Individual Economists

Friday: October Retail Sales and PPI will NOT be released

Calculated Risk -

The statistical agencies will post new schedules soon. It is possible that the October employment and CPI reports will never be released since the data wasn't gathered.

From the Census Bureau:
The U.S. Census Bureau is updating its economic indicator release calendar in coordination with other agencies and the Office of Management and Budget to address the impacts of the recent lapse in federal funding. We will provide the updated release schedule as soon as it becomes available.
Mortgage Rates Note: Mortgage rates are from MortgageNewsDaily.com and are for top tier scenarios.

Friday (red will NOT be released);
• At 8:30 AM ET, Retail sales for October.

• Also at 8:30 AM, The Producer Price Index for October from the BLS.

Points or Cash Back?

The Big Picture -

 

 

Fees are going higher.

There has been a lot of coverage about this, especially with high-end credit cards like the Chase Sapphire Reserve and the Amex Platinum. Some of this is inflation, some business model adjustments, some just platform decay (aka enshittification).

Nobody really needs a points card, but if you use it well, it might be worth the cost.

I discussed a contrarian reason why pre-pandemic:

“Spending points provide any consumer with an opportunity to act as irrationally or even irresponsibly as they like, without the fear of negative consequences. (Spending recklessly on credit cards to accumulate points is idiotic; that is not what we are discussing here). I also am deeply aware of the advantages of purchasing experiences as opposed to the usual materialistic consumer stuff.

I see it not as a loss of 1%, an amount I do not imagine I was likely to have noticed either way. Instead, it is an unexpected windfall, providing an excuse to do some things and make some purchases you might not have done on your own, but wanted to.”

My choice is irrational. I intellectually understand that all cash is fungible, and that dollars back are both more flexible and more efficient than any points plan. I freely admit this. But it creates the opportunity to purchase guilt-free things I would not otherwise buy with my own money.

In 2018, I mentioned a ~$1000 Weber Grill (ironically, it reveals the impact of inflation that in 2018, that amount seemed silly for a grill). A $300 Dyson whisper fan for my desk that I would never have spent the money on; prior to that, an unusually generous points program at Restoration Hardware led to a new bedroom set.

Since then, I have purchased not one but two ridiculous Breville Espresso Machines with points: The Breville Barista Touch Impress Espresso Machine Brass Collection ($1700 at Williams Sonoma) and a Breville Oracle Touch Espresso Machine BES990BSS, Brushed Stainless Steel ($2500 at Amazon). Either of these machines purchased with real money would have ended in divorce, something you definitely cannot pay for with points.

 

The Math remains the same: Cash Back is rational, but Points can be used as an  irrational behavioral hack…

 

 

 

Previously:
Adventures in Behavioral Finance, Points Edition (May 17, 2018)

 

See also:
How much in cash back/points makes a credit card worthwhile for you?  (reddit)

The Problem With Rewards Credit Cards (The Atlantic, July 24, 2025)

Money anxiety is basically a part-time job now (Axios, Jul 30, 2025)

 

The post Points or Cash Back? appeared first on The Big Picture.

"Chicagoans Do Not Want Us To Bankroll The Regime": Chicago Will No Longer Buy Treasury Bonds

Zero Hedge -

"Chicagoans Do Not Want Us To Bankroll The Regime": Chicago Will No Longer Buy Treasury Bonds

Authored by Jonathan Turley,

“It’s a bold statement, isn’t it?”

Those words of Chicago City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin hardly capture the moment.

Yesterday, Conyears-Ervin declared that her office would no longer invest in U.S. Treasury bonds to protest what she called the “authoritarian regime” of President Donald Trump. It is more bonkers than bold. It makes about as much sense as President Trump saying that he will not eat deep-dish pizza to protest Chicago.

My hometown of Chicago is facing an economic meltdown due to towering debt and massive spending. Mayor Ben Johnson and the unions have pushed self-destructive tax schemes and borrowing plans that would only accelerate the flight from the city and the collapse of the city’s finances.

Now, the person in charge of investing that money is declaring that politics rather than economics will guide investments.

It is the ultimate virtue signaling at the cost of others. She is given a fiduciary duty to properly maintain and protect the investments of the city, which is currently facing a rising debt crisis. She is saying that the city will not invest in what Ald. Bill Conway (34th), a former investment banker, correctly described as “by far the most liquid and secure debt instrument in the history of the world.”

Chicago has held almost a quarter of a billion dollars in Treasury bonds in the last three years due to its healthy return for citizens. To forego such investments is Kamikaze economics, destroying your own portfolio and investors as a demonstration of true faith.

The position hurts only Chicagoans.  However, the loss to the citizens could still provide gains to Conyears-Ervin, who is running to replace radical Chicago congressman, Danny Davis. Her announcement is meant to tap into the rage as she declared: “Chicagoans do not want us to bankroll the regime — the authoritarian regime — of Donald Trump where he has waged a war on our city. It’s a bold statement, isn’t it? And we need it to be.”

So, a city collapsing under debt will forego investing in one of the most secure debt instruments in the world.

Let’s recap. Mayor Johnson wants to float massive bonds to avoid cutting the budget while taxing large businesses for every new person that they employ. At the same time, the city will not invest in bonds that guarantee the most secure investment of money currently in city coffers.

This is coming in a week when many are questioning the logic of the government shutdown. After losing billions and putting many families and travelers into duress, the Democrats agreed to basically the identical clean CR that was offered over a month earlier. Yet, Conyears-Ervin makes that effort seem brilliant in comparison.

It is the same logic as burning money as a way to prevent its theft.

It is not clear where the money will go.

Antifa does not currently offer an investment fund option that guarantees a total political return with no capital gains. On the other hand, over $200 billion is practically hard to stuff in the mattress of Conyears-Ervin.

This could work out in the end, resulting in practically no loss due to the new investment policies. As Johnson virtually chases businesses out of the city, there will be less money to invest. Problem solved.

*  *  * Please consider supporting ZeroHedge

ZeroHedge Hat

ZeroHedge Multitool

Weird shirt

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/13/2025 - 12:20

"Chicagoans Do Not Want Us To Bankroll The Regime": Chicago Will No Longer Buy Treasury Bonds

Zero Hedge -

"Chicagoans Do Not Want Us To Bankroll The Regime": Chicago Will No Longer Buy Treasury Bonds

Authored by Jonathan Turley,

“It’s a bold statement, isn’t it?”

Those words of Chicago City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin hardly capture the moment.

Yesterday, Conyears-Ervin declared that her office would no longer invest in U.S. Treasury bonds to protest what she called the “authoritarian regime” of President Donald Trump. It is more bonkers than bold. It makes about as much sense as President Trump saying that he will not eat deep-dish pizza to protest Chicago.

