Individual Economists

Appeals Court Temporarily Allows Pentagon To Require Escorts For Reporters

Zero Hedge -

Appeals Court Temporarily Allows Pentagon To Require Escorts For Reporters

Authored by Aldgra Fredly via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

A U.S. appeals court on April 27 temporarily allowed the Department of War to require reporters entering Pentagon grounds to be escorted while the government appeals a lower court ruling.

The Pentagon is seen from a flight taking off from Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Va., on Nov. 29, 2022. Alex Wong/Getty Images/TNS

In a 2–1 decision, a three-judge panel from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit stayed an April 9 order issued by U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman, which found the department’s revised press access policy violated his previous order by mandating escorts for reporters entering the Pentagon.

The panel said the department has shown that it is likely to succeed on the merits of its case. According to the ruling, the department argued that allowing journalists to enter the Pentagon unescorted could increase the risk of sensitive information being disseminated.

The Department has thus supported its claim that this aspect of its policy furthers important national security interests,” the ruling stated.

Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell welcomed the appeals court’s decision and emphasized that journalists continue to hold valid press credentials and access to Pentagon briefings, press conferences, and interviews.

“Despite what many in the media have told you, the Department’s policy has never been about limiting journalism—it is about safeguarding classified information that protects American lives,” Parnell said on X.

The New York Times challenged the Pentagon’s rules in December 2025, arguing that its press access policy violated the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment by restricting journalists’ ability to “ask questions of government employees and gather information to report stories that take the public beyond official pronouncements.” Friedman subsequently blocked the rules and ordered the Pentagon to reinstate the credentials of New York Times reporters.

This story is developing and will be updated.

Tyler Durden Tue, 04/28/2026 - 13:00

Vegas Casino Stocks Hit A Cold Streak As Visitor Growth Muted

Zero Hedge -

Vegas Casino Stocks Hit A Cold Streak As Visitor Growth Muted

Las Vegas casino stocks have been largely mixed year to date on New York exchanges, as soaring costs for alcohol, parking, food, hotel rooms, bottled water, and other basic items have deterred cash-strapped visitors from the Strip.

Visitor volumes have been under pressure for more than a year, with Canadian travel down sharply in 2025. Major operators such as MGM and Caesars have reported revenue declines in Sin City, according to Bloomberg.

The latest data from the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority show that visitor volumes increased marginally by 2.1% in February, but this was from a depressed level, as foot traffic remains below late-2024 levels.

Foot-traffic data from Placer.ai indicate that quarterly visits across the top casino operators remain soft, with Las Vegas-exclusive Red Rock Resorts being the only one showing growth.

Vegas foot traffic is expected to remain muted this year: "I wouldn't expect a major upswing," Bloomberg Intelligence gaming and lodging senior analyst Brian Egger said.

Citizens analyst Jordan Bender noted that Vegas is more like a "vacation," with visitors going there "not necessarily to gamble more."

If "you just want a fun weekend for two days, it's not a bad place to go," Suter told clients.

We have detailed for years how unaffordable Vegas has become. Even MGM CEO William Hornbuckle acknowledged this reality on an October earnings call: "Whether it's the infamous bottle of water or Starbucks coffee at Excalibur that costs $12, shame on us."

Vegas must become affordable again - or risk yet another year of muted traffic, which would impact the local economy because the leisure and hospitality industry made up about a quarter of all jobs in the metro area.

 

Tyler Durden Tue, 04/28/2026 - 12:40

More Than 1,000 TSA Officers Have Quit Amid Shutdown

Zero Hedge -

More Than 1,000 TSA Officers Have Quit Amid Shutdown

Authored by Troy Myers via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) said Monday that more than 1,000 Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers have left the agency since the partial shutdown began on Feb. 14.

