Individual Economists

Coinbase Opposes Stablecoin Compromise In Senate Crypto Bill: Report

Zero Hedge -

Coinbase Opposes Stablecoin Compromise In Senate Crypto Bill: Report

Authored by Jesse Coghlan via CoinTelegraph.com,

Crypto exchange Coinbase is reportedly against the latest compromise over stablecoin yields that the Senate is looking to include in its crypto market structure bill.

Coinbase representatives told Senate lawmakers in a meeting on Monday that they had concerns over the language around stablecoin yields in the new compromise version of the bill, Punchbowl News reported Wednesday, citing four people briefed on the exchange.

A proposal that circulated earlier this week would have reportedly prevented third parties, such as exchanges, from paying stablecoin yields, a measure aimed at addressing banks’ concerns over the risk of deposit flight.

Coinbase is one of the largest crypto lobbyists in the US, and its withdrawal of support for the bill in January came just before the Senate Banking Committee indefinitely postponed a markup to advance the legislation.

Republican Senator Thom Tillis and Democratic Senator Angela Alsobrooks are leading the latest effort to advance the bill, and talks are reportedly ongoing. Coinbase did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Senator Alsobrooks, pictured at a banking event in early March, said the compromise bill may leave both crypto and the banks unhappy. Source: American Bankers Association

Yield fight plagues Senate bill

The fight between the crypto and banking lobbies over the Senate’s bill, which aims to outline how regulators should approach crypto, has largely revolved around stablecoin yields.

The White House has hosted at least three meetings for the groups to agree on a compromise, which has yet to materialize.

Banking groups argue that stablecoin yield payments by exchanges are a loophole in the GENIUS Act, which banned stablecoin issuers from paying yield to holders, and present a risk of deposit flight from the banking system.

Stablecoin yields are a major business for crypto exchanges, and the crypto lobby has argued that the risks are overstated and has accused the banks of anticompetitive behavior.

Republicans are pushing to pass the bill ahead of the midterms, where the makeup of Congress could change and derail momentum around the legislation. The House passed its version of the bill, called the CLARITY Act, in July.

Patrick Witt, the executive director of the President’s Council of Advisors for Digital Assets, posted to X on Wednesday that there was “plenty of uninformed FUD [fear, uncertainty and doubt] circulating on social media this week.”

“It’s all going to work out. Bullish,” he added.

Republican Senator Cynthia Lummis also posted to X on Wednesday that “we can’t wait until 2030 for another chance” to pass the crypto bill. 

“Bipartisan compromise is necessary for the Clarity Act to pass,” she added. “We’re working around the clock to ensure stablecoin rewards are protected and to prevent deposit flight from community banks.”

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 14:45

Wall Street Bonus Pool Hits Record Despite "Domestic And International Upheavals"

Zero Hedge -

Wall Street Bonus Pool Hits Record Despite "Domestic And International Upheavals"

As the K-shaped economy rages on, gasoline and diesel prices at the pump spike, and risks of food inflation later this year mount, Wall Street's bonus pool surged to a record in 2025, even as the Trump administration insists the inflationary shock is temporary.

On Thursday, New York State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli released a new report showing that the Wall Street bonus pool surged to a record $49.2 billion in 2025, up 9% from the previous year, while the average bonus rose 6% to $246,900.

"Wall Street saw strong performance for much of last year, despite all of the ongoing domestic and international upheavals," DiNapoli said.

Bloomberg noted, "The total pool is the largest in records going back to 1987."

DiNapoli continued, "When Wall Street does well, it's good for our state and city budgets, which are reliant on the industry's significant tax contributions."

Wall Street bankers entered 2026 with momentum after generating a record $134 billion in trading revenue last year. 

Top executives expect dealmaking and trading revenue to remain strong this year, but the Trump administration's crusade across the Americas and the Middle East, seen as an effort to pressure China, has heightened geopolitical tensions, sparked market turmoil, stoked inflation fears, and darkened the near-term outlook.

"However, we are seeing slower job growth, and geopolitical conflicts have global repercussions that pose extraordinary risks for the short- and long-term outlook on the financial sector and for broader economic markets," DiNapoli said.

The report showed that the city's securities industry edged down slightly to 198,200 jobs in 2025, from a three-decade high of 201,500 in 2024. The Office of the State Comptroller expects that figure to be revised higher when annual data adjustments are made.

Wall Street accounted for about 19% of New York State's tax revenue between 2024 and 2025. The bonuses are expected to generate $199 million more in state income tax revenue and $91 million more for NYC than in 2024. 

For NYC socialist Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who faces budget woes, it is probably not a smart idea to wage war on capitalism, or more of the industry will leave for red states. 

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 14:25

Putin Issues Some Frank Thoughts On 'Unpredictable' Iran War

Zero Hedge -

Putin Issues Some Frank Thoughts On 'Unpredictable' Iran War

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday delivered some rare, wide-ranging and frank commentary on the US-Israeli war against Iran.

He compared the war and the Hormuz Strait closure, and subsequent impact on global energy, to the massive widescale impact of the Covid-19 pandemic. But he also stated that outcomes to the war are at this point too hard to predict.

via ZUMA press

The conflict, Putin explained, is now resulting in significant damage to international logistics, production and supply chains while putting intense pressure on hydrocarbon, metals and fertilizer companies - according to a translation in Reuters.

"The consequences of the conflict in the Middle East are still difficult to accurately predict," Putin said before a conference of business leaders in Moscow. "It seems to me that those who are involved in the conflict cannot predict anything themselves, but for us it is even more difficult," he observed.

"However, there are already estimates that they can be compared with the coronavirus epidemic," Putin said. "Let me remind you that it has dramatically slowed down the development of all regions and continents, without exception."

There are reports circulating that earlier this week Putin highlighted the West's double standard when it comes to Ukraine, in comparison to raging Iran war, which is about to reach its first month.

In refence to the Western allies, Putin stated: "They signed all sorts of letters at the start of the Ukraine conflict. Yet these lovers of the epistolary arts haven't written anything about the current tragic events."

Putin's spokesman has meanwhile on Thursday addressed many of what he called "lies" related to Moscow's role in the Iran war.

"There are so many lies being spread by the media... Do not pay attention to them," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters in response to an AFP question on Russia supplying Tehran with drones.

Peskov also took the opportunity to address media claims being made about Moscow's approach to peace talks and Ukraine, in connection to the Iran war. The transcript from the audio exchange is below:

REPORTER: A question about the New York Times editorial published yesterday. You may have seen it. It says Putin was close to reaching a peace agreement with Ukraine back in February, but that the US and Israeli operation against Iran changed everything, and now he’s no longer interested in peace. How would you respond to that?

DMITRY PESKOV: "No, that's completely false and doesn’t reflect reality. It’s true that during the rounds of trilateral talks there was some movement toward a settlement. But the key issues that matter critically to Russia still were not agreed. From the very start, it was clear, and we’ve said this many times, that this includes territorial questions. That's the main issue under discussion. There has stolen been no progress on that. At the same time, that doesn't mean Russia has lost interest in negotiations. On the contrary, we remain open to talks, we're in contact with the Americans, and we expect the next round of negotiations to take place as soon as circumstances allow.

Meanwhile, numerous headlines in Western media have continued to say that Russia has been the real winner as a result of Washington's latest regime change adventure in the Middle East, describing that Putin raking in at least $760m a day amid soaring demand for Russian oil.

This also amid the US sanctions waivers, with The Telegraph reporting that "Kremlin sales from oil and gas will double from about $12bn to nearly $24bn this month as Putin profits from an enormous price surge and Donald Trump’s sanctions waivers, according to the Kyiv School of Economics (KSE) Institute."

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Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 13:50

Turkey Dumped 58 Tons Of Gold After Iran War Started, Slamming Price

Zero Hedge -

Turkey Dumped 58 Tons Of Gold After Iran War Started, Slamming Price

There has been much speculation about the mystery seller(s) that sent gold sliding into a bear market from its January high: was it a sovereign seeking to plug holes in their budget from the recent surge in oil, a "market maker" trying to spark stop loss liquidations, or just retail investors taking profit after one of the best years in history for the precious metal?

Today we learned the identity of at least one of the sellers: Turkey’s central bank sold and swapped about 60 tons of gold, worth more than $8 billion, or more than 10% of the country's total holdings, in two weeks after the start of the war in Iran, adding to the sharp downward pressure on bullion prices.

Turkish gold reserves showed a decline of 6 tons in the week of March 13 and another 52.4 tons in the week of March 20, marking a sharp drawdown in reserves, according to the latest data published by the central bank. While the composition of the sales is unclear, some of that was sold outright, while the majority was used to secure foreign exchange or liras via swap agreements, according to Bloomberg. It’s not uncommon for central banks to sell spot gold and simultaneously agree to buy it back in the future via swap agreements, effectively a gold-collateralized USD loan, which grants the country cheap dollar funding using the precious metal as collateral.

The move comes amid strains on Turkey’s disinflation strategy - meaning the currency isn’t allowed to depreciate at a rate faster than monthly inflation - which relies heavily on maintaining a stable or steadily depreciating lira, including with hard-currency interventions, usually via state-run banks. Rising energy import costs and increased dollar demand since the conflict began have made that approach more challenging to maintain, and forced Turkey to resort to its hard currency reserves. 

Turkey officials turned to gold sales and gold swap arrangements from the central bank’s $135 billion stockpile to meet liquidity needs and stabilize domestic demand, according to Iris Cibre, the founder of Phoenix Consultancy in Istanbul. She estimated total sales at 58.4 tons, with more than half of that conducted via gold-for-foreign-exchange swaps abroad.

That amount exceeds total outflows from gold-backed exchange-traded funds tracked by Bloomberg, which were about 43 tons over the same two-week period. ETFs are one of the most popular ways for institutional and retail investors to get exposure to gold.

Turkey is especially vulnerable to inflation shocks and balance-of-payment concerns should the war in Iran prolong because it needs to import almost all of its oil and gas. Officials are already struggling to rein in an inflation rate that last registered at 31.5% in February, one of the highest in the world. 

Turkish policymakers have so far responded to the crisis in the Middle East - which has sent oil prices soaring to above $100 a barrel from around $70 - by tightening liquidity, making lira funding costlier, and having state-run lenders intervene in the currency market. 

The sales mark a reversal for Turkey, which has been one of the world’s most aggressive gold buyers over the past decade as it sought to reduce exposure to US dollar-denominated assets. Gold prices have fallen by about 15% this month, with investors taking profits following a strong rally since last year. They extended their drop to more than 3% on Thursday, pushing the price of gold below $4400.

According to Daniel Ghali, a commodity strategist at TD Securities, the economic shock from the war in Iran will likely dent demand for bullion from some central banks while forcing others to sell from gold reserves to meet dollar-denominated obligations.

“Outright sales are not out of the question, although we expect the broader trend to be a step-change lower in the pace of central bank accumulation for the time being,” he said.

Turkey's sales are likely to persist: Bloomberg reported on Tuesday that Turkey’s central bank had been discussing tapping its gold reserves via gold-for-foreign currency swap transactions in the London market, as it seeks to shield the lira from steeper war-related losses. 

Turkey is estimated to hold about $30 billion of those reserves at the Bank of England, which Turkey’s central bank “may decide to use for FX intervention purposes without logistical constraints,” according to a report by JPMorgan Chase & Co. economist Fatih Akcelik on Tuesday.

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Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 13:35

Ugly 7Y Auction Has Lowest Bid To Cover Since September, Biggest Tail Since 2024

Zero Hedge -

Ugly 7Y Auction Has Lowest Bid To Cover Since September, Biggest Tail Since 2024

After two "terrible" coupon auctions earlier this week, moments ago the Treasury concluded the week's final auction when it sold $44 billion in 7 Year paper. It may not have been quite as terrible as the previous two, but it wasn't much stronger either.