My hometown of Chicago is facing an economic meltdown due to towering debt and massive spending. Mayor Ben Johnson and the unions have pushed self-destructive tax schemes and borrowing plans that would only accelerate the flight from the city and the collapse of the city’s finances.

Now, the person in charge of investing that money is declaring that politics rather than economics will guide investments.

It is the ultimate virtue signaling at the cost of others. She is given a fiduciary duty to properly maintain and protect the investments of the city, which is currently facing a rising debt crisis. She is saying that the city will not invest in what Ald. Bill Conway (34th), a former investment banker, correctly described as “by far the most liquid and secure debt instrument in the history of the world.”

Chicago has held almost a quarter of a billion dollars in Treasury bonds in the last three years due to its healthy return for citizens. To forego such investments is Kamikaze economics, destroying your own portfolio and investors as a demonstration of true faith.

The position hurts only Chicagoans.  However, the loss to the citizens could still provide gains to Conyears-Ervin, who is running to replace radical Chicago congressman, Danny Davis. Her announcement is meant to tap into the rage as she declared: “Chicagoans do not want us to bankroll the regime — the authoritarian regime — of Donald Trump where he has waged a war on our city. It’s a bold statement, isn’t it? And we need it to be.”

So, a city collapsing under debt will forego investing in one of the most secure debt instruments in the world.

Let’s recap. Mayor Johnson wants to float massive bonds to avoid cutting the budget while taxing large businesses for every new person that they employ. At the same time, the city will not invest in bonds that guarantee the most secure investment of money currently in city coffers.

This is coming in a week when many are questioning the logic of the government shutdown. After losing billions and putting many families and travelers into duress, the Democrats agreed to basically the identical clean CR that was offered over a month earlier. Yet, Conyears-Ervin makes that effort seem brilliant in comparison.

It is the same logic as burning money as a way to prevent its theft.

It is not clear where the money will go.

Antifa does not currently offer an investment fund option that guarantees a total political return with no capital gains. On the other hand, over $200 billion is practically hard to stuff in the mattress of Conyears-Ervin.

This could work out in the end, resulting in practically no loss due to the new investment policies. As Johnson virtually chases businesses out of the city, there will be less money to invest. Problem solved.

*  *  * Please consider supporting ZeroHedge

ZeroHedge Hat

ZeroHedge Multitool

Weird shirt

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/13/2025 - 12:20

"Chicagoans Do Not Want Us To Bankroll The Regime": Chicago Will No Longer Buy Treasury Bonds

Zero Hedge -

"Chicagoans Do Not Want Us To Bankroll The Regime": Chicago Will No Longer Buy Treasury Bonds

Authored by Jonathan Turley,

“It’s a bold statement, isn’t it?”

Those words of Chicago City Treasurer Melissa Conyears-Ervin hardly capture the moment.

Yesterday, Conyears-Ervin declared that her office would no longer invest in U.S. Treasury bonds to protest what she called the “authoritarian regime” of President Donald Trump. It is more bonkers than bold. It makes about as much sense as President Trump saying that he will not eat deep-dish pizza to protest Chicago.

My hometown of Chicago is facing an economic meltdown due to towering debt and massive spending. Mayor Ben Johnson and the unions have pushed self-destructive tax schemes and borrowing plans that would only accelerate the flight from the city and the collapse of the city’s finances.

Now, the person in charge of investing that money is declaring that politics rather than economics will guide investments.

It is the ultimate virtue signaling at the cost of others. She is given a fiduciary duty to properly maintain and protect the investments of the city, which is currently facing a rising debt crisis. She is saying that the city will not invest in what Ald. Bill Conway (34th), a former investment banker, correctly described as “by far the most liquid and secure debt instrument in the history of the world.”

Chicago has held almost a quarter of a billion dollars in Treasury bonds in the last three years due to its healthy return for citizens. To forego such investments is Kamikaze economics, destroying your own portfolio and investors as a demonstration of true faith.

The position hurts only Chicagoans.  However, the loss to the citizens could still provide gains to Conyears-Ervin, who is running to replace radical Chicago congressman, Danny Davis. Her announcement is meant to tap into the rage as she declared: “Chicagoans do not want us to bankroll the regime — the authoritarian regime — of Donald Trump where he has waged a war on our city. It’s a bold statement, isn’t it? And we need it to be.”

So, a city collapsing under debt will forego investing in one of the most secure debt instruments in the world.

Let’s recap. Mayor Johnson wants to float massive bonds to avoid cutting the budget while taxing large businesses for every new person that they employ. At the same time, the city will not invest in bonds that guarantee the most secure investment of money currently in city coffers.

This is coming in a week when many are questioning the logic of the government shutdown. After losing billions and putting many families and travelers into duress, the Democrats agreed to basically the identical clean CR that was offered over a month earlier. Yet, Conyears-Ervin makes that effort seem brilliant in comparison.

It is the same logic as burning money as a way to prevent its theft.

It is not clear where the money will go.

Antifa does not currently offer an investment fund option that guarantees a total political return with no capital gains. On the other hand, over $200 billion is practically hard to stuff in the mattress of Conyears-Ervin.

This could work out in the end, resulting in practically no loss due to the new investment policies. As Johnson virtually chases businesses out of the city, there will be less money to invest. Problem solved.

*  *  * Please consider supporting ZeroHedge

ZeroHedge Hat

ZeroHedge Multitool

Weird shirt

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/13/2025 - 12:20

WTI Holds Gains Despite Big Crude Build, New Record US Crude Production

Zero Hedge -

WTI Holds Gains Despite Big Crude Build, New Record US Crude Production

Oil prices are bouncing modestly off of yesterday's ugly drop driven by OPEC+'s outlook for a sizable surplus (glut) ahead. The IEA also flagged a deteriorating outlook for a sixth consecutive month, saying in a report on Thursday that supply will exceed demand by just over four million barrels a day next year.

“There’s a lot of oil supply that’s coming back from the OPEC+ countries,” Chevron Corp. Chief Executive Officer Mike Wirth told Bloomberg Television.

“There’s a period of time when it would appear we’re going to see more supply coming into the market than demand will be able to absorb.”

At the same time, Bloomberg reports that the Trump administration has moved to raise the pressure on Russia to end the war in Ukraine, including sanctions on Rosneft PJSC and Lukoil PJSC. An oil trading firm that’s a unit of Russian oil giant Lukoil is starting to terminate jobs with days to go until sanctions fully kick in.

“The latest round of sanctions appear significant and there’s clear risk to supply,” Toril Bosoni, head of the oil markets division at the International Energy Agency, said in a Bloomberg TV interview.

That, coupled with Ukraine attacks against Moscow’s energy infrastructure, has helped to support fuel prices and offer a support to oil markets otherwise weighed down by oversupply fears.

