Individual Economists

US Industrial Production Rises At Strongest Annual Rate Since Apr 2022

Zero Hedge -

US Industrial Production Rises At Strongest Annual Rate Since Apr 2022

Following the much-stronger-than-expected GDP print, US Industrial Production also surprised to the upside, rising 0.2% MoM in November and pulling the YoY change up to 2.52% - the strongest annual growth since April 2022...

Source: Bloomberg

US Manufacturing output was unchanged in November, but better than the 0.4% MoM decline in October, as Motor Vehicles & Parts fell 5.1% MoM while Utilities jumped 2.6% MoM.

Capacity Utilization limped lower to 75.9% (from an upwardly revised 76.0%), but remains off the Nov 2024 lows...

Source: Bloomberg

So a mixed bag with output up strongly as capacity utilization slides...

Source: Bloomberg

... does that signal the productivity boost everyone has been waiting for?

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 09:31

Education Department Announces Safety Review Of Brown University After Deadly Campus Shooting

Zero Hedge -

Education Department Announces Safety Review Of Brown University After Deadly Campus Shooting

Authored by Kimberley Hayek via The Epoch Times,

The U.S. Department of Education on Monday announced it would conduct a review of Brown University to uncover potential safety violations after a campus shooting left two students dead and nine others wounded, and to determine if the Ivy League institution complied with federal laws requiring ample campus security measures to receive student aid funding.

The review, led by the department’s Office of Federal Student Aid, will assess whether the Ivy League institution met requirements under the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act, also known as the Clery Act. The law mandates that colleges receiving federal student aid maintain robust security measures, including timely warnings and accurate crime reporting.

Public reports in the hours after the incident suggested Brown’s surveillance and security systems fell short, allowing the suspect to escape while the university struggled to provide useful details about the shooter. Students and staff also reported delays in emergency notifications, sparking worries about the alert system’s effectiveness. If confirmed, these issues could represent major breaches of federal obligations.

“After two students were horrifically murdered at Brown University when a shooter opened fire in a campus building, the Department is initiating a review of Brown to determine if it has upheld its obligation under the law to vigilantly maintain campus security,” Secretary of Education Linda McMahon said in a statement.

“Students deserve to feel safe at school, and every university across this nation must protect their students and be equipped with adequate resources to aid law enforcement. The Trump Administration will fight to ensure that recipients of federal funding are vigorously protecting students’ safety and following security procedures as required under federal law.”

As part of the probe, the department has asked Brown to submit documents by Jan. 30, including annual security reports for 2024 and 2025, audit trails of crimes and arrests from 2021 to 2024, dispatch logs, daily crime logs, lists of timely warnings and emergency notifications from 2021 to 2025, and policies on alerts, crime logs, and active shooter protocols. The request also includes any assessments of campus safety practices since 2020.

The shooting, which occurred Dec. 13, drew national attention, with the FBI offering a $50,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of a suspect.

Killed in the shooting were Mukhammad Aziz Umurzokov, an 18-year-old from Virginia who aspired to become a neurosurgeon, and 19-year-old Ella Cook, vice president of the College Republicans at Brown and a native of Mountain Brook, Alabama.

The suspect, Claudio Neves Valente, a 48-year-old Portuguese national and former Brown student, was found dead in a storage unit in Salem, New Hampshire, days later. An autopsy determined he died by suicide with a gun two days before his body was found.

The department’s statement did not clarify a timeline, but noted the process would assess compliance in depth, along with safety requirements.

The university did not return a request for comment by publication time.

Under the Trump administration, the Department of Education has investigated institutions like the University of Pennsylvania for inaccurate foreign funding disclosures and others for allegedly excluding U.S.-born students from scholarships. Continuing disagreements revolve around federal funding linked to diversity, equity, and inclusion policies, as well as anti-Semitism concerns.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 09:20

Industrial Production Increased 0.2% in November; Declined 0.1% in October

Calculated Risk -

From the Fed: Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization
This release includes preliminary estimates for industrial production (IP) and capacity utilization for both October and November as well as revised estimates for May through September. IP rose 0.2 percent in November after ticking down 0.1 percent in October. On average, IP rose 0.1 percent per month across October and November, the same as the rate of increase in September and a somewhat slower average pace than the past 12 months. Manufacturing output was flat in November after dropping 0.4 percent in October. There were swings in both mining and utilities output over October and November, though, on net, both sectors posted gains. At 101.8 percent of its 2017 average, total IP in November was 2.5 percent above its year-earlier level. Capacity utilization was 76.0 percent in November, a rate that is 3.5 percentage points below its long-run (1972–2024) average.
emphasis added
Capacity UtilizationClick on graph for larger image.

This graph shows Capacity Utilization. This series is up from the record low set in April 2020, and close to the level in February 2020 (pre-pandemic).

Capacity utilization at 76.0% is 3.5% below the average from 1972 to 2023.  This was close to consensus expectations.

Note: y-axis doesn't start at zero to better show the change.

Industrial Production The second graph shows industrial production since 1967.

Industrial production increased to 101.8. This is at the pre-pandemic level.

Industrial production was close to consensus expectations.

Q3 GDP Unexpectedly Surges To 2 Year High On Soaring Health Insurance Spending

Zero Hedge -

Q3 GDP Unexpectedly Surges To 2 Year High On Soaring Health Insurance Spending

By now, Q3 GDP - which should have been reported almost two months ago - is ancient history but it still matters in a world where the Fed's every sneeze is overanalyzed. Which is why the report by the Bureau of Economic Analysis that in Q3 US GDP surged by 4.3%, up from an already hot 3.8% in Q2 and driven by a spike in consumer spending, will surely raise some eyebrows (for those wondering, this report was originally supposed to hit on Oct 30, and the second estimate was scheduled for Nov 26; none of that happened due to the govt shutdown). This was the highest annualized quarterly GDP print since Q3 2023. 

The number was higher than all but one economist forecasts, and was a 3-sigma beat to the median consensus of 3.3%

According to the BEA, the increase in real GDP in the third quarter reflected increases in consumer spending, exports, and government spending that were partly offset by a decrease in investment. Imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, decreased. 

Compared to the second quarter, the acceleration in real GDP in the third quarter reflected a smaller decrease in investment, an acceleration in consumer spending, and upturns in exports and government spending. Imports decreased less in the third quarter.

Taking a closer look at the components, this is how the 4.34% increase in bottom line GDP happened:

  • Personal Consumption rose by a whopping 2.39%, up from 1.68% in Q2
  • Fixed Investment moderated, rising by 0.19%, vs 0.77% in Q2. Once again, this is mostly data centers
  • Change in private inventories declined by 0.22%, a moderation from the -3.44% drop in Q2, and to be expected as the trade aberration from the trade war moderate 
  • Net trade (exports less imports) also normalized and after a surge of 4.83%, the increase was a more modest 1.59%, driven by positive contributions from both exports (0.67%) and imports (0.92%).
  • Finally, government contributed 0.39% to Q3 GDP after subtracting from US growth in each of the previous two quarters of 2024.

And visually:

While the surge in personal consumption would be a red flag for the Fed, as it indicates the US consumer is much stronger than expected, the reality is that - as shown below - the bulk of the increase was the result of surge in healthcare spending, which increased at a whopping 0.76% adjusted annual rate. Which means that personal spending was not driven by discretionary splurging but by a need to meet much higher health insurance costs!

Linked to this surge in health insurance, the GDP price index for Q3 jumped 3.8%, up from 2.1% in Q2 and a big beat to the 2.7% estimate. The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index increased 2.8%, compared with an increase of 2.1%. Excluding food and energy prices, the PCE price index increased 2.9 percent, in line with estimates, and higher than the increase of 2.6 percent in Q2.

Overall, this was a stronger than expected print however for all the wrong reasons. As to whether it will change the Fed's thinking, we very much doubt it if the US labor market continues deteriorating as it has been for much of 2025.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 09:09

DOGE Delivers Massive $214 Billion In Taxpayer Savings... So Far

Zero Hedge -

DOGE Delivers Massive $214 Billion In Taxpayer Savings... So Far

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

In a stunning victory against bloated bureaucracy, the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), originally spearheaded by Elon Musk, has slashed an eye-popping $214 billion from federal spending in less than a year.

Official figures from DOGE’s own tally reveal a relentless assault on waste, including terminations of thousands of contracts, grants, and leases that were draining resources without delivering value.

From bloated defense deals to questionable health programs, the cuts are stacking up, proving that an America First approach can rein in the deep state’s excesses.

The milestone comes amid widespread praise for Musk’s no-nonsense tactics, even as legacy media nitpicks the details. According to DOGE’s breakdown, contract cancellations alone account for around $61 billion, targeting over 13,000 agreements like a $3.9 billion aircraft maintenance boondoggle and multi-billion-dollar health service pacts that ballooned under prior administrations.

Grants saw $49 billion axed, hitting everything from foreign aid handouts to domestic epidemiology programs that critics argue fueled unnecessary spending.

Leases weren’t spared either, with $113 million clawed back from underused federal spaces across the country—think vacant offices in California and North Carolina that taxpayers were footing the bill for.

Beyond that, DOGE claims broader impacts through asset sales, fraud crackdowns, interest reductions, and workforce streamlining, pushing the total to that landmark $214 billion.

Dividing the savings by roughly 161 million U.S. taxpayers gives a saving of $1,329 for every taxpaying American, a direct hit against the endless tax hikes peddled by big-government advocates.

This triumph throws a harsh spotlight on the left’s double standards. As X user MAZE notes: “Democrats used to preach about the need to eliminate waste, fraud, and abuse from the system. Now they enable it and cover it up.”

It’s a damning indictment—while DOGE was busy slashing redundancies, Democrats in Congress and their media allies dragged their feet, defending the very pork-barrel projects that Musk’s team eviscerated.

