I'm a former advisor to President Trump, during one of the greatest economic booms in history... | | | | And I've been asked to share my expertise with officials at the highest levels of our government and economic communities... | Alongside former Congressmen, high-ranking military officers, Ivy League PhDs, even a chief executive from NASA... | Today, I'm issuing a special warning to all Americans... | I recently visited Mar-a-Lago to record a new presentation... | To discuss something I believe every American has the right to know... | A federal land opportunity that allows regular Americans to collect legally mandated payouts, set to benefit from a new Executive Order signed by the President. | I also reveal the biggest threat facing America and investors today... | If you've got money in the market right now, I urge you to watch my new presentation and prepare yourself for this urgent situation.
| Presented by WIDE MOAT RESEARCH |
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| | Good Sunday morning. | While the markets are closed today, the real economy never truly stops. It's the perfect time to step back from the daily noise and look at the bigger picture. | Land has always played a steadier role in America's economic life than markets or money. | It doesn't react to quarterly earnings, and it doesn't evaporate in a selloff. Federal land—more than 500 million acres—has been a reliable source of revenue for decades through leases, royalties, and long-running extraction rights. | What's changed in late 2025 is not the land itself, but the rules around it. Federal agencies have quietly updated classifications, royalty formulas, and lease schedules. As these adjustments filter through state budgets, tribal communities, and county services, they reshape the national flow of capital long before most people notice. | The result is a renewed focus on land as an economic instrument, not just a physical resource. | | | | Land as a Financial Instrument, Not Just Geography | Federal land generates revenue through three main streams: upfront lease bids, annual rents on idle parcels, and royalties on whatever is extracted.
In 2025, these mechanisms produced $14.61 billion in disbursements to states, tribes, and federal programs—one of the highest totals in four decades, despite an 11% decline tied to commodity prices. | The formulas behind these distributions are mechanical. States typically receive about half of the royalties from production within their borders; the rest flows to the Treasury or conservation funds. It's an old system, but one that still shapes local economies. | The scale is striking. | New Mexico received $2.76 billion, nearly 70% of all state disbursements. Wyoming received $544.87 million, though declines in coal revenue have begun to compress budgets.
| | | Two recent developments illustrate how federal adjustments ripple outward: | — In December 2025, the first Gulf of Mexico offshore lease sale since 2023 generated $300 million in bids. — A new coal royalty rate, reduced from 12.5% to as low as 7% through 2034, is projected to cost Wyoming $50 million annually. | Quiet regulatory changes, loud financial consequences. | The Rise of Mandated Payouts and Revenue Sharing | Land revenues move through a web of statutory payout systems. States receive shares of onshore royalties, offshore revenues, and compensation through the federal PILT program—payments designed to offset lost property taxes in areas dominated by federal land. | PILT disbursed $579 million to more than 1,900 local governments in 2023. For many rural counties, it's a stabilizing force. | Then came the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed in July 2025. It reduced onshore oil and gas royalties to 12.5% for new leases and lowered offshore rates to the same level—the lowest in nearly twenty years. The CBO projects a $6 billion revenue decline over ten years at the federal level, with similar proportional reductions for states. | Along the Gulf Coast, fiscal year 2025 payouts included $51.9 million to Mississippi alone. Individual counties received between $1.9 million and $4.3 million based on their statutory formulas. | Distribution formulas are quiet levers. When royalty rates decline, payouts follow—with no headlines required. | | |
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| When Executive Authority Redirects Capital | Beyond legislation, executive directives can change how federal land is classified, leased, or conserved. | In September 2025, Interior proposed rescinding the Public Lands Rule—arguing it restricted access to "hundreds of thousands of acres." The reversal shifts federal land back toward a multiple-use framework that prioritizes extraction, grazing, and economic activity. | A separate development arrived in November 2025: a new five-year offshore leasing program proposing expanded tracts near California and Florida. These adjustments don't require Congress. But they determine which lands become eligible for leasing, who bids, and how much capital ultimately flows to states and local jurisdictions. | This is where executive authority intersects with economics—not through speeches, but through classification, acreage, and lease timing. | |
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|  | | | Presented by WIDE MOAT RESEARCH | |
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| What These Shifts Mean for Households | Federal land revenue isn't abstract. It funds schools, hospitals, infrastructure, and public safety in regions where federal holdings dominate the tax base. | When Wyoming loses $50 million a year from lowered coal royalties, that shortfall becomes a direct strain on county services. In New Mexico, analysts estimate that reduced royalty rates may cost the state $1.7 billion over the next decade—money that otherwise supports education and healthcare. | Even PILT payments move in response to inflation. The 2025 rate rose to $3.15 per acre, up from $2.94 in 2022, reflecting a 7.17% inflation adjustment and offering counties a modest buffer. | For households, these mechanisms influence the quality of services, the timing of local budgets, and the economic stability of entire regions—without ever appearing in national news. |
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| |  | The world's largest real estate empire is about to be divided. And thanks to President Trump, every American citizen can stake their claim... |
| | The Slow Return of a Foundational Asset | Land has always been among America's most durable economic building blocks. What's changing now is not its function, but its visibility. | As mandates evolve and payout formulas shift, land quietly reenters the national wealth conversation—shaping revenues, redistributing capital, and influencing investment decisions at the community level. | Understanding these mechanics provides clarity in a moment when attention shifts quickly elsewhere. Land endures. And the systems tied to it continue to matter. |
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| Which part of today's briefing did you find most useful? | |
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| | Written by Deniss Slinkins Global Financial Journal |
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