Overnight, API reported a modest crude build.

Quick reminder that this week’s data won’t include the effect of the US government shutdown on aviation and, therefore, jet fuel demand and inventories. That will come in next week’s data after airlines began curtailing flights on Nov. 7. 

API

  • Crude +1.3mm

  • Cushing -43k

  • Gasoline -1.4mm

  • Distillates +944k

DOE

  • Crude +6.413mm - biggest build since July

  • Cushing -346k

  • Gasoline -945k

  • Distillates -637k

Crude inventories surged higher for the second week in a row (biggest build since July), modestly offset by small drawdowns for products (down for six straight weeks)...

Source: Bloomberg

The last two weeks have lifted US crude stocks to their highest in five months, but we note on a seasonal basis, it continues to lag recent years...

Source: Bloomberg

US Crude production surged by over 200k b/d last week to a new record high despite the ongoing slide in the rig count...

Source: Bloomberg

WTI is holding on top its modest gains off yesterday's plunge lows for now...

Source: Bloomberg

The bearish outlook for next year has triggered a key indicator - WTI’s prompt spread - to sink into contango...

Source: Bloomberg

That pricing pattern, with the nearest contracts trading at discounts to further-out ones, signals ample short-term supplies, though it also recovered Thursday.

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/13/2025 - 12:10

WTI Holds Gains Despite Big Crude Build, New Record US Crude Production

Zero Hedge -

WTI Holds Gains Despite Big Crude Build, New Record US Crude Production

Oil prices are bouncing modestly off of yesterday's ugly drop driven by OPEC+'s outlook for a sizable surplus (glut) ahead. The IEA also flagged a deteriorating outlook for a sixth consecutive month, saying in a report on Thursday that supply will exceed demand by just over four million barrels a day next year.

“There’s a lot of oil supply that’s coming back from the OPEC+ countries,” Chevron Corp. Chief Executive Officer Mike Wirth told Bloomberg Television.

“There’s a period of time when it would appear we’re going to see more supply coming into the market than demand will be able to absorb.”

At the same time, Bloomberg reports that the Trump administration has moved to raise the pressure on Russia to end the war in Ukraine, including sanctions on Rosneft PJSC and Lukoil PJSC. An oil trading firm that’s a unit of Russian oil giant Lukoil is starting to terminate jobs with days to go until sanctions fully kick in.

“The latest round of sanctions appear significant and there’s clear risk to supply,” Toril Bosoni, head of the oil markets division at the International Energy Agency, said in a Bloomberg TV interview.

That, coupled with Ukraine attacks against Moscow’s energy infrastructure, has helped to support fuel prices and offer a support to oil markets otherwise weighed down by oversupply fears.

Overnight, API reported a modest crude build.

Quick reminder that this week’s data won’t include the effect of the US government shutdown on aviation and, therefore, jet fuel demand and inventories. That will come in next week’s data after airlines began curtailing flights on Nov. 7. 

API

  • Crude +1.3mm

  • Cushing -43k

  • Gasoline -1.4mm

  • Distillates +944k

DOE

  • Crude +6.413mm - biggest build since July

  • Cushing -346k

  • Gasoline -945k

  • Distillates -637k

Crude inventories surged higher for the second week in a row (biggest build since July), modestly offset by small drawdowns for products (down for six straight weeks)...

Source: Bloomberg

The last two weeks have lifted US crude stocks to their highest in five months, but we note on a seasonal basis, it continues to lag recent years...

Source: Bloomberg

US Crude production surged by over 200k b/d last week to a new record high despite the ongoing slide in the rig count...

Source: Bloomberg

WTI is holding on top its modest gains off yesterday's plunge lows for now...

Source: Bloomberg

The bearish outlook for next year has triggered a key indicator - WTI’s prompt spread - to sink into contango...

Source: Bloomberg

That pricing pattern, with the nearest contracts trading at discounts to further-out ones, signals ample short-term supplies, though it also recovered Thursday.

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/13/2025 - 12:10

WTI Holds Gains Despite Big Crude Build, New Record US Crude Production

Zero Hedge -

WTI Holds Gains Despite Big Crude Build, New Record US Crude Production

Oil prices are bouncing modestly off of yesterday's ugly drop driven by OPEC+'s outlook for a sizable surplus (glut) ahead. The IEA also flagged a deteriorating outlook for a sixth consecutive month, saying in a report on Thursday that supply will exceed demand by just over four million barrels a day next year.

“There’s a lot of oil supply that’s coming back from the OPEC+ countries,” Chevron Corp. Chief Executive Officer Mike Wirth told Bloomberg Television.

“There’s a period of time when it would appear we’re going to see more supply coming into the market than demand will be able to absorb.”

At the same time, Bloomberg reports that the Trump administration has moved to raise the pressure on Russia to end the war in Ukraine, including sanctions on Rosneft PJSC and Lukoil PJSC. An oil trading firm that’s a unit of Russian oil giant Lukoil is starting to terminate jobs with days to go until sanctions fully kick in.

“The latest round of sanctions appear significant and there’s clear risk to supply,” Toril Bosoni, head of the oil markets division at the International Energy Agency, said in a Bloomberg TV interview.

That, coupled with Ukraine attacks against Moscow’s energy infrastructure, has helped to support fuel prices and offer a support to oil markets otherwise weighed down by oversupply fears.

Overnight, API reported a modest crude build.

Quick reminder that this week’s data won’t include the effect of the US government shutdown on aviation and, therefore, jet fuel demand and inventories. That will come in next week’s data after airlines began curtailing flights on Nov. 7. 

API

  • Crude +1.3mm

  • Cushing -43k

  • Gasoline -1.4mm

  • Distillates +944k

DOE

  • Crude +6.413mm - biggest build since July

  • Cushing -346k

  • Gasoline -945k

  • Distillates -637k

Crude inventories surged higher for the second week in a row (biggest build since July), modestly offset by small drawdowns for products (down for six straight weeks)...

Source: Bloomberg

The last two weeks have lifted US crude stocks to their highest in five months, but we note on a seasonal basis, it continues to lag recent years...

Source: Bloomberg

US Crude production surged by over 200k b/d last week to a new record high despite the ongoing slide in the rig count...

Source: Bloomberg

WTI is holding on top its modest gains off yesterday's plunge lows for now...

Source: Bloomberg

The bearish outlook for next year has triggered a key indicator - WTI’s prompt spread - to sink into contango...

Source: Bloomberg

That pricing pattern, with the nearest contracts trading at discounts to further-out ones, signals ample short-term supplies, though it also recovered Thursday.

