Cam Harvey: Through the Noise

PODCAST · business

Cam Harvey: Through the Noise

Fuqua economist Campbell Harvey gives his insights on pressing topics within the worlds of economics and finance.

  1. 18

    Banks Are Terrified of Stablecoins

    While bitcoin and dogecoin grab headlines, a far less flashy corner of crypto has quietly overtaken Visa and Mastercard in annual transaction volume. In this episode of Through the Noise, Cam Harvey walks Robert Olinger through stablecoins - dollar-pegged tokens that settle in seconds for pennies instead of days for dollars. Cam unpacks how Circle's USDC actually works, why the model is structurally safer than fractional-reserve banking, and how the GENIUS Act now puts token holders first in line if an issuer fails. He revisits the brief 2023 USDC depeg tied to Silicon Valley Bank, explains why Tether earns a staggering $33 million in profit per employee, and lays out the brewing fight over the Clarity Act - where stablecoin issuers want to pay interest, and the bank lobby is fighting hard to stop them.

  2. 17

    The END of Banking and Why Your Savings Account Earns NOTHING

    Why does your savings account earn essentially zero while money market funds pay nearly 4%? In this episode of Through the Noise, host Robert Ollinger sits down with Duke finance professor Cam Harvey to unpack the massive gap between bank deposit rates and market yields - and why giants like Chase pay just 0.01% APR on savings deposits. Harvey explains how large banks exploit market power to maximize their funding spread at the expense of smaller depositors, then lays out four powerful forces disrupting traditional banking: fintech, private credit, stablecoins, and AI. The conversation turns to regulatory failures from the global financial crisis to Silicon Valley Bank, the case for narrow banks, and why the Clarity Act's stablecoin interest provisions could transform the entire financial system.

  3. 16

    Is There ANYWHERE Safe to Put Your Money?

    In this episode of Cam Harvey's Through the Noise, host Robert Olinger sits down with finance professor Cam Harvey to examine whether truly safe assets still exist in today's turbulent global economy. With US debt at $39 trillion and geopolitical uncertainty rising, institutional investors are rethinking their allocations. Harvey unpacks the real story behind China's shifting Treasury holdings, explains why gold now exceeds Treasuries on central bank balance sheets, and walks through the eight essential attributes of a reserve currency—revealing why the dollar's dominance remains hard to displace despite mounting challenges. The conversation closes with a provocative look at tokenized gold as an alternative medium of exchange that could provide much-needed discipline against central bank inflation. Essential listening for anyone navigating today's evolving financial landscape.

  4. 15

    The Debt Bomb Ticking Toward 2033

    Is America's national debt a slow-moving crisis hiding in plain sight? In this episode of Through the Noise, Duke finance professor Campbell Harvey breaks down why the U.S. debt is far larger than headlines suggest - closer to $39 trillion once Social Security obligations are counted - and why politicians have little incentive to act before 2033, when the Social Security Trust runs dry. Harvey unpacks Ferguson's Law, the Triffin dilemma, and the alarming fact that 20% of federal tax revenue now goes just to servicing interest on the Federal debt. He weighs the unattractive fixes: raising taxes, inflating the debt away, cutting costs, against the one genuinely promising path forward - productivity-driven growth. 

  5. 14

    The Four Horsemen of Technological Disruption

    Cam Harvey reveals why AI is just one piece of a much larger puzzle. In this episode, he outlines four simultaneous technological disruptions — artificial intelligence, quantum computing, decentralized technologies, and multiomics — arguing that nothing in history compares to having all four converge at once. Harvey explains why AI productivity gains are imminent in 2026, how quantum computing will solve optimization problems that today's supercomputers can't touch, why stablecoins will become the financial backbone for AI agents, and how the combination of all four could revolutionize personalized medicine within years, not decades. The synergies between these technologies, he argues, will dwarf the changes we've seen in recent history.