Starting at the top, the auction stopped with a high yield of 4.255%, up sharply from 3.790% in February and the highest since Jan 2025. It also tailed the When Issued 4.247% by 0.8bps, the biggest tail since August 2024.

The bid to cover was 2.432, down from 2.498 last month and the lowest since Sept 2025.

Internals were also ugly as Indirects were awarded just 62.56%, down from 63.57% and the lowest since December 2025. And with Directs dipping (but not as much as the 2Y auction earlier this week which saw a collapse) from 26.01% to 25.03%, Dealers rose to 12.41%, the highest since last November.

Overall, this was another very ugly auction and while foreign demand wasn't catastrophic it certainly was on the light side, suggesting that in addition to liquidating other hard assets, foreign buyers are becoming cautious with putting more money to funding the US deficit.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 13:20

"Don't Be Evil": Google's Motto Becomes A Jury Verdict In California

Zero Hedge -

"Don't Be Evil": Google's Motto Becomes A Jury Verdict In California

Authored by Jonathan Turley via jonathanturley.org,

Google once had a motto: “Don’t be evil.”

In its reorganization in 2015, the motto was changed to “Do the right thing.”

According to a California jury this week, neither motto stuck.

In a historic verdict against both Google and Meta, a jury found that the companies maliciously designed their social media products to addict children, including the plaintiff, who was known only as Kaley or KGM.

The jury heard testimony of efforts to “target” young users and feed an addiction to social media and YouTube. The jury awarded Kaley $3 million in compensatory damages divided between Meta (70%) and Google (30%). It then awarded another $3 million in punitive damages.

Those damages are nothing to companies worth billions. However, the verdict was like a dinner gong for plaintiffs lawyers. There are already thousands of cases filed against social media companies. That wave is about to become a tsunami. That is particularly the case after companies like TikTok and Snap settled before trial.

In addition to this civil verdict, the New Mexico Attorney General secured a $375 million verdict the same week against Meta under the state’s consumer protection laws.

But it will be a very long time before these companies cut a check. The California case is rife with compelling appellate issues that will take years to work out.

Indeed, what makes this case so intriguing — and even more tempting for plaintiffs’ lawyers — is that it was actually not the strongest case.

The 17-year-old in California started using social media at age 6. Kaley had a troubled childhood with problems at home and bullying at school. She experienced depression, anxiety, and body dysmorphia that could be linked to other aspects of her life. Her use of social media was extreme: all-consuming and all-day.

Meta argued that it does prohibit users under 13 from using any of its platforms. YouTube offers different platforms for children, like YouTube Kids.

However, Kaley created dozens of accounts to drive her “likes” and increase her virtual interactions.

The trial showed how complex such cases are in isolating what was the most substantial factor in Kaley’s harmful childhood. The case stretched the concepts of factual and legal causation to the breaking point.

I have taught torts for over 30 years and, in my view, the causation in this case is dubious. Even with tobacco, there was protracted litigation over other sources of cancer. However, that litigation was relatively straightforward in comparison to cases seeking to assign liability for depression, anxiety, or body dysmorphia. Children are bombarded with social and media imagery and messages from myriad sources. At the same time, many (like Kaley) come from homes with troubling or abusive elements.

The companies have previously asserted immunity under Section 230 of the Communications Act of 1934. These lawyers found a creative way to evade that immunity by claiming they are challenging the design of “the product” of social media companies, not suing over the specific content that appears on their sites.

That may prove too clever by half for some judges. Product liability law has previously been used to circumvent constitutional or legal barriers, as in the unsuccessful product liability and nuisance cases against gun manufacturers. Section 230 is designed to protect internet companies that serve as platforms for third-party postings. Here, the lawyers are arguing that you have immunity for what is posted, but your system itself is a product that is subject to a lawsuit.

In finding negligence and a failure to warn, the jury clearly agreed with the complaint that the design of the sites was maliciously intended to create “a compulsion to engage with those products nonstop,” feeding  “harmful and depressive content.” However, it is a difficult line between marketing and targeting.

It is not clear what warning these social media companies should offer beyond what they have previously posted. More importantly, it is unclear whether such warnings would have any impact on users.

If Meta warned that social media can be addictive or harmful, would it have deterred Kaley? Her mother already tried to block her from such usage.

There is no question that social media has a hold on children and adults because they like it. It allows them to create, observe, and communicate with an unprecedented range of people and sites. The question is whether this compulsive conduct reflects an intentional effort to addict minors or a product that is irresistible for many.

The only certainty after these verdicts is that there will be more of them. As soon as this verdict was read, the “likes” from plaintiffs’ lawyers flooded in across social media. Those trials will continue despite great uncertainty about the very foundation of any liability.

For now, it will be left to the courts, not these companies, “to do the right thing” on social media liability.

Jonathan Turley is a law professor and the best-selling author of “Rage and the Republic: The Unfinished Story of the American Revolution.”

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 13:20

Jesse Ventura Claims Trump Staged Assassination Attempt With Wrestling 'Blade Job' On His Own Ear

Zero Hedge -

Jesse Ventura Claims Trump Staged Assassination Attempt With Wrestling 'Blade Job' On His Own Ear

Authored by Steve Watson via modernity.news,

Jesse Ventura went full conspiracy mode on Piers Morgan’s show, suggesting President  Trump faked the July 13, 2024, assassination attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania, complete with a self-inflicted “blade job” cut to his ear for dramatic effect.

The former Minnesota governor and wrestling personality repeatedly questioned the authenticity of the event that left Trump bloodied but defiant, while downplaying the death of Corey Comperatore, the firefighter who was killed shielding his family.

Morgan highlighted Trump’s immediate response: standing up and pumping his fist with the call “fight, fight, fight.”

“Oh yeah, right, right, right. You ever hear of a blade job?” Ventura replied.

Morgan pressed back: “A blade? What, you think it was fake?”

“I don’t know. Where’s his scar today?” Ventura said.

Somebody died, literally, sitting behind him,” Morgan countered

Ventura continued: “Come on, Piers. You’re gonna tell me this guy’s a big hero now?

“I thought that day he was, yeah,” Morgan responded.

“Yeah, well, then he accomplished what he wanted out of you guys,” Ventura shot back.

Morgan held firm: “No, I think you can be heroic on one day, and he can be less heroic on others. But if you ask me, was he heroic when he got shot? Yeah.”

The exchange captured Ventura hedging with repeated “I don’t know” disclaimers even as he pushed the theory that Trump orchestrated the shooting purely for sympathy and electoral gain. 

Ventura, who once hosted a conspiracy theory television series, appeared uncomfortable when basic facts about the real bullet wound and the dead father were raised.

This latest outburst echoes earlier attempts to rewrite the Butler rally. In 2024, a simple photo of Trump’s ear without a bandage triggered leftist conspiracy spirals claiming the injury was exaggerated or nonexistent. 

By 2025, CNN’s Touré was openly framing the event as Trump being only “supposedly” shot in the ear, only to face immediate pushback. 

Ventura’s wrestling-inspired “blade job” claim – where performers secretly cut themselves to draw blood – fits the same pattern of denial.

Later in the same interview, the 74-year-old Ventura pivoted to personal bravado, floating a physical showdown with the president. Discussing Trump’s WWE Hall of Fame induction, Ventura declared: “Let’s both get in the ring. He’s in the Hall of Fame, isn’t he? Even though he’s never, ever had a match.” 

He added that if Trump wanted it, they could settle it there, framing it as a clash between a “Vietnam veteran” and a “draft dodger.”

The suggestion drew swift ridicule online, with many noting the absurdity of a man approaching 80 issuing wrestling challenges to the sitting president. Ventura further hinted at broader plans to travel to Washington and go “on the offense,” claiming Minnesota was now “secure,” though he declined to elaborate on specifics.

Ventura has long thrived on provocative theories, but here he faltered when Morgan simply held him to account for the human cost and the visible reality of that day. Insisting Trump hired or staged gunfire toward a crowd – resulting in death and injury – while performing a self-cut for optics remains a grotesque insult to the victims and to basic evidence.

Trump survived through instinct and timing amid clear Secret Service shortcomings that were later scrutinized. His unscripted courage became an iconic moment that resonated with millions and underscored the very real threats from political violence. Attempts to dismiss it as theater, whether from fringe voices or established media skeptics, only highlight the desperation to undermine his presidency.

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.

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Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 12:40

'13 US Bases Uninhabitable': Pentagon Admits Much Of Iran War Overseen By Personnel 'Working Remotely'

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'13 US Bases Uninhabitable': Pentagon Admits Much Of Iran War Overseen By Personnel 'Working Remotely'

The New York Times really buried the lede in a fresh report entitled "Iran’s Attacks Force US Troops to Work Remotely." With the report noting that before the Iran war started the Pentagon had some 40,000 troops in the region, we are told that many have been widely dispersed due to the Iranian retaliatory bombing campaign on the Gulf, even as far as Europe, and must 'work remotely'.

Somehow readers expect they are about to read a story mainly about how troops are now confined to hotels and office spaces throughout the region: "So now much of the land-based military is, in essence, fighting the war while working remotely, with the exception of fighter pilots and crews operating and maintaining warplanes and conducting strikes," NY Times writes.

But then several paragraphs in comes a huge confirmation of what many analysts suspected was the case over the course of the last weeks of expanding war: "Many of the 13 military bases in the region used by American troops are all but uninhabitable, with the ones in Kuwait, which is next door to Iran, suffering perhaps the most damage." This is based on statements by unnamed US defense officials who admit they've had to scramble to find 'alternative' housing and office solutions for personnel.

Al Udeid Air Base, Qatar, on March 1, 2026. Image via New York Times/Airbus DS)

The revelation comes on the heels of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) having earlier warned that if American troops are 'stationed' in hotels or civilian office complexes, then those hotels and locations effectively become targets.

"We are forced to identify and target the Americans," the IRGC intelligence arm earlier stated, according to state Tasnim. "Therefore, it is better not to shelter them in hotels and to stay away from their locations," the ominous message added, while calling on local Muslims to report on the American "hiding places".

The Times report meanwhile suggests that the US saw earlier fatalities and casualties (CENTCOM figures say 13 dead and some 300 injuries thus far) in part due to lack of preparedness for such a robust Iranian ballistic missile retaliation on US regional bases.

The report goes so far as to say the situation is already worse than that of prior Iraq and Afghan wars in terms of danger to 'front line' bases and exposure to enemy fire:

While Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan and the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, for example, were often targeted in suicide bombings and other attacks, neither the Taliban nor Iraqi militias possessed the kind of ballistic missile capability that Iran has.

During the war in Iraq in particular, the United States built up its bases there and in Kuwait, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Qatar. Now, the war in Iran has made all of those bases vulnerable — to the point where service members can’t really live or work there for extended periods, military officials said.

As for why this information wasn't disclosed within the first three weeks of war, there have been reports that the Pentagon and Trump administration is downplaying negative developments while boosting only positive stories of battlefield successes.

The public was blocked from an accurate assessment also due to open source satellite image firms agreeing to censor their own data and imaging.

As for running a war over Iran while many CENTCOM units have been forced to relocate, the NYT report cites Pentagon officials who bluntly admit that "The result, according to current and former military officials, is a war that is much harder to prosecute."

This of course is another big hurdle in terms of US grand strategy (assuming there is one in the first place), given already Iran has some major advantages of geography related to long term leverage, which has been obvious given the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 12:20

Gold Vs Bitcoin: Can Either Usurp The Dollar's Reign?

