Roy:

Welcome back to the deep dive. It is boxing day twenty twenty five. And, if you've been watching the market, it's certainly given everyone a a pretty high flying Christmas gift.

Penny:

No. Absolutely. We're sitting at all time highs.

Roy:

Yeah. The S and P 500 closed just shy of 7,000. I think it was 6,932.05.

Penny:

Right. And the Dow breached 48,000. It settled at 48,731.1 seen. That Santa Rally really delivered this year.

Roy:

It did. And it's a wonderful party, but our mission today isn't really to celebrate the peak, is it?

Penny:

No. Not at all. We are here for you, the listener, to really break down the architecture for survival and and compounding in 2026.

Roy:

Right. When the market looks this good, it's a moment for strategy, not euphoria.

Penny:

Exactly. We need to be thinking about moving capital into, let's call them protected fortresses. You know, positions based on real structural shifts, not just holiday sentiment.

Roy:

And that's reflected in the strategy. The long term portfolio is holding 50% cash.

Penny:

Which is a huge position of strength. Over $600,000 ready to go.

Roy:

We survived the uncertainty of this year and now the mandate for next year is, well, it's crystal clear.

Penny:

Be the house, not the gambler.

Roy:

Be the house. We want the market to pay us to get into the positions we love.

Penny:

So to do that, we have to answer the big question. What are the, three macro earthquakes that are really gonna define the 2026 landscape.

Roy:

And what assets are specifically designed to weather them or even profit from them?

Penny:

Yeah. We have to look past the day to day headlines and find those deep foundational shifts.

Roy:

Okay. Let's unpack that architecture. The sources point to three major drivers. What's number one?

Penny:

Driver number one is what analysts are calling the weak dollar regime.

Roy:

Okay. That's the starting point.

Penny:

It is. The dollar index is trading around what 99.5 to a 100 right now?

Roy:

Which sounds strong if you just listen to the news.

Penny:

It does, but historically it's not. Compared to the last administration's average of a 105 or, you know, highs of a 110, this is fundamentally a weak dollar environment, especially with all the global debt out there.

Roy:

Wait. Can you break that down? If it's at a 100, why do your sources call that level weak?

Penny:

Well, it's all about relative purchasing power. When every central bank is printing money like crazy, a dollar at a 100 might sound good, but it's actually losing its real historical purchasing power.

Roy:

So inflation is ticking up.

Penny:

Exactly. But for corporations, this weakness is actually a powerful tailwind.

Roy:

And that tailwind works two ways. Right?

Penny:

Precisely. First, a weak dollar makes all US goods and exports cheaper for the rest of the world. So American companies just become more competitive.

Roy:

Okay.

Penny:

Second, and this is crucial for earnings, it inflates the value of international profits.

Roy:

So if a company makes a billion euros overseas.

Penny:

When they convert that back into softer US dollars, it's suddenly worth more. It's like an instant artificial boost to their reported earnings.

Roy:

Okay. That's the first leg. The second big earthquake is the one big beautiful tax bill, the OBBTB.

Penny:

Right. This passed back in July 2025, but some new, really important provisions kick in on 01/01/2026.

Roy:

And this isn't just about rates. It's about shifting the whole landscape.

Penny:

That's the key. The OBBTB creates these really aggressive incentives. Things like accelerated depreciation, direct subsidies.

Roy:

All for domestic manufacturing.

Penny:

Yes. The bill is explicitly designed to push reshoring to make it cheaper and more profitable to build things here in The US.

Roy:

You call the bill fiscally expansive. For the listener, what does that really mean for the economy? Why is that another word for inflationary?

Penny:

It means the government is spending way more than it's taking in. It's injecting massive stimulus into the economy.

Roy:

So you have a huge dose of government demand.

Penny:

Meeting supply constraints because of tariffs and the costs of reshoring. When you have that much cash flooding the system, the natural result is higher prices. It's inflation.

Roy:

Which is why we need those inflation hedges built in.

Penny:

Exactly. And that flows perfectly into the third earthquake, the looming tariff wall.

Roy:

Everyone's already watching that July 2026 USMCA review.

Penny:

Yeah, the consensus in our sources is that this review is going to result in new reciprocal tariffs.

Roy:

And these aren't just for revenue?

Penny:

No. They're explicitly designed to protect key US industries. And if those walls go up, the game changes overnight.

Roy:

Companies that rely on cheap imports get hammered.

Penny:

While the domestic players get this huge protected, profitable advantage, a moat built by policy.

Roy:

So weak dollar, an expansive tax bill driving domestic manufacturing, and a potential tariff wall. Yeah. That architecture brings us right to the Boxing Day 10 list.

Penny:

Yes. The protected fortress trades. And the philosophy here is so important. We are not chasing tech growth at 50 times forward earnings. No.

Penny:

We are finding high quality companies with wide policy driven moats, all positioned for what we're calling the physical AI phase.