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/13/2025 - 12:10

Verizon Set To Axe 15,000 Jobs Right Before Thanksgiving Holiday

Zero Hedge -

Verizon Set To Axe 15,000 Jobs Right Before Thanksgiving Holiday

The optics look awful for Verizon Communications if the Wall Street Journal's report is accurate: the carrier is preparing for its largest job cuts ever just days before millions of Americans hit the road for Thanksgiving. 

WSJ says Verizon is planning to cut 15,000 jobs. If that figure is correct, Bloomberg's latest data suggests this would be about 15% of its roughly 100,000-person workforce. WSJ notes this would be the largest workforce reduction on record for the carrier

Most of the job reductions will come from direct layoffs, and the carrier will shift 200 corporate stores into franchise operations, removing those employees from Verizon's payroll

For three consecutive quarters, Verizon has been losing postpaid phone subscribers, putting pressure on leadership to stop the hemorrhaging.  

Earlier, Verizon chairman Mark Bertolini told CNBC's Becky Quick on "Squawk Box" that the company needs to "do something different" as it undergoes its leadership change.

Bertolini said the carrier's new CEO, ex-PayPal boss Dan Schulman, is working on a turnaround plan after share losses under former CEO Hans Vestberg. 

"Verizon has gone from number one in market cap, bond ratings and market share to number three. And the network isn't as differentiated as it used to be, in large part because everybody's been spending money to put these 5G networks in place," Bertolini said. "So losing 30% share over the last eight years is an issue, and we have to do something different."

Bertolini added that Schulman will reveal his plan to turn the company around "sooner rather than later."

Schulman recently pledged to "aggressively transform our culture, our cost structure, and the financial profile of Verizon in order to put our customers first, compete effectively, and deliver sustainable returns for our shareholders."

Shares of Verizon in New York are up only 4% year to date, after being halved since peaking around $60 a share in late 2021.

T-Mobile appears to be the winner in the 'carrier wars'... 

Rest assured, AI will drive deeper workforce cuts in the years ahead. Everyone is starting to figure out what we've known for years (read here)

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/13/2025 - 12:00

Verizon Set To Axe 15,000 Jobs Right Before Thanksgiving Holiday

Zero Hedge -

Verizon Set To Axe 15,000 Jobs Right Before Thanksgiving Holiday

The optics look awful for Verizon Communications if the Wall Street Journal's report is accurate: the carrier is preparing for its largest job cuts ever just days before millions of Americans hit the road for Thanksgiving. 

WSJ says Verizon is planning to cut 15,000 jobs. If that figure is correct, Bloomberg's latest data suggests this would be about 15% of its roughly 100,000-person workforce. WSJ notes this would be the largest workforce reduction on record for the carrier

Most of the job reductions will come from direct layoffs, and the carrier will shift 200 corporate stores into franchise operations, removing those employees from Verizon's payroll

For three consecutive quarters, Verizon has been losing postpaid phone subscribers, putting pressure on leadership to stop the hemorrhaging.  

Earlier, Verizon chairman Mark Bertolini told CNBC's Becky Quick on "Squawk Box" that the company needs to "do something different" as it undergoes its leadership change.

Bertolini said the carrier's new CEO, ex-PayPal boss Dan Schulman, is working on a turnaround plan after share losses under former CEO Hans Vestberg. 

"Verizon has gone from number one in market cap, bond ratings and market share to number three. And the network isn't as differentiated as it used to be, in large part because everybody's been spending money to put these 5G networks in place," Bertolini said. "So losing 30% share over the last eight years is an issue, and we have to do something different."

Bertolini added that Schulman will reveal his plan to turn the company around "sooner rather than later."

Schulman recently pledged to "aggressively transform our culture, our cost structure, and the financial profile of Verizon in order to put our customers first, compete effectively, and deliver sustainable returns for our shareholders."

Shares of Verizon in New York are up only 4% year to date, after being halved since peaking around $60 a share in late 2021.

T-Mobile appears to be the winner in the 'carrier wars'... 

Rest assured, AI will drive deeper workforce cuts in the years ahead. Everyone is starting to figure out what we've known for years (read here)

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/13/2025 - 12:00

Verizon Set To Axe 15,000 Jobs Right Before Thanksgiving Holiday

Zero Hedge -

Verizon Set To Axe 15,000 Jobs Right Before Thanksgiving Holiday

The optics look awful for Verizon Communications if the Wall Street Journal's report is accurate: the carrier is preparing for its largest job cuts ever just days before millions of Americans hit the road for Thanksgiving. 

WSJ says Verizon is planning to cut 15,000 jobs. If that figure is correct, Bloomberg's latest data suggests this would be about 15% of its roughly 100,000-person workforce. WSJ notes this would be the largest workforce reduction on record for the carrier

Most of the job reductions will come from direct layoffs, and the carrier will shift 200 corporate stores into franchise operations, removing those employees from Verizon's payroll

For three consecutive quarters, Verizon has been losing postpaid phone subscribers, putting pressure on leadership to stop the hemorrhaging.  

Earlier, Verizon chairman Mark Bertolini told CNBC's Becky Quick on "Squawk Box" that the company needs to "do something different" as it undergoes its leadership change.

Bertolini said the carrier's new CEO, ex-PayPal boss Dan Schulman, is working on a turnaround plan after share losses under former CEO Hans Vestberg. 

"Verizon has gone from number one in market cap, bond ratings and market share to number three. And the network isn't as differentiated as it used to be, in large part because everybody's been spending money to put these 5G networks in place," Bertolini said. "So losing 30% share over the last eight years is an issue, and we have to do something different."

Bertolini added that Schulman will reveal his plan to turn the company around "sooner rather than later."

Schulman recently pledged to "aggressively transform our culture, our cost structure, and the financial profile of Verizon in order to put our customers first, compete effectively, and deliver sustainable returns for our shareholders."

Shares of Verizon in New York are up only 4% year to date, after being halved since peaking around $60 a share in late 2021.

T-Mobile appears to be the winner in the 'carrier wars'... 

Rest assured, AI will drive deeper workforce cuts in the years ahead. Everyone is starting to figure out what we've known for years (read here)

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/13/2025 - 12:00

Ukraine Ruled By "Wartime Mafia Network" With "Countless Ties" To Zelensky: Viktor Orban

Zero Hedge -

Ukraine Ruled By "Wartime Mafia Network" With "Countless Ties" To Zelensky: Viktor Orban

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is having a "told you so" moment as Ukraine's massive corruption scandal which has already taken down the country's Justice Minister and several other high officials has come to light. The crisis has entered Ukraine's presidential office, with at least one close Zelensky business associate, Tymur Mindich, having fled the country already, just as the major embezzlement and kickbacks scandal involving the state-owned nuclear power company was made public.