Zero Hedge -

Gold Vs Bitcoin: Can Either Usurp The Dollar's Reign?

Tonight at 7pm ET, wealth manager Peter Schiff will debate bitcoin investor Mark Moss on the future of hard assets and the global monetary system. 

Since the start of the war in Iran, Bitcoin and gold have reversed roles. While BTC used to trade like a leveraged tech stock, tanking on any shaky geopolitical news, it surged since Trump started bombing. Gold meanwhile, briefly dropped into a technical bear market.

Are traders anticipating a swift end to the war or has there been a structural shift in the assets?

Still, zooming out, gold had an incredible surge last year and still sits comfortably at around +50% year over year. Bitcoin meanwhile is around -18% yoy at the time of writing.

Monthly trading swings aside, the important question for an investor is which is the superior asset, or even currency. Could either replace the dollar as the global reserve currency? Being backed by gold is arguably what allowed for the U.S. dollar’s global adoption.

Is Bitcoin an improvement on gold given its ease of transaction or is it worthless numbers on a computer?

Trump has been the most “pro crypto” President thus far, appointing tech billionaire David Sacks as the crypto (and AI) czar. Bitcoin’s institutional adoption has undeniably surged with numerous approved ETFs on the market with reportedly close to $100B AUM allocated. But is mass appeal the same as underlying utility and value?

Tune in tonight at 7pm ET at the top of the ZeroHedge homepage, X feed, or YouTube as the hard money camps duke it out over the future of money. The debate will be hosted by Real Vision’s Ash Bennington, an S-tier moderator and friend of zh.
 

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 11:40

USC Cancels Gubernatorial Debate Due To Absence Of Candidates Of Color

Zero Hedge -

USC Cancels Gubernatorial Debate Due To Absence Of Candidates Of Color

Authored by Jonathan Turley via jonathanturley.org,

The University of Southern California (USC) is under fire after canceling the California gubernatorial debate with less than 24 hours’ notice.  The reason? None of the polling candidates are people of color. It was a crushingly revealing moment in a state where universities have long defied voters who demanded an end to affirmative action in admissions.

USC Dornsife Center for the Political Future and ABC/KABC Los Angeles were scheduled to co-host the debate at Bovard Auditorium on Tuesday evening. Then it was canceled on Monday.

Former Biden Health and Human Services Secretary and California Attorney General Xavier Becerra had sent a letter to President Beong-Soo Kim, alleging “election rigging” and objecting “you disqualified all of the candidates of color from participating.”

For many,  USC succeeded in beclowning itself by first defending USC Professor Christian Grose’s “data-driven” selection process and then abruptly canceling the debate lineup selected through that process. If that seems incomprehensible, welcome to American higher education.

The cancellation is only the latest unexpected turn in the election, where the two top vote-getters will face each other in a runoff election.

California Democrats are in a panic as two Republicans currently top the polling: Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco and commentator Steve Hilton.

At the same time, the leading Democrats include controversial candidates such as Rep. Katie Porter and Rep. Eric Swalwell. Porter is best known nationally for spewing profanity and abuse at staff members. Last year, Swalwell was outvoted by Rep. Raul Grijalva, who died in March 2025. However, they are still doing markedly better than Becerra with voters.

USC insisted that it “vigorously defends the independence, objectivity, and integrity of USC Professor Christian Grose, whose data-driven candidate viability formula is based on extensive research and enjoys broad academic support.”

That “data-driven system” produced a lineup of Bianco and Hilton as well as Democrats Tom Steyer, San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan, former Rep. Katie Porter, and Rep. Eric Swalwell.

Advocates then went into full rage, calling the process racist and rigged. Becerra declared:

“USC goes to great lengths to justify its exclusionary candidate formula. But you can’t escape the detestable outcome: you disqualified all of the candidates of color from participating while you invited a white candidate who has NEVER polled higher than some of the candidates of color, including me.”

However, the methodology considered both polling percentage and fundraising with the polling given greater weight.

Becerra has been shown at 3 percent, notably within the statistical margin of error for most polls.  In other words, he could be closer to zero. (He is shown as tied with Mahan, who Becerra appears to be referencing in his letter as lacking higher polling).

USC then yielded after trying to expand the number of participants to appease objectors. In a statement, USC stated:

“We recognize that concerns about the selection criteria for tomorrow’s gubernatorial debate have created a significant distraction from the issues that matter to voters. Unfortunately, USC and [debate co-sponsor] KABC have not been able to reach an agreement on expanding the number of candidates at tomorrow’s debate. As a result, USC has made the difficult decision to cancel tomorrow’s debate and will look for other opportunities to educate voters on the candidates and issues.”

Becerra took a victory lap: “We fought. We won! … Thank you to everyone who stood up, raised hell and demanded justice. Never give up when you’re fighting for fairness!”

At least Becerra’s position is comprehensible. He has long defended affirmative action in California. Indeed, despite statewide votes against the practice, California universities continue to be accused of applying racial criteria in admissions. Becerra is effectively demanding such action for himself as a “candidate of color.”

USC was left stumbling in search of a place to hide. USC scholars defended the process that USC affectively scuttled:

“All of us expect and welcome critical engagement from inside and outside the academy. What Professor Grose has faced, however, is not substantive or methodological debate. Attacks and insinuations from members of the political classes include completely baseless allegations of election-rigging, inconsistency, bias and data manipulation. These are harmful character assassinations, not substantive debate. They are of a piece with other attempts to strong-arm or malign scholars that have become all too common in America.

Whatever their intent, the effect of these attacks is to diminish academic freedom and chill scholarly willingness to add their voices to the public square. It is imperative that universities defend their faculties’ integrity when it is unfairly attacked.”

That is a powerful statement if one does not then consider that the university caved, cancelled the debate, and meekly said that it will “look for other opportunities to educate voters on the candidates and issues.” The “strong-arming” succeeded.

What is particularly disappointing is that I just spoke at USC and was impressed with the members of the USC community seeking to restore a diversity of viewpoints. The event was sponsored by The Center for the Political Future, which was the sponsor of the debate. It was also organized by the USC Open Dialogue Project and the USC chapter of the Heterodox Academy. Both have written in defense of this process.

Professor Morris Levy with Heterodox wrote: “[USC’s] message is unmistakable: USC was allowing “concerns” and a public “distraction” to override its own institutional conviction that the selection formula was data-driven and backed by research.”

So Heterodox, The Center for the Political Future, and ABC7  issued statements indicating that they were prepared to go forward and also defended the process of selection. That left only USC.

In this controversy, USC succeeded in finding the least defensible ground to make its stand. It denounced the cancel campaign but then effectively yielded to it.

The alternative is to stand by your race-blind, data-driven process and hold the debate for all invited candidates willing to attend.

Where USC was criticized recently for its fake punt in the game with Northwestern, it actually punted in this play and left the field.

Jonathan Turley is a law professor and the best-selling author of “Rage and the Republic: The Unfinished Story of the American Revolution.”

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Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 11:20

US Postal Service Plans 8% Fuel Surcharge As Iran War Raises Transport Costs

Zero Hedge -

US Postal Service Plans 8% Fuel Surcharge As Iran War Raises Transport Costs

By Eric Kulisch of FreightWaves,

The U.S. Postal Service is seeking permission to impose a fuel surcharge on parcel products for the first time ever to cover soaring transportation costs for gasoline and diesel fuel, which have jumped more than 30% since the invasion of Iran by the United States and Israel nearly a month ago.

Parcel shipments would be charged an 8% fee, on top of their regular transportation charge, if the fee is approved.

The quasi-private agency on Wednesday sought permission from the Postal Regulatory Commission for a time-limited price adjustment on parcel shipments because of rapidly changing market prices for fuel. It would be the first time in its history that the Postal Service has applied a fuel fee, a common practice with private carriers like DHL, FedEx and UPS. 

The Postal Service also said that the temporary surcharge would help it transition to a permanent mechanism for imposing surcharges on competitive products to support its universal service obligation in a more financially sustainable way.

Last fiscal year, the USPS lost $9 billion, with an operating loss of about $2.7 billion.

The 8% planned price change, which was approved by the Governors of the Postal Service on Tuesday, would affect base postage prices Priority Mail Express, Priority Mail, USPS Ground Advantage, and Parcel Select. The price change is scheduled to go into effect on April 26 and remain in place through Jan. 17, 2027. At that time, the Postal Service can determine if a different long-term approach is needed. 

Nearly all USPS delivery vans run on gasoline, which has jumped about $1 in price to nearly $4 per gallon in less than a month. The organization also uses diesel fuel for large trucks that move mail and packages long distances to distribution centers. 

The big parcel carriers have standard fuel surcharge mechanisms that automatically update each week as the price of fuel changes. Instead of constantly adjusting base transportation rates, the carriers use fuel surcharges as a flexible pricing mechanism tied to external fuel indexes. Their fuel surcharges currently range from about 21% to 34% of the base transportation rate, depending on mode and import/export status. 

UPS on March 9 imposed another 1% increase to its fuel surcharge table for domestic shipping. It is the carrier’s third fuel surcharge increase this year.  UPS and FedEx have also introduced temporary fees for shipments between the U.S. and Middle East.

The Postal Service said its fee is less than one-third of what its competitors charge for fuel alone.

“So even with this change, the Postal Service continues to offer great value in shipping with some of the lowest rates in the industrialized world,” the USPS said in a news release. 

The Postal Regulatory Commission will review the proposed price change before it is scheduled to take effect. 

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 10:40

One Day Until Trump's Self‑Imposed 5-Day Deadline On Iran But Markets Appear Increasingly Numb

Zero Hedge -

One Day Until Trump's Self‑Imposed 5-Day Deadline On Iran But Markets Appear Increasingly Numb

By Molly Schwartz, Cross Asset Macro Strategist at Rabobank

More persistent inflation

Yesterday, Iran rejected the US-proposed 15-point plan, instead laying out its own conditions in a 5-point plan;

(1) halt the killing of Iranian officials;

(2) means to make sure no other war is wage against it;

(3) reparations for the war;

(4) an end to all hostilities; and

(5) Iran’s “exercise of sovereignty over the Strait of Hormuz.”

The probability that Washington would accept these terms in exchange for a ceasefire is roughly equal to the likelihood that Tehran would have accepted the original US proposal…zero.

Against that backdrop, the clock on Trump’s self‑imposed five‑day deadline continues to tick down.

The relative calm in markets suggests some investor confidence that hostilities may eventually wind down, however slim that prospect remains. Still, even a “diplomatic” resolution at this stage would carry material costs for both the US and Israel.

We have repeatedly argued that the Iranian regime’s overriding objective is survival; a negotiated outcome that leaves it intact (see Venezuela) in effect constitutes a strategic defeat.

As Michael Every and Ben Picton put it here, “If we see a US and Israeli defeat…Trumpism will suffer both electorally and geopolitically: its grand macro strategy will unravel, to China’s advantage.”

US Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt yesterday announced that JD Vance may be headed for Pakistan on Friday to continue negotiations, but if diplomacy fails, Trump has at least partial backing from NATO.

Mark Rutte said the President was “doing this to make the whole world safe,” and argued that it is “only logical” for European countries to take a couple of weeks to coordinate naval deployments to the Strait of Hormuz following Washington’s request. Not all European leaders are aligned, however, with officials in Germany, Italy, and Spain stressing that “this is not our war.”

Whether Europe views the conflict as its war or not, it is already implicated via the economic channel. Several ECB policymakers spoke yesterday at the ECB and Its Watchers Conference, striking a cautious tone as they assess how large and persistent the inflationary shock from the conflict may be. Kazaks said it remains “unclear” whether rate hikes in April are justified, but warned that risks could intensify if energy prices meaningfully pass through into other components.