An employee with the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) checks the documents of a traveler at Reagan National Airport in Washington, Jan. 6, 2019. Joshua Roberts/Reuters

Amid the record-breaking lapse in funding, DHS said that with summer months approaching and the FIFA World Cup kicking off in June, impacts to travelers could be significant.

The department announced the drastic drop in staffing in a post on X, blaming Democrats in Congress for the prolonged shutdown.

This loss has SIGNIFICANTLY decreased TSA’s ability to meet passenger demand and left critical gaps in staffing, as each new recruit requires 4-6 MONTHS of training,” DHS wrote.

Fliers at airports across the United States experienced hours-long security lines earlier in the spending lapse.

To ease travel pains, President Donald Trump on March 23 deployed Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers to 14 U.S. airports.

“[The American public is] going through a big struggle right now, and we just put ICE in charge, and they’re helping TSA—the agents—and they’re working together so far very well,” Trump said at the time.

If longer wait times persisted, Trump pitched the idea of also deploying the National Guard.

Lauren Bis, acting assistant secretary for public affairs at DHS, told The Epoch Times that from the start of the shutdown through March 24, 450 TSA agents had quit. Thousands more were calling out sick and could not afford gas, childcare, food, or rent, she added.

“As Democrats continue to put the safety, reliability, and efficiency of our air travel system at risk, [President] Donald Trump is taking decisive action—deploying hundreds of ICE officers, already funded by Congress, to the airports under the greatest strain,” Bis said.

TSA acting Administrator Ha Nguyen McNeill told Congress on March 25 that airports might be forced to close if the partial shutdown continued.

“At this point, we have to look at all options on the table. We don’t have the luxury of picking and choosing how we maintain our operations,” McNeill told lawmakers.

“And that does require us to, at some point, make very difficult choices as to which airports we might try to keep open and which ones we might have to shut down as our callout rates increase.”

Only days after McNeil testified on Capitol Hill, Trump signed a presidential memorandum to pay TSA agents with DHS emergency funds.

More than 50,000 TSA employees had been working without pay for weeks.

Wait times at airports eased as TSA agents began receiving paychecks and backpay. Security lines that were taking multiple hours to pass through were down to 10 minutes or less.

But there’s still no long-term plan from Congress to fully fund DHS.

Republicans and Democrats are blaming each other for the spending standstill. An array of funding proposals have come from both sides, but none have successfully advanced.

GOP lawmakers are criticizing their counterparts for not passing their proposals, as Democrats demand a guaranteed overhaul of immigration operations in exchange for a funding agreement.

On March 27, the House passed a stopgap plan to fund DHS for 60 days. The bill was sent to the Senate, which had already left for a two-week recess.

Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin warned on April 21 that DHS will soon run out of its emergency funds to pay TSA if Congress cannot reach a deal. The money would run dry by the first week in May, he said in a “Fox and Friends” interview.

“My payroll at DHS is just over $1.6 billion every two weeks,” Mullin said. “There is no more emergency fund, so the president can’t do another executive order for us to use money, because there’s no more money there.”

The Senate, using the budget reconciliation process, advanced on April 23 a $70 billion funding plan for ICE and Customs and Border Protection through 2029. The process allows passage by a simple majority, bypassing the Senate’s 60-vote threshold.

If brought up by the House, the resolution would allow congressional committees to write detailed legislation on allocation of the funds, which would then require Trump’s signature to take effect.

Trump praised the Senate’s effort and urged Republicans to unify to achieve full funding for DHS.

Tyler Durden Tue, 04/28/2026 - 12:20

Top Fauci Advisor David Morens Charged In COVID Records Cover-Up: DOJ

Zero Hedge -

Top Fauci Advisor David Morens Charged In COVID Records Cover-Up: DOJ

With Pam Bondi out (related?), the U.S. Department of Justice announced today that it has indicted Dr. David M. Morens, a longtime senior advisor to former National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Dr. Anthony Fauci. The 78-year-old Morens faces charges including conspiracy against the United States, destruction, alteration, or falsification of records in federal investigations, concealment, removal, or mutilation of records, and aiding and abetting.