Orban commented on X in a scathing denunciation of Zelensky's rule that Ukraine has been taken over by a "wartime mafia network" and that "the golden illusion" of an underdog nation heroically resisting the Russians is "falling apart". The crisis centers ironically on Ukraine's state-run energy sector at a moment common Ukrainians are suffering amid rolling blackouts and relentless Russian aerial attacks on the power grid.

AFP/Getty Images

"A wartime mafia network with countless ties to President Volodymyr Zelensky has been exposed," stated the Hungarian leader. "The energy minister has already resigned, and the main suspect has fled the country."

He then unleashed on those Eurocrats who've long wagged their finger at Hungary for not stepping up to do more in funding Ukraine. This has simultaneously included years of immense pressure from Western Europe for Hungary to sever its energy dependency on Russian imports, which Orban has at various times warned would sink the economy if done drastically.

Orban in the Thursday X statement blasted this "Madness":

"This is the chaos into which the Brusselian elite want to pour European taxpayers’ money, where whatever isn’t shot off on the front lines ends up in the pockets of the war mafia. Madness."

"Thank you, but we want no part of this," he continued sarcastically. "We will not send the Hungarian people’s money to Ukraine. It can be put to far better use at home: this week alone we doubled foster parents’ allowances and approved the 14th month’s pension."

And again, alluding to the ongoing scandal, "Anyhow, after all this, we certainly won't give in to the Ukrainian president’s financial demands and blackmail. It's high time Brussels finally understood where their money is really going," Orban wrote.

Hungary has clashed with Kiev time and again over the years, with at times other European allies stepping in to seek to mediate the delicate relationship. EU leadership has also constantly chastised Orban in particular for thwarting and sabotaging European unity when it comes to collective efforts to support Ukraine and punish Russia.

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/13/2025 - 11:50

Ukraine Ruled By "Wartime Mafia Network" With "Countless Ties" To Zelensky: Viktor Orban

Zero Hedge -

Ukraine Ruled By "Wartime Mafia Network" With "Countless Ties" To Zelensky: Viktor Orban

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is having a "told you so" moment as Ukraine's massive corruption scandal which has already taken down the country's Justice Minister and several other high officials has come to light. The crisis has entered Ukraine's presidential office, with at least one close Zelensky business associate, Tymur Mindich, having fled the country already, just as the major embezzlement and kickbacks scandal involving the state-owned nuclear power company was made public.

Orban commented on X in a scathing denunciation of Zelensky's rule that Ukraine has been taken over by a "wartime mafia network" and that "the golden illusion" of an underdog nation heroically resisting the Russians is "falling apart". The crisis centers ironically on Ukraine's state-run energy sector at a moment common Ukrainians are suffering amid rolling blackouts and relentless Russian aerial attacks on the power grid.

AFP/Getty Images

"A wartime mafia network with countless ties to President Volodymyr Zelensky has been exposed," stated the Hungarian leader. "The energy minister has already resigned, and the main suspect has fled the country."

He then unleashed on those Eurocrats who've long wagged their finger at Hungary for not stepping up to do more in funding Ukraine. This has simultaneously included years of immense pressure from Western Europe for Hungary to sever its energy dependency on Russian imports, which Orban has at various times warned would sink the economy if done drastically.

Orban in the Thursday X statement blasted this "Madness":

"This is the chaos into which the Brusselian elite want to pour European taxpayers’ money, where whatever isn’t shot off on the front lines ends up in the pockets of the war mafia. Madness."

"Thank you, but we want no part of this," he continued sarcastically. "We will not send the Hungarian people’s money to Ukraine. It can be put to far better use at home: this week alone we doubled foster parents’ allowances and approved the 14th month’s pension."

And again, alluding to the ongoing scandal, "Anyhow, after all this, we certainly won't give in to the Ukrainian president’s financial demands and blackmail. It's high time Brussels finally understood where their money is really going," Orban wrote.

Hungary has clashed with Kiev time and again over the years, with at times other European allies stepping in to seek to mediate the delicate relationship. EU leadership has also constantly chastised Orban in particular for thwarting and sabotaging European unity when it comes to collective efforts to support Ukraine and punish Russia.

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/13/2025 - 11:50

Ukraine Ruled By "Wartime Mafia Network" With "Countless Ties" To Zelensky: Viktor Orban

Zero Hedge -

Ukraine Ruled By "Wartime Mafia Network" With "Countless Ties" To Zelensky: Viktor Orban

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán is having a "told you so" moment as Ukraine's massive corruption scandal which has already taken down the country's Justice Minister and several other high officials has come to light. The crisis has entered Ukraine's presidential office, with at least one close Zelensky business associate, Tymur Mindich, having fled the country already, just as the major embezzlement and kickbacks scandal involving the state-owned nuclear power company was made public.

Orban commented on X in a scathing denunciation of Zelensky's rule that Ukraine has been taken over by a "wartime mafia network" and that "the golden illusion" of an underdog nation heroically resisting the Russians is "falling apart". The crisis centers ironically on Ukraine's state-run energy sector at a moment common Ukrainians are suffering amid rolling blackouts and relentless Russian aerial attacks on the power grid.

AFP/Getty Images

"A wartime mafia network with countless ties to President Volodymyr Zelensky has been exposed," stated the Hungarian leader. "The energy minister has already resigned, and the main suspect has fled the country."

He then unleashed on those Eurocrats who've long wagged their finger at Hungary for not stepping up to do more in funding Ukraine. This has simultaneously included years of immense pressure from Western Europe for Hungary to sever its energy dependency on Russian imports, which Orban has at various times warned would sink the economy if done drastically.

Orban in the Thursday X statement blasted this "Madness":

"This is the chaos into which the Brusselian elite want to pour European taxpayers’ money, where whatever isn’t shot off on the front lines ends up in the pockets of the war mafia. Madness."

"Thank you, but we want no part of this," he continued sarcastically. "We will not send the Hungarian people’s money to Ukraine. It can be put to far better use at home: this week alone we doubled foster parents’ allowances and approved the 14th month’s pension."

And again, alluding to the ongoing scandal, "Anyhow, after all this, we certainly won't give in to the Ukrainian president’s financial demands and blackmail. It's high time Brussels finally understood where their money is really going," Orban wrote.

Hungary has clashed with Kiev time and again over the years, with at times other European allies stepping in to seek to mediate the delicate relationship. EU leadership has also constantly chastised Orban in particular for thwarting and sabotaging European unity when it comes to collective efforts to support Ukraine and punish Russia.

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/13/2025 - 11:50

Michael 'Big Short' Burry Rage-Quits Market, Liquidates Hedge Fund

Zero Hedge -

Michael 'Big Short' Burry Rage-Quits Market, Liquidates Hedge Fund

We'll begin with the famous quote from economist John Maynard Keynes: "The market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent."