Lagarde echoed this data‑dependent stance.

“We will not act before we have sufficient information on the size and persistence of the shock and its propagation,” she said, “but we will not be paralyzed by hesitation: our commitment to delivering 2% inflation over the medium term is unconditional.”

She underlined that April is a “live” meeting. Market pricing of the European OIS curve implies close to 16bp of hikes in April, but nearly 65bp of cumulative hikes by the end of 2026.

Markets, meanwhile, appeared almost numb. Earlier this week, asset prices swung sharply as Washington and Tehran issued conflicting statements on whether negotiations were progressing—or even taking place., with Crude bouncing between $96 and $115.

Yesterday, however, was markedly calmer. US 10‑year Treasury yields traded within their narrowest range since the conflict began, closing around 4.33%, while crude oil settled near $103/bbl.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 10:05

Ritholtz Wealth Management Is Coming to San Francisco!   

The Big Picture -

 

 

Ritholtz Wealth Management is heading west. The week of April 16, 2026, our team will be in San Francisco to meet with clients and advisors. If you’re in the Bay Area and want to connect, we’d love to hear from you.

We’re also thrilled to announce a special live taping of Masters in Business, hosted at Bloomberg San Francisco (Pier 3, The Embarcadero). I sit down with Glen Kacher, Chief Investment Officer and Founder of Light Street Capital, for an in-depth conversation about markets, technology investing, and what’s next for growth-oriented strategies. Glen has built one of the most respected technology-focused investment firms in the world, and this is a conversation you won’t want to miss.

This is an invite-only event. Space is limited. If you’d like to attend, please reach out to us directly for details.

Seats are extremely limited — you must ask your RWM or Bloomberg contact for tickets. 