Dr. David Morens. Look at that criminal brow. 

According to the indictment, Morens allegedly used his personal Gmail account to evade Freedom of Information Act requests and worked with others to conceal communications related to COVID-19 research grants during the pandemic.

Morens served as Senior Scientific Advisor in NIAID’s Office of the Director from 2006 through 2022 - advising senior leadership, including Fauci, on policy matters, infectious disease issues, and aspects of COVID-19 origins research. He also gathered information from grantees and the scientific community and helped prepare briefings for Fauci to use with the White House, Congress, and the public.

The Congressional Investigation

The indictment follows years of scrutiny by Congress. In June 2023, the House Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic began obtaining emails showing that Morens had been using his personal Gmail account for official government business specifically to avoid FOIA disclosures. Over the following months the subcommittee issued document requests and subpoenas, conducted transcribed interviews with Morens in December 2023 and January 2024, and ultimately obtained tens of thousands of additional pages from his personal email account in late April 2024.

As Paul Thacker of the DisInformation Chronicle noted in 2024, the subcommittee released a detailed staff memo and more than 150 pages of emails on May 22, 2024, documenting what it described as serious questions about potential wrongdoing and illegal activity by Morens. The emails included discussions of deleting records and routing sensitive communications through personal accounts.

Sen. Ron Johnson had raised similar concerns even earlier. In November 2023 he wrote to HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra and Inspector General Christi Grimm, stating that Morens’ actions may have directly obstructed congressional oversight efforts related to NIAID activities during the pandemic.

Key Emails

Two emails in particular have drawn significant attention. In a February 24, 2021 message to Peter Daszak of EcoHealth Alliance and Gerald Keusch, Morens wrote that he had learned from an NIH FOIA official “how to make emails disappear after I am FOIA’d but before the search starts, so I think we are all safe. Plus, I deleted most of those earlier emails after sending them to Gmail."

In an April 21, 2021 email to Daszak, Morens added: “PS, I forgot to say there is no worry about FOIAs. I can either send stuff to Tony on his private gmail, or hand it to him at work or at his house. He is too smart to let colleagues send him stuff that could cause trouble." (“Tony" refers to Anthony Fauci.)

These messages, along with others detailing coordination with EcoHealth Alliance after its NIH grant was terminated, formed a central part of the congressional record.

'Tie Your Shoe'

On May 22, 2024, Morens appeared for a public hearing before the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic. He faced questions from both Republican and Democratic members about the emails, his relationship with Daszak, and his role in efforts to restore EcoHealth’s terminated grant and shape public messaging around COVID-19 origins.

During the hearing, Morens was confronted with evidence that he:

  • Edited compliance letters and press releases for EcoHealth Alliance
  • Wrote to the EcoHealth board on Daszak’s behalf when the latter feared being fired
  • Used personal email to route information to Fauci while attempting to avoid FOIA
  • Discussed methods for deleting or hiding emails after FOIA requests had been filed

As Paul Thacker writes: 

Reading back to Morens passages from his own emails and prior congressional testimony, Chairman Brad Wenstrup forced Morens to confirm that he had conspired with EcoHealth Alliance’s Peter Daszak to restore Daszak’s NIH grant. Morens admitted that he edited a compliance letter Daszak sent to the NIH, edited an EcoHealth Alliance press release after NIH terminated Daszak’s grant, and “put in a word” to the EcoHealth Alliance board when Daszak was worried about being fired.

Ranking Member Raul Ruiz berated Morens at several points, saying his actions were a “stain on the legacy” of the NIH and his colleagues. After Wenstrup banged down his gavel to end the hearing, Morens remained seated and was approached by his lawyer, white collar crime attorney Timothy Belevetz.

Leaning into his client’s ear, Belevetz whispered, Before you get up, tie your shoe.