Recent reports confirm the context: DOGE’s efforts, though now wound down after achieving key goals, targeted sacred cows like USAID’s $1.75 billion grant to the GAVI Foundation and the Department of Energy’s half-billion-dollar handouts for dubious “decarbonization” schemes. These weren’t just cuts—they were a rejection of globalist agendas that prioritize foreign interests over American workers.

The raw impact is undeniable. Musk himself reflected that DOGE was “somewhat successful,” but the $214 billion speaks volumes, far exceeding initial lowered projections and delivering on President Trump’s promise to drain the swamp.

The ripple effects are already showing. Positive market indicators, as highlighted in recent Fox Business segments, point to a “bountiful” 2026 fueled by these efficiencies. Stock futures are climbing, cryptos are steady, and investor confidence is rebounding.

This isn’t about austerity—it’s about smart governance. By dismantling the layers of fraud and inefficiency that Democrats once railed against but now protect, DOGE has handed everyday Americans a massive return on their tax dollars.

This isn’t just numbers on a page—it’s real relief for every taxpaying American fed up with Washington’s endless money pit.

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 08:51

Core Durable Goods Orders Rise For 7th Straight Month

Zero Hedge -

Core Durable Goods Orders Rise For 7th Straight Month

While admittedly extremely lagging, the preliminary OCTOBER durable goods orders print was a big disappointment after a rebound in the summer with the headline falling 2.2% MoM (far worse than the 1.5% MoM decline expected). However, while this disappointment dragged down the YoY growth to 4.7%, it was still well above inflation...

Source: Bloomberg

Core Orders (ex Transports) rose 0.2% MoM (notably slower than the 0.7% MoM in September and below the +0.3% MoM expected)...

Source: Bloomberg

That was the 7th straight monthly gain and lifted core durable goods orders up 3.57% YoY, near the highest since Nov 2022.

Finally, core capex remains solid with new orders ex-air up 0.5% (4th straight monthly gain) and shipments continue to significantly stronger than expected.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 08:41

BEA: Real GDP increased at 4.3% Annualized Rate in Q3

Calculated Risk -

From the BEA: Gross Domestic Product, 3rd Quarter 2025 (Initial Estimate) and Corporate Profits (Preliminary)
Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 4.3 percent in the third quarter of 2025 (July, August, and September), according to the initial estimate released by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the second quarter, real GDP increased 3.8 percent.

Due to the recent government shutdown, this initial report for the third quarter of 2025 replaces the release of the advance estimate originally scheduled for October 30 and the second estimate originally scheduled for November 26.br />
The increase in real GDP in the third quarter reflected increases in consumer spending, exports, and government spending that were partly offset by a decrease in investment. Imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, decreased. ...

Compared to the second quarter, the acceleration in real GDP in the third quarter reflected a smaller decrease in investment, an acceleration in consumer spending, and upturns in exports and government spending. Imports decreased less in the third quarter.

Real final sales to private domestic purchasers, the sum of consumer spending and gross private fixed investment, increased 3.0 percent in the third quarter, compared with an increase of 2.9 percent in the second quarter.

The price index for gross domestic purchases increased 3.4 percent in the third quarter, compared with an increase of 2.0 percent in the second quarter. The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index increased 2.8 percent, compared with an increase of 2.1 percent. Excluding food and energy prices, the PCE price index increased 2.9 percent, compared with an increase of 2.6 percent.
emphasis added
PCE increased at a 3.5% annual rate, and residential investment decreased at a 5.1% rate. The initial Q3 GDP report, with 4.3% annualized increase, was above expectations.

Futures Flat Ahead Of Final Macro Data Dump Of 2025

Zero Hedge -

Futures Flat Ahead Of Final Macro Data Dump Of 2025

US equity futures are flat, pointing to a muted open off the overnight session highs on the last full trading session before Christmas, as traders await the last remaining data sets of 2025 to see whether they could materially change expectations for Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts. As of 8:0am ET, the S&P 500 is little changed after a three-day rally that has pushed the benchmark within reach of a new all-time high; Nasdaq futures are down 0.1% with Mag 7 names mixed. European stocks are buoyed by a 7% surge in the shares of Novo Nordisk after the Danish firm won US approval to sell a pill version of its obesity drug Wegovy. US Treasuries steadied after days of losses, with the 10-year yield declining two basis points to 4.15%. The dollar fell to the lowest level since October. Gold extended its record-breaking run, setting sights on $4,500 an ounce. Copper rose past $12,000 a ton for the first time. Bitcoin fell again, failing to stage even a modest rebound. The US calendar includes ADP weekly employment change (8:15am), 3Q GDP (8:30am), November industrial production (9:15am), December Richmond Fed manufacturing index, consumer confidence (10am).

In premarket trading, Mag 7 stocks are mixed: (Tesla +0.4%, Alphabet is little changed, Microsoft +0.07%, Apple -0.05%, Amazon -0.1%, Meta is little changed, Nvidia -0.4%)

  • Gold, silver and copper mining and royalty stocks climb as the metals continued to hit record highs amid rising geopolitical tensions. Barrick Mining (B) rises 1% while Hudbay Minerals (HBM) gains 1%.
  • Invivyd (IVVD) climbs 1% after the FDA granted a fast track designation for the biotech’s investigational vaccine-alternative monoclonal antibody candidate for Covid prevention in individuals with underlying risk factors for severe Covid.
  • Sable Offshore Corp. (SOC) soars 25% after the company said that the US Department of Transportation Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration approved the firm’s Las Flores pipeline restart plan.
  • Zim Integrated Shipping Services (ZIM) climbs 8% after the company said it is evaluating proposals from multiple potential buyers. The review of strategic alternatives is in advanced stages.

In corporate news, department stores group Saks, facing limited options ahead of a more than $100 million debt payment due at the end of this month, is considering Chapter 11 bankruptcy as a last resort, according to people with knowledge of the situation. Johnson & Johnson was ordered to pay about $1.56 billion to a Maryland woman who blamed the company’s talc-based baby powder for causing her asbestos-linked cancer, the largest such jury verdict for an individual in 15 years of litigation. And Nvidia’s biggest Southeast Asian chip customer is facing a smuggling investigation.

The latest three-day rally pushed US stocks fractionally into positive territory for the month after a turbulent start to December. Preserving those gains until the end of December would extend this winning streak to an eighth month, the longest such run since 2018.

Meanwhile, volatility is collapsing. With the VIX index at 14.11, implied volatility for US equities over the coming 30 days is near the lowest in more than a year. That reflects enduring investor optimism around strong earnings growth, slowing inflation and a soft landing for the economy.

“Volatility is sitting at the lows of the year, while credit spreads are among the most compressed we’ve seen in decades,” said Alberto Tocchio, portfolio manager at Kairos Partners. “That dynamic is helping sustain the current market bonanza, especially in an environment where trading volumes are falling sharply and many discretionary players are already on the sidelines.”

The VIX may be snoozing around a 12-month low, but investors added new short bets across US stock futures last week, leaving net positioning near neutral levels, according to Citigroup strategists. Exposure to the Russell 2000 index of small caps is now bearish.

While Tuesday’s delayed third-quarter US gross domestic product print will likely be too dated to offer a clear read on current conditions, traders will also focus on consumer data after November showed a sharp slump in confidence.

In Europe, the Stoxx 600 edges up 0.2% to touch a new all time high with the health care sector leading gains. Novo Nordisk shares rally after the Danish drugmaker won approval to sell a pill version of its blockbuster obesity shot Wegovy in the US. Meanwhile, banks underperform. Here are some of the biggest movers on Tuesday:

  • Novo Nordisk shares rise as much as 7.9%, the most since August, after the Danish drugmaker won approval to sell a pill version of its blockbuster obesity shot Wegovy in the US.
  • SIG Group shares gain as much as 6.8%, the most in over a month, after the Swiss food packaging maker disclosed that Swedish activist investor Cevian Capital acquired a 3.1% stake.

Asian stocks were on course to advance for a third day, helped by gains in Japan amid expectations for further interest rate hikes. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose as much as 0.7%, with TSMC and Sony Group among the major contributors to the climb. Equities gained in Vietnam, Taiwan and Australia, while those in Indonesia fell. Speculation that the Bank of Japan may raise borrowing costs even more buoyed Japan’s financial stocks. Analysts said the yen’s continued weakness remains a tailwind for equities, even though the currency gained slightly overnight following comments by the finance minister.  The onshore benchmark CSI 300 Index climbed 0.2%, despite a downgrade by Citi on Chinese equities to neutral from overweight on less favorable earnings revisions and a lackluster macro outlook. 

In FX, the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index is down 0.4%, falling for a second day and trading at the lowest since early October. The kiwi has overtaken the yen as the G-10 outperformer, rising 0.8% against the greenback. The yen is up 0.7%, dragging USD/JPY back below 156 after another round of jawboning from Japan’s Finance Minister. The Hungarian forint falls 0.2% after Economy Minister Nagy renewed his calls for lower interest rates.

Those moves came as the dollar headed for its weakest annual performance in eight years, with the options market signaling that traders are bracing for further losses. The currency is down 8.3% this year, on track for its biggest slide since 2017. Another modest dip would mark its worst year in at least two decades. Options pricing has also turned more negative, with so-called risk reversals, which track positioning and sentiment, showing options traders are the most bearish in three months.

“The structural drivers of US dollar weakness remain intact,” wrote Patrick Brenner, chief investment officer of multi-asset at Schroders Plc. “Institutional credibility continues to erode, fiscal deficits are widening, and global reserve managers remain steady buyers of gold rather than US dollar assets.”