Event Details

Date: April 16, 2026 Location: Bloomberg San Francisco — Pier 3, The Embarcadero, Suite 101, San Francisco Guest: Glen Kacher, CIO & Founder, Light Street Capital Host: Barry Ritholtz Admission: Invite only

~~~

For those of you interested in learning about how RWM works with clients or information about the event, reach out to us at Info AT RitholtzWealth.com

The post Ritholtz Wealth Management Is Coming to San Francisco!    appeared first on The Big Picture.

"Historic Injustice": DOJ Settles With Retired Gen. Flynn For Malicious Russiagate Prosecution

Zero Hedge -

"Historic Injustice": DOJ Settles With Retired Gen. Flynn For Malicious Russiagate Prosecution

Authored by Troy Myers via The Epoch Times,

The Department of Justice (DOJ) and retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, a former national security adviser in President Donald Trump’s first term, reached an undisclosed financial settlement Wednesday, according to court documents.

Flynn sought a $50 million payout from the government for what he claimed were politically motivated actions against him. The settlement brings an end to a years-long dispute that stemmed from false claims of Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election.

Once Flynn has confirmed receipt of the settlement funds, he and the DOJ will file a joint dismissal of the case with prejudice, with each party bearing its own costs and fees, the agreement shows.

Flynn’s lawyer provided an emailed statement to The Epoch Times, including a statement from the former Trump adviser as well.

Although the case has reached a settlement, Flynn said, “Nothing can fully compensate for the hell that my family and I have endured over these many years.”

“There should never again be such a brazen attempt to weaponize federal law enforcement against political opponents or innocent citizens,” Flynn said.

“It is not this Department of Justice that created this crisis of politicized justice, but they are doing right by truly pursuing justice now.”

The settlement, while imperfect, Flynn continued, brings an end to a chapter of partisan, ruinous injustice.

Flynn’s lawyer, Jesse Binnall, called him an American hero in the emailed statement.

“In this agreement, the Justice Department is doing more than simply cutting a check, they are admitting that General Flynn was seriously wronged,” Binnall said.

A DOJ spokesperson also provided an emailed statement to The Epoch Times, stating that Wednesday’s settlement is an important step in redressing a “historic injustice,” referring to the allegations of Russia collusion in 2016 and the prosecution of Flynn that resulted.

“Those who instigated the Russia Collusion Hoax and Crossfire Hurricane abused their power to mislead the American people and tarnish the reputations of President Trump and his supporters,” the DOJ’s statement said.

Crossfire Hurricane was the codename of the FBI investigation into the later-discredited claims of ties between Trump and Russia to influence the 2016 election.

Flynn, a former head of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) under the Obama administration, was investigated by the FBI beginning in August 2016 over alleged ties to Russia. In January 2017, he was interviewed by two FBI agents and asked about a conversation with a Russian official. At first, he denied the conversation, which was not the truth, then said he didn’t remember. Intelligence officials and others later concluded that the conversation did not involve collusion or illegality.

Nevertheless, that exchange became the core of the charge of lying to the FBI brought against Flynn by the late special counsel Robert Mueller, who took over the case in May 2017.

Flynn initially pleaded guilty but then withdrew that plea, claiming he did not intentionally lie and was misled by his attorneys to enter the guilty plea because prosecutors threatened legal action against his son.

Internal emails from Flynn’s first legal team showed this was true—prosecutors informed his legal team that Flynn’s son would be left alone if he signed the guilty plea.

In 2020, then-head of the District of Columbia U.S. Attorney’s Office Timothy Shea concluded that it seemed the FBI’s purpose for interviewing Flynn was to “elicit ... false statements and thereby criminalize Mr. Flynn.”

The DOJ eventually dropped the charge, but the judge overseeing Flynn’s case refused to dismiss it. Trump ultimately pardoned him in 2020.

In 2023, Flynn filed a lawsuit against the DOJ and FBI, accusing prosecutors from Mueller’s office of investigating and prosecuting him for political reasons.

“General Flynn—who already had a reputation as a hands-on disruptor at DIA, who had publicly excoriated the politicization of the intelligence community, and who had made clear his desire to overhaul the national security structure and the ‘interagency process’—was a direct threat, not only to the self-interest of entrenched intelligence bureaucracies and the federal officials involved, but to exposing their prior and ongoing efforts to derail and discredit President Trump,” the suit stated.

Aside from accusations of a malicious, politically motivated prosecution, Flynn’s suit also accused the government of abusing the legal process by coercing him into the guilty plea with threats of prosecution against his son.

“He was falsely branded as a traitor to his country,” according to the lawsuit.

The suit against the government, which included as defendants the FBI, DOJ, Executive Office of the President, Office of Special Counsel, former FBI Director James Comey, Mueller, and others, further claimed Flynn lost tens of millions of dollars as a result of the prosecution.

“[Trump’s] Department of Justice will continue to pursue accountability at all levels for this wrongdoing,” the DOJ’s emailed statement said. “Such weaponization of the federal government must never be allowed to happen again.”

*  *  * Stash one where it matters

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 09:25

Iran "Laying Traps" And "Building Up Defenses" On Kharg Island, Preparing For U.S. Ground Attack

Zero Hedge -

Iran "Laying Traps" And "Building Up Defenses" On Kharg Island, Preparing For U.S. Ground Attack

Iran has recently bolstered its defenses around Kharg Island, anticipating a possible US move to seize the key oil export hub, CNN reported this week. The island is vital to Iran’s economy, handling roughly 90% of its crude shipments, and has become a focal point in escalating tensions.

The Trump administration has explored the option of sending US forces to take control of the island as leverage to pressure Iran into reopening the Strait of Hormuz. But military officials caution that such an operation would carry serious risks. Iran has reinforced the island with additional air defense systems, including portable missiles, and has planted mines along likely landing zones.

There is also growing skepticism among US allies and policymakers about whether capturing the island would achieve its broader objective. Even if successful, it may not resolve the wider dispute over energy flows and could instead intensify the conflict. An Israeli source warned that US troops could face attacks from drones and shoulder-fired missiles if they attempt a landing.

“I would be very worried about this,” said retired Adm. James Stavridis. “Iranians are clever and ruthless. They will do everything they can to inflict maximum casualties on US forces both on the ships at sea, and especially once ground troops are anywhere in their sovereign territory.”

CNN writes that Iran has responded with its own warnings. Parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said any attempt to occupy Iranian territory would prompt retaliation against critical infrastructure in the region, adding that US troop movements are under close watch.

Despite its relatively small size—about one-third of Manhattan—Kharg Island would require a substantial military operation to capture. US forces in the region include Marine units trained for amphibious assaults, along with airborne troops preparing to deploy. Surveillance has shown newly fortified positions and defensive preparations on the island.

Although earlier US strikes weakened parts of Iran’s defenses, American forces would still face significant threats from missiles and drones launched from the nearby mainland. This has led to internal debate in Washington over whether the potential benefits justify the risks.

Regional allies are urging restraint, warning that a ground assault could result in heavy casualties and trigger wider retaliation across the Gulf. Some analysts suggest that targeting Iran’s oil exports through a naval blockade could be a less risky alternative to putting troops on the ground.

*  *  * Try it for a month. You'll agree.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 09:05

Jobless Claims Hover Near Record Lows Sustaining 'No Hire, No Fire' Narrative

Zero Hedge -

Jobless Claims Hover Near Record Lows Sustaining 'No Hire, No Fire' Narrative

The number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits for the first time was flat from the prior week at 210.5k (215k exp). Simply put, these numbers are hovering near their lowest levels since 1969...

Source: Bloomberg

Continuing claims also printed below expectations at 1.819 million Americans. This is the lowest level since May 2024...

Source: Bloomberg

Finally, as a reminder, sentiment surveys suggest the labor market is bifurcated with 'jobs hard to get' but joblessness not surging...

Source: Bloomberg

That chart reinforces the 'no hire, no fire' economy remains the status quo - no worse, no better.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 08:35

Stocks, Bonds Slide As Ceasefire Hopes Fade

Zero Hedge -

Stocks, Bonds Slide As Ceasefire Hopes Fade

It's Day 27 of the war: stocks and bonds fell globally as ceasefire optimism fades given mixed messages on progress toward ending the war in Iran and growing uncertainty over Iran’s willingness to engage in talks about a ceasefire in the Middle East sent oil prices higher. Futures gapped lower just after 5am ET, when Axios reported that the Pentagon is developing military options for a “final blow” in Iran that could include ground troops.  Trump urged Iran “to get serious” before it was too late but Tehran is steadfast saying no negotiations are occurring and both side rejecting each other’s deal demands as the fighting continues & more military assets arriving. As of 8:00am ET, S&P 500 futures dropped 0.9%, at session lows, with about 48 hours before a US delay in strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure expires. Nasdaq futures slumped more than 1%.In premarket trading, Mag7 names were down with all sectors lower ex-Energy. Brent resumed its advance, rising 3.8% to above $106 a barrel; Oil is on track for its biggest monthly jump in more than three decades, as the Trump administration examines potential consequences if prices spike to $200 a barrel. The move rekindled inflation fears and pushed yields higher as money markets priced in tighter monetary policy. Two-year Treasury yields rose four  basis points to 3.93% as the yield curve bear flattened with yields +4 – 6bp; the 10Y yield was back up to 4.39%, pushing the USD also higher. Gold slipped below $4,450 an ounce. Today’s macro data focus is on initial / continuing claims

In premarket trading, Mag 7 stocks are all lower (Alphabet -1%, Amazon -1%, Apple -0.2%, Nvidia -1.2%, Meta -1.3%, Microsoft -0.4%, Tesla -1%)

  • US mining stocks fell and energy stocks rose as attacks in the Middle East continued and US President Donald Trump warned Iran to get serious about discussions “before it is too late.”
  • Memory-chip stocks fall in reaction to a new compression technique proposed by Google researchers that could reduce the amount of memory needed for AI workloads. Micron (MU) falls 2% while Sandisk (SNDK) declines 3%.
  • Equitable Holdings Inc. (EQH) gains 3% and Corebridge Financial Inc. (CRBG) rises 1.7% as the US insurers are set to merge in an all-stock deal valuing that combined business at $22 billion.
  • Kodiak Sciences (KOD) climbs 43% after the drug developer gave efficacy data from a late-stage trial of its experimental drug for diabetic retinopathy — a complication of diabetes that affects the eyes.
  • MillerKnoll (MLKN) drops 18% after the office furniture designer’s earnings forecast for the fourth quarter missed the average analyst estimate.
  • Navan (NAVN) rises 18% after the business travel platform reported fourth-quarter results that beat expectations and gave an outlook analysts see as both positive and conservative.
  • Olaplex (OLPX) rose more than 50% after Henkel agreed to buy the hair-care brand in a $1.4 billion deal.
  • Precigen (PGEN) jumps 15% after the biopharmaceutical company said first-quarter revenue is expected to exceed $18 million, driven by sales of its recurrent respiratory papillomatosis treatment, Papzimeos.

In other corporate news, Blackstone is said to be close to a deal to buy Rowan Digital Infrastructure, which may value the major U.S. data center developer at more than $10 billion. Novo Nordisk’s Chairman is set for an earful at the AGM after a boardroom coup, with investors pointing to recent missteps. 

With markets already on edge over Iran's unwillingness to negotiate ceasefire terms, the mood deteriorated overnight after an Axios report that the Pentagon is developing military options for a "final blow" in Iran that could include the use of ground forces and a massive bombing campaign.  Trump claimed Iran was desperate for a deal to end hostilities and the White House insisted peace talks are ongoing, even as Tehran publicly rejected US overtures and issued fresh conditions of its own to end the conflict. Those included sovereign control over the Strait of Hormuz, and drafting laws to introduce tolls for safe passage.  

“If Iran were to signal willingness to negotiate and an end to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz became more likely, equity markets may quickly move back to previous highs,” said Wolf von Rotberg, strategist at Bank J Safra Sarasin. “Yet Iran has so far declined all offers to talk as time is on their side.”

In AI news, memory stocks are under pressure on concerns over demand after Google researchers touted its new TurboQuant technology, a new compression technique. Bulls suggest the improved efficiency may actually increase demand, but related stocks at risk of profit taking after exponential moves in related stocks. Accenture launched Cyber.AI powered by Claude, Anthropic’s AI model. 

Private credit is again in focus after Jefferies’ results missed Wall Street estimates, dragged down by losses on wayward credit bets, an Ares private credit fund posted its steepest monthly loss on record and ex-Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein warned of “fire” risk in private markets. In contrast, executives from Apollo, Blackstone and Blue Owl said they don’t see evidence of rising systemic risks or defaults, which is to be expected since they all run... private credit funds.

BlackRock Inc. President Rob Kapito said investors may be underestimating the risks stemming from the war, which are likely to weigh on economic growth and drive inflation higher even if the conflict ends soon.

“What if this disruption is a week, six months, a year — what is it going to mean for the companies that I own?” Kapito said. “My biggest concern is that people aren’t looking at this - they’re just making the assumption” for an optimistic outcome.

JPMorgan expects around $65 billion of equity buying and bond selling due to March-end rebalancing; Goldman sees a more modest $13 billion. Elsewhere, global investors are on track to withdraw a record amount from Asian EM equities excluding China, as surging oil prices due to the Middle East conflict cloud the region’s outlook. 

The Fed’s Stephen Miran said he moved up his projection for where interest rates should end the year by half a percentage point in response to disappointing inflation data, not due to oil and Iran. A plethora of Fed speakers are on deck later today. 

In politics, FHFA’s Pulte sent letters to the DOJ encouraging prosecutors to open new fraud investigations into New York Attorney General Letitia James related to real estate. G-7 energy, finance ministers and monetary policy makers will meet on Monday to discuss the situation in the Middle East. Officials in Berlin have started mapping vulnerabilities in US supply chains to identify points where Germany and its European Union partners could apply pressure.

