Thursday, October 16, 2025

🪳 When the Cockroaches Come Out: Jamie Dimon’s Warning and the Yin–Yang of Market

 

“To understand the present, learn from the past.”

By David H. Huynh


Hidden risks in the light, many more in the shadows — all within the Yin–Yang rhythm of markets.

In 2007, a few cracks appeared in the walls of finance. A pair of Bear Stearns hedge funds collapsed — and most people shrugged. A year later, the world was burning.

Today, Jamie Dimon, the CEO of JPMorgan Chase who helped rescue Bear Stearns back then, is warning again. Two small collapses — a sub-prime auto lender (Tricolor Holdings) and an auto-parts supplier (First Brands) — may be the first “cockroaches” scurrying out from the dark corners of a seemingly solid economy.

“When you see one cockroach, there are probably more… Everyone should be forewarned.”

He’s not talking about insects. He’s talking about hidden leverage, opaque loans, and fragile balance sheets — the unseen Yin within today’s Yang of booming markets.

⚖️ The Yin–Yang of Finance

In the Tao of Quantum, every boom (Yang ☀️) contains the seed of its own correction (Yin 🌑). Markets expand with optimism, innovation, and easy credit — until they overheat. Then fear replaces greed, liquidity freezes, and the cycle turns again.

The crash of 1929 birthed new guardrails: the SEC, the FDIC, and strict banking separations like Glass–Steagall. After the subprime crisis of 2008, we built Dodd–Frank, stress tests, and higher capital rules to prevent déjà vu.

🐂 “Business as Usual” — Until the Next Fall

In Vietnamese, we say: “Mất bò mới lo làm chuồng.” Only after losing the cow do we build the barn. English has a cousin: “Closing the stable door after the horse has bolted.”

After every catastrophe, humanity rebuilds — wiser, for a while. Then prosperity returns, barriers feel heavy, and regulators loosen the rules “to free business.” Little by little, the walls thin, and the next lesson begins forming in silence.

Some guardrails have been eased since 2008, while a great deal of credit and leverage has migrated into shadow banking/private credit — areas less visible to regulators. The details differ from 1929 or 2008, but the pattern rhymes.

🪞 Dimon’s Antenna and the Mirror of History

Dimon’s “antenna goes up” because he has seen this movie before: easy credit to risky borrowers, complex off-balance-sheet financing, and faith that this time is different

Like Warren Buffett said:

“When the tide recedes, we see who’s been swimming naked.”

Today’s private-credit markets and non-bank lenders are large and interconnected. They may not trigger a crash tomorrow, but the possibility of contagion grows with every hidden exposure — the true “cockroaches” in the dark.

🌊 The Tao of Quantum Reflection

To understand the present, learn from the past. History doesn’t repeat exactly — but it rhymes. The Yang of expansion always drifts toward the Yin of correction. Yet within every Yin there is Yang — opportunity reborn from collapse.

The task for the wise investor and mindful citizen is not to fear the cycle but to see it clearly — to preserve capital during the storm so it may blossom again in the calm.

Be water. Flow with the wave, not against it. That is the Tao of Quantum Investing.

Source: 
https://edition.cnn.com/2025/10/16/business/jamie-dimon-us-economy-cockroaches




Wednesday, October 15, 2025

🌿 Why the Nobel Peace Prize Is Awarded from Oslo, Norway — Seen Through The Tao of Quantum

 When people hear “Nobel Prize,” they often think of Stockholm, Sweden — the birthplace of Alfred Nobel, inventor of dynamite and founder of the world’s most prestigious awards. Yet one exception stands out: the Nobel Peace Prize is presented not in Stockholm but in Oslo, Norway.

A Gift from a Troubled Inventor

Alfred Nobel (1833 – 1896) was a Swedish chemist, engineer, and inventor of more than 350 patents. His childhood was marked by financial hardship and constant struggle, yet it was within those pressures that his creativity ignited — a living example of the Tao of Quantum: when the wave of adversity compresses, the opposite force of innovation expands.

Through persistence, he discovered dynamite, intending it to help humankind peacefully build tunnels, roads, and mines. But the same invention was soon used to destroy. In this lies a profound paradox — the Yin and Yang of existence. The light of progress cannot exist without the shadow of misuse. Nobel’s life illustrates the Tao of Quantum truth: within every particle of creation hides its opposite potential.

The Scandinavian Union and the Choice of Oslo

During Nobel’s lifetime, Sweden and Norway were united under one monarch (1814 – 1905). Although politically joined, the two nations differed deeply in temperament: Sweden carried a more militaristic history, while Norway was known for its peaceful, democratic spirit.