In rates, treasuries advance, pushing US 10-year yields down 2 bps to 4.14%. European government bonds outperform.US yields richer by 1bp to 3bp across the curve in a bull flattening move, tightening 2s10s and 5s30s spreads by 1bp and 1.2bp on the day. Treasury 10-year yields trade around 4.14%, richer by 2.5bp on the day with bunds and gilts outperforming by an additional 1.5bp and 2bp in the sector. The Treasury is selling $70 billion 5-year notes at 1pm New York, with this week’s issuance concluding with $44 billion 7-year notes Wednesday. Ahead of today’s sale, the WI 5-year yield is about 3.705% which is ~14bp cheaper than the November stop-out

In commodities, gold and silver rise 0.9% each, having notched fresh record highs earlier. Copper also hits a record above $12,000 a ton. Brent was near $62 a barrel after rising about 5% over the previous four sessions as the US continued its blockade of crude shipments from Venezuela.Bitcoin falls 0.5%.

Today's economic calendar includes ADP weekly employment change (8:15am), 3Q GDP (8:30am), November industrial production (9:15am), December Richmond Fed manufacturing index, consumer confidence (10am

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 mini little changed
  • Nasdaq 100 mini little changed
  • Russell 2000 mini little changed
  • Stoxx Europe 600 +0.2%
  • DAX +0.2%
  • CAC 40 -0.1%
  • 10-year Treasury yield -2 basis points at 4.15%
  • VIX little changed at 14.04
  • Bloomberg Dollar Index -0.4% at 1201.58
  • euro +0.3% at $1.1796
  • WTI crude little changed at $58.03/barrel

Top Overnight News

  • Pill Version of Wegovy Is Approved for Use in the US: WSJ
  • Japan issues sternest intervention warning, says yen deviating from fundamentals: RTRS
  • China’s Sprint for Tech Dominance Can’t Hide an Economy Full of Holes: WSJ
  • Car Payments Now Average More Than $750 a Month. Enter the 100-Month Loan: WSJ
  • Copper Hits $12,000 for First Time as Tariff Trade Upends Market: BBG
  • Silver rises above $70/oz for the first time ever, gold rises to record $4500
  • Russian air attack on Ukraine kills three and sparks sweeping outages: RTRS
  • Ukraine's Zelenskiy says several draft documents ready after Miami talks: RTRS
  • South Africans dragged into Russia's war in Ukraine dig trenches, dodge bullets: RTRS
  • Russian Oil Stuck at Sea Booms as Tanker Logjams in Asia Expand: BBG
  • Trump is mulling giving 775 acres of federal wildlife refuge to SpaceX: NYT.
  • DOJ Releases Fresh Tranche of Epstein Files as Pressure Mounts: BBG
  • A Small Nebraska Town Is Reeling From the Exit of Meatpacking Giant Tyson: WSJ
  • Retail investors to have more sway over Wall Street after record year: RTRS
  • The AI Boom Is Making Real-Estate Investors Rich—and Exposing Them to Risk: WSJ
  • Trump’s First-Term Trust Buster Is Now Working to Get Paramount Its Deal: WSJ

A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk

APAC stocks eventually traded mixed after initially taking their cue from Wall Street, although volumes and news flow remained subdued as markets wound down for the holiday period. ASX 200 was underpinned by strength in gold miners after the yellow metal printed a fresh all-time high near USD 4,500/oz, supported by a softer USD and ongoing geopolitical tensions. Nikkei 225 initially saw shallower gains than peers as a firmer yen, following official jawboning, capped upside for the index, whilst further gains in the JPY later took the index into the red. KOSPI extended its tech-led rally, with Samsung Electronics shares pushing toward near all-time highs. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp initially tracked the broader risk tone, while fresh region-specific catalysts remained scarce. Hang Seng later gave up earlier gains.

Top Asian News

  • Japanese Finance Minister Katayama declines to comment on forex levels or interest rates, and said Japan will take appropriate action and reiterates they have a "free hand" to respond to excessive moves in the JPY. FX moves after the BoJ press conference are speculative and not reflecting fundamentals. The market has stabilised somewhat since yesterday.

European bourses are mixed, with macro newsflow light. On the micro side, Novo Nordisk (+6.7%) said its oral Wegovy pill has been approved in the US for weight management after showing 16.6% weight loss in the OASIS 4 trial, and it plans a US launch in January 2026. European sectors have opened mixed with a slight positive bias. Health Care (+1.1%), to no surprise, leads due to gains in Novo Nordisk (+6.7%) after US approval of its weight-management drug. Utilities (+0.4%) and Food, Beverage and Tobacco (+0.4%) are also near the top, however, this is likely a rebound from yesterday’s underperformance. Banks (-0.3%), Consumer Products & Services (-0.3%) and Construction (-0.2%) lag, with little fresh newsflow driving moves.

Top European News

  • EU is preparing checks on imported plastics and other measures to shore up its recycling industry, according to FT.
  • European Car Sales +2.4% to 1.08mln vehicles in November, according to Bloomberg citing ACEA.
  • Novo Nordisk (NOVOB DC) said Wegovy pill is approved in the US as the first oral GLP-1 treatment for weight management after showing 16.6% weight loss in the Oasis 4 trial, and said it plans to launch the drug in the US in January 2026. US-listed NOVO shares +5% after market. Eli Lilly -1.2% after market.
  • US President Trump said he told French President Macron that France has to raise its drug prices.

Central Banks

  • RBA Minutes: Board discussed whether a rate increase might be needed at some point in 2026; holding the cash rate steady for some time could be sufficient to keep the economy in balance. October CPI suggested a risk that Q4 inflation could also be higher than forecast. The board discussed whether a rate increase might be needed at some point in 2026. Recent data suggested risks to inflation had lifted to the upside. The board judged it was too early to know whether the rise in inflation would prove persistent. The board said it would take a little longer to assess the persistence of inflation. Holding the cash rate steady for some time could be sufficient to keep the economy in balance. Policy would be assessed at future meetings, with Q4 inflation data available before the February meeting. Some board members felt conditions were no longer restrictive, while others felt they were a little restrictive. The impact of the recent rise in bond yields on financial conditions needed to be assessed. The economy was operating with excess demand and it was not clear if financial conditions were tight enough. The labour market was judged to still be a little tight, with the output gap positive. The full impact of policy easing earlier in the year was yet to be felt. Measures of capacity utilisation pointed to supply constraints. Little immediate action in AUD or ASX 200.

FX

  • DXY is lower and trades at the bottom end of a 97.88 to 98.23 range; really not much driving things for the USD recently, with newsflow exceptionally light, but perhaps facilitated by a strong JPY (see below). Nonetheless, traders will keep a keen eye out for Q3 GDP Advance/PCE, as well as Durable Goods (Oct), due at the same time.
  • JPY is amongst the outperformers, with the strength seemingly a continuation of the price action seen following fresh jawboning from Finance Minister Katayama; as a reminder, she said that they have a “free hand” to take bold action in the FX market if needed. USD/JPY drifted lower from an overnight high of 157.07, down below the 156.00 mark, where the pair currently resides.
  • Antipodeans also gained throughout overnight trade and into the European session, boosted by ongoing strength in metals prices (XAU now eyeing USD 4.5k/oz to the upside). Earlier, the Aussie showed little reaction to the RBA minutes, which indicated the Board debated whether a rate increase might be required at some point in 2026. Elsewhere, for the Kiwi specifically, NZD/USD breached 0.58 to the upside, which allowed the pair extend beyond the level, which can explain some of the outperformance this morning.
  • The GBP and EUR are steady vs the broadly weaker USD. Really not much driving things for either at the moment; the single currency really only has geopolitical updates to digest heading into the Christmas holidays. For Cable, the pair extended beyond the 1.3500 mark to make a peak of 1.3518; the next level to the upside includes the October 1 high at 1.3527.

Fixed Income

  • 10yr JGB futures outperformed, firmer by over 40 ticks at best, while the yen simultaneously reversed its early-week weakness following verbal jawboning from Japanese Finance Minister Katayama. JGB futures then rose further after Japanese PM Takaichi said Japan's national debt is still high, and rejected any "irresponsible bond issuance or tax cuts", via a Nikkei interview.
  • USTs follow JGBs higher, with a lack of domestic newsflow helping things for the benchmark. Currently trading higher by a handful of ticks, and towards the upper end of a 112-11+ to 112-15+ range. Ahead, focus turns to some key US data points, which include US GDP Advance/PCE (Q3) and Durable Goods.
  • Bunds, Gilts and OATs also follow suit. For the latter, OATs remain in focus after yesterday's cabinet meeting made the use of Article 49.3 more likely. For the near-term fiscal needs, the Assembly and Senate are set to finish debating and then adopt text to allow the government to continue financing basic public services into early-2026, despite the absence of a 2026 budget deal. A point that has contributed to OAT strength, as the benchmark marginally outmuscles Bunds, causing the OAT-Bund 10yr yield spread to probe 70bps to the downside.
  • China's Finance Ministry expects aggregate government bond issuance to remain "elevated" in 2026, according to Reuters citing sources.

Commodities

  • WTI and Brent chop around USD 58/bbl and USD 62/bbl, respectively, in tight ranges as crude benchmarks consolidate following Monday’s bid higher. Geopolitics has resurfaced in recent sessions as the near-term driver for crude prices, with tensions between the US and Venezuela rising and a potential escalation between Israel and Iran. However, a lack of updates throughout the APAC session has led to a muted start to Tuesday’s session.
  • Spot XAU has followed on from Monday's trend, peaking just shy of USD 4500/oz as the European morning gets underway, with rising geopolitical tensions acting as a new driver for the yellow metal. The recent US-Venezuela developments, specifically the blockaded oil tankers, have urged investors to look for safer places to place their investments.
  • 3M LME Copper traded muted in a tight c. USD 60/t band throughout APAC trade, seemingly not benefiting from the further extension in gold and silver prices. As the European session gets underway, the red metal lifted as the positive risk tone in equities fed through into copper. Thus far, 3M LME Copper trades just shy of the ATH formed in Monday’s session, currently at USD 11.98k/t.
  • China crude steel output in November 69.6mln tonnes, -10.9% Y/Y; global crude steel output in November 140.1mln tonnes, -4.6% Y/Y, via WorldSteel.
  • Thai Central Bank Chief said there will be a set maximum trading volumes per major gold trader.
  • Thailand's Finance Minister is looking to implement a tax on gold trading online.

