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Space Power, Greenland Metals: Building the Resource Stack for AI Beyond Earth
MacroMashup Newsletter

Space Power, Greenland Metals: Building the Resource Stack for AI Beyond Earth

Energy, compute, and the next phase of sovereign industrial power

Jan 23, 2026
Neil Winward

Author:

Neil Winward

|

Founder and CEO

of

Dakota Ridge Capital

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    Space Power, Greenland Metals: Building the Resource Stack for AI Beyond Earth
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    Volatility is back in the driver’s seat.

    This week, the VIX pushed toward the 20 level as markets digested something rare: an institutional shock rather than a data surprise. The trigger wasn’t CPI or jobs—it was governance risk.

    An unprecedented DOJ investigation into Federal Reserve Chair Jay Powell has injected political uncertainty directly into monetary credibility. Powell’s public acknowledgment of subpoenas—framed as a pretext to force rate cuts—sparked a reflexive “Sell America” trade. U.S. equities slid toward ~6,830 on the S&P 500. Treasuries sold off alongside them. When stocks and bonds fall together, markets aren’t pricing growth—they’re repricing trust.

    At the same time, Davos became a geopolitical accelerant. Greenland re-entered the global chessboard as the administration floated 10% tariffs on NATO allies over territory and security posture. The EU response—quietly framed as a push toward “strategic independence”—introduced a nonlinear risk markets don’t yet know how to model. The Trump approach was typical: outrage triggering an extreme position from which a deal is struck.

    The clearest signal wasn’t equities.

    It was metals.

    Gold broke decisively above $4,700. Silver surged over 6% in a single session, testing $95/oz. Bitcoin, notably, failed to catch a safe-haven bid—continuing to trade like a high-beta risk asset rather than monetary insurance.

    Credit markets, meanwhile, remained eerily calm. Spreads stayed tight despite the institutional chaos. Either credit investors see resilience that macro traders don’t—or complacency hasn’t cracked yet.

    This divergence matters, because it frames the deeper question of this cycle:

    What happens when AI demand collides with physical limits—energy, cooling, land, water, and permitting—on a planet already running hot?

    This week’s MacroMashup goes beyond Earth to explore why power generation and compute are starting to detach from geography altogether—and why capital is now seriously evaluating space-based solutions as a pressure valve for terrestrial constraints.

    Deep Dive for Members Begins Below

    In the rest of this issue, we explore:

    • Why precious metals are behaving like balance-sheet hedges, not inflation trades
    • How Greenland fits into the AI resource stack
    • Why space-based solar flips the capacity-factor equation
    • How orbital compute arbitrages energy, cooling, and geography
    • Where latency actually matters—and where it doesn’t
    • The real investable layers of the “space stack”
    • What this means for portfolio construction over the next decade

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      Neil Winward

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      Global Energy: Narrative vs. Reality
      MacroMashup Newsletter
      3

      Global Energy: Narrative vs. Reality

      Neil Winward

      Markets price stories. Energy prices physics. MacroMashup cuts through hype, coal reality, policy, and capital flows.

      Welcome to MacroMashup

      A systems-level briefing on markets, energy, geopolitics, and capital flows.

      MacroMashup is not a news recap.

      We don’t chase headlines, hot takes, or moral theater. We focus on constraints — the physical, financial, and political limits that actually shape markets before narratives catch up.

      Each edition connects:

      • Macro policy and market structure
      • Energy, infrastructure, and industrial reality
      • Capital flows across assets, regions, and regimes

      The goal isn’t prediction.

      It’s orientation — so you can see regime shifts forming while others are still arguing about stories.

      If you’re new here, start with the free section below.

      👉 Subscribe to MacroMashup to receive:

      • Weekly free macro briefings
      • Member-only deep dives into energy, policy, and capital allocation
      • Private audio notes framing how to read the week calmly

      Paid members get the full analysis, charts, and portfolio-level implications.

      Markets are trading stories. Energy is trading physics.

      The Fed met this week with one objective: don’t spook anyone.