In his will, Nobel instructed that prizes in Physics, Chemistry, Medicine, and Literature be awarded in Stockholm, but that the Peace Prize be presented in Oslo, overseen by the Norwegian Parliament (Storting). Historians suggest that Nobel, aware of Sweden’s warlike past, viewed Norway as a more neutral and harmonious setting — a place where the Yin of reflection could balance the Yang of power.

The Tao of Quantum in Nobel’s Legacy

Seen through The Tao of Quantum, Nobel’s decision embodies balance and transformation. From destruction came renewal; from guilt emerged generosity. His invention held both potential for harm and for progress — just as a quantum field holds both wave and particle, energy and emptiness. Looking deeply into anything, we find this same dual nature — the dance of Yin and Yang that defines the universe and human destiny alike.

A Tradition of Hope

Every December 10 — the anniversary of Nobel’s death — the world turns to Oslo City Hall, where laureates receive their medals, diplomas, and words of gratitude. From Martin Luther King Jr. to Malala Yousafzai, these moments remind us that even an inventor once linked to destruction left humankind its greatest symbol of hope and harmony.

“From a man who made dynamite came the world’s most powerful prize for peace — the ultimate Yin–Yang transformation.”


🕊 Inspired by: Alfred Nobel’s legacy, RFI Tiếng Việt report, and The Tao of Quantum reflections
(© Dave H. Huynh – The Tao of Quantum Blog)

Monday, October 13, 2025

The Tao of Quantum: Warning Signs of a Market Crash

Part II — AI Bubble Mechanics, Circular Financing & the 1929 Echo

← Back to Part I

1) Anatomy of an AI-driven bubble

  • Extreme concentration: A handful of mega-caps drive index performance, raising fragility if leadership stumbles.
  • Expectations vs. earnings: Capex and narrative outpace realized profit conversion.
  • Circular financing optics: Capital raised by AI firms is spent within the same ecosystem (cloud credits, GPUs, models), inflating headline growth.

2) The 1929 rhyme: GM & GMAC ↔ AI 2025

In the late-1920s, GM’s financing arm (GMAC) turbocharged demand by extending credit to buyers — while investors and lenders also bid up GM equity. Demand, earnings, and stock prices fed each other until credit snapped in 1929. Today’s AI ecosystem rhymes with that structure: multi-billion investments, pre-purchased cloud credits, and GPU spend circulate among a small set of players, creating a feedback loop that flatters growth until it doesn’t.

Figure 2 — Circular financing rhymes: GM & GMAC (1929) vs. the modern AI loop (OpenAI–Microsoft–Nvidia). When the loop tightens, fragility rises.

3) Triggers to watch

  • Hardware lead indicators: Semiconductor index (SOX) underperforms while mega-caps hold up.
  • Funding & credit stress: Tighter financing or credit accidents inside the ecosystem.
  • Policy shocks: New tariff rounds, sanctions, or prolonged shutdowns pressuring earnings multiples.

4) Risk hygiene (The Tao of Quantum)

The crest seeds the trough: as Yang (optimism/expansion) peaks, Yin (correction/restoration) emerges. Translate that into practice — right-size positions, diversify, add asymmetry (hedges), and prioritize capital preservation over return maximization.

Continue exploring Part I — Gold & Macros, or review the source notes below.


Full Reference List (live links)

Note: If any news links sit behind a paywall, include an accessible mirror or summary.

The Tao of Quantum: Warning Signs of a Market Crash

 

Part I — Gold, Macro Signals & Systemic Fault-Lines

Skip to Part II → AI Bubble & Crash Mechanics

Gold price chart 2015–2025 (includes 2020–2025)
Figure 1 — Gold’s breakout, 2020–2025: A long up-trend that accelerated in 2025 amid trade tensions, policy uncertainty, and ongoing central-bank accumulation. Source: GoldPrice.org.

In a world awash with AI euphoria, stretched equity multiples, tariff headlines, and geopolitics, one of the cleanest market signals is the quiet surge in gold. Below I summarize why gold is flashing amber — and how those macro signals fit the bigger story we’ll unpack in Part II.

1) Gold is speaking — here’s what it’s saying

  • Official-sector demand: The World Gold Council’s 2025 Central Bank Survey reports 95% of central banks expect global gold reserves to rise in the next 12 months, and a record 43% expect to add themselves.
  • Fresh records: In October 2025, spot gold broke above $4,000/oz to new all-time highs. Major banks lifted targets (e.g., BofA sees room toward ~$5,000 by 2026).
  • Dollar & policy risk: Shutdown/fiscal uncertainty, tariff volleys, and dovish expectations for rates periodically weaken the USD — a tailwind for bullion.

2) Macro fault-lines that reinforce the gold bid

  1. Policy & fiscal strain: U.S. shutdown risk and debt-ceiling drama increase funding uncertainty and volatility premia.
  2. Tariff-driven inflation pressure: Trade frictions and export controls raise costs and complicate supply chains — a stagflationary tilt.
  3. Main Street vs. “AI Street” divergence: Real-economy softness vs. mega-cap exuberance increases fragility if sentiment turns.
  4. De-dollarization hedging: Reserve managers diversify from USD-centric assets toward gold, strengthening structural demand.