Geopolitics

  • Russia's Ryabkov said Russia and US held new round of talks on 'Irritants'; main issues remain unresolved, via IFX. New round of contacts may take place in early spring.
  • Polish Armed Forces said they have scrambled jets following Russian strikes on Ukraine.
  • Russia is again attacking Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, according to Ukraine’s energy ministry.
  • Russia conducts airstrikes on Ukrainian capital Kyiv, according to Ukraine's military.
  • Ukrainian President Zelensky said "Negotiations to end the war are "close to achieving a result", according to Sky News Arabia.
  • Russia's Kremlin states Ukraine peace talks over the weekend did not achieve breakthrough.
  • Russia needs to understand to what extent the US work with Ukraine and Europe on peace plan corresponds to spirit of earlier Putin-Trump Alaska summit, via TASS.
  • Odesa regional governor said Russian forces launch new evening drone attack on Ukraine's Odesa, damaging port facilities and civilian ship.
  • "Israel's Channel 12: Israel fears miscalculation with Iran, assures Washington that it will not take risks", via Sky News Arabia.

US Event Calendar

  • 8:30 am: US Oct. Durable Goods Orders, est. -1.5%, prior 0.5%
  • 8:30 am: US 3Q GDP Annualized QoQ, est. 3.2%, prior 3.8%
  • 8:30: US 3Q GDP Price Index, est. 2.7%, prior 2.1%
  • 8:30 am: US 3Q Personal Consumption, est. 2.7%, prior 2.5%
  • 10 am: US Dec. Richmond Fed Index, est. -10, prior -1

DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

This is the last EMR of 2025, before we resume normal service again on January 2. Many thanks for reading and for your interactions this year and wishing you all a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

Markets broadly saw another risk-on move yesterday, with the S&P 500 (+0.64%) posting a third consecutive gain that left the index less than half a percent beneath its record high. However, the global bond sell-off showed few signs of relenting either, with yields reaching new milestones across several countries. The biggest story was undoubtedly the Japanese move, where the 10yr yield (+6.2bps) closed at 2.07% yesterday, the highest since 1999. But that was echoed around the world and yesterday saw 10yr bund yields (+0.2bps) inch above their March peak to close at 2.90%, marking their highest level since October 2023. That ratchet higher for yields is a significant story given that the fiscal picture is likely to remain a big theme in 2026, with many countries running budget deficits on a scale that’s rare outside of wars or major recessions.

As a reminder on Japan, yields increased sharply after the Bank of Japan’s 25bp rate hike on Friday morning, given they signalled that more rate hikes were still to come. Interestingly though, we then saw a decent bout of FX weakness, which in turn led to uncertainty about even more hikes, given the potential need to offset that inflationary impulse. However, that FX weakness began to stabilise yesterday, as finance minister Satsuki Katayama said in a Bloomberg interview yesterday that Japan had a “free hand” to take action in the FX markets, and that “The moves were clearly not in line with fundamentals but rather speculative”. So the yen strengthened after those headlines came out and was up +0.44% against the US dollar yesterday, and this morning it’s the top-performing G10 currency, strengthening a further +0.66% against the US dollar. Our FX strategist Mallika Sachdeva has written more about what happens now in Japan and she says that it makes sense for policymakers to look for measures to stabilise FX

This morning, we’ve seen some of those bond moves begin to ease as well, with yields on 10yr Japanese (-4.4bps) and Australian (-3.2bps) yields coming down, alongside those on 10yr Treasuries (-0.8bps). That comes as Japan’s PM Takaichi said in an interview today that she wouldn’t implement “irresponsible” tax cuts. Meanwhile, there’ve been further equity gains across Asia, with the CSI 300 (+0.51%), the Shanghai Comp (+0.34%) the Hang Seng (+0.18%) and the KOSPI (+0.30%) all advancing. The one exception has been the Nikkei (-0.27%) amidst an underperformance from tech stocks, but other Japanese indices like the TOPIX (+0.19%) are still higher this morning.

Otherwise yesterday, the bond sell-off was a big story outside of Japan too. For instance, in Europe 10yr bund yields (+0.2bps) hit their highest since October 2023 at 2.90%, taking them above their peak in March shortly after the fiscal stimulus announcements. They had been even higher at the intraday peak, but that was pared back after we heard from Isabel Schnabel of the ECB’s Executive Board. She said that “At the moment, no interest-rate increase is to be expected in the foreseeable future”. That was significant, because it was Ms. Schnabel who’d said earlier this month that she was “rather comfortable” with expectations about the next move being a hike, which led investors to price in a growing probability that would happen as soon as 2026. But after the latest interview, investors dialled back the likelihood of a 2026 rate hike even further, and the more policy-sensitive 2yr German yield (-0.6bps) ultimately closed slightly lower.

For US Treasuries, it was mostly a similar story of higher yields yesterday. That came as futures slightly dialled back their expectations for rate cuts next year, now pricing in 58bps by the Dec 2026 meeting, down from 60bps on Friday. In part, that was thanks to the ongoing rebound in oil prices, as that renewed concerns about inflationary pressures, with Brent crude (+2.65%) posting a 4th consecutive increase to $62.07/bbl. And we’d also heard from Cleveland Fed President Hammack over the weekend, who said her base case was that “we can stay here for some period of time until we get clearer evidence that either inflation is coming back down to target, or the employment side is weakening more materially”. So by the close, the 10yr yield (+1.6bps) was up to 4.16%, and notably, the 10yr real yield (+2.5bps) was up to 1.91%, its highest level in 4 months.

Yet despite that rise in nominal and real yields, which normally dampen investor appetite for precious metals that pay no interest, the rally for gold and silver continued to power forward yesterday. By the close, gold (+2.41%) had hit a new record of $4,444/oz, and silver (+2.80%) was also at a new peak of $69.04/oz. Moreover, both have seen further gains this morning, with gold up another +0.78% to $4,478/oz, whilst silver (+0.53%) is up to $69/40/oz. So that now brings their YTD gains to 71% and 140% respectively, which in both cases is their strongest annual performance since 1979.

In the meantime, US equities put in a decent performance as well, with the S&P 500 (+0.64%) back into positive territory for December again. So that currently leaves it on track for an 8th consecutive monthly gain for the first time since January 2018. The advance yesterday was its third consecutive move higher, and it was a broad-based move that saw over three-quarters of the index advance. Moreover, the Magnificent 7 (+0.54%) also posted a third consecutive gain to close just over 1% beneath its own record high. However, in Europe, the picture wasn’t quite as rosy, with the STOXX 600 (-0.13%) posting a modest decline.

Looking forward, today we’ll see the last batch of US data before Christmas. That includes the delayed Q3 GDP print, although that’s backward-looking and covers the period before the shutdown. However, a more recent piece of data will be the Conference Board’s consumer confidence reading for December. Remember that in November, the last reading was the lowest since the Liberation Day turmoil in April, so that will be in the spotlight given the recent downtick in sentiment indicators.

Finally on the day ahead, aside from the Q3 GDP and the Conference Board reading, today’s US data releases include industrial production for November, preliminary durable goods orders for October, and the Richmond Fed’s manufacturing index. Otherwise from central banks, the Bank of Canada will publish their summary of deliberations for the December policy decision.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 08:29

ADP Weekly Employment Data Shows Labor Market Rebounding In December

Zero Hedge -

ADP Weekly Employment Data Shows Labor Market Rebounding In December

Since the start of the government shutdown, what labor market data indications we got actually surprised to the upside (while soft survey data crashed)...

...but now, as the data starts to re-emerge from its slumber, it remains mixed with jobless claims data remaining solid to say the least while JOLTS leaves questions about the low-hire, low-fire, low-quits economy. If one data set has bee noisy through the past few weeks, it's ADP (and its new weekly updated prints). Analysts expected a 16.25k average job gain per week over the past four weeks... but the print was just +11.5k (46k on a monthly basis) for the week-ending Dec 6th, with the prior week's average revised up strongly to +17.5k (+70k monthly).

Source: Bloomberg

That is the third straight week of month-over-month gains for the labor market after a brief slump as the government shutdown started.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 08:22

The Challenge For 2026 Markets

Zero Hedge -

The Challenge For 2026 Markets

Authored by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

It’s that time of year when Wall Street polishes up its crystal balls and begins predicting returns for 2026. Since Wall Street never predicts a down year, which would be unwise for fee-based product revenues, these forecasts are often inaccurate and sometimes significantly wrong. Let’s review some previous years. For example, on December 7th, 2021, we wrote an article about the predictions for 2022.

“There is one thing about Goldman Sachs that is always consistent; they are ‘bullish.’ Of course, given that the market is positive more often than negative, it ‘pays’ to be bullish when your company sells products to hungry investors. It is important to remember that Goldman Sachs was wrong when it was most important, particularly in 2000 and 2008. However, in keeping with its traditional bullishness, Goldman’s chief equity strategist David Kostin forecasted the S&P 500 will climb by 9% to 5100 at year-end 2022. As he notes, such will “reflect a prospective total return of 10% including dividends.”

The problem, of course, is that the S&P 500 did NOT end the year at 5100.