      Policy remains nominally unchanged. The language is softer. Powell is stuck in the narrow corridor where inflation isn’t dead, growth isn’t dead — but political tolerance for pain very much is. The only thing reporters really wanted to talk about wasn’t policy at all. It was politics…

      And, it was succession.

      Rick Rieder at BlackRock is now widely seen as the front-runner to replace Powell, a signal that markets are already gaming the next regime rather than listening to the current one.

      Equities keep floating higher for the same reason they’ve been floating all year: relative attractiveness. Compared to everything else on the menu, stocks still look like the least-ugly chaos hedge.

      The real tell isn’t in equities.

      It’s in shiny rocks.

      • Gold north of $5,000 and silver above $110 isn’t about CPI prints. It’s about trust.
      • Central banks keep accumulating quietly.
      • Retail is finally noticing.
      • And silver’s industrial role in AI, solar, and electrification is turning a “store of value” into a supply-chain bottleneck.

      Meanwhile, Minnesota has become the unwilling focal point of America’s immigration psychodrama.

      The killing of Alex Pretti — an ICU nurse and U.S. citizen — by federal immigration officers in Minneapolis detonated a narrative shift. After video evidence dismantled the initial “terrorist” framing, the administration pivoted fast: reviews announced, Tom Homan dispatched, language softened.

      State officials are suing. Judges are weighing restraining orders. Even some Republicans are blinking at the optics.

      Layer in South Korea slow-rolling U.S. investment commitments — and getting tariff threats in response — and you’re watching an administration try to be pro-market, pro-tariff, tough on immigration, and allergic to viral video all at once.

      Then there’s industrial policy.

      Washington just wrote another check into the rare-earths casino: up to $277 million in direct support, plus a potential $1.3 billion in additional backing for USA Rare Earth — in exchange for equity and warrants. Venture logic, sovereign balance sheet.

      So where does that leave us?

      Here’s the MacroMashup snapshot:

      • Macro regime: shifting from “central banks in charge” to “fiscal math in charge.” Bond markets are slowly realizing they’re financing deficits politics won’t fix.
      • Policy reality: the tightening narrative is over. De-facto gradual monetization is in. Structurally negative real rates remain the path of least resistance.
      • Asset implications:
        • Tailwinds for hard assets, energy, commodities, and durable cash-flow businesses
        • Bitcoin should benefit eventually — but hasn’t yet
        • Headwinds for long-duration paper claims dependent on stable real yields
      • Market behavior:
        • Mega-caps and Treasuries can levitate on flows and AI narratives
        • Breadth is improving beneath the Mag 7
        • Volatility shocks are becoming a feature, not a bug
      • Capital rotation: slow but real movement away from concentrated U.S. duration risk toward:
        • Energy and commodities
        • Geographically diversified real assets
        • Balance sheets built for financial repression, not perfection

      That’s the surface.

      Now let’s dig into where the energy story breaks down — and why the narrative no longer matches the operating system.

      Read More
      Mamdani Is About to Screw Up NYC Housing. Surprised?
      MacroMashup Newsletter
      3

      Mamdani Is About to Screw Up NYC Housing. Surprised?

      Neil Winward

      NYC just replayed a policy experiment St. Paul already ran, while Minneapolis quietly chose supply and delivered better outcomes. The constraint was never moral intent. It was state capacity.

      New York City just reran the St. Paul rent-control experiment — knowingly. Six weeks after Gen Z’s “decommodification” victory, capital is exiting, permits are collapsing, and maintenance math is breaking. This MacroMashup issue explains why deliberately making housing uninvestable freezes supply, why Minneapolis quietly produced better outcomes, and why state capacity — not moral intent — is the binding constraint in urban housing policy.

      New York didn’t stumble into this.

      In late 2025, Gen Z didn’t just post about power — they exercised it. City Hall flipped on a promise to “decommodify” housing, punish landlords, and make New York explicitly hostile to private capital.

      Six weeks later, the dopamine high is fading.

      What was sold as a moral reset of the “real estate power structure” is beginning to look familiar: collapsing asset values, disappearing permits, and lenders quietly stepping back. Even the language has shifted. Capital markets are now using the same word for NYC multifamily that Exxon once used for Venezuela.

      Uninvestable.