3) A practical dashboard (watch weekly/monthly)

Signal Why It Matters Alert
Central-bank gold flows Official de-risking from USD/Treasuries >~20 tonnes net/month for several months
USD trend (DXY) Weaker USD → mechanical support for gold −5% in 3 months
Policy shocks Tariffs, shutdowns, fiscal standoffs New tariff rounds / prolonged shutdown
Real-economy vs. market Gap between earnings reality & narrative Profit downgrades while indices levitate

Sources linked below; jump to Full Reference List. Continue to Part II → AI Bubble & Crash Mechanics.


🌀 The Tao of Innovation: How the 2025 Nobel Prize in economics explains the Yin–Yang of the AI Boom

 


Illustration: The Tao of Innovation — Creative Destruction as a Yin–Yang Cycle.

The News

The 2025 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences was awarded to Joel Mokyr, Philippe Aghion, and Peter Howitt for their pioneering research explaining “innovation-driven economic growth.” Their work sheds light on the process of creative destruction, a concept introduced by economist Joseph Schumpeter, which describes how technological innovation replaces old industries, reshaping economies and societies.

Mokyr, a historian of economics, traced centuries of innovation to show that progress depends not only on invention but also on scientific understanding. Aghion and Howitt, meanwhile, built mathematical models showing how cycles of innovation, competition, and renewal sustain long-term growth.

In their words and models, innovation is both the engine and the disruptor — a dual force that drives expansion while dismantling the past.

The Commentary: The Tao of Innovation

This year’s Nobel recognition resonates deeply with the central idea in my upcoming book, The Tao of Quantum, which explores the harmony between Eastern philosophy and Western science.

The Nobel laureates’ work brings scientific clarity to what ancient Taoist thinkers expressed symbolically: the eternal Yin–Yang rhythm of creation and destruction. When Yang (innovation, expansion, optimism) dominates, Yin (correction, contraction, humility) begins to emerge — restoring balance.

Their theory of creative destruction is the economic expression of this same principle. Every great technological revolution — from steam and electricity to the internet and now artificial intelligence — follows this cyclical dance.

AI today is the new Yang: radiant, expansive, full of promise. Companies invest billions; stock markets soar with exuberance. Yet, hidden within this surge is the seed of Yin — overvaluation, dislocation, and the inevitable correction that restores equilibrium.

The Yin–Yang of the Market

In the language of Taoism, when Yang reaches its extreme, Yin is born. In market psychology, this translates into the boom and bust cycle — or what I call “The Yin–Yang of Market Psychology.”

The Nobel laureates’ findings help explain why this happens not by accident but by design. Innovation breeds optimism; optimism fuels speculation; speculation breeds imbalance; and imbalance leads to collapse — from which new innovation arises again.

This eternal motion, this “creative destruction,” is not a flaw in capitalism but its heartbeat. It is the same cosmic rhythm that governs the universe, from the birth and death of stars to the rise and fall of civilizations.

The Quantum Connection

In The Tao of Quantum, I argue that both quantum physics and Taoism point to a world of dualities — wave and particle, Yin and Yang, growth and decay — existing not in opposition but in harmony.

The Nobel Prize this year, honoring the science of innovation cycles, is an affirmation of that view: the quantum of economics lies in its oscillation. The creative impulse and the destructive correction are not enemies; they are partners in evolution.

Just as electrons leap to higher energy states only to return, releasing energy, economies leap forward through innovation and settle back through correction — gaining wisdom, balance, and new potential each time.

Reflection

The 2025 Nobel Prize in Economics is not just an award for scholars — it is a mirror for our time. It reminds us that progress is cyclical, not linear; that AI’s promise and peril are two faces of the same force; and that the key to navigating the coming wave is not resistance, but balance.

As Lao Tzu wrote, “When nothing is done, nothing is left undone.” In the same way, when we move with the rhythm of innovation — not against it — we find prosperity without excess, and wisdom within change.


Author: David H. Huynh
Book in Progress: The Tao of Quantum — When Physics Meets Philosophy
Illustration: The Tao of Innovation: Creative Destruction as a Yin–Yang Cycle
Published: October 13, 2025


🌀 The Tao of Risk Management: Riding the Quantum Waves

 In the Tao of Quantum, the market behaves like a sine-cosine wave — rising and falling with natural rhythm. The wise investor does not fight these cycles but flows with them. When you understand the pattern of Yin and Yang, you no longer fear the downturns; you prepare for them.

1. Preserve Before You Prosper

The first rule of the Tao investor:

“Do not try to maximize your return. Preserve your capital first — then compound.”