Today’s DOJ Indictment

The indictment alleges that after NIH terminated EcoHealth Alliance’s grant Understanding the Risk of Bat Coronavirus Emergence — which included a subaward to the Wuhan Institute of Virology — Morens and unnamed co-conspirators conspired to help restore the grant and counter the lab-leak narrative. The charges further claim that Morens used his personal Gmail account to hide these communications from public view and that he received illegal gratuities, including wine delivered to his home, in connection with official acts favorable to EcoHealth.

Maximum penalties if convicted:

  • Conspiracy against the United States: up to 5 years in prison
  • Destruction, alteration, or falsification of records in federal investigations: up to 20 years per count
  • Concealment, removal, or mutilation of records: up to 3 years per count

An indictment is not a finding of guilt. All defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

Timeline of Key Events
  • 2020–2021: Key emails written regarding FOIA avoidance, back-channel communications, and coordination with EcoHealth Alliance
  • June 2023: House Select Subcommittee begins obtaining Morens’ personal emails
  • October 2023: Morens subpoenaed for documents
  • November 2023: Sen. Ron Johnson raises concerns with HHS leadership about potential obstruction of oversight
  • December 2023 and January 2024: Morens gives transcribed interviews to the subcommittee
  • April 2024: Additional subpoena issued; Morens produces roughly 30,000 pages of emails
  • May 22, 2024: Public hearing held and staff memo plus 155 pages of emails released
  • June 3, 2024: Dr. Anthony Fauci testifies before the subcommittee
  • April 28, 2026: Department of Justice indicts David Morens
Broader Context: The Offshoring of Risky U.S. Research

In 2014, the Obama administration imposed a pause on federal funding for certain gain-of-function research on pathogens such as influenza, SARS, and MERS viruses, citing serious biosafety concerns following several laboratory incidents. The moratorium was lifted in 2017, but by then much of the work had effectively moved overseas. EcoHealth Alliance, led by Peter Daszak, continued receiving millions in NIH grants for bat coronavirus research - with a significant portion funneled through subawards to the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) in Wuhan, China.

Related: 

At the same time, University of North Carolina virologist Ralph Baric - one of the world’s leading experts on coronaviruses - had been collaborating closely with WIV scientists, including Shi Zhengli, in work described in a 2018 DEFUSE funding proposal (that was rejected by DARPA) to create an aerosolized bat covid that could infect humans. Baric’s lab created “humanized mice” expressing the human ACE2 receptor and engineered chimeric viruses to study how bat coronaviruses could jump to humans. Much of this high-risk work, which had previously been conducted on U.S. soil, was effectively transferred to the WIV - located in the very city where COVID-19 first emerged. 

Details of the DEFUSE project were first leaked by Major Joseph Murphy, an employee of US military research agency DARPA, in the summer of 2021 and further details of earlier drafts have come to light this month thanks to public record requests from U.S. Right to Know (USRTK).

In DEFUSE, Baric proposed to create a virus that was, to most intents and purposes, SARS-CoV-2. The proposal included inserting a furin cleavage site into a coronavirus spike protein, an order for the restrictive enzyme BsmBI, the search for a binding domain that would infect ACE2 human receptors and a requirement for a viral genome around 25% different to SARS.

One down (until Boasberg knights him), many to go.

Tyler Durden Tue, 04/28/2026 - 12:00

A Nation Divided: The Chilling Embrace Of Political Violence In The US

Zero Hedge -

A Nation Divided: The Chilling Embrace Of Political Violence In The US

Authored by Jonathan Turley,

We are seeing increasing support for violent action across social media, including those lamenting that the recent presidential assassination was not successful. Conservative sites have been featuring teachers and others who were upset that the recent effort failed, including one who has now lost her job. The current violence and violent rhetoric have been building for years as our leaders fuel the rage in the nation.