It's a reminder that even the smartest traders in the room, the ones who've built entire careers calling bubbles and shorting tops, can be steamrolled when markets detach from reality.

Case in point: "Big Short" investor Michael Burry, who periodically disappears into X hibernation, nuking his account every so often, only to reemerge months later with cryptic warnings like his latest: "Sometimes, we see bubbles."

Days after Burry's bubble post on X, his Scion Asset Management 13F revealed that roughly 80% of his put positions were concentrated in the high-flyers Palantir and Nvidia.

Source

Fast forward one week, and the unthinkable has happened, or perhaps thinkable, given his 2023 "Sell" call...

... Burry's Scion Asset Management terminated its SEC registration on Monday.

By Thursday night, Burry's X post clarified details about his recent bearish bet on Palantir, noting he bought 50,000 option contracts at $1.84 each, representing 100 shares per contract, for a total outlay of about $9.2 million, not the $912 million figure circulated online. The contracts give him the right to sell Palantir shares at $50 in 2027.

"That was done last month. On to much better things, Nov. 25," he wrote.

Burry sent a letter to investors late last month, noting: "With a heavy heart, I will liquidate the funds and return capital — but for a small audit/tax holdback — by year's end."

Almost admitting he is wrong: "My estimation of value in securities is not now, and has not been for some time, in sync with the markets."

The letter is circulating on X and has not yet been confirmed.

ZeroHedge commentary on Burry's 13Fs from last week:

All we know is that Burry appears to once again be swinging for the bubble fences, similar to what he did during the housing bubble, and is shorting the two names that are most synonymous with the current market mania — similar to what he did in 2008 when he was shorting housing using CDS.

We also know that since both names are sharply higher than where they were on Sept. 30 (the date of the 13F), Burry has already suffered substantial losses on his positions, assuming he hasn't already liquidated them (at a loss).

And while some will declare that Burry putting his money where his bubble-bursting mouth is a sign of the top, we have two words of caution: back in 2005, Burry was early by about two years, and even though he ultimately got the trade right, the carry on the CDS crushed him. Second, the last time Burry tried to top-tick the market was January 2023 when he blasted the one-word "Sell." The market is up 69% since then.

Bloomberg Intelligence Eric Balchunas' first take on Burry "taking his ball and going home":

1. Shows how bears win battles but bulls win wars.

2. Arguable a top signal that this mkt broke him, echoes Ted Aronson closing his value fund in similar existential crisis manner just prior to 2022 value comeback (brutal).

3. NO ONE KNOWS THE FUTURE (even ppl who get portrayed by Christian Bale in a movie, which may be the coolest thing that can happen to someone).

Ouch!

Back to Keynes' quote about bears being steamrolled in bubbles... What is Burry's next move?

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/13/2025 - 11:50

Michael 'Big Short' Burry Rage-Quits Market, Liquidates Hedge Fund

Zero Hedge -

Michael 'Big Short' Burry Rage-Quits Market, Liquidates Hedge Fund

We'll begin with the famous quote from economist John Maynard Keynes: "The market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent."

It's a reminder that even the smartest traders in the room, the ones who've built entire careers calling bubbles and shorting tops, can be steamrolled when markets detach from reality.

Case in point: "Big Short" investor Michael Burry, who periodically disappears into X hibernation, nuking his account every so often, only to reemerge months later with cryptic warnings like his latest: "Sometimes, we see bubbles."

Days after Burry's bubble post on X, his Scion Asset Management 13F revealed that roughly 80% of his put positions were concentrated in the high-flyers Palantir and Nvidia.

Source

Fast forward one week, and the unthinkable has happened, or perhaps thinkable, given his 2023 "Sell" call...

... Burry's Scion Asset Management terminated its SEC registration on Monday.

By Thursday night, Burry's X post clarified details about his recent bearish bet on Palantir, noting he bought 50,000 option contracts at $1.84 each, representing 100 shares per contract, for a total outlay of about $9.2 million, not the $912 million figure circulated online. The contracts give him the right to sell Palantir shares at $50 in 2027.

"That was done last month. On to much better things, Nov. 25," he wrote.

Burry sent a letter to investors late last month, noting: "With a heavy heart, I will liquidate the funds and return capital — but for a small audit/tax holdback — by year's end."

Almost admitting he is wrong: "My estimation of value in securities is not now, and has not been for some time, in sync with the markets."

The letter is circulating on X and has not yet been confirmed.

ZeroHedge commentary on Burry's 13Fs from last week:

All we know is that Burry appears to once again be swinging for the bubble fences, similar to what he did during the housing bubble, and is shorting the two names that are most synonymous with the current market mania — similar to what he did in 2008 when he was shorting housing using CDS.

We also know that since both names are sharply higher than where they were on Sept. 30 (the date of the 13F), Burry has already suffered substantial losses on his positions, assuming he hasn't already liquidated them (at a loss).

And while some will declare that Burry putting his money where his bubble-bursting mouth is a sign of the top, we have two words of caution: back in 2005, Burry was early by about two years, and even though he ultimately got the trade right, the carry on the CDS crushed him. Second, the last time Burry tried to top-tick the market was January 2023 when he blasted the one-word "Sell." The market is up 69% since then.

Bloomberg Intelligence Eric Balchunas' first take on Burry "taking his ball and going home":

1. Shows how bears win battles but bulls win wars.

2. Arguable a top signal that this mkt broke him, echoes Ted Aronson closing his value fund in similar existential crisis manner just prior to 2022 value comeback (brutal).

3. NO ONE KNOWS THE FUTURE (even ppl who get portrayed by Christian Bale in a movie, which may be the coolest thing that can happen to someone).

Ouch!

Back to Keynes' quote about bears being steamrolled in bubbles... What is Burry's next move?

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/13/2025 - 11:50

Michael 'Big Short' Burry Rage-Quits Market, Liquidates Hedge Fund

Zero Hedge -

Michael 'Big Short' Burry Rage-Quits Market, Liquidates Hedge Fund

We'll begin with the famous quote from economist John Maynard Keynes: "The market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent."

It's a reminder that even the smartest traders in the room, the ones who've built entire careers calling bubbles and shorting tops, can be steamrolled when markets detach from reality.

Case in point: "Big Short" investor Michael Burry, who periodically disappears into X hibernation, nuking his account every so often, only to reemerge months later with cryptic warnings like his latest: "Sometimes, we see bubbles."

Days after Burry's bubble post on X, his Scion Asset Management 13F revealed that roughly 80% of his put positions were concentrated in the high-flyers Palantir and Nvidia.

Source

Fast forward one week, and the unthinkable has happened, or perhaps thinkable, given his 2023 "Sell" call...