Roy:

Okay. So let's get into the names. Let's do five of the 10, starting with what you're calling the ultimate July tariff wall play. That has to be Steel Dynamics STLD.

Penny:

Absolutely. STLD is the bellwether here. They're a domestic mini mill operator, which means their costs are already low. They don't rely on expensive imported material.

Roy:

So if those tariffs come back?

Penny:

Foreign steel becomes way too expensive. And their domestic mills don't just become profitable, they become cash machines. They are by far the most efficient operator in a neighborhood that's about to get a very high fence put around it.

Roy:

And the strategy isn't to buy it tomorrow morning. The target entry is a specific zone.

Penny:

Exactly. We're looking for the market to give us a chance to get in between say $150 and $160 that's a solid floor where we're buying protection at a really reasonable price.

Roy:

Okay moving on to inflation and defense hedges. Protecting against that OBBTB environment. First up, Newmont Corporation, NEM.

Penny:

Newmont is basically an insurance policy. It's a hedge against monetary debasement.

Roy:

With the tax bill being so expansive and concerns about The U. S. Credit rating.

Penny:

Gold becomes the ultimate safe house for your cash. You're just protecting your purchasing power.

Roy:

And NEM gives you that gold exposure, but with a dividend.

Penny:

Right. You get paid while you wait for that macro trend to really play out. We're looking to get in around the 90 to $95 zone.

Roy:

And for geopolitical insurance, that's Lockheed Martin LMT.

Penny:

Lockheed is a global defense giant. Tensions are rising, defense budgets aren't shrinking, but here's the key link back to our macro theme.

Roy:

The weak dollar.

Penny:

The weak dollar. It makes Lockheed's high end defense systems cheaper for our allies. The company is set up for strong international orders no matter who's in office. We're aiming for that 450 to $460 support zone.

Roy:

Now let's shift to physical AI. The infrastructure that powers all this stuff. Let's talk about Corning, GLW.

Penny:

Yeah, Corning is the glass backbone of this whole AI data center surge. AI doesn't just live in the cloud, you know, it travels through fiber optic cables.

Roy:

Right. And the data centers themselves need specialized glass.

Penny:

A ton of it for cooling and displays. Yeah. And the OBBTB incentives are specifically targeting domestic tech manufacturing, which gives Corning a direct tailwind.

Roy:

Okay. And finally, a national security asset where we have to look past a pretty scary PE ratio. MP Materials. MP.

Penny:

The sticker shock is real. You see a 75 times forward PE and you wanna run. But the strategy is different. You're not buying the multiple, you're buying the asset. MP is the only major fully integrated rare earth mining operation in North America.

Roy:

But how does buying the asset protect you from a multiple that high collapsing? If demand changes, that seems like a massive risk.

Penny:

That's a fair challenge. The moat here isn't just market driven, it's policy driven. MP has a Department of Defense price floor.

Roy:

A price floor.

Penny:

A $110 per kilogram price floor for certain materials. That contract dramatically derisks their revenue. And on top of that, the OBBTB sourcing rules mean that if you want those tax incentives, you must buy from places like MP. We're looking for entry around $40 to $45

Roy:

This is where it gets really interesting because all of this is forming a huge tech rotation. And we have to talk about the big name that's missing from the list, Alphabet, g o g o l.

Penny:

The omission of Google is very deliberate. Experts are raising a huge red flag here. They're viewing Google as a melting ice cube because AI fundamentally breaks the math of their core business model. Their search advertising revenue is under structural threat from what's called the agentic shift.

Roy:

Okay. Define that. What is the agentic shift? How does it eat their revenue?

Penny:

Okay. Think about how you use search now. You type something, you get 10 blue links, you click three of them, and one is probably a sponsored ad.

Roy:

Right. Those clicks are their lifeblood.

Penny:

Exactly. The agentic shift means AI tools, chatbots, OS agents. They don't give you links. They just give you the answer. They book the reservation for you.

Roy:

So instead of searching best pizza and clicking a bunch of links, the AI just tells you where to go.

Penny:

Precisely. AI users click way fewer ads because the AI removes all that friction. Friction. It directly cannibalizes the highest margin part of their business.

Roy:

And that's on top of the DOJ ruling against their default search payments.

Penny:

It's a compound threat. When they're e, their earnings, is in jeopardy like this, why would you try to catch a falling knife?

Roy:

So if you want to play AI without that search risk, what's the opposite trade?

Penny:

That would be Qualcomm, QCOM. They are positioning themselves to win the on device AI shift.

Roy:

Meaning the AI moves off the cloud.

Penny:

Laptop. Qualcomm is the arms dealer for the hardware that bypasses the cloud. They are making the chips that let your devices run powerful AI locally.

Roy:

The picks and shovels for the new paradigm. We're targeting an entry around 160 to $165.

Penny:

Correct. They are buying into the new tech cycle, not defending the old one.

Roy:

Okay. Let's talk about the metals melt up. Boxing day was quiet for stocks, but the commodities pit was screaming a signal.