Then, in 2022, Wall Street predicted a modest return of just 3.9% for 2023.

Of course, reality turned out to be markedly different.

The same trend was observed in 2023, 2024, and 2025 as Wall Street grossly underestimated the forward market return. Heading into 2025, Wall Street predicted a median return of just 8.2% with the highest estimate of nearly 15%. As we wrap up the year, the market is again closing in on a 20% return, marking the third consecutive year of such performance.

However, while analysts repeatedly fail at the guessing game, Wall Street’s annual tradition is always of higher returns. To borrow a quote:

“(Market) Predictions Are Difficult…Especially When They Are About The Future” – Niels Bohr

Okay, I took a little poetic license, but the point is that while we try, predicting the future is difficult at best and impossible at worst. If we could accurately predict the future, fortune tellers would win all the lotteries, psychics would be more prosperous than Elon Musk, and portfolio managers would always beat the index.

However, this is never the case, and as investors, we must rely on our data, analyze past events, filter out the current noise, and discern possible future outcomes. The biggest problem with Wall Street today and in the past is its consistent disregard for the unexpected and random events that inevitably occur, like the “Liberation Day” tariff event that sent the market plunging by nearly 20%. However, even when such events occur frequently, from trade wars to Brexit to Fed policy and a global pandemic, Wall Street analysts were often convinced that such things would not happen.

So what about 2026? We have some early indications of Wall Street targets for the S&P 500 index, and, as is always the case, they are primarily optimistic for the coming year. The median estimate for 2026 is for the market to rise to 7500 next year, which would be a disappointing return of just 9.3% after three years of 20% gains. However, the high estimate from Deutsche Bank suggests a 15% return, while the low estimate from BofA is just 4%. Notably, not one firm forecasts a negative return.

There are several risks to these forecasts.

The Challenge For 2026

As of this writing, the market appears poised to close the year above 6,800. That’s roughly a 17% percent gain for the year based on price appreciation. That advance was a combination of AI-fueled enthusiasm, softening inflation, and hopes of Fed rate cuts and increased liquidity. However, under the surface, the setup for 2026 looks increasingly fragile. Valuations are stretched, expectations are optimistic, and earnings have little room for error.

Let’s start with the data. The current trailing twelve-month price-to-earnings ratio sits at 26, near historic extremes. The Shiller CAPE ratio, which adjusts for inflation and smooths cycles over a decade, stands near 39. Forward P/E estimates for 2026 earnings are in the 23 range. By almost every measure, equities are priced at levels that historically limit future returns.

However, this also presents a risk that investors need to be prepared for. At current valuation levels, stocks don’t need a crisis to fall; they only need disappointment. If growth falls short, or if the Fed doesn’t deliver the cuts the market expects, equities face pressure. In other words, a “recession” is not the risk; it is just anything that is “less than perfect.”

Wall Street, of course, is bullish. That’s the default setting. Morgan Stanley is calling for a 14 percent gain. Goldman Sachs projects double-digit earnings growth. Deutsche Bank has a target of 8,000 for the S&P 500. But look closer. These forecasts assume strong profit growth, stable inflation, and rate cuts starting in mid-2026, which is a very tight window.

However, investors have heard this before, but have also seen what happens when markets get ahead of reality. That leaves the setup for 2026 a little less bullish, as elevated expectations and high valuations leave minimal margin for error.

Valuation Math: What the Numbers Suggest for 2026

To make sense of where the S&P 500 could go in 2026, we don’t need a prediction, just a calculator. Rather than guessing, we prefer to let “valuations do the talking.” The reason is that valuations represent investor sentiment based on the outlook for earnings growth. If forward earnings growth is strong, investors can overpay for equities today, anticipating that earnings will justify the overpayment. However, if earnings expectations start to fall, investors will reprice the markets for lower premiums.

As shown below, we ran multiple scenarios based on forward earnings estimates, valuation ranges, and historical outcomes. The S&P 500 begins the year near 6,900, our base case, and from there, outcomes depend on whether multiples expand, hold, or contract. For the earnings analysis, we are using S&P Global’s forward 2026 reported earnings per share estimate of $282, which will likely be the high-water mark for 2026. Therefore, we will assume that these estimates are accurate, and we can then incorporate valuation multiples and predict forward market returns.

Here are the scenarios, based on $282 per share: (Note: There are an infinite number of possibilities that could occur in 2026. The point of the following discussion is to understand the math of valuations as it relates to market risk next year.)

Optimistic Case (Multiple Expansion): Bullish investor sentiment persists, and risk-taking intensifies, resulting in a multiple expansion to 29x. Such a prediction would suggest a figure close to Deutsche Bank’s current 2026 estimate of 8,000 as a year-end target. As shown, at 29 times earnings, the year target would be $ 8,185, or a roughly 18% gain.

Neutral Case (Maintain Current Multiples): This scenario assumes that, while the bullish market persists, concerns over monetary policy, inflation, or earnings growth rates will keep multiples stable at 26x forward earnings. Such a scenario would allow the index to rise to 7,338, representing a more historically normal 6% gain in 2026. Such a muted return will be very disappointing after three years of nearly 20% gains.

Slow-Down Case: If we assume an economic slowdown that impacts forward earnings expectations, such a scenario would potentially lead to a reversion in valuations toward its 5-year average of 22x. Such a decline would likely result in a market value of 6,209, or a negative return of approximately 10%.

Recession Case: The most likely worst-case outcome, barring a financial or credit-related event next year, is the onset of a mild recession. While such an event is likely a low-probability occurrence in 2026, a scenario like this would likely lead to more severe earnings disappointment and market repricing. If such were to occur, a valuation contraction toward 18 times earnings is possible, with a price decline in the index towards 5080, taking markets back to the 2021 peak, or a 26% correction.

Notice this: even a mild reversion in valuations creates downside. If earnings flatten and multiples fall to 20, that’s enough to limit or erase gains. If both earnings and valuations fall short, returns turn negative fast. This makes managing risk less simple in 2026. While high valuations reduce forward returns, they do not guarantee losses. However, high valuations leave “no cushion” if things go sideways.

This is not a time for aggressive positioning. It’s a time to respect the math.

Risk Factors: What Could Go Wrong in 2026

Markets don’t move in straight lines. The problem with 2026 isn’t a forecast. It’s the imbalance between expectations and risk. Everything must go right for stocks to deliver strong returns from current levels. But there’s plenty that could go wrong. As shown in the table below, since 2009, investors have enjoyed annualized real returns in the market that are 50% higher than the historic returns from 1900 to the present. Those returns were a function of near-zero interest rates, massive liquidity injections, and a valuation reversion following the 2008 crisis. None of those supports is currently available as we head into 2026.

Here is another risk. The current 3-year return is 18% above its 3-year average. While that is not the highest level on record, when the index trades significantly above its moving average, volatility tends to rise. These periods often see sharp drawdowns, and corrections become more frequent, with increased variance in returns leading to larger losses in downturns, which compounds the problem. Secondly, there are declining risk-adjusted returns. When returns deviate significantly from the trend, future returns tend to revert toward the mean. This mean reversion is driven by stretched valuations resetting. Over time, high volatility and large price swings reduce compound returns. Even if average returns remain positive, the math of compounding is compromised by losses, weakening full-cycle gains.

Secondly, the economy is forecasted to grow around 2 percent, but there are signs of slowing. With consumer debt levels rising, delinquency rates on credit cards and auto loans inching higher, and student loan repayments resuming, those factors weigh on discretionary spending.

Third, while the Fed is cutting rates, investors have already priced those cuts into the market. However, inflation remains sticky, wage growth is still elevated, and jobless claims remain near lows. As such, if the Fed hesitates or signals fewer cuts, this could pressure valuation multiples, especially for growth stocks.

Fourth, consensus earnings remain extremely optimistic in relation to expectations for economic growth and inflation. That requires strong margins, global stability, and continued AI-driven demand. If any of these falter, earnings estimates will fall, and investors will reprice markets for lower multiples.

Finally, the 2025 rally was led by a small group of stocks with only about 37% of all issues outperforming the index. If leadership narrows or stalls, the index could struggle even if broader conditions remain stable.

Investors should also watch geopolitical risk. U.S. midterm elections, global conflict, or supply chain issues could disrupt assumptions; however, these are secondary concerns. The core issue remains earnings versus valuation. The higher the price you pay, the smaller the margin for error.

While this market is priced for a smooth glide path, the odds of turbulence are rising.

Strategy: What Investors Should Do Next

The playbook for 2026 isn’t about guessing market direction. It’s about managing risk, and understanding that with valuations high, earnings uncertain, and monetary policy in transition, your best move is preparation, not prediction.

The chart below combines the four potential predictions to show the possible market range for next year. Of course, you can analyze, make valuation assumptions, and derive your targets for next year based on your views. This analysis is an exercise in logic to develop a range of possibilities and probabilities over the next 12 months.

Valuations matter. At this stage of the cycle, you need to be more cautious—not more aggressive. Here’s how to position:

  • Lower your return expectations. If you’re assuming another 15 to 20 percent gain next year, you’re betting against the data. Valuation history suggests forward returns will be lower, especially if earnings growth slows. A more reasonable expectation is mid-single-digit returns, with higher volatility.
  • Reduce exposure to sectors with extreme valuations. AI might be real, but prices already assume perfection. Don’t abandon growth, but rotate toward quality. Look for companies with real cash flow, low leverage, and strong pricing power.
  • Focus on quality. Companies with strong cash flow, low debt, and pricing power are likely to outperform in slower-growth environments.
  • Increase Fixed Income. High-quality fixed income will shield portfolios against increased market volatility.
  • Hold some cash. Not because you’re timing the market, but because flexibility matters. If volatility spikes, you want dry powder. That also gives you a chance to buy quality at a discount if the market pulls back.
  • Most importantly, stop chasing narratives. AI is real, but that doesn’t make every AI stock a buy. The same goes for the “soft landing” story. Focus on the numbers. Stick with fundamentals.

