This week on Wealth and Means, we follow a single thread through every major signal in the market: the most consequential shifts are happening in layers you cannot see.

We open with what you did not see in the news — a ninety-six dollar guided rocket that signals the cost collapse of autonomy, Salesforce’s Agentforce crossing $540 million in ARR, uranium breaking $100 a pound as fifteen nuclear reactors come online, a historic rotation from large-cap growth into small-cap and physical assets, gold hitting all-time highs at $5,589, and a Substack essay that moved equity prices within hours.

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Wake Up Ready unpacks the structural squeeze defining the week ahead: GDP revised down to 0.7%, core PCE running hot at 3.1%, tariffs escalating from 10% to 15% under Section 122, and a Fed that is frozen between cutting into inflation and tightening into weakness. The labor market headline looks strong. The composition underneath it does not.

The Knowledge Bomb introduces reflexivity — George Soros’s framework for understanding how markets do not just observe reality but participate in creating it — and explains why, in 2026, the feedback loop between narrative and price is running faster than at any point in financial history.

Humor Me takes an honest look at what it is actually like to work with AI agents: the 17% error rate that keeps you checking everything, the new genre of meetings about what the AI said in the last meeting, and the beautiful irony of machines trained on the internet that now do not want to work either.

The Greater Debate stages a conversation between Jim Simons and Warren Buffett on whether autonomous AI agents should trade markets without human oversight. Simons argues for speed and the elimination of bias. Buffett argues that markets are social institutions, and removing human judgment severs the connection between finance and the real economy it serves.

And Let’s Invent Again tells the story of Willis Whitfield — a physicist from a West Texas cotton farm who, in 1962, built the first modern clean room at Sandia National Laboratories. His laminar flow design produced particle counts a thousand times lower than anything that existed. Without it, there is no semiconductor industry, no personal computer, no internet, no AI. The entire digital economy sits on top of an invention by a man who just wanted to keep dust off of nuclear weapon components.

The infrastructure beneath the infrastructure. That is the pattern. And it is the only one that matters.

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