... Burry's Scion Asset Management terminated its SEC registration on Monday.

By Thursday night, Burry's X post clarified details about his recent bearish bet on Palantir, noting he bought 50,000 option contracts at $1.84 each, representing 100 shares per contract, for a total outlay of about $9.2 million, not the $912 million figure circulated online. The contracts give him the right to sell Palantir shares at $50 in 2027.

"That was done last month. On to much better things, Nov. 25," he wrote.

Burry sent a letter to investors late last month, noting: "With a heavy heart, I will liquidate the funds and return capital — but for a small audit/tax holdback — by year's end."

Almost admitting he is wrong: "My estimation of value in securities is not now, and has not been for some time, in sync with the markets."

The letter is circulating on X and has not yet been confirmed.

ZeroHedge commentary on Burry's 13Fs from last week:

All we know is that Burry appears to once again be swinging for the bubble fences, similar to what he did during the housing bubble, and is shorting the two names that are most synonymous with the current market mania — similar to what he did in 2008 when he was shorting housing using CDS.

We also know that since both names are sharply higher than where they were on Sept. 30 (the date of the 13F), Burry has already suffered substantial losses on his positions, assuming he hasn't already liquidated them (at a loss).

And while some will declare that Burry putting his money where his bubble-bursting mouth is a sign of the top, we have two words of caution: back in 2005, Burry was early by about two years, and even though he ultimately got the trade right, the carry on the CDS crushed him. Second, the last time Burry tried to top-tick the market was January 2023 when he blasted the one-word "Sell." The market is up 69% since then.

Bloomberg Intelligence Eric Balchunas' first take on Burry "taking his ball and going home":

1. Shows how bears win battles but bulls win wars.

2. Arguable a top signal that this mkt broke him, echoes Ted Aronson closing his value fund in similar existential crisis manner just prior to 2022 value comeback (brutal).

3. NO ONE KNOWS THE FUTURE (even ppl who get portrayed by Christian Bale in a movie, which may be the coolest thing that can happen to someone).

Ouch!

Back to Keynes' quote about bears being steamrolled in bubbles... What is Burry's next move?

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/13/2025 - 11:50

Hotels: Occupancy Rate Increased 2.5% Year-over-year

Calculated Risk -

Hotel occupancy was weak over the summer months, due to less international tourism.  The fall months are mostly domestic travel and occupancy is still under pressure! 

From STR: U.S. hotel results for week ending 8 November
Due to a comparison against election week in 2024, the U.S. hotel industry reported positive year-over-year comparisons, according to CoStar’s latest data through 8 November. ...

26 October through 1 November 2025 (percentage change from comparable week in 2024):

Occupancy: 64.2% (+2.5%)
• Average daily rate (ADR): US$162.70 (+3.6%)
• Revenue per available room (RevPAR): US$104.42 (+6.2%)
emphasis added
The following graph shows the seasonal pattern for the hotel occupancy rate using the four-week average.
Hotel Occupancy RateClick on graph for larger image.

The red line is for 2025, blue is the median, and dashed light blue is for 2024.  Dashed black is for 2018, the record year for hotel occupancy. 
The 4-week average of the occupancy rate is tracking behind both last year and the median rate for the period 2000 through 2024 (Blue).
Note: Y-axis doesn't start at zero to better show the seasonal change.
The 4-week average will decrease seasonally until early next year.
On a year-to-date basis, the only worse years for occupancy over the last 25 years were pandemic or recession years.

A New Oil Price War Is Now Underway

Zero Hedge -

A New Oil Price War Is Now Underway

Authored by Robert Rapier via OilPrice.com,

  • OPEC+ raised output to defend market share, signaling a deliberate shift away from price stabilization.

  • U.S. shale’s record production and rapid adaptability have weakened OPEC’s traditional pricing control.

  • Oil prices now hinge as much on market psychology and expectations as on physical supply and demand.

Contrary to popular belief, oil prices aren’t determined by any one country, company, or cartel. Instead, they’re the product of a global tug-of-war among producers, traders, and policymakers. It’s a market defined not just by physics, but by psychology, where the actions of a few key players can ripple across the world in a matter of hours.

On November 2nd, OPEC+ announced a modest 137,000 barrel-per-day production increase for December, followed by a pause on further increases in the first quarter of 2026. The move surprised many analysts who expected continued restraint. On the surface, boosting supply when prices are already under pressure seems counterintuitive. But this is not a move driven by near-term pricing. It’s a move about market share and about power.

As Morningstar aptly summarized, “defending market share now outweighs defending prices.”

That’s a telling statement, and it signals a familiar shift in strategy among major producers.

We’ve seen this playbook before—in 2014 and again in 2020—when Saudi Arabia and Russia opened the taps to undercut higher-cost rivals, particularly U.S. shale producers. 

Those episodes triggered sharp price declines, but OPEC+ was trying to reassert dominance in a market that had become increasingly influenced by American production growth. The strategy largely failed in 2014 (see OPEC’s Trillion Dollar Miscalculation), but it did squeeze out some overleveraged shale producers. 

The Strategic Logic Behind a Price War

At first glance, it seems self-defeating for OPEC+ to intentionally push prices lower. But history shows that short-term pain can yield long-term control. By tolerating lower prices for a period, OPEC+ can squeeze out marginal producers whose break-even costs are higher. Once those players scale back, the cartel can tighten supply again and reclaim pricing power.

This latest production increase comes at a time when U.S. output is at record levels, surpassing 13.7 million barrels per day. That resurgence reflects the flexibility of American shale—producers can ramp up quickly when prices rise and idle rigs just as fast when prices drop. This “elastic” supply has turned the United States into the de facto swing producer of the world.

However, that elasticity comes at a cost. Unlike OPEC+, which can coordinate cuts through collective agreements, U.S. producers act independently. When dozens of companies all respond to higher prices by drilling more wells, the collective impact is oversupply. The very efficiency that makes shale powerful also makes it self-defeating.

OPEC+ understands this dynamic. By modestly boosting output now, it’s signaling to the market that it won’t easily cede share to U.S. producers, even if that means tolerating prices closer to $75 per barrel rather than the $90 level that many members would prefer.

Beyond Barrels: The Psychology of Pricing

Physical barrels of oil aren’t the only factor at play. Prices are also shaped by expectations. In oil markets, perception moves faster than production.

If traders anticipate a surplus of even 500,000 to 600,000 barrels per day, prices will start adjusting long before those barrels appear. Futures markets incorporate everything from storage levels to exchange rates, creating an intricate web of feedback loops. When economic data points to weaker global demand, traders price that in immediately. Conversely, when a refinery fire breaks out in California or tensions flare in the Strait of Hormuz, prices can change overnight—even if global supply remains unchanged.