In 2026, outcomes will depend on earnings, inflation, and the actions of the Fed. However, your results will vary based on your risk-management discipline, allocations, and portfolio structure. As such, it is important not to overreach, not to assume past returns will repeat, and to respect valuations.

That’s how you protect capital, and ultimately stay in the game when others can’t.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 08:05

President Unveils 'Trump Class' Of Warships, Huntington Ingalls Shares Jump

Zero Hedge -

President Unveils 'Trump Class' Of Warships, Huntington Ingalls Shares Jump

Shares of warship builder Huntington Ingalls Industries rose in premarket trading and are on track for the largest annual gain in 12 years, driven by news of President Trump's continued push to rebuild the U.S. Navy.

HII gained 5% on Monday and another 5% in premarket trading early Tuesday after President Trump announced a plan on Monday evening to build two new "Trump-class" battleships, to acquire 20-25 of these ships in the coming years.

Here are critical details about Trump's major announcement Monday evening (courtesy of Goldman analyst Noah Poponak):

Trump-class battleships. On December 22, 2025 President Trump announced that he had approved a plan for the U.S. Navy to build two new "Trump-class" battleships, with the goal of acquiring 20-25 of these ships in the coming years.

In his address, the President noted these 30,000-40,000 ton ships will carry a large quantity of missiles, including hypersonic missiles, and will also be outfitted with electromagnetic rail guns and directed energy lasers.

Trump-class battleships will also carry nuclear-armed sea launched cruise missiles (currently under development) adding an additional element of nuclear deterrence to the Navy. Trump-class destroyers appear to be designed as the center of enhanced command and control networks at sea, as the Navy looks to field more autonomous assets and traditional vessels in the coming years.

The WSJ has reported that the U.S. Navy will launch a vendor competition, with plans to procure the first hull in 2030.

The first "Trump-class" battleship will be named USS Defiant, and it will be even longer than the Iowa-class battleships of the World War II era. However, at 35,000 tons, it will only weigh about half as much, and have a smaller crew of between 650 and 850 sailors; the Iowa had some 2,700 sailors. The new ships -- which are being called "guided missile battleships" --  are part of larger vision for a "Golden Fleet." The Navy has rolled out a website to promote that concept. Sources tell AP that construction of the Defiant is expected to start in the early 2030's, with another 19 to 24 Trump-class ships to follow. 

While they're being billed as "battleships," they'll differ from what that term has previously described -- heavily armored ships with massive guns. The Defiant will have hypersonic missiles, nuclear cruise missiles, rail guns, and high-powered lasers. All of those systems are currently under development, raising the odds that, like so many weapons programs, the Trump-class ships will blow past their budgets and due dates. Rail guns -- electromagnetic launchers whose projectiles unleash their damage via pure kinetic energy rather than explosives -- have a particularly notorious development history. The Navy invested more than 15 years and more than a half a billion dollars trying to equip warships with rail guns before giving up in 2021.  

"Engineered to outmatch any foreign adversary, the new battleship class will be the centerpiece of naval power," said the Navy in a press release. "At triple the size of an Arleigh Burke-class destroyer, its massive frame provides superior firepower, larger missile magazines, and the capability to launch Conventional Prompt Strike hypersonic missiles and the Surface Launch Cruise Missile-Nuclear." 

Key technical specifications: 

  • Length: 840-880'
  • Beam: 105-115'
  • Draft: 24-30'
  • Speed: 30+ knots
  • Main Battery: Nuclear Surface Launch Cruise Missile (SLCM-N), hypersonic missiles, vertical launch missiles
  • Secondary Battery: 1 x 32-megagoule railgun with hypervelocity projectile (HVP), 2 x 5" gun with HVP, 2 x 300 kW or 2 x 600kW lasers
  • Defensive Battery: 2 x rolling airframe missile launchers, 4 x 30mm guns, 4 x ODIN lasers, 2 x counter-UxS (drone) systems 

Promising to treat weapons systems like an Oval Office update or a new ballroom, Trump said he'll be very much a part of the design process. "The U.S. Navy will lead the design of these ships along with me, because I'm a very aesthetic person," he said Monday. Trump has previously said he altered the design of the since-nixed Constellation-class frigates, after seeing one under construction in a shipyard and finding it lacked curb appeal. "The ships that they were building, they looked terrible," Trump said in a 2020 speech. "I changed designs. I looked at it, I said, 'That's a terrible-looking ship, let's make it beautiful'." 

Poponak told clients that his 12-month price target for HII was upgraded to $384 from $356.

This year, HII shares are up a whopping 87%, the largest annual increase since the 107% increase in 2013.

Shares are at record high levels.

The S&P 500 Aerospace & Defense Index nears record highs.

Secretary of the Navy John Phelan recently said that the U.S. military will be acquiring a "new frigate class based on HII's Legend-Class National Security Cutter design."

Earlier this year, HII stock had one of the largest intraday gains on record as Trump touted his move to revitalize domestic shipbuilders.

All of this plays into the total reposturing of the U.S. military to focus on Western hemispheric defense and securing the hemisphere ahead of the 2030s. We've outlined how to profit from this (read here). 

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 07:45

"Much-Needed Win": Novo Shares Jump Most In Nearly Two Years After US Approval Of Wegovy Obesity Pill

Zero Hedge -

"Much-Needed Win": Novo Shares Jump Most In Nearly Two Years After US Approval Of Wegovy Obesity Pill

Novo Nordisk shares in Europe jumped the most in nearly two years after the U.S. FDA approved the Wegovy pill, a once-daily 25 mg oral semaglutide, for long-term weight loss, weight maintenance, and reduction of major adverse cardiovascular events. The approval marks a much-needed win for the struggling Danish pharmaceutical company, which has been hit by market share losses to GLP-1 knockoffs.

"The Wegovy pill is the first oral glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist therapy approved for weight management," Novo wrote in a press release earlier on Tuesday.

Approval was based on the Oasis 4 trial, which showed patients taking the daily pill lost an average of 16.6% of body weight. The new pill will be available in the U.S. in early January and will be approved for long-term weight loss and weight maintenance.

BMO Capital Markets analyst Evan David Seigerman told clients the FDA approval gives the company a “much-needed win,” after the “recent challenges maintaining incretin market share dominance."

Seigerman said that Novo will “benefit from first-mover advantage, capturing patients with a preference for convenience and comfort provided by an oral dosing regimen." He noted that Eli Lilly’s rival pill, orforglipron, is "just around the corner."  

Novo shares in Copenhagen jumped more than 7%, the largest intra-day gain since March 2024. This surge of optimism in the stock comes as market-share losses have pressured it down 48% year to date.

Has a bottom finally formed?

Related:

Will 2026 be a rebound here for Novo?

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 07:20

The Box Office Crisis Is Worse Than It Looks

Zero Hedge -

The Box Office Crisis Is Worse Than It Looks

Prior to the release of "Avatar: Fire and Ash" in the week before Christmas, 2025 was another disappointing year at the box office.

Statista's Felix Richer details below that, according to industry tracker The Numbers, this year's domestic box office gross will be roughly in line with last year's result, which fell short of the 2023 total, not to mention coming anywhere close to pre-pandemic levels.

At an estimated total of $8.6 billion, the North American box office fell 23 percent short of its 2019 performance last year and is currently projected to do the same in 2025.

While that sounds bad enough, it gets worse: looking at ticket sales, which takes rising ticket prices out of the equation, the results are more dire than the box office earnings would suggest.

Compared to 2019, ticket sales are down almost 40 percent, and, perhaps most concerning, the decline in ticket sales began long before the pandemic.

According to The Numbers, ticket sales of North American movie theaters peaked in the early 2000s. Since the turn of the millennium, they decline by 46 percent. Box office revenue, however, is up 14 percent since 2000, partially glossing over a weakness that goes beyond post-pandemic struggles.

 The Box Office Crisis Is Worse Than It Looks | Statista

You will find more infographics at Statista

While the short-term weakness can be explained by things like the 2023 Hollywood writers strikes, which created a scarcity of blockbuster releases, and economic hardship caused by inflation, the longer-term decline in ticket sales indicates that consumers are gradually falling out of love with the cinema.

While the first two factors will eventually recede, consumer habits appear to have changed for good and the film industry will have to find new ways to attract consumers, who are obviously enjoying to consume most video content in their own home, whenever they please.

Shortened theatrical release windows, a genie let out of the bottle when studios were desperate to make money during Covid lockdowns, don't help with this development, as consumers have even less incentive to go to the movies if they can enjoy the same film at home, possibly for free, just a few weeks later.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 06:55

DHS Offering $3,000 To Illegal Aliens To Self-Deport As Part Of Holiday Deal

Zero Hedge -

DHS Offering $3,000 To Illegal Aliens To Self-Deport As Part Of Holiday Deal

Authored by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is offering triple the amount of cash to illegal immigrants who willingly leave the United States through a smartphone app as part of a “holiday deal.”

In this photo illustration, a phone displays the CBP Home App, on May 5, 2025. Oleksii Pydsosonnii/The Epoch Times

“Since January 2025, 1.9 million illegal aliens have voluntarily self-deported and tens of thousands have used the CBP Home program,” Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said in a Dec. 22 statement.

“During the Christmas Season, the U.S. taxpayer is so generously TRIPLING the incentive to leave voluntarily for those in this country illegally—offering a $3,000 exit bonus, but just until the end of the year.”

DHS earlier this year unveiled a plan for illegal immigrants to self-deport through the CBP One app, which allows them to receive $1,000 from the federal government upon leaving the United States. It also forgives any immigration-related fines or penalties they may have incurred.