European stocks slumped more than 1.2% as higher energy prices dampen sentiment. Stoxx 600 falls 1.2% to 580.54 with mining and technology stocks leading declines. The biggest outperformers were chemicals and personal care shares. Here are the biggest movers Thursday:

  • Next shares rally as much as 6.9%, the most in five months, after the clothing retailer posted annual profits that were slightly ahead of the upgraded guidance outlined in January, having boosted its outlook five times throughout the year
  • Comet rises as much as 4.8% after BNP Paribas double-upgrades the semiconductor equipment components supplier to outperform from underperform, citing expectations the company will benefit from a multi-year memory capex super-cycle
  • THG shares rise as much as 8.8%, among the top gainers in the FTSE 250 Index on Thursday morning, after the online retailer reported 2025 results and said it’s had a strong start to the new year, which support revenue and adjusted Ebitda expectations
  • Pollen Street rises as much as 8.4%, the most since Jan. 2025, after the alternative asset manager delivered results which Panmure Liberum says came in ahead of consensus expectations
  • The Stoxx 600 basic resources index is the worst-performing sector in Europe, falling as much as 3.6% on Thursday
  • Boliden drops as much as 19%, the most since January 2008, after providing an update on the abnormally high seismic activity that has impacted production at its key Garpenberg mine
  • Edenred shares drop as much as 16%, slumping to a 2016-low, after the Italian Competition Authority launched an investigation into its Italian subsidiary over possible abuse of its dominant market position in the meal voucher market
  • H&M slips as much as 6.6%, the most since September 2024, after the Swedish fast-fashion retail group reported weaker-than-expected current trading which analysts said overshadowed margin strength in the first quarter
  • Currys shares drop as much as 11%, the most in over two years, after announcing the departure of Chief Executive Alex Baldock
  • 3i Group shares fall as much as 3.3% after sales and margin at Action, its largest portfolio company, missed analyst estimates
  • CSG shares fall as much as 6.7% after the recently-listed defense firm posted weaker-than-expected earnings in its Ammo+ small caliber ammunition division, though it saw a better performance in military vehicles and weapons

Asian stocks fell after two consecutive days of gains as conflicting signals from the US and Iran about their ceasefire talks turned investors cautious. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index fell as much as 1.4% before paring some declines. Shares of South Korean chipmaking giants Samsung and SK Hynix were the biggest drags on the benchmark, slumping on concerns over demand after Google researchers touted a new compression technique that can reduce memory size for large language models and vector search engines. Equity benchmarks in Hong Kong and Indonesia were among the top losers in Asia alongside the Kospi, while markets in India were shut for a holiday. Strategists at Goldman Sachs downgraded the South Asian nation’s stocks to marketweight from overweight, citing higher‑for‑longer energy prices from the war.

In FX, markets are contained compared to stocks and bonds with the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index barely up 0.1% as the greenback posts a mixed performance versus peers.

In commodities, Brent crude is up over 3% and around the $106 per barrel mark with the US and Iran providing conflicting comments on efforts to end the war. More recently, an Axios report noted that the Pentagon is developing military options for a “final blow” in Iran.

In rates, higher energy prices are again dragging bonds lower with US yields up 4-5bps across the curve. Norwegian bonds saw further losses after the Norges Bank held rates steady but pointed towards a potential rate hike.

Spot gold and silver are on the back foot, showing respective losses of 1.5% and 4%. Bitcoin is down 1.9%.  

US economic data scheduled includes weekly initial jobless claims (8:30am) and March Kansas City Fed manufacturing activity (11am). Fed speaker slate includes Cook (4pm), Miran (6:30pm), Jefferson (7pm) and Barr (7:10pm)

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 mini -0.8%
  • Nasdaq 100 mini -1%
  • Russell 2000 mini -1.2%
  • Stoxx Europe 600 -1.3%
  • DAX -1.6%
  • CAC 40 -1.1%
  • 10-year Treasury yield +4 basis points at 4.38%
  • VIX +2.2 points at 27.51
  • Bloomberg Dollar Index little changed at 1212.32
  • euro little changed at $1.1557
  • WTI crude +3.4% at $93.38/barrel

Top Overnight News

  • The Pentagon is developing military options for a "final blow" in Iran that could include the use of ground forces and a massive bombing campaign: Axios
  • President Trump has told associates in recent days that he wants to avoid a protracted war in Iran and that he hopes to bring the conflict to an end in the coming weeks. The president has privately informed advisers he thinks the conflict is in its final stages, urging them to stick to the four-to-six-week timeline he has outlined publicly, according to people familiar with the matter. WSJ
  • Israeli officials say a US-Iran deal remains unlikely, but fear President Donald Trump could still declare a temporary ceasefire as talks continue. Jerusalem Post
  • Trump administration officials are examining what a potential spike in oil prices as high as $200 a barrel would mean for the economy, according to people familiar with the matter, a sign senior officials are studying the possible fallout from extreme scenarios for the Iran war. BBG
  • On the stage and sidelines of a global energy conference in Houston, CEOs painted a much bleaker picture: Financial markets aren’t accurately reflecting the gravity of the crisis, the war is crippling the world’s fuel supplies, and the industry’s Middle East operations are at risk, they said. WSJ
  • Hong Kong is weighing “big bang” tax cuts that may allow many asset managers to earn their performance fees free of all levies. FT
  • Norway’s central bank said it’ll probably raise its benchmark rate at one of its forthcoming meetings. Officials left it at 4% today, as expected. BBG
  • Germany has plans for the EU to squeeze US tech, drug supplies and manufacturers in its next dispute with Trump. The goal is to create a consensus among bloc members on how to best use their leverage. BBG
  • Gulf and European allies are closely watching and growing concerned about the lack of momentum towards negotiations to end the conflict or even put a ceasefire into place. CNN
  • An Ares-managed $23 billion private credit fund posted its steepest monthly loss on record in February. BBG
  • Global investors are on track to withdraw a record amount from Asian EM equities excluding China, as surging oil prices due to the Middle East conflict cloud the region’s outlook. BBG
  • White House confirms that US President Trump is to hold a cabinet meeting is to be held from 10:00EDT/14:00GMT on Thursday.

A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk

APAC stocks traded cautiously as the geopolitical situation in the Middle East remained fluid, with mixed messages from the US and Iran about talks, while strikes persisted overnight against Iran and its regional neighbours. ASX 200 closed slightly lower with miners, tech and materials front-running declines, but with downside cushioned by gains in energy, defensives and financials, while price action was contained by a lack of data or fresh major catalysts. Nikkei 225 retreated as the rebound in oil stoked inflationary and growth concerns, given Japan's large dependency on Middle East oil, despite the government releasing emergency oil reserves, as planned. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were pressured amid a deluge of earnings releases and with developer debt concerns stoked as China Vanke seeks another bond repayment delay, whilst it works on a restructuring plan.

Top Asian News

  • Japan's provisional budget is seen totalling around JPY 8.6tln, according to NHK.

European bourses (STOXX 600 -1.1%) have gotten off to a softer start to Thursday's session. The DAX 40 underperforms, hindered by poor Porsche SE (-2.6%) earnings, while the SMI outperforms with only mild losses, as Kuehne+Nagel, along with the broader shipping sector, is supported by Hapag-Lloyd earnings. European sectors are entirely in the red, with Basic Resources, yet again, sitting at the bottom of the pile as metals prices continue to fall. Technology also prints decent losses, following news stateside by Google that its new TurboQuant tech can reduce the amount of memory needed for AI workloads, which is weighing on computer memory and storage makers (ASML -3.8%).

Top European News

  • Spanish GDP Growth Rate QoQ Final (Q4) Q/Q 0.8% vs. Exp. 0.8% (Prev. 0.6%).
  • Spanish GDP Growth Rate YoY Final (Q4) Y/Y 2.7% vs. Exp. 2.6% (Prev. 2.7%).
  • German GfK Consumer Confidence (Apr) -28.0 vs. Exp. -26.5 (Prev. -24.7, Low. -32.2, High. -25.6).
  • Italian Business Confidence (Mar) 88.8 (Prev. 88.5).
  • Italian Consumer Confidence (Mar) 92.6 (Prev. 97.4).

Trade/Tariffs

  • Germany reportedly drafts a plan to hit US tech, drug supplies and companies, Bloomberg reported citing sources; officials are mapping vulnerabilities in US supply chains to apply pressure on the US.
  • China's Foreign Ministry, on Trump's China visit announcement for May 14-15th, said the two sides have maintained communication.
  • China Commerce Ministry will impose an additional 55% tariff on beef imports from Australia after quota threshold reached.
  • EU's Dombrovskis said we have received assurances from the US that they intend to honour the trade deal.
  • US President Trump said Supreme Court ruling on tariffs will cost the US hundreds of millions.

FX

  • DXY is essentially flat and trades within a narrow 99.56-99.75 range, with price action taking a breather after a string of ceasefire related volatility. Recent reports surrounding the Middle East situation suggests that US President Trump told aides he wants a speedy end to the Iran war and wants to wrap up the conflict in the coming weeks, via WSJ. Elsewhere, Israeli Media reported that US President Trump may announce a ceasefire with Iran by next Saturday. Jobless claims and a slew of Fed speak is due throughout the day.
  • G10s are incrementally lower against the USD (ex-Antipodeans). Ultimately, subdued price action as markets await updates related to concrete progress on the ceasefire plan, or the risk of another bout of escalation measures. Most recently, Axios reported that Trump is preparing for a massive “final blow” against Iran. Antipodeans are at the bottom of the G10 pile this morning, with the Kiwi underperforming – pressure which follows the broader downbeat risk-tone. EUR/USD trades within a very thin 1.1547-1.1572 range, and ultimately little moved to ECB’s Nagel and de Guindos. Elsewhere, Cable is incrementally lower, as traders await commentary from BoE’s Breeden, Taylor and Greene. Focus will be on the former, given Taylor spoke last week (remained dovish), whilst Greene spoke on Wednesday.
  • NOK is net-unchanged in the aftermath of the Norges Bank policy announcement, where the Bank kept rates steady at 4% (as expected). There was some volatility at the time, with EUR/NOK moving higher as traders unwound outside bets of a hike. That move since entirely pared. Decision aside, focus was on the MPR and accompanying commentary was hawkish, with the Bank noting that "it will likely be appropriate to raise the policy rate at one of the forthcoming monetary policy meetings". This was also reflected by the updated MPR, whereby the end-2026 rate is now seen at 4.35% (prev. 3.71%); 2027 was revised higher to 3.98% (prev. 3.31%), and the "terminal rate" was raised to 3.54% (prev. 3.20%).

Fixed Income

  • Once again, another session dictated by energy movements and the associated implications for prices and yields.
  • USTs are lower by 12 ticks at most, to a 110-16+ trough. If the move continues, we look to the 110-05+ mark from the 24th, and then the 109-31+ WTD base. Ahead, a handful of data points, numerous Fed speakers and supply features in a relatively busy schedule; however, geopolitics will likely continue to dictate.
  • Bunds in-fitting. At a 125.30 low, with losses of nearly 70 ticks at most. If the move continues, we look to support at 125.02 and then the 124.77 WTD base. For Europe, newsflow is somewhat limited, with no move to a handful of data points or ECB officials. The region's docket ahead is a little light, and as such, action will be determined by the above US points and/or Middle East developments.
  • Gilts took the lead from peers and opened with losses of over 60 ticks before falling another 35 or so to a 87.73 trough. If the move continues, we look to recent bases at 87.06, 86.81 and then the contract low of 85.91. A busy BoE docket today, with Taylor and Greene scheduled; though, we have yet to see anything of pertinence from Breeden.

Commodities

  • Crude futures gradually edged higher overnight and held onto that strength throughout the European morning, with Brent Jun'26 printing a USD 100.96/bbl peak (vs USD 97.69/bbl low) while WTI May'26 prints a current USD 94.13-90.71/bbl range.
  • On the geopolitical front, US President Trump reportedly told aides that he wants a speedy end to the war and believes the conflict is in its final stages. Meanwhile, Israeli media reported that Trump may announce a ceasefire with Iran by next Saturday, even without a final agreement, while N12 News separately said the working assumption in Israel is that he could announce a ceasefire as soon as this coming Saturday. More recently, it was reported US Pentagon is reportedly preparing for a massive "final blow" of the Iran war, via Axios.
  • Spot gold is lower after a two-day recovery, with bullion back under USD 4,450/oz at the time of writing, giving back most of the prior session gains, amid the conflicting US and Iranian statements. Spot gold currently resides in a USD 4,412-4,544/oz range after finding support on Monday at its 200-DMA (4,091.57/oz)
  • Base metals are also softer, with copper under pressure as investors weigh the inflationary implications of the conflict alongside the risk of weaker global activity and softer demand. 3M LME copper resides in a USD 12,114.00- 12,276.08/t range at the time of writing.
  • Russian Deputy PM Novak says "we will impose a gasoline export bank if necessary"; has possibility to increase oil production if required, but investment will be needed; is already trading oil without discount, and with a premium in a number of lines.
  • French Commerce Minister said release of strategic oil reserves to be discussed at G7 minister meeting on Monday.
  • Japan begins releasing national oil reserves, as expected, according to Kyodo.
  • Turkish oil tanker was hit by a drone in the Black Sea near Istanbul.
  • Saudi Arabia’s oil sales to China and India are set to be lower-than-usual levels next month, according to Bloomberg.
  • Japan is reportedly to lift restrictions on coal-fired power plant operation as an emergency response to the Middle East situation for a one-year limit period, according to the Nikkei.
  • Philippines suspends electricity market due to Middle East conflict and proposes modified administered pricing by April 1st, cites fuel supply risks and price volatility for the suspension.
  • Pilbara ports in Australia said they closed the ports of Ashburton, Cape Preston West, Dampier and Varanus Island due to cyclone Narelle.

Central Banks

  • Norges Bank maintains its rate unchanged at 4.0% as expected; "it will likely be appropriate to raise the policy rate at one of the forthcoming monetary policy meetings". STANCE. The Committee judges that a tighter monetary policy stance is needed to return inflation to target within a reasonable time horizon. The inflation outlook indicates that an increase in the policy rate will likely be required. The Committee therefore wants to await further information on the prospects for inflation. FUTURE POLICY. The future path of the policy rate will depend on economic developments. If the outlook indicates higher inflation than currently projected, a higher policy rate than currently envisaged may be required.
  • US Treasury Secretary Bessent said to have discussed ways to recast ties between the Fed and the Treasury in the Bank of England's image, and praises BoE's market intervention capabilities, according to FT.
  • ECB's de Guindos said the outbreak for the Iran war has made the growth and inflation outlook significantly more uncertain, sharp increase in energy prices poses upside risks for inflation and downside risks for economic growth. ECB is well positioned to navigate this uncertain period.