Capital is like Qi (energy) — once it’s drained, recovery is slow. Protecting your base is protecting your life force in the financial realm.

2. Be Water — Flow with the Waves

Like water, adapt to the market’s shape.
When the wave rises too steeply, quietly retreat.
When it falls deeply, prepare to enter again.

“He who flows with the Tao never breaks when the storm comes.”

3. The Yin–Yang of Market Psychology

When Yang (euphoria) peaks, the seed of Yin (correction) has already sprouted.
When Yin (fear) dominates, Yang (opportunity) is preparing its return.
Recognize these transitions — they are the pulse of the market’s heart.

4. Compounding: The Path of Stillness

True wealth grows in stillness and patience.
Compounding is the Tao’s quiet magic — invisible day by day, powerful year by year.


🕯️ “In the Tao of Quantum, the goal is not to conquer the market but to harmonize with it.
Be water. Flow with the waves. Preserve your Qi — and let compounding do the rest.”

📉 Historical Timeline of Major Stock Market Crashes (1900–2025

1907 – Panic of 1907

  • Trigger: Collapse of Knickerbocker Trust and bank runs.

  • Impact: NYSE down ~50%. Led to the creation of the Federal Reserve.

1929 – Wall Street Crash

  • Dates: Oct 24 (Black Thursday), Oct 28 (Black Monday), Oct 29 (Black Tuesday).

  • Impact: Dow fell ~90% from peak to 1932 bottom. Great Depression followed.

1937–1938 – Roosevelt Recession

  • Trigger: Policy tightening and reduced government spending.

  • Impact: Industrial production −32%, Dow −50%.

1973–1974 – Oil Crisis Bear Market

  • Trigger: OPEC oil embargo, inflation, and recession.

  • Impact: Dow −45%, global indices −35–40%.

1987 – Black Monday (Oct 19)

  • Trigger: Portfolio insurance, overvaluation, and panic selling.

  • Impact: Dow −22.6% in a single day — worst one-day drop in history.

1989 – Friday the 13th Mini-Crash (Oct 13)

  • Trigger: Collapse of UAL leveraged buyout.

  • Impact: Dow −6.9%.

1997 – Asian Financial Crisis (Oct 27)

  • Trigger: Thai baht collapse, regional contagion.

  • Impact: Dow −7.18%, circuit breakers triggered.

1998 – LTCM / Russia Default Crisis

  • Trigger: Russian debt default, hedge fund leverage blow-up.

  • Impact: S&P −19% correction, near-global liquidity crunch.

2000–2002 – Dot-Com Bubble Burst

  • Trigger: Overvaluation of internet stocks.

  • Impact: Nasdaq −78%, trillions lost in tech sector.

2001 – 9/11 Terror Attacks

  • Trigger: Market closed for a week, reopened Sept 17.

  • Impact: Dow −7.1% first day, −14% that week.

2007–2009 – Global Financial Crisis

  • Trigger: Subprime mortgage collapse, Lehman failure.

  • Impact: S&P −57%, worst crash since 1930s.

2010 – Flash Crash (May 6)

  • Trigger: High-frequency trading algorithm cascade.

  • Impact: Dow plunged ~1,000 pts (~9%) intraday, then rebounded.

2011 – U.S. Credit Downgrade (Aug 8)

  • Trigger: S&P downgrades U.S. credit rating.

  • Impact: Dow −5.6%.

2015 – China’s Black Monday (Aug 24)

  • Trigger: Chinese stock and currency turmoil.

  • Impact: Dow −1,000 pts at open, −3.6% close.

2018 – Volmageddon (Feb 5)

  • Trigger: Short-volatility ETFs collapse.

  • Impact: S&P −4.1%, VIX +115%.

2020 – COVID-19 Crash (Mar)

  • Trigger: Global pandemic, lockdowns.

  • Impact: Fastest bear market in history, S&P −34% in 23 days.

2022 – Inflation & Fed Tightening Crash

  • Trigger: Rapid interest-rate hikes, inflation peak.

  • Impact: S&P −25% to Oct 12 low.

2023 – Banking Panic (SVB Collapse)

  • Trigger: Silicon Valley Bank failure, contagion fears.

  • Impact: Regional banks −30–50%, brief market shock.

🔄 Seasonality Insight

Historically, September and October are the most volatile months for markets. Many crashes cluster in these months — yet they also mark beginnings of recoveries. In the Taoist sense, when Yang (optimism) peaks, Yin (fear) begins, and vice versa.



Prepared for: David H. Huynh – The Tao of Quantum Finance

Updated: October 13, 2025

🪳 When the Cockroaches Come Out: Jamie Dimon’s Warning and the Yin–Yang of Market

  “To understand the present, learn from the past.” By David H. Huynh Hidden risks in the light, many more in the shadows — all within t...