  6. 13

    Why Executives Are Dangerously Wrong About AI's Impact

    The latest CFO Survey, directed by The Fuqua School of Business in partnership with the Federal Reserve Banks of Richmond and Atlanta, suggests AI won't meaningfully shrink payrolls. In this episode, Professor Harvey argues that CEOs and CFOs are dramatically underestimating AI's reach. The real disruption isn't replacing clerks; it's AI rewriting code for security and speed, redesigning websites and apps, drafting and reviewing contracts, prepping earnings call questions, and serving as an always-on strategy consultant.Harvey details how "agents" — not mere tools — are already reshaping legal, finance, and sales workflows. He also flags additional disruptions on the horizon: quantum computing, decentralized technologies, and "multiomics” (an integrated approach to DNA, RNA, and protein structure). The future is closer than most managers think.

  7. 12

    AI and the Decoupling of Jobs from Economic Growth

    What if working fewer hours coincided with stronger economic growth?New labor data reveals a puzzling trend: employment is being revised downward even as the economy keeps growing. Professor Harvey explores whether AI is the variable that can help us understand that divergence.The conversation moves beyond the familiar narrative of job displacement to examine a structural shift in how AI functions. As systems evolve from tools into agents, they can organize tasks, execute workflows, and contribute to their own development.As structured, repeatable white-collar work becomes increasingly automated, productivity gains may allow output to grow with fewer hours worked per person. The result may be a reallocation of labor rather than a simple reduction, with potential implications for economic growth and fiscal capacity.

  8. 11

    The Seven Risks of the Iran War

    The war in Iran is being treated by financial markets as a systemic event rather than a local conflict.In this episode, Professor Harvey outlines a framework for understanding that distinction. He distinguishes between geographically contained wars and those that intersect with critical nodes of the global economy. Iran sits at the center of energy transit routes, regional trade networks, and broader strategic relationships, making the potential spillovers materially different from more isolated historical conflicts.He identifies several layers of uncertainty shaping market behavior: renewed inflation risk from disrupted oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz, the economic interdependence of surrounding countries, questions about whether other major powers could alter their posture in response, the duration of the conflict, the stability of political transition, and the fiscal capacity of the United States to sustain prolonged engagement given elevated debt and deficits.

  9. 10

    How Markets Absorb Geopolitical Shock

    Geopolitical events test how quickly and efficiently markets incorporate risk. When news of military action in Iran broke outside traditional trading hours, investors responded immediately in alternative venues.This episode examines three economic linkages. First, the role of gold as a safe-haven asset and how 24/7 trading in tokenized gold provides real-time price discovery when conventional markets are closed. Second, the strategic importance of industrial capacity, including concentrated global production of materials such as aluminum that underpin both civilian and defense manufacturing. Supply constraints are not only a logistical concern; they are an economic variable.Third, the conversation turns to artificial intelligence as a general-purpose technology with dual-use implications. While widely discussed for its productivity benefits, AI also affects the economics of national security, capital allocation, and technological competition. How should markets think about a technology that simultaneously drives efficiency and reshapes strike capabilities?The episode frames recent developments in Iran through the lens of risk, incentives, and long-term economic resilience.

  10. 9

    Tariffs as National Risk Management

    Tariffs are typically recognized as a tax. But that framing assumes the only objective is efficiency.Since China’s entry into the World Trade Organization in 2001, the balance of global manufacturing power has shifted dramatically. Where the United States once dominated, it now depends on foreign supply in strategically important sectors. In an era of supply chain fragility and strategic uncertainty, industrial capacity is not just an economic variable – it is leverage.The rollout of broad tariffs in 2025 drew widespread criticism. The more consequential question is whether a targeted industrial strategy can reduce strategic vulnerability without imposing unnecessary economic cost, and how much exposure a nation can afford in the name of free trade.

  11. 8

    Why Bitcoin Is Not the New Gold

    Bitcoin is often described as “digital gold.” Both are presented as inflation hedges with supply constraints beyond the control of any single government. But do they serve the same economic function?  In this episode, Duke finance professor Campbell Harvey argues that Bitcoin’s extreme volatility and structural risks undermine its claim to safe-haven status. He examines the deeper differences between Bitcoin and gold, including valuation uncertainty, network vulnerability, and the importance of tangible use and long-term credibility in establishing a store of value.If speculation is not the enduring promise of crypto, what is? Harvey turns to the tokenization of real-world assets and the potential for blockchain technology to increase financial efficiency and support economic growth.Explore Professor Harvey’s referenced paper here: Gold and Bitcoin