      This wasn’t an accident. It was a choice — and we’ve already seen how it ends.

      Macro Context (Why This Matters Now)

      Zoom out, and the timing isn’t random.

      • Inflation is cooling, but not collapsing
      • Labor is softening, not breaking
      • Gold is quietly reshaping trade flows
      • AI multiples deflated, but the capex cycle didn’t die

      Against that backdrop, New York chose to test whether politics alone can suspend capital constraints.

      History says it can’t.

      The Trade Deficit Mirage

      October delivered a headline that looked like a breakthrough: the U.S. trade deficit collapsed to roughly $29 billion, a 16-year low and nearly a 40% improvement from September.

      At first glance, it read like proof that industrial policy was working — factories humming, exports surging, America “making things” again.

      That isn’t what happened.

      The swing came almost entirely from a double-digit-billion spike in non-monetary gold exports and other precious-metal flows, not from a revival in manufactured goods. Strip those flows out, and the picture looks far more familiar.

      That distinction matters. When precious metals move headline trade data, you’re no longer talking about competitiveness.

      You’re talking about balance sheets.

      This week, we go deeper into what those flows actually signal — and why metals, not machines, are quietly becoming the marginal asset class of this cycle.

      Where This Goes Next

      This is where the overview ends.

      In the rest of this issue, we walk through:

      • Gen Z thought they were buying
      • What they’re actually getting
      • Why Minneapolis beat St. Paul
      • Why maintenance math always wins
      • Why state capacity is the real constraint
      • And why renters pay first when capital leaves

      New here? Welcome! MacroMashup exists to connect policy, capital, and reality — before the consequences are obvious.

      If you want to stay ahead of the next urban macro shift, this is where the work continues.

      Paid subscribers get:

      • Full macro deep dives with the mechanics explained
      • Clear frameworks for interpreting policy, capital flows, and power
      • Early insight into regime shifts before they show up in prices
      • Access to members-only analysis and commentary

      If you want to keep thinking in second-order effects — not narratives — this is where the real work continues.

      Read More
      Pentagon Inc.: Owning the Pipes of Power
      MacroMashup Newsletter
      3

      Pentagon Inc.: Owning the Pipes of Power

      Neil Winward

      A new era of industrial policy — and why it makes sense

      The United States has quietly abandoned laissez-faire industrial policy. Through direct equity stakes, debt guarantees, and offtake control, the Pentagon is now operating a de facto venture capital portfolio spanning metals, energy, and critical supply chains. This MacroMashup deep dive examines the $ 7.4 Billion Tennessee smelter project as the centerpiece of a broader $20B(+) sovereign metals strategy — and explains why ownership of midstream infrastructure, not mines or markets, defines power in the next industrial age.

      Welcome to MacroMashup — where geopolitics, capital flows, and real-world power intersect.

      If you’re here, you already know the headlines miss the signal. Our goal is to map what matters before it becomes consensus.

      What Happened Since the Last Edition

      Before we dive into industrial policy, the macro landscape shifted — violently.

      Venezuela’s regime collapse didn’t happen in a vacuum. Iran’s unrest didn’t fade organically. Gold didn’t hit $4,500 and silver didn’t test $80 by accident. And defense and AI infrastructure equities didn’t shrug off rate fears because markets suddenly got complacent.

      These are not disconnected events.

      They are symptoms of a deeper transition: resource control is back at the center of geopolitics — and it’s happening quietly.

      This week’s MacroMashup connects those dots.

      Economic data this week (ADP Employment Report for December) delivered a clean snapshot of a cooling but still expanding U.S. economy.

      Where This Piece Goes Next

      This article explores:

      • Why the Pentagon is now running a venture-style capital portfolio
      • How the $7.4B Tennessee smelter rewrites U.S. industrial doctrine
      • Why smelting and refining — not mining — are the real choke points
      • How equity ownership replaces sanctions and stockpiles
      • Why this marks the end of naïve globalism in materials markets
      • What this means for commodities, defense, and AI infrastructure investors

      If you want the full framework — including deal mechanics, capital stacks, and macro implications — this is where the real work begins.

      👉 Continue reading by upgrading to MacroMashup.

      Read More
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