@BatchelorShow and @RealConstabke reported on market trends among many other things.
LISTEN HEREThursday, November 20, 2025
CONTINUED Commodities, AI Demand, and UK Political Turmoil reported on market trends
Commodities, AI Demand, and UK Political Turmoil. Guest: @RealConstable
Sunday, November 16, 2025
@RealConstable and @BatchelorShow analyze rare earth markets, noting China’s dominance is achieved through undercutting prices and buying out competitors.
By SIMON CONSTABLE
Prices for key industrial commodities like copper and aluminum are up
Friday, November 14, 2025
Commodity Markets and UK Political Instability.
By SIMON CONSTABLE
@RealConstable and @BatchelorShow analyze rare earth markets, noting China’s dominance is achieved through undercutting prices and buying out competitors. Prices for key industrial commodities like copper and aluminum are up. Listen here.
Barron’s: Europe Is Spending Big on Defense. Rheinmetall Benefits
Monday, November 10, 2025
WSJ: Financial Flashback -- 30 YEARS AGO: Dow 5000
By SIMON CONSTABLE
With the Dow Jones Industrial Average standing today around 47000, it’s hard to get excited for every 1,000-point milestone. But 30 years ago was a different time for the Dow.
After passing the 4000 threshold in February 1995, the Dow industrials took only nine months to pass and close above 5000 — bringing cheers from the New York Stock Exchange floor.
Sunday, October 12, 2025
Briefings Magazine: ‘It’s called commodity nationalism.’ The Global Race for Minerals
By SIMON CONSTABLE
For much of the post-WWII period, buying minerals such as copper, coal, or iron ore was simply a matter of money: Did you have it or not? If your company needed to purchase copper ore, it could get it from Chile, among other places. Likewise, the need for cobalt could be sated with supplies from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Indonesia, or Australia. It more or less didn’t matter which country was selling the product. But that practice of unfettered trade seems to be disappearing, fast — and it has nothing to do with the great tariff wars of 2025. Rather, it comes down to worries about national security.
Currently, there’s a global race to secure minerals and other commodities. To ensure their own growth, as well as protect and defend themselves, countries around the world want access to vital materials. “It’s called commodity nationalism,” says Pete Earle, director of economics and economic freedom at the American Institute for Economic Research. “Control over oil and minerals is becoming more important.”
It was COVID-era changes in international trade that first put the whole issue of supply chains into focus, says Bill Stone, chief investment officer and managing principal at the Glenview Trust Company in Louisville, Kentucky. That period highlighted how susceptible global trade was to interruptions, accidental or otherwise. “When the stakes get big enough, countries will hold back from selling precious materials to other countries,” he says. “The goal is to find their vulnerabilities.” READ MORE HERE.