  • ECB's Nagel said the ECB will have enough data by April to determine if they need to act or whether to wait and see.
  • ECB hopes to look through energy price shock from Iran war and Lagarde said it's too early to know the impact of the Iran war, while it sees rates steady if shock is temporary but may hike rates twice if energy shock is persistent, according to FT.
  • BoE's Breeden (neutral) says firms and workers are likely to have less price and wage bargaining power, so second round effects less likely.
  • BoJ Governor Ueda said large JGB holding doesn't make policy adjustments difficult, adds conducting policy to achieve price stability target.
  • RBA Assistant Governor Kent said the board will set monetary policy to achieve low and stable inflation and full employment. Will continue to assess the countervailing forces operating on the economy. Middle East conflict has tightened financial conditions. The longer the conflict persists, the larger the economic impacts will be.
  • CNB Minutes (Mar): Ready to tighten policy if core inflation rises, agreed a rate hike is premature now.
  • UBS expects the Fed to deliver two 25bps cuts in September and December (prev. saw cuts in June and September).

Geopolitics

  • US Pentagon reportedly prepares for massive "final blow" of Iran war, Axios reported. The Pentagon developing military options for a "final blow" in Iran that could include the use of ground forces and a massive bombing campaign. Options include: Invading or blockading Kharg Island; Invading Larak, an island that helps Iran solidify its control of the Strait of Hormuz; seizing the strategic island of Abu Musa and two smaller islands, which lie near the western entrance to the strait and are controlled by Iran but also claimed by the UAE; Blocking or seizing ships that are exporting Iranian oil on the eastern side of the Hormuz Strait.
  • Pakistan Foreign Minister says US-Iran indirect talks are taking place through messages being relayed by Pakistan.
  • US President Trump says NATO nations have done absolutely nothing to help with Iran.
  • US Pentagon is considering diverting Ukraine military aid to the Middle East, WaPo reported. Comes as the war in Iran depletes some of the US military’s most critical munitions, according to sources cited.
  • US President Trump said Iran is negotiating and wants a deal, but is afraid to say so, adds no one in Iran wants to be Supreme Leader right now.
  • Iran's Foreign Minister said Iran's current policy is to continue resistance in the face of ongoing unprovoked American-Israeli aggression while ruling out negotiations and ceasefire in the absence of required guarantees, according to Press TV. Vessels belonging to “friendly countries” including China, Russia, India, Iraq and Pakistan had been allowed to pass through the Strait of Hormuz.
  • IRGC has reportedly imposed a de facto ‘toll booth’ regime in the Strait of Hormuz, requiring vessels to submit full documentation, obtain clearance codes and accept IRGC-escorted passage through a single controlled corridor, according to Lloyd's List.
  • US Central Command said USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier continues to carry out strikes on military targets in Iran, while CENTCOM also said most of the Iranian facilities used to build missiles, drones and warships, are badly damaged or destroyed.
  • Iranian-linked Handala Hack Group say they have "initiated a new phase of Operation Lockheed Martin (LMT)", said Co. employees have 48 hours to respond, Mehr News reported.
  • Pakistani official said Israel took Iran's Foreign Minister Araghchi and Parliamentary Speaker Ghalibaf off the hit list after Pakistan requested the US not to target them.
  • Iran targeting an American fuel supplier, according to a report cited by Tasnim.
  • The IRGC naval commander was eliminated in Bandar Abbas, according to the Jerusalem Post citing an Israeli source.
  • Hezbollah said it targeted headquarters of Israel's Ministry of Defense with missiles on Thursday and barracks affiliated with the military intelligence department of Israel's army in the north of Tel Aviv, was also one of the targets of the operation.
  • Egypt's Foreign Minister said Cairo is ready to host talks to support de-escalation between US and Iran, and backs President Trump's push for negotiations, adding he hopes there will be direct talks between the two sides.
  • UAE Foreign Minister discussed developments in the region and the repercussions of Iran's missile attacks on the UAE and brotherly countries in a call with foreign ministers of Pakistan, Britain, Spain, France and Kazakhstan.
  • Local sources say huge explosions occurred in the Amir Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia following drone attacks.
  • Explosions heard in Iranian cities of Isfahan and Bandar Abbas.
  • Arab sources report a loud explosion was heard in the capital of the UAE, according to SNN.
  • Israel's Ben Gurion airport halts all operations amid Iranian missile barrage, according to Press TV.
  • Russia's Kremlin says "we have not lost interest in peace talks"; territory is one issue that has not been settled.
  • Ukrainian President Zelensky said Ukraine does not see any genuine desire from Russia to end the war.
  • Russia attacked damaged ports and energy infrastructure in Ukraine's Odesa region, according to the regional governor.
  • UK authorises armed forces to board Russian shadow fleet tankers in British waters, according to The Guardian.

US Event Calendar

  • 8:30 am: United States Mar 21 Initial Jobless Claims, est. 210k, prior 205k
  • 8:30 am: United States Mar 14 Continuing Claims, est. 1849k, prior 1857k
  • 4:00 pm: United States Fed’s Cook Speaks on Financial Stability
  • 6:30 pm: United States Fed’s Miran Speaks on Balance Sheet
  • 7:00 pm: United States Fed’s Jefferson Speaks on the US Economy
  • 7:10 pm: United States Fed’s Barr in Moderated Conversation

DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

As we go to press this morning, oil prices are moving higher again, with Brent crude up +1.86% overnight to $104.12/bbl. Several factors are responsible, but a big one is that Iran have continued to reject the messages from the US about some kind of deal, raising questions about whether there is really an off-ramp to the conflict in the days ahead. Indeed, market attention is quickly turning to the end of Trump’s 5-day deadline from Monday, when he said he’d postpone strikes against Iranian power plans and energy infrastructure. So that’s just over 48 hours away now, and multiple outlets have reported that thousands of US troops have been sent to the region. So the prospect of a fresh escalation is still top of mind for investors.

That shift in sentiment has hit global markets this morning, with futures on the S&P 500 (-0.20%) and the DAX (-0.49%) both lower, whilst 10yr Treasury yields (+2.6bps) are back up to 4.36%. Indeed, the 2yr Treasury yield (+3.1bps) is currently at 3.91%, the highest since July. Meanwhile in Asia, the major equity indices have lost ground as well, with the Nikkei (-0.52%), the Hang Seng (-1.43%), CSI 300 (-0.62%), Shanghai Comp (-0.67%) and the KOSPI (-2.70%) all falling back. Moreover, Japanese bond yields have continued to rise, with the 2yr JGB yield (+3.2bps) up to 1.32% this morning, which is the highest it’s been since 1996. So it’s a tough morning across the board. 

For markets, the issue is there’s still plenty of doubt about whether a US-Iran deal can be reached, given how Iran have publicly rejected the US on several occasions. So that’s seen markets become increasingly sceptical about positive headlines from the US side, because we haven’t seen similar noises from Iran. For a sense of the difference, it’s been widely reported that the US have a 15-point plan, which includes the dismantling of Iran’s nuclear facilities and reopening the Strait of Hormuz. That hasn’t been confirmed by the White House, but Press Secretary Leavitt said there were elements of truth to the reports. Meanwhile, CNN reported yesterday that Vice President JD Vance might travel to Pakistan this weekend for a meeting to discuss an off-ramp. And White House Press Secretary Leavitt said that the US was engaged in “productive conversations”. So all that suggested some kind of progress towards a ceasefire.

By contrast, we’ve had much more negative rhetoric on the Iranian side. Indeed, oil prices moved higher after Iran’s Fars News cited sources who said the moves by Trump to start indirect talks were illogical and not viable at this stage. Then, Iran’s Press TV cited an official who said Iran would end the war when it chose, and when its conditions were met, including security guarantees and recognition of Iran’s authority over the Strait of Hormuz. Later on, Reuters also reported that Iran has demanded for Lebanon to be involved in any ceasefire, implying an end to Israel’s offensive against Hezbollah. So by the close, that meant Brent crude had risen from $97.30/bbl during the European morning to end the US session at $102.22/bbl, before its latest climb this morning to $104.12/bbl.

Before that, markets had seen a more positive session yesterday when oil prices were lower, as that helped to ease concerns on the extent of any inflation shock. So that led investors to dial back their expectations for rate hikes this year, which in turn helped bonds and equities on both sides of the Atlantic. For the Fed, that meant just 4bps of hikes were priced for this year by the close, down -1.8bps on the day. And for the ECB, the probability of a hike at the next meeting in April came down from 86% to 62% by the close.

For the ECB, that shift in market pricing followed comments from ECB President Lagarde, who said they would “not act before we have sufficient information on the size and persistence of the shock and its propagation”. So that offered some reassurance against an imminent hike, although she also said they were “prepared, if appropriate, to make changes to our policy at any meeting”. Separately, we also had the latest Ifo business climate indicator from Germany, which fell to a 13-month low of 86.4 in March (vs. 86.3 expected). So again, that cemented investor conviction that the European economy was slowing down given the conflict, in line with what the flash PMIs had shown the previous day. 

Given all that, sovereign bonds rallied across Europe, with yields on 10yr bunds (-7.0bps), OATs (-10.6bps) and BTPs (-11.6bps) all posting large falls. Moreover, 10yr UK gilts (-11.7bps) saw a decent decline as well, despite some upside surprises in the latest CPI print yesterday. That showed headline CPI remained at +3.0% in February, as expected, but core CPI unexpectedly moved up to +3.2% (vs. +3.1% expected). And in the US it was a similar story, with yields falling back as investors priced in less inflation and fewer rate hikes. So the 2yr yield (-0.4bps) fell to 3.9%, and the 10yr yield (-3.0bps) fell to 4.33%. Interestingly, that also pushed the 2s10s Treasury curve down to 44bps, which is the flattest it’s been since July. 

For equities, it was a decent session across the board yesterday too. In the US, the S&P 500 (+0.54%) advanced, and remains on track for its first weekly gain since the strikes began, having risen +1.31% over the three days so far this week. That gain was supported by a decent performance for the Magnificent 7 (+0.78%), whilst small-caps in the Russell 2000 (+1.23%) hit a two-week high. Those moves came as the VIX index (-1.62pts to 25.33) eased to its lowest level since last Thursday. Meanwhile, gold (+0.68%) posted back-to-back gains for the first time in three weeks.  

Over in Europe, the STOXX 600 (+1.42%) also did well, posting a third consecutive advance for the first time since the strikes began, taking it up to a one-week high. And that was echoed elsewhere, with the DAX (+1.41%), the CAC 40 (+1.33%) and the FTSE MIB (+1.48%) all posting solid gains. 

Looking at the day ahead, data releases include the US weekly initial jobless claims, the Kansas City Fed’s manufacturing index for March, and the Euro Area money supply for February. Central bank speakers include the Fed’s Cook, Miran, Jefferson and Barr, along with the ECB’s de Guindos and Muller, and the BoE’s Breeden, Taylor and Greene.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 08:29

Will AI Trigger The Next Great Depression?

Zero Hedge -

Will AI Trigger The Next Great Depression?

Authored by Michael Lebowitz via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

Our article title is certainly scary. The question we pose has become a hot topic following the release of “The 2028 Global Intelligence Crisis,” by Citrini Research.

While evaluating the impact of AI on the labor market is complex, we can distill both optimistic and pessimistic views into two straightforward questions.

  • Will AI bring about an era of unmatched prosperity and productivity, freeing workers from monotonous tasks, revitalizing old industries, and creating new and unimaginable ones?
  • Or will AI displace many white-collar workers faster than the economy can absorb them, triggering a deflationary spiral with consequences that rival the Great Financial Crisis or worse, the Great Depression?

To better understand how AI might affect the labor market and, ultimately, the economy, we review the bleak Citrini article alongside more optimistic rebuttals from Citadel Securities and Bianco Research. The articles and our summaries provide a useful primer on how the labor markets may adjust to the upcoming major technological changes.

The articles we review are linked below.

The 2028 Global Intelligence Crisis – Citrini Research

The 2026 Global Intelligence Crisis – Citadel Securities

An Alternate View of the Post-AI Labor Market – Bianco Research

Citrini: A Warning from the Future

The pessimistic outlook comes from Citrini Research’s recent article, “The 2028 Global Intelligence Crisis.” The author cleverly frames the article as a memo written two years from now, looking back on an economic catastrophe that is already underway. The article is not a prediction. To wit, they start with the following caveat:

What follows is a scenario, not a prediction. This isn’t bear porn or AI doomer fan-fiction. The sole intent of this piece is modeling a scenario that’s been relatively underexplored.

Citrini’s scenario starts with the “opening act,” something that is already in motion: agentic AI is making software cheaper and easier to develop. Citrini writes:

 A competent developer working with Claude Code or Codex could now replicate the core functionality of a mid-market SaaS product in weeks,

The Software as a Service (SaaS) industry is based on initial purchase revenue and recurring subscription income. In Citrini’s view, this business model falters in the face of AI, causing wide-ranging effects across the industry. 

What makes Citrini’s view concerning is not the impact on software companies and their employees. It is the negative feedback loop rippling through the economy.

 AI capability improves, payroll shrinks, spending softens, margins tighten, companies buy more capability, capability improves,…. A negative feedback loop with no natural brake.

Citrini: Act Two- The Intelligence Displacement Spiral

Citrini’s pessimistic outlook extends well beyond the SaaS industry. That is merely the opening act. Act two is what Citrini calls “the intelligence displacement spiral.” This is a self-reinforcing loop in which displaced white-collar workers across many industries are pushed into the gig economy, depressing wages and weighing on economic activity. Bear in mind that wages and employment have a significant impact on consumer spending, which accounts for 70% of GDP. Moreover, the author reminds us that, in their scenario, the new employees- machines- spend “zero” dollars on discretionary goods.

It’s not just joblessness and a faltering economy. The once dependable backstop for the economy — the US government — will be dealing with falling tax revenue amidst already large fiscal deficits, and a significant preexisting debt load. To wit:

The government needs to transfer more money to households at precisely the moment it is collecting less money from them in taxes.

As is typical, the economic struggles will spread to the financial markets.  For example, they foresee a large number of software-related private credit defaults, which weigh heavily on insurance companies that invest heavily in these assets. Also consider the mortgage market, with approximately $13 trillion in US mortgage debt, the repayment of which depends on borrowers maintaining their current income.  They write:

