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Most conversations about inflation and “money printing” are built on oversimplified stories — stories that sound intuitive, spread quickly, and quietly mislead investors. In this video, we break down what actually drives inflation, asset prices, and market behavior — not from headlines or political narratives, but from the plumbing of the global financial system itself. You’ll hear claims like: “Inflation is just too much money chasing too few goods” “The Fed is printing money to fund government spending” “Lower rates automatically mean higher inflation” “Markets rise because the Fed turns on the money printer” These explanations feel right — but they miss how modern finance actually works. What this video explains instead: Why money ≠ liquidity, and why that distinction matters How balance sheets, not slogans, drive inflation and asset prices What the Federal Reserve actually controls — and what it doesn’t Why Treasury funding, bank lending, and markets are not the same thing How changes in discount rates affect valuations even without new money Why asset prices can rise without broad inflation — and vice versa This isn’t about defending the Fed or attacking it. It’s about understanding the mechanics beneath the surface — the settlement systems, funding markets, and balance-sheet constraints that connect banks, markets, governments, and central banks. If you’re an investor, analyst, student, or simply someone who wants to understand why markets move the way they do, this framework will change how you interpret inflation data, rate cuts, and market rallies. Just a clearer mental model of the global financial system.