This is why oil markets can seem disconnected from fundamentals. They’re not just reflecting today’s balance of supply and demand, but the collective judgment of millions of traders trying to guess tomorrow’s.

The New Normal: Shale vs. the Cartel

Over the past decade, the rise of U.S. shale has permanently altered the energy landscape. Once, OPEC could shift prices with a simple announcement. Now, its influence is constrained by a U.S. industry that can respond more rapidly than any government-directed producer.

But the U.S. isn’t immune to pressure. Shale drilling depends heavily on capital discipline and investor confidence—both of which can erode quickly when oil falls below $70. That gives OPEC+ leverage. The group knows it can afford a period of lower prices longer than many U.S. independents can.

If Brent crude stabilizes in the $75–85 range, that’s a price OPEC+ can live with and one that still supports healthy refining margins for global majors. But if the expected surplus materializes, a slide below $60 isn’t out of the question. That would test the resilience of both producers and policy.

What It Means for Investors and Consumers

For consumers, this tug-of-war shows up at the pump. Gasoline prices generally track crude prices with a lag, so when oil slides, relief eventually filters through—though rarely as fast as it rises. For investors, understanding these dynamics is crucial. Energy stocks are among the most cyclical in the market, and they react more to forward price expectations than current spot prices.

In a world where oil is caught between economic uncertainty, OPEC+ maneuvering, and record U.S. production, volatility is the only constant. The smartest investors are the ones who understand the forces shaping the battlefield.

Oil remains a geopolitical currency as much as a commodity. And as long as both OPEC+ and U.S. shale producers continue to fight for influence, the market will remain what it’s always been: a high-stakes contest of patience, power, and price.

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/13/2025 - 11:25

A New Oil Price War Is Now Underway

Zero Hedge -

A New Oil Price War Is Now Underway

Authored by Robert Rapier via OilPrice.com,

  • OPEC+ raised output to defend market share, signaling a deliberate shift away from price stabilization.

  • U.S. shale’s record production and rapid adaptability have weakened OPEC’s traditional pricing control.

  • Oil prices now hinge as much on market psychology and expectations as on physical supply and demand.

Contrary to popular belief, oil prices aren’t determined by any one country, company, or cartel. Instead, they’re the product of a global tug-of-war among producers, traders, and policymakers. It’s a market defined not just by physics, but by psychology, where the actions of a few key players can ripple across the world in a matter of hours.

On November 2nd, OPEC+ announced a modest 137,000 barrel-per-day production increase for December, followed by a pause on further increases in the first quarter of 2026. The move surprised many analysts who expected continued restraint. On the surface, boosting supply when prices are already under pressure seems counterintuitive. But this is not a move driven by near-term pricing. It’s a move about market share and about power.

As Morningstar aptly summarized, “defending market share now outweighs defending prices.”

That’s a telling statement, and it signals a familiar shift in strategy among major producers.

We’ve seen this playbook before—in 2014 and again in 2020—when Saudi Arabia and Russia opened the taps to undercut higher-cost rivals, particularly U.S. shale producers. 

Those episodes triggered sharp price declines, but OPEC+ was trying to reassert dominance in a market that had become increasingly influenced by American production growth. The strategy largely failed in 2014 (see OPEC’s Trillion Dollar Miscalculation), but it did squeeze out some overleveraged shale producers. 

The Strategic Logic Behind a Price War

At first glance, it seems self-defeating for OPEC+ to intentionally push prices lower. But history shows that short-term pain can yield long-term control. By tolerating lower prices for a period, OPEC+ can squeeze out marginal producers whose break-even costs are higher. Once those players scale back, the cartel can tighten supply again and reclaim pricing power.

This latest production increase comes at a time when U.S. output is at record levels, surpassing 13.7 million barrels per day. That resurgence reflects the flexibility of American shale—producers can ramp up quickly when prices rise and idle rigs just as fast when prices drop. This “elastic” supply has turned the United States into the de facto swing producer of the world.

However, that elasticity comes at a cost. Unlike OPEC+, which can coordinate cuts through collective agreements, U.S. producers act independently. When dozens of companies all respond to higher prices by drilling more wells, the collective impact is oversupply. The very efficiency that makes shale powerful also makes it self-defeating.

OPEC+ understands this dynamic. By modestly boosting output now, it’s signaling to the market that it won’t easily cede share to U.S. producers, even if that means tolerating prices closer to $75 per barrel rather than the $90 level that many members would prefer.

Beyond Barrels: The Psychology of Pricing

Physical barrels of oil aren’t the only factor at play. Prices are also shaped by expectations. In oil markets, perception moves faster than production.

If traders anticipate a surplus of even 500,000 to 600,000 barrels per day, prices will start adjusting long before those barrels appear. Futures markets incorporate everything from storage levels to exchange rates, creating an intricate web of feedback loops. When economic data points to weaker global demand, traders price that in immediately. Conversely, when a refinery fire breaks out in California or tensions flare in the Strait of Hormuz, prices can change overnight—even if global supply remains unchanged.

This is why oil markets can seem disconnected from fundamentals. They’re not just reflecting today’s balance of supply and demand, but the collective judgment of millions of traders trying to guess tomorrow’s.

The New Normal: Shale vs. the Cartel

Over the past decade, the rise of U.S. shale has permanently altered the energy landscape. Once, OPEC could shift prices with a simple announcement. Now, its influence is constrained by a U.S. industry that can respond more rapidly than any government-directed producer.

But the U.S. isn’t immune to pressure. Shale drilling depends heavily on capital discipline and investor confidence—both of which can erode quickly when oil falls below $70. That gives OPEC+ leverage. The group knows it can afford a period of lower prices longer than many U.S. independents can.

If Brent crude stabilizes in the $75–85 range, that’s a price OPEC+ can live with and one that still supports healthy refining margins for global majors. But if the expected surplus materializes, a slide below $60 isn’t out of the question. That would test the resilience of both producers and policy.

What It Means for Investors and Consumers

For consumers, this tug-of-war shows up at the pump. Gasoline prices generally track crude prices with a lag, so when oil slides, relief eventually filters through—though rarely as fast as it rises. For investors, understanding these dynamics is crucial. Energy stocks are among the most cyclical in the market, and they react more to forward price expectations than current spot prices.

In a world where oil is caught between economic uncertainty, OPEC+ maneuvering, and record U.S. production, volatility is the only constant. The smartest investors are the ones who understand the forces shaping the battlefield.

Oil remains a geopolitical currency as much as a commodity. And as long as both OPEC+ and U.S. shale producers continue to fight for influence, the market will remain what it’s always been: a high-stakes contest of patience, power, and price.

Tyler Durden Thu, 11/13/2025 - 11:25

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