Noem added, “Illegal aliens should take advantage of this gift and self-deport because if they don’t, we will find them, we will arrest them, and they will never return.”

The Trump administration has said the CBP Home app is a way for people to leave without having to deal with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents. The app replaced the CBP One program that was used under the Biden administration, which allowed people to schedule hearings with immigration judges and to enter the United States before it was suspended by the White House in January.

A news release issued by DHS this past week said that more than 2.5 million illegal immigrants have left the United States since President Donald Trump was sworn into office for a second time, with 1.9 million voluntarily leaving and more than 600,000 deportations.

Trump, who promised record levels of deportations during the 2024 campaign, has ramped up enforcement actions and signed numerous orders related to both immigration and border security. The president has said that it’s needed after record numbers of illegal immigrants were encountered by agents or entered the United States under the Biden administration.

The Trump administration is preparing for a new push against illegal immigration in 2026 with billions in new funding, and officials have said they plan to hire thousands more immigration agents, open new detention centers, and partner with outside companies to track down people who are in the country illegally.

ICE and the Border Patrol will receive around $170 billion in additional funds through September 2029 as part of a funding package that was passed and signed into law over the summer.

White House border czar Tom Homan said on Monday that Trump had delivered on his promise of a historic deportation operation and removing criminals while shutting down illegal immigration across the U.S.–Mexico border. Homan said the number of arrests will increase sharply as ICE hires more officers and expands detention capacity with the new funding.

“I think you’re going to see the numbers explode greatly next year,” Homan said, adding that there will be more enforcement activity at workplaces next year.

Some of the immigration-related orders have faced legal pushback. A federal appeals court in late November, for example, declined to clear the way for Trump to expand a fast-track deportation process to allow for the expedited removal of illegal immigrants who are living far away from the border.

Reuters contributed to this report.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 06:30

Journo Freaks Out After Bari Weiss Spikes '60 Minutes' Segment On El Salvador Prison

Zero Hedge -

Journo Freaks Out After Bari Weiss Spikes '60 Minutes' Segment On El Salvador Prison

CBS News' new editor in chief Bari Weiss pulled a planned "60 Minutes" segment on an El Salvador maximum-security prison where the Trump administration has sent hundreds of Venezuelan migrants - apparently because the journalist behind the piece failed to obtain comment from the Trump administration. 

Bari Weiss backstage at The Theatre at the Ace Hotel in Los Angeles, September 13, 2023.Francine Orr/Getty Images.

The 11th hour decision prompted outrage from a high-profile network correspondent, Sharyn Alfonsi, who said that Weiss "spiked our story," and characterized the move as a political decision rather than an editorial call, according to an email reviewed by the Wall Street Journal

"Our story was screened five times and cleared by both CBS attorneys and Standards and Practices. It is factually correct," Alfonsi's email continues, adding that if the standard for airing a story became the government agreeing to be interviewed, the network would cede editorial control. "We go from an investigative powerhouse to a stenographer for the state," she added. 

While Alfonsi's email suggests that the segment was held over lack of comment from the Trump admin, a source tells Axios that's not the case - and that the report actually needed more reporting and other elements, and that the reporters did seek comment from the Trump admin.

In response, Weiss said: "My job is to make sure that all stories we publish are the best they can be," adding "Holding stories that aren’t ready for whatever reason—that they lack sufficient context, say, or that they are missing critical voices—happens every day in every newsroom. I look forward to airing this important piece when it’s ready."

In a follow-up, Weiss said: 

As of course you all have seen, I held a ‘60 Minutes’ story, and I held that story because it wasn’t ready. The story presented very powerful testimony of abuse at CECOT, but that testimony has already been reported on by places like The Times. The public knows that Venezuelans have been subjected to horrific treatment in this prison. So to run a story on this subject, two months later, we simply need to do more. And this is ‘60 Minutes.’ We need to be able to make every effort to get the principles on the record and on camera. To me, our viewers come first, not a listing schedule or anything else, and that is my north star, and I hope it’s the north star of every person in this newsroom.

CBS had been advertising the segment on Friday, teasing some of Alfonsi's interviews with some of the deported migrants who had been released from the megaprison - describing "the brutal and torturous conditions they endured." 

The Trump administration has been deporting alleged Venezuelan gang members to El Salvador's Terrorism Confinement Center (CEDOT), however in June a federal judge said that the admin must allow migrants an opportunity to challenge their removal from the US. 

CBS parent company Paramount purchased Weiss's news and opinion site, the Free Press, for $150 million earlier this year - which CEO David Ellison (Larry Ellison's son) said was to bring the network "news that reflects reality" and journalism that "doesn’t seek to demonize, but seeks to understand."

Meanwhile, some (like CNBC's Andrew Ross Sorkin) are suggesting that this was about appeasing the Trump administration amid a fierce battle between Netflix and Paramount over the purchase of Warner Brothers Discovery.

Either scenario would likely trigger a review by the US Justice Department, which could block the transaction or demand changes. 

Earlier this month, President Trump suggested that the Netflix deal "could be a problem" because of the size of the combined market share.

"There’s no question about it," Trump said, though later he claimed that he "didn't know anything about the deal."

On Monday, Paramount Skydance announced that billionaire Larry Ellison had personally guaranteed an amended offer for Warner Brothers Discovery.

"Larry Ellison has agreed to provide an irrevocable personal guarantee of $40.4 billion of the equity financing for the offer and any damages claims against Paramount," the company said in a press release. 

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 06:11

Zurich Has The World's Most Expensive Cappuccino, Amsterdam The Cheapest

Zero Hedge -

Zurich Has The World's Most Expensive Cappuccino, Amsterdam The Cheapest

Coffee is a daily ritual for millions of people around the world. Yet the price of a simple cappuccino can vary dramatically depending on where you order it.

Local wages, rents, taxes, and currency strength all shape what consumers ultimately pay for their caffeine fix.

This visualization ranks the most expensive cappuccinos among the 69 major cities covered in Deutsche Bank’s Mapping the World’s Prices 2025 report.

It covers cappuccino prices in 2025, expressed in U.S. dollars for comparability.

Swiss and Nordic Cities Lead the Rankings

Zurich and Copenhagen share the top spot, with an average cappuccino price of $6.77. Switzerland’s high wages and cost of living, combined with a strong currency, push everyday purchases higher.

Geneva also ranks among the most expensive cities at $5.86, reinforcing Switzerland’s position as one of the costliest places in the world for daily consumption.

U.S. Cities Cluster Near the Top

Several U.S. cities appear prominently in the rankings. New York ($5.95) and San Francisco ($5.90) lead the pack, followed closely by Los Angeles, Chicago, and Boston.

Despite differences in geography and culture, cappuccino prices across these U.S. cities fall within a relatively narrow range, suggesting similar cost structures in large urban markets.

Europe’s Price Range—and Italy’s Exception

European cities show a wider spread. While London ($5.19), Stockholm ($5.10), and Helsinki ($5.13) rank among the pricier options, Vienna and Amsterdam sit below $5.00.

Notably, Italy stands apart. Even the most expensive cappuccino in Italy—found in Milan—costs just $2.15, while in Rome the average price is only $1.79.

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Which Countries Drink the Most Wine? on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 05:45

Germany's Debt-Fueled Illusions: Merz Humiliated, Economy In Freefall

Zero Hedge -

Germany's Debt-Fueled Illusions: Merz Humiliated, Economy In Freefall

Submitted by Thomas Kolbe

The year 2025 ends for the slap-prone German Chancellor with a resounding smack in Brussels. After the failed raid on Russian assets at Euroclear, Berlin now turns its gaze to the hoped-for comeback of the German economy. Yet here too awaits the next bitter realization for naïve statisticians: wealth cannot be printed with debt.

Whether the Chancellor finds any sense of fulfillment—or even joy—in his current job is difficult to discern. Not that Friedrich Merz, with his numerous political sleights of hand, has preserved any claim to professional happiness. And yet curiosity remains: what must the psyche of a man be like, who for nearly eight months has been led by social-democratic buccaneers such as Lars Klingbeil and Bärbel Bas by the nose through the political circus—exposed, humiliated, and repeatedly made ridiculous?

March into Command Economy

Merz’s grandiose promises of cutting bureaucracy, unleashing the economy in a vitalizing fall of reforms, and his bizarre economic patriotism à la “Made for Germany” evaporate at the slightest breeze of intra-coalition opposition. It reads like a naive comedy: the CDU and SPD camouflage reform policies, only to steer the central plan of transforming society and the economy into a green command economy with a military-industrial complex through increasingly rough seas to a safe harbor. The good old Erich—what would he have thought of what the old “FRG” has become?

The ongoing public humiliation of former BlackRock breakfast director Friedrich Merz reached a temporary peak on Friday in Brussels. At the EU summit, he received a resounding slap from the small Visegrád coalition led by Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, ultimately preventing the expropriation of Russian assets at Euroclear.

For those who understand the significance of Euroclear and even vaguely grasp what it means to damage a pillar of the trust-based international financial market architecture, a sigh of relief was inevitable.

What threatened here was nothing less than a reckless kick against a system’s foundation—whether from ignorance, political incompetence, or an almost manic denial of reality regarding the long-lost war in Ukraine. Panic replaces reason, EU-Europe digs deeper into the spiral of debt and recession, whose accelerating spin now lifts once-prosperous cities like Stuttgart and Wolfsburg off their fiscal saddles.

In Brussels, Merz and his allies were shown a boundary—unmistakably. Thus, the circle closes on a disagreeable year 2025 for him. And everything suggests the coming year will offer little cause for optimism.