Penny:

The signal from hard assets is just deafening. Silver broke $75. It's trading at $77.88, up a 158% year to date.

Roy:

A 158%.

Penny:

Gold hit a record high of 4,549. Platinum surged 9%. This isn't just drift. It's a parabolic move.

Roy:

What's really fascinating and what our sources pointed out is that the forty year negative correlation between gold and stocks is just broken.

Penny:

Totally broken. Historically, stocks go up, gold goes down, now they're both rising together.

Roy:

What does that mean?

Penny:

This is definitive proof of a reflation trade on steroids. The market is pricing in strong economic growth. That's the stock market high in aggressive currency debasement and inflation fear. That's record gold price.

Roy:

So gold and silver are the market just shouting.

Penny:

Protect your purchasing power because the value of the dollar is going down even if stocks are going up.

Roy:

And inside that story, copper is critical, trading around $5 and 85 a pound. Why is copper joining this party so aggressively?

Penny:

Because copper has fundamentally changed its identity. It is now an AI metal.

Roy:

An AI metal.

Penny:

You still have the old drivers like supply constraints and US stockpiling before tariffs, but the big new driver is AI data center demand.

Roy:

How much copper are we talking about here?

Penny:

A huge amount. About 27 tons of copper per megawatt of power for cooling, for distribution. As every big tech company builds out their AI capacity, copper becomes this critical bottleneck.

Roy:

So copper's price isn't just about industrial recovery anymore?

Penny:

No, it's a direct reflection of the infrastructure build out for this physical AI phase. Experts are projecting a 450,000 ton copper deficit in 2026.

Roy:

Okay, we've covered macro fortresses and hard assets. Let's pivot to a real sniper shot. Policy driven value trades in healthcare.

Penny:

This is a perfect example of policy creating an immediate market opportunity. The OBTB, that big tax bill.

Roy:

Yes.

Penny:

Expands health savings account eligibility.

Roy:

To include the bronze and catastrophic health plans. Why is that so important?

Penny:

It just massively widens the addressable market for these managed care providers basically overnight. Millions of people who couldn't use an HSA before are suddenly eligible.

Roy:

And that brings us to Molina Healthcare MOH and Centene CNC.

Penny:

Both are trading at trough valuations. MOH is at a PE of just 12. The S and P is what, 22.5. This screams deep value.

Roy:

And the company is poised for EPS to potentially double by 2029.

Penny:

As they capture all this new HSA market share, it's a pure policy arbitrage trade. Centene is a similar story, but the trade structure here is key to being the house. Right. We wanna get paid while we wait. So the strategy is to buy the stock at the steep discount and then immediately sell what are called far out of the money calls.

Roy:

Okay. Break that down. What does selling calls do for us?

Penny:

It means we collect cash, a premium right now, from other traders who are betting the stock will surge way higher, say, by January 2027.

Roy:

So we take their cash and commit to selling our stock at a much higher price later.

Penny:

Exactly, like selling the January $2,207 calls on MOH, it generates immediate income for the portfolio while we wait for that growth to happen, you're letting the market pay you to be patient.

Roy:

That is the textbook definition of being the house. Okay, one last lesson from today's market. The geopolitical oil paradox.

Penny:

Yeah, this was interesting. WTI crude fell to $57 despite these huge headlines. US strikes in Nigeria, seizure of Venezuelan tankers.

Roy:

The old logic says war is bullish for oil. What happened?

Penny:

The market is getting much more sophisticated at processing risk. It understood the nature of those headlines. The strikes in Nigeria were limited and coordinated.

Roy:

So they weren't a systemic threat to supply?

Penny:

Not at all. The market removed the war premium almost instantly. The fundamental truth of high US production and soft global demand just overpowered the geopolitical noise.

Roy:

A powerful lesson. Okay, let's recap the 2026 mandate for the listener.

Penny:

It's threefold. First, position for the physical AI phase. Buy the copper, the glass, the infrastructure, not just the code.

Roy:

Second, prioritize liquidity. That 50% cash position is there for a reason.

Penny:

We survived the uncertainty. Now we strategically compound.

Roy:

And third, the entry strategy has to be disciplined.

Penny:

No chasing the Santarelli. We are setting stink bids, limit orders far below the current price, and selling puts and calls to let the market pay you to enter these protected positions at strong support zones.

Roy:

Okay. Let's leave our listeners with a final provocative thought.

Penny:

The current metals melt up, gold, silver, platinum, all going parabolic, is not just a fear trade. It's the clearest signal that the market anticipates both strong growth and aggressive currency debasement in 2026.

Roy:

Because of these fiscally expansive policies.

Penny:

Exactly. And if gold keeps ripping with stocks, if that forty year correlation stays broken, you absolutely must ask yourself if your portfolio is protected against the loss of purchasing power that implies.

Roy:

If your only bet is on stocks.

Penny:

You might be winning the dollar race while losing the purchasing power war. And that is the homework heading into the New Year.