  12. 7

    What the New Fed Chair Signals About Monetary Policy

    What does the nomination of a new Federal Reserve chair signal about the future direction of U.S. monetary policy?Professor Harvey uses the announcement as a lens to examine a deeper question inside central banking. He explains how prediction markets anticipated the decision, then draws a clear distinction between crisis intervention and ongoing economic fine-tuning. While aggressive Fed action can be appropriate in moments of stress, Cam argues that prolonged zero interest rates and large-scale quantitative easing outside crisis periods have created serious unintended consequences.The conversation breaks down those consequences in concrete terms, including higher government debt, the survival of unproductive firms, reduced labor mobility, distorted investment decisions, and slower long-term growth. It also raises a governance question: when monetary policy begins shaping outcomes traditionally decided by elected officials, where should the line be drawn? 

  13. 6

    Gold's Wild Week: Why Prices Surged then Fell 11%

    Gold prices moved sharply in late January 2026, surging past $5,500 before dropping 11% in a day. The swing ranks among the largest single-day moves in decades.In the latest episode of Through the Noise, Prof Campbell Harvey explains the trading dynamics behind the reversal, showing why the episode reflects a rapid correction following an extreme run-up rather than a change in underlying fundamentals. The discussion traces how retail buying, institutional momentum strategies, leverage, and margin calls reinforced one another on the way up and again on the way down.Cam also addresses claims linking the drop to Federal Reserve leadership news, explaining why that story misses the timing and scale of the move.The analysis focuses on how trading dynamics, not new information, drove the reversal.

  14. 5

    Gold’s Strength Reflects a Changing World

    Why have gold prices hit an all-time high, and what’s driving demand for gold now?In this episode of Cam Harvey: Through the Noise, Duke Fuqua finance professor Campbell Harvey explains the forces behind the recent surge in gold prices. Cam breaks down why gold supply is uniquely constrained, how its decentralized global production supports its role as a safe haven asset, and why gold has preserved purchasing power over thousands of years despite periods of significant volatility.The discussion then turns to demand. Cam examines how the weaponization of the U.S. dollar, growing geopolitical risk, and rising concerns about U.S. debt and fiscal sustainability are leading central banks and governments to reduce reliance on dollar-based assets. As countries look to diversify reserves, gold has increasingly moved to the top of the list.

  15. 4

    Understanding the Impact of Interest Rates

    In this episode of Cam Harvey: Through the Noise, Duke Fuqua finance professor Campbell Harvey joins Assistant Dean Robert Olinger to clarify how interest rates are determined, and why long-term rates matter far more for the economy than short-term moves by the Federal Reserve.Cam argues that today’s rate environment is shaped less by Fed policy and more by deep structural forces. From rising U.S. government debt and shifting global capital flows to inflation expectations and AI-driven investment, these pressures are pushing long-term rates higher and limiting how much economic impact policy rate cuts can deliver. 

  16. 3

    Federal Reserve Independence and the Evolution of Monetary Policy

    How independent should the Federal Reserve be as its role in the economy continues to expand?In the latest episode of Through the Noise, Duke Fuqua professor Cam Harvey examines how modern monetary policy has evolved and what that means for central bank independence, credibility, and long-term economic growth.

  17. 2

    Is Today’s AI Boom Another Tech Bubble? Lessons from 1999

    Are markets experiencing another tech bubble, or is this time fundamentally different?In the first episode of Through the Noise, Cam Harvey, Professor of Finance at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business, discusses today’s market environment through the lens of the late-1990s tech boom. Joined by Robert Olinger, Assistant Dean at Fuqua, Harvey draws on his firsthand experience from 1999 to assess whether current concerns about overvaluation and AI-driven enthusiasm are justified.The conversation examines five key differences between the dot-com era and now, including the nature of artificial intelligence as a productivity-enhancing technology, its broad impact across industries, stronger corporate fundamentals, and the role of institutional memory following past market cycles. Harvey explains why, while market corrections are always possible, comparisons to the 2000 collapse often overlook critical structural differences in today’s economy.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Fuqua economist Campbell Harvey gives his insights on pressing topics within the worlds of economics and finance.

HOSTED BY

Duke University's Fuqua School of Business

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