts.