https://preservewm.com We've been keeping up with the latest headlines... here are two of our favorites worth sharing. ** Your Money ------------------------------------------------------------ Last week, markets reacted to what looked, on the surface, like a hiring decision. News that Kevin Warsh had emerged as a leading contender to succeed Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell set off an unusual mix of moves. Stocks slipped, bond yields barely budged, the dollar jumped, and gold and silver suffered their worst single-day drops in decades. For anyone not following Fed politics closely, that reaction can seem confusing. Why would markets swing on speculation about a job that hasn’t even been filled yet? The answer is not about personalities. It is about policy levers. Warsh, a former Fed governor, has recently argued that interest rates should come down faster. Normally, that would be welcome news for markets. At the same time, he has been outspoken about shrinking the Fed’s massive balance sheet, which is still loaded with Treasury bonds. Reducing those holdings quietly tightens financial conditions, even if rates are falling. Those two ideas push against each other. Investors are trying to decide which one would dominate if Warsh were in charge, and last week’s market moves reflected that uncertainty. There is also a bigger issue underneath the headlines. Markets care deeply about Federal Reserve independence. Many investors believe Warsh would protect that independence, even if his policies are not uniformly market friendly. For long-term investors, the lesson is simple. Monetary policy is not a single switch. Rates, liquidity, and credibility all move together. Short-term market reactions can look chaotic, but portfolios built for durability are designed to live through exactly this kind of moment. Wall Street Can’t Decide Whether Kevin Warsh Will Be a Friend or Foe (https://www.wsj.com/finance/investing/wall-street-cant-decide-whether-kevin-warsh-will-be-a-friend-or-foe-3d344c67?st=EMWLA3&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink) by Gregory Zuckerman, Gunjan Banerji, and Sam Goldfarb ** Your Life ------------------------------------------------------------ When people talk about sleep, they usually focus on hours or interruptions. What often gets missed is consistency. Research suggests that going to bed and waking up at roughly the same time each day may matter as much as how long you sleep. An irregular schedule can quietly disrupt the body’s internal clock, affecting everything from stress hormones to metabolism and mood. Over time, that misalignment appears linked to higher risks for heart disease, cognitive decline, and mental health challenges. The idea is not perfection. It is rhythm. A steady sleep pattern gives the body something it values deeply: predictability. One Sleep Habit Experts Wish You Would Adopt (https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/05/well/health-benefits-sleep-consistency.html?unlocked_article_code=1.JFA.xJgt.SfpiiYYsyE-M&smid=url-share) by Caroline Hopkins Legaspi https://www.linkedin.com/in/danheth/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/rosalynn-harvey-heth-mpa-ceps-3a3aa3191/ ** Complexity Simplified ------------------------------------------------------------ If a piece of eggshell falls into a cracked egg, using another shell to remove it works better than a spoon for a simple reason: surface tension. Egg whites are mostly water and proteins. When a smooth spoon touches the liquid, the egg white flows away and the shell fragment slips with it. A jagged eggshell edge disrupts that flow just enough for the stray piece to cling to it instead of sliding away. It’s a small bit of kitchen physics most people learn once and then forget, until the next time it happens. The Only Hack You Need To Remove Shell Pieces From Your Cracked Eggs (https://www.thedailymeal.com/1296657/only-hack-need-remove-shell-pieces-cracked-eggs/) by Allie Sivak ** Trivia ------------------------------------------------------------ Last week's answer: Maine. It borders only New Hampshire. This week's question: Which movie became the first animated film to win the Academy Award for Best Picture? https://youtu.be/HTkbj56bnYs?si=7Hu6r_a9nop1LoNA ** Back in 1959, this song reached #1 ------------------------------------------------------------ ============================================================ ** Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/preservewm) ** Twitter (https://twitter.com/preservewm) ** LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/preservewm/about/) Copyright © *|CURRENT_YEAR|* *|LIST:COMPANY|*, All rights reserved. This email was sent to *|EMAIL|* (mailto:*|EMAIL|*) why did I get this? (*|ABOUT_LIST|*) unsubscribe from this list (*|UNSUB|*) update subscription preferences (*|UPDATE_PROFILE|*) *|LIST_ADDRESSLINE_TEXT|* *|REWARDS_TEXT|*

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