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When indicators lie: why data distortion redefines investment strategy in 2025
The problem isn't inflation—it's that we no longer know if the numbers are real
In November, the US CPI registered a 2.7% year-over-year, a welcome drop from the previous 3.0% and below market expectations of 3.1%. On paper, the narrative is perfect: “controlled inflation, room for rate cuts, a bullish market.”
But here’s the uncomfortable part: John Williams, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, stated bluntly on December 19th that the November figure is contaminated by “technical factors.” The October government shutdown forced statisticians to use retroactive data and interpolate zero growth to fill gaps. The result is a smoothed inflation trajectory that does not reflect reality.
The Federal Reserve does not reject the number. What it rejects is using it as a political compass. And here lies the true distortion: when data lose credibility, policy stalls. Instead of aggressive cuts, the central bank opts to keep rates at 3.5%–3.75% and wait for December data to “verify the actual trend.”
Macroeconomics is no longer complex. It’s simply opaque.
Geopolitics returns as an inflation variable—and this time it’s not noise
While algorithms expected more rate cuts, something more dangerous was brewing in energy markets.
The United States has intensified its blockade on Venezuela. Not only has it confiscated three oil tankers loaded with Venezuelan crude, but it has also begun to choke off vessel departures and, with that, the regime’s fiscal revenues. The strategy is clear: graduated economic strangulation.
But there’s an even more volatile risk on the radar: Israel is evaluating a preemptive attack on Iran, based on intelligence suggesting Iran’s monthly missile production may have reached 3,000 units.
In the last confrontation, Iran managed to bypass Israeli air defenses with a massive missile barrage. The US had to intervene directly, deploying B-2 bombers to attack nuclear facilities and temporarily contain the conflict.
If Israel attacks without warning this time:
The Middle East remains the heart of the petrodollar system. A geopolitical escalation not only affects energy prices: it destabilizes the monetary policy compass already fragile due to data distortion.
The market is shifting from optimistic algorithmic expectations to a risk-driven structure.
Three questions the traditional market cannot answer
When data are questionable, geopolitical risk is tangible, and monetary policy is in wait-and-see mode, the market changes its question.
From: “When will there be another rate cut?”
To:
The answers are not innovative. They have existed in the real world for years:
What’s scarce is not the existence of these assets. What’s scarce is to bring them onto the blockchain transparently, verifiably, and executable.
R2: adapt to the world, not predict it
In a context where:
R2 offers something different: a yield structure that does not depend on guessing a single direction.
What does it do?
Instead of predictions, it offers clarity:
When data distortion makes policy unpredictable, when geopolitics makes inflation volatile, the importance of real yield does not diminish—it amplifies.
From “guess once” to “work always”
The inflection point is clear:
In this scenario, what matters is no longer “guess the right direction.” It’s about building a yield structure that is valid under most possible macroeconomic scenarios.
R2 does not try to predict how the world will evolve. It guarantees something more fundamental: no matter how circumstances change, users will always know what their capital is doing, where each return comes from, and how each risk is managed.
That transparency and ability to function in uncertain scenarios—this is truly scarce in 2025.