 In 2008, the loans were bad on day one,” Citrini notes. “In 2028, the loans were good on day one. The world just…changed after the loans were written.

They conclude:

As investors, we still have time to assess how much of our portfolios are built upon assumptions that won’t survive the decade. As a society, we still have time to be proactive.

The canary is still alive.

The Rebuttal: Citadel Securities

The first rebuttal we summarize is courtesy of Citadel Securities.

As the title alludes (The 2026 Global Intelligence Crisis), Citadel’s article was clearly motivated by their disagreement with Citrini. They start by directly challenging Citrini’s pessimistic assessment of today’s software job market. The graph below shows that job postings for software engineers are rising, up 11% year-over-year. Furthermore, they state that St. Louis Fed data on AI adoption at work “presents little evidence of any imminent displacement risk.”

Citadel’s core argument is that Citrini is wrong about AI’s recursive potential, specifically the speed and breadth of its spread throughout the economy. To wit:

“Technological diffusion,” or the rate at which a new technology spreads through the economy, has historically followed an “S-curve.”

Essentially, Citadel argues that even if Citrini is right about where AI is eventually headed, the pace of getting there is likely far slower than Citrini assumes — and that slower pace gives the labor market, businesses, and governments time to adapt.

They write:

Markets often extrapolate the acceleration phase linearly, but history implies the pace of adoption plateaus as organizational integration is costly, regulation emerges, and diminishing marginal returns exist in economic deployment.

Citadel also directly challenges Citrini’s macroeconomic logic. They claim:

AI-driven automation is a productivity shock. Productivity shocks are positive supply shocks: they lower marginal costs, expand potential output, and increase real income. They are in isolation disinflationary and growth-enhancing in the medium term.

They support the opinion by noting how steam power, electrification, the internal combustion engine, and, more recently, computing, have followed the “S-curve” pattern. Furthermore, they argue that lower prices due to productivity growth increase consumption.

Defining GDP

They support the argument with the national income accounting identity.  

The national income identity states that all spending in the economy (Y) comes from four categories: consumption (C), investment (I), government spending (G), and net exports (X-M –exports minus imports)

Or:

Y = C + I + G + (X − M)

Because this is an identity, it always holds true. Citadel states:

If output rises and real GDP increases then by national income accounting identity something must be rising on the demand side: Consumption, investment, government spending, or net exports must be increasing (more here). A scenario in which productivity surges but aggregate demand collapses while measured output rises violates accounting identities.

More simply, everything produced is ultimately purchased by someone. Consumers (C) buy it, businesses (I) invest in it, the government (G) spends on it, or foreign buyers (X-M) import it. Those are the only four options. If total economic output (Y) is rising — which Citrini’s scenario assumes, since AI is driving a productivity boom — then by definition someone must be doing more buying. You cannot have an economy producing more and selling less at the same time. The basic math and capitalist motives do not allow for it.

Historically, technological revolutions have altered task composition rather than eliminated labor as an input. To produce a negative demand shock large enough to overwhelm output expansion, one must assume near-total automation of economically relevant labor combined with extremely weak redistributive responses. To frame this debate correctly one can simply ask, was the advent of Microsoft office a complement or substitute for office workers? Ex-ante, the concern skewed towards substitution; ex post, it appears a clear complement.

Citadel brings up an important historical note. In 1930, John Maynard Keynes, in his piece “Economic Possibilities For Our Grandchildren,” predicted that rising productivity would reduce the workweek to fifteen hours by the early twenty-first century. He was right about productivity growth but dead wrong about the labor market implications. To wit-“Rather than working dramatically less, societies consumed dramatically more.”

They end by reminding us:

It is also worth recalling that over the past century, successive waves of technological change have not produced runaway exponential growth, nor have they rendered labor obsolete. Instead, they have been just sufficient to keep long-term trend growth in advanced economies near 2%. Today’s secular forces of ageing populations, climate change and deglobalization exert downward pressure on potential growth and productivity, perhaps AI is just enough to offset these headwinds.

Jim Bianco

Jim Bianco’s piece (An Alternate View Of The Post-AI Labor Market), like Citadel’s, is a more optimistic take than Citrini’s article. Bianco approaches the rebuttal from a different angle than Citadel — the nature of business itself.

Bianco writes, “At its core, every business exists to solve a human problem,” calling Citrini’s fatal flaw “the assumption that humanity has a finite number of problems.”

Bianco’s argument leans on Jevons Paradox: when technology makes something more efficient, demand for that thing tends to explode, rather than contract. If AI reduces the cost of drafting a lawsuit to near zero, lawyers do not go home; instead, they file more lawsuits, creating new demand for legal defense and judges.

Bianco also makes a useful distinction between automating parts of a job. He uses GPS as an example. To wit:

When a job is disrupted, the outcome depends entirely on which part is automated. For 150 years, the hard part of driving a London taxi was passing the knowledge test. This involved memorizing 25,000 streets and nearly 20,000 landmarks. This took three or four years, often riding around London on a moped. This knowledge created a scarcity of qualified drivers, allowing them to command a premium wage. GPS automated this scarcity into a free app, flooding the market with new competitors (Uber/Bolt), which flattened wages. Technology took away the hard part of being a taxi driver, making the role less valuable.

Bianco’s “flipside” of less valuable London cab drivers is the story of accountants.  Computers eliminated the easy part of accounting, which in turn allowed accountants to provide “more valuable” financial advisory services along with accounting services.  

The outcome on the labor market depends on whether AI automates the scarce, high-judgment part of a role or the repetitive overhead.

Bianco believes AI removes the easy, repetitive parts of knowledge work, making workers more valuable. This counters Citrini, who claims it does not matter which part gets automated — if it happens fast enough and at a large enough scale, the labor market cannot absorb the displacement, regardless of whether the remaining work is more interesting.

Bianco closes with what he considers the most critical variable — the speed of transition. He introduces us to a historical parallel, the Engel Pause of the Industrial Revolution.

The Engels Pause: Where Everyone Agrees

The Engels Pause, named after Friedrich Engels, co-author of The Communist Manifesto, describes a harsh fifty-year period from 1790 to 1840. During the Industrial Revolution, this interval was marked by significant job losses that were not immediately offset by new employment. According to Bianco:

That gap between job destruction and job creation sparked a massive collective pushback against capitalism that the world came to know as Communism. Karl Marx directly observed this dangerous dynamic, writing that when an instrument of labor takes the form of a machine, it immediately becomes a competitor of the worker himself.

Citrini’s scenario is, at its core, a modern Engels Pause playing out again, but much more quickly; thus, its immediate impact could be greater. Bianco and Citadel do not deny the transition risk; however, they seem to argue that the gap can be managed if the pace of adoption is measured and institutional responses are timely.

The three authors implicitly agree that if job destruction outpaces job creation for long enough, the political and social consequences could be severe, despite improvements in productivity and corporate profits.

Summary

Technological revolutions have consistently created more jobs than they destroyed. While that statement is 100% true, we must caveat it by describing the transition with the word “EVENTUALLY.” If the AI transition is unbalanced, the negative economic, social, and political ramifications become more worrisome.

From our perspective, the Citrini 2028 scenario is a tail risk and not a base case. That said, we certainly don’t turn a blind eye to their opinion.

To assess the ongoing labor market transition, we will closely monitor economic indicators, including white-collar job openings, real wage growth in knowledge industries, and consumer spending patterns among higher-income households. If those metrics deteriorate simultaneously, the feedback loops Citrini describes could be a force to reckon with.

The canary, Citrini notes, is still alive, but we need to watch it closely.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 08:05

Western Intel Says Russia Preparing Kamikaze Drone Shipment To Iran

Zero Hedge -

Western Intel Says Russia Preparing Kamikaze Drone Shipment To Iran

A senior Western official told Financial Times reporters that new intelligence indicates Moscow is preparing to ship a batch of kamikaze drones to Iran as part of a broader support package, with the US-Iran conflict nearing the one-month mark.

When asked about the drone shipment, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told FT reporters, "There are a lot of fakes going around right now. One thing is true: we are continuing our dialogue with the Iranian leadership."

One thing is certain: Iranian forces have launched what reports estimate to be as many as 3,000 drones at US air bases, energy infrastructure, tankers, and neighboring Gulf states that coordinate with US and allied forces.

FT's report suggests that Iran may need additional drone supplies after an overnight update from Operation Epic Fury, US Central Command Chief Admiral Brad Cooper said Wednesday that US forces had struck their 10,000th target.

"Together, we have struck thousands more, clearly demonstrating that we're stronger together," Cooper said.

Cooper said US forces have severely degraded Iran's missile capabilities and heavily bombarded its missile, drone, and naval production sites. He added that Iran's drone and missile launch rates have collapsed by 90%, and that two-thirds of its military-industrial base has been destroyed or heavily damaged.

Another Western security official told FT that the type of Russian drones in this month's upcoming shipment has yet to be determined. The official said Moscow would likely deliver Geran-2 drones, which are basically copycats of the Iranian-designed Shahed-136.

Geran-2 drones 

Antonio Giustozzi, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, said of the Iranians, "They don't need more drones. They need better drones. They are after the more advanced capabilities."

Nicole Grajewski, a professor at Sciences Po University in Paris who focuses on Russia and Iran, noted, "The Russians dramatically improved the Shaheds, including modifications to the engines, navigation, and anti-jamming capabilities. So these systems are already more advanced than the ones Iran was producing domestically."

Grajewski warned that any new batch of Russian-made drones shipped to Iran could significantly improve the effectiveness of Iranian drone strikes.

Recall that our supply chain report on a crashed Iranian drone found a Russian guidance chip with Western parts in the early days of the conflict. Also, China appears to be making low-cost kamikaze drones for the war (read the report). 

*  *  * Superb Craftsmanship 

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 07:45

Saudis Bypass Hormuz As Oil Exports From Yanbu Surge Toward 5 Million Target

Zero Hedge -

Saudis Bypass Hormuz As Oil Exports From Yanbu Surge Toward 5 Million Target

One week ago, when fears that the Strait of Hormuz blockade would mean a permanent collapse in oil supply (we have since seen that Iran is allowing "friendly" ships to cross the strait, especially if they grease the toll-keeper with $2 million per crossing) hit a fever pitch and pushed the price of Brent to $120, we said that "Saudi Arabia Has Already Revived More Than Half Its Oil Exports Via Hormuz Bypass."  

With Iran blocking Saudi ships from cross Hormuz for the time being, the Kingdom had drastically ramped up its oil exports to more than half of normal levels despite the disruptions from the Iran war, a successful sign for the kingdom’s ambitious contingency plan to bypass the Strait of Hormuz. To do this, Saudi Arabia has ramped up crude shipments from Yanbu export terminals on the Red Sea coast as it diverted supplies away from the Persian Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz via the East-West pipeline.

Saudi Arabia, along with the UAE, is one of only two countries in the region that can divert significant amounts of oil to bypass Hormuz, providing a crucial lifeline for supply. And since the start of the war, the Saudis had been rerouting oil through the 1,200 kilometer (746 mile) East-West pipeline to the western port of Yanbu. At the same time, it’s quickly amassed a huge armada of tankers that have streamed toward the Red Sea to load the oil and are now piling up around the port. 

Fast forward to today when Bloomberg reported that Riyadh now aims to boost export shipments from its Red Sea ports to 5 million barrels a day, a target within reach. The East-West pipeline, linking the Abqaiq processing hub to Yanbu, has a nominal capacity of 7 million barrels a day. But 2 million of those are required to supply refineries in Riyadh and on the Red Sea coast at Yanbu and Jizan, near the Yemen border, as well as power generation and desalination plants.

Crude shipments for export from the Yanbu South and Yanbu North terminals averaged 4.4 million barrels a day in the five days to Tuesday, according to vessel tracking data compiled by Bloomberg. Flows through Yanbu have been rising steadily after the kingdom moved quickly to pump crude through the 746-mile conduit to the Red Sea.

Remarkably, the kingdom’s rerouting efforts have seen it double crude exports from Yanbu in just over two weeks. Even so, the diversions will only be enough to offset about half the lost Persian Gulf shipments this month. Even at target levels, Yanbu exports would still leave Saudi Arabia’s crude exports roughly 2 million barrels per day below pre-war levels, which however is a far cry from some of the worst case scenarios contemplated just days ago. 

According to Bloomberg calculations, there are about 56 million barrels of Saudi crude held on tankers that are stuck in the Gulf. Those cargoes loaded in late February and early March, but have been unable to transit the Strait of Hormuz to the open seas.

At least 40 oil tankers, most of them very large and capable of hauling about 2 million barrels of crude each, are now anchored near Yanbu waiting to take on cargoes, the tracking data show. 

Additionally, several ships stopped transmitting automated position signals in the Arabian Sea while en route to the Saudi port and may not reappear on tracking systems until they are well clear of the region. This could result in upward revisions to export figures.

Tankers that have loaded since the diversions began have mostly headed to Asia, with shipments to China and India dominating the flow. Cargoes are also bound for South Korea, Pakistan and Thailand. Customers in Japan have been supplied from storage tanks on the island of Okinawa, where the Saudi national oil company Aramco leases storage tanks that can hold 8.2 million barrels of crude.

In the early days of the conflict, shipments from Yanbu mostly went north to the Sumed pipeline that crosses Egypt to bypass the Suez Canal. Saudi Arabia typically loads crude for its customers in Europe and along the east coast of North America from a terminal at Sidi Kerir on Egypt’s Mediterranean coast.

 

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/26/2026 - 07:25

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