Toward the Sunset

The German economy alone ensures that 2026 will seamlessly continue the disaster of 2025. An honest economic assessment requires a willingness for an honest inventory. The state’s share of German GDP has long surpassed the magic mark of 50 percent. New borrowing next year—adjusted for the federal government’s accounting tricks—will amount to roughly 5.6 percent.

Merz’s relentless fight against the debt brake now forces even Bundesbank economists to a sober assessment. For the coming year, they forecast an official budget deficit of 4.8 percent—a figure indirectly confirming our estimate of actual new borrowing.

If one views the state as a consumer filling its deficits with a debt printer, then statistically reported zero growth means nothing more than the private economy—producing goods and services for real consumers—is shrinking dramatically.

To counteract this economic erosion, the federal government, in addition to its already high-deficit budget, channels special funds into two artificial economies: the green disaster economy and the freshly revitalized war sector. Over €50 billion per year is borrowed on the credit market for this purpose.

It is this mixture of economic ignorance, historical oblivion, and near-childlike faith in miracles that leaves one speechless. One can safely assume that no cabinet member comprehends that only capital saved from the economic process and transformed into investments on a free market creates wealth.

The Merz–Klingbeil duo is building a bubble economy ideologically committed to the green transformation and geopolitically following a historically fatal idea: the growth of a war economy.

The Silent Erosion of the Real Economy

This policy may further swell the public sector. Merely distributing these massive debt and credit programs puts tens of thousands to work at the expense of the productive population. The high regulatory tempo in Brussels and Berlin has forced the German economy to create roughly 325,000 new administrative positions over the past three years—solely to handle the flood of documentation and regulatory requirements. Paper piles upon paper: absurd, Kafkaesque, and economically destructive.

The state thus effectively outsources its own bureaucracy and distorts statistics on multiple levels. While administrative apparatuses grow, hundreds of thousands of industrial jobs have already been lost. The consensus estimate for economic growth in 2026 of just about one percent is the true disaster Berlin must now digest.

It matters little how much credit the state withdraws from the capital market or which incentives it creates to direct private capital into industrial wastelands—green steel or wind energy. In this environment, the private sector will shrink by at least four percent next year.

The Turning Point

For Friedrich Merz, this economic catastrophe is no longer merely a domestic political time bomb. If the downward spiral continues, media spectacles, ritualized bashing of entrepreneurs, hollow site patriotism, and endless “persevere” slogans will not suffice to explain to citizens why their exsanguination through taxes and labor markets continues to rise while no one addresses the causes.

At its core, this crisis is about correcting two fundamental ideological misdirections. The moment will come when Germany must abandon the leftist illusion of permanently acting as the world’s social office. This cut will coincide with the end of destructive climate socialism, which is either bankrupting German industry or pushing it into the arms of rationally managed locations.

The Visegrád group delivered a demonstrative kick to Merz’s shins. But the real dynamics extend further: a powerful opposition of conservative parties and governments—from Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Italy—is forming. They will eventually behead the climate-socialist Medusa of central planners. Yet, given the stiff headwinds and fierce resistance of Brussels’ powerful core, the birth of the liberating European Perseus may be a long and difficult labor.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 05:00

Non-US Citizens More Likely To Have Devices Checked

Zero Hedge -

Non-US Citizens More Likely To Have Devices Checked

Tourists heading to the United States could soon have to disclose the past five years of their social media activities to authorities during the ESTA process. Where providing such information was previously only mandatory for longer-term visas, U.S. Customs and Border Protection have now submitted a new regulatory proposal to make it an essential part of short-term tourists and business travelers’ applications too. The move would be a part of a wider package of data collection measures which authorities say are necessary for security reasons. The decision is not yet legally binding, but could start to come into force from February.

The new regulation would move the inspection process to a pre-travel stage. Currently, the CBP can demand a media search of entrants’ electronic devices at random at the border, without needing a warrant or any specific reason. More “advanced” searches, which happens when a CBP or ICE official connects the device to external equipment in order to review, copy, and/or analyze its contents, requires reasonable suspicion of criminal activity or a "national security concern". CBP officers are also able to "detain” an electronic device or copies of information contained within it, usually up to a maximum of five days.

As Statista's Anna Fleck reportsdata from the CBP shows that non-U.S. citizens are over three times more likely to have their devices checked at the U.S. border than those who hold a U.S. passport. Of the 55,318 media searches of electronics devices checks in the fiscal year of 2025, running from October 1, 2024 to September 30, 2025, 41,728 were of non-U.S. citizens, while 13,590 were of U.S. citizens.

 Non-U.S. Citizens More Likely To Have Devices Checked | Statista

You will find more infographics at Statista

On average, searches have historically been relatively rare. Of the total 419 million passengers processed at U.S. ports of entry last year, around 0.01 percent had their electronic devices searched. Ports of entry include international airports, road and rail crossings on land borders and major seaports, and are places where travelers can legally enter the country.

However, the number of searches, which includes the checking of mobile phones, computers, cameras, or other electronics, has been on the rise over the past decade. An increase in annual passenger footfall likely plays a part, with the dip in the number of device checks in 2020 and 2021 mirroring a decrease in travelers those years due to pandemic-related restrictions.

But this reason alone does not explain why the number of searches in 2025 nearly tripled since 2016, and increased more than six fold since 2015. In the latter year, around 382 million travelers were processed at U.S. ports of entry and the devices of 8,503 travelers were checked, working out to an average of around 0.002 percent.

It remains to be seen how the number of checks will change over the next few years with the Trump 2.0 administration. While checks generally increased under Biden too, the new proposed regulations and string of cases of U.S. tourists and work visa holders having been detained on arrival to the U.S. this year have raised concerns that there has been a shift, with the country now carrying out greater scrutiny than before.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 04:15

New NATO Hub To Open In Romania, Doubling Weapons Deliveries To Ukraine

Zero Hedge -

New NATO Hub To Open In Romania, Doubling Weapons Deliveries To Ukraine

Via Remix News,

Starting in January 2026, a second NATO hub will begin operating in Romania, doubling the transit of weapons to Ukraine, including through the PURL (Prioritized Ukraine Requirements List) mechanism.

Right after Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, a similar hub was opened in Jasionka, Poland, to serve as a key logistics center for all international aid flowing to Kyiv — military, humanitarian, and medical. Funds flow into Jasionka from Europe and the United States, writes Do Rzeczy.

The opening of the second hub reporting directly to NATO was confirmed by NATO’s deputy commander for support to Ukraine, General Mike Keller, who also informed press that in the past year, Ukraine received around 220,000 tons of military aid – approximately 9,000 trucks, 1,800 railway cars, and some 500 aircraft carrying weapons and military equipment.

“This is actually quite positive news, considering the independence of arms supplies to Ukraine from a single logistics center in Poland. This concerns urgently needed air defense assets, and above all, missiles, ammunition, etc.,” Defense Express experts assessed.

The current hub in Poland is located approximately 80 kilometers from the Polish-Ukrainian border. From there, goods, previously subjected to security checks, including explosives and counterintelligence equipment, are transported to the Ukrainian border.

For over two years, all these tasks were performed by a special support inspectorate – a team of four services under the overall leadership of the Military Counterintelligence Service – the police, the Central Bureau of Police Investigation, the Military Counterintelligence Service, and a dozen or so officers of the Military Gendarmerie.

Read more here...

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 03:30

US Mulls Sanctions On Spanish-Flagged Vessels

Zero Hedge -

US Mulls Sanctions On Spanish-Flagged Vessels

Lately headlines have been filled with developments of the United States targeting Venezuelan-linked tankers, or sanctioning Russia's so-called Shadow Fleet, or else intercepts of Iranian oil shipments on the high seas. Such country names on the receiving end of Washington's punitive measures have become commonplace, but it is surprising to see the EU country of Spain pop up as potentially next on the target list. Sanctions on Spanish-flagged vessels?

The US is actually mulling it, based on Madrid having blocked vessels carrying weapons bound for Israel since last year, even including refusals for American ships to dock.

Source: Bloomberg

Maritime monitoring source Freight Waves reported of several incidents last year, "Spain refused docking privileges at APM terminals in Algeciras, Spain in November 2024 to three U.S. flagged vessels operating under the MSP: Maersk Denver, Maersk Nysted, and Maersk Seletar."

The Federal Maritime Commission conducted a formal investigation and this month confirmed the anti-US and anti-Israel actions by the Spanish government did take place, in line with Spain's recent boycotting of Israel (specifically arms and military equipment) policy due to the Gaza war.

Spain has made clear it has recently codified a "multi-faceted policy" to ban ships and aircraft carrying weapons headed for Israel or tankers carrying fuel for use by the Israeli military from using Spanish ports or even flying in its airspace.

The US Federal Maritime Commission within the last days issued a statement confirming that it is considering "remedies the commission can implement to adjust or meet unfavorable conditions to shipping in the foreign trade of the United States include adopting regulations restricting voyages to or from US ports, imposing per voyage fees, limiting amounts or types of cargo, or taking ‘any other action the commission finds necessary and appropriate to adjust or meet any condition unfavorable to shipping the foreign trade of the United States’."

There has long existed routine coordination between Spanish and American military officials, however, the relationship is becoming increasingly tense, given port blockage issue reflects a serious political divergence amid the ongoing war in Gaza.

The Rota base, near Cádiz on the Atlantic coast, is under Spanish control but heavily utilized by American forces. Also, the Morón air base, which is near Seville, is a key hub for US military operations, with American forces long operating with a broad degree of freedom there.

US naval base at Rota in Cadiz province, file image

Madrid has defended its decision as rooted in Spain's sovereignty and terms outlined in a 1988 bilateral defense agreement, amid the past couple years of European scrutiny of Israeli military action against Palestinians, especially in war-ravaged Gaza.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/23/2025 - 02:45

Pages