Different Headlines

NHL Season Hasn’t Even Started Yet, And We Already Have Players Beating Hell Out Of Each Other

Leftist Physically Assaults, Threatens to Kill South Dakota Republican Gubernatorial Candidate Over His Support For Charlie Kirk

Ginger Activates Immune Cells

Self-Important Loser David Hogg Leaves Instructions for When He’s Assassinated by a Right-Winger – Don’t waste a good bullet on losers

State Department Warns Against Americans Traveling To 6 Nations

Visualizing The Number Of Farms In Each US State

From Unrest to Resilience: The Remarkable Turnaround Since Summer 2020

Europe

Nearly All Daily UK High Temperatures Are Set At Junk Weather Stations

Germany’s Bureaucratic State Devours 3% Of GDP

Russia Gains Another Village In Central Ukraine Oblast As Negotiations Effectively Dead

64% Of Robberies, Physical Attacks, & Sexual Assaults On Parisian Public Transport Are Committed By Foreigners

World

The Silk Road Toll: Beijing’s Debt, Deals, & Control

NASA Bans Chinese Nationals From Working On Agency Programs

How Does Japan Have Nearly 100K Centenarians?

Ranked: 25 Richest Countries in the World, by Three Metrics

Ranked: 25 Richest Countries in the World, by Three Metrics

This was originally posted on our Voronoi app. Download the app for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Luxembourg’s immense GDP per capita ($141K) masks the fact that much of it is generated by non-residents who commute in to work.
  • Qatar’s oil windfall lifts GDP per capita ($72K) but that hasn’t translated into broader wealth.
  • English-speaking countries translate middling GDP per capita into high median wealth through property ownership and strong pension systems.
  • Generating national wealth and distributing it to people are distinctly different economic challenges.

Previously, when we’ve covered 25 richest countries, we did so by GDP per capita alone. As a result, tiny states and global city-states tended to dominate the top of the rankings.

Introducing per capita income and median wealth per adult paints a more nuanced picture. It shows that where money is produced is not always where it ultimately accumulates.

The data for this visualization comes from the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, and the UBS Global Wealth Report 2024.

It compares each country’s 2025 GDP per capita, 2024 GNI per capita, and median adult wealth in 2024 to reveal three very different “rich lists.”

source

Druckenmiller Declares: U.S. Going From ‘The Most Anti-Business Administration In History To The Opposite’

Duquesne Family Office Chairman Stanley Druckenmiller stated Monday that “animal spirits” have returned to the market, fueled by “giddy” CEOs anticipating Trump’s return to the White House. Speaking to CNBC, the billionaire investor argued that the U.S. economy is shifting from “the most anti-business administration” in history to the most business-friendly administration. 

STANLEY DRUCKENMILLER: The economy is very interesting. We’re at a very low unemployment rate, essentially 4%, with 3% GDP growth. I’ve been doing this for 49 years, and we’re probably moving from the most anti-business administration to the opposite. We do a lot of talking to CEOs and companies on the ground, and I’d say CEOs are somewhere between relieved and giddy. We’re believers in animal spirits. Paul Ryan was on your show last week talking about a 32% increase in business confidence over the last 12 months, which is probably a record in terms of change.

So the economy looks very strong, at least for the next six months, which is about as far out as one can see with any degree of confidence.

In terms of the markets, I would say it’s complicated. Despite what I just said about all the wonderful things about the economy, we have an earnings yield to bond yield ratio that’s probably the most unattractive level in 30 years.

So you’ll have this push of a strong economy versus rising bond yields in response to that strong economy, and that makes it hard to have a strong opinion one way or the other on the market.

I will say this: in my business, every change creates change in security prices, and having this kind of radical shift from one administration to another, in addition to what’s going on in the private sector with innovation, then you’ve got deregulation from the government, disruption. I think there’s going to be plenty of chance, plenty for your viewers to do. I wouldn’t worry about the market, I would focus on individual stocks. 

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