One poll by the University of Virginia Center for Politics found that 52 percent of Biden supporters say Republicans are now a threat to American life, while 47 percent of Trump supporters say the same about Democrats. Among Biden supporters, 41 percent believed violence is justified “to stop [Republicans] from achieving their goals.” An almost identical percentage, 38 percent, of Trump supporters embraced violence to stop Democrats.

The support for violence has been growing. One prior poll shows a quarter of Americans supporting political violence.

An earlier survey from the Baker Center at Georgetown University also captured the growing divide among Americans on this 250th anniversary year of our revolution. The public’s distrust of the media, democracy, and each other appears to be growing as one out of seven Americans now embraces political violence.

That survey also showed the continuing drop in support for the media. As the mainstream media continues to show the same bias and advocacy journalism that has been alienating many citizens, roughly half (49%) of the public has little or no confidence in the press. Roughly the same percentage believes that the press favors the Democrats in its coverage. The percentage with great confidence in the media is now just 18%.

One of the most chilling aspects of the survey is the drop in faith in each other and in democracy. A shocking 57% believe that members of the opposite party are a somewhat or very serious “threat to the U.S. and its people.” Only 69% say that democracy is “preferable to any other kind of government.”

The drop in support of democracy is particularly concerning with almost 10% of the public saying that political violence is “sometimes” warranted and 5% say that individual acts of political violence are “often” or “very often” justified.

With the third attempted assassination of President Donald Trump, the survey suggests and a sizable number of Americans may share the views of Cole Allen that even murder is now a legitimate, even righteous, response to political opponents.

The New York Times recently ran a podcast in which radical Hasan Piker, the New York Times Opinion Culture Editor Nadja Spiegelman, and New Yorker writer Jia Tolentino captured the moral relativism that has taken hold of the left in American society. They cheerfully described the rationale for everything from “microlooting” to murder.

In response to the latest assassination attempt, Hakeem Jeffries declared, “I don’t give a damn” about criticism over his reckless rhetoric. That is hardly surprising for a politician whose favorite political prop appears to be a baseball bat, but it shows how politicians hope to ride this rage wave back into power. For Jeffries, rage may be the ticket to becoming the next Speaker of the House of Representatives.

The sad fact is that violent rhetoric works in an age of rage. Virginia Democratic gubernatorial nominee Abigail Spanberger  called upon her supporters to “Let your rage fuel you.” She then refused to withdraw her support for the Democratic candidate for Attorney General, Jay Jones, who once expressed his desire to kill his political opponents and his children.

It is the combination of this rising moral relativism with the failing faith in our system that represents an existential threat to our Republic. We will be facing unprecedented economic and social challenges in this decade. We have a system that is designed for such changes.

In my book, Rage and the Republic” I discuss what I view as a crisis of faith in our values and ourselves.

When Michel Guillaume Jean de Crèvecoeur asked, “What then is the new American, this new man?” he was a Frenchman. Later, the author, cartographer, farmer, and diplomat would adopt a new name as John Hector St. John as well as a new identity: an American farmer. ,,, What was so striking about Letters from an American Farmer was the fourth word: American. At a time when most people still identified with their states as Georgians or Virginians, Crèvecoeur wrote as one of a new people known as Americans…

The greatest challenge of this century may be a rediscovery of that essential character that seemed so clear to these early writers when they first came upon our shores. Call it a crisis of faith or a confusion of the times, but many seem unsure whether we represent something beyond the totality of our wealth or power. We were much more than that when we first assumed the moniker of Americans. The question, is what we are now? Or, perhaps more pointedly, what do we aspire to be in this new century?

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

Tyler Durden Tue, 04/28/2026 - 11:40

BOJ Keeps Rates On Hold In Rare 6-3 Vote Split As It Warns Of Looming Stagflation

Zero Hedge -

BOJ Keeps Rates On Hold In Rare 6-3 Vote Split As It Warns Of Looming Stagflation

In the first G5 central bank announcement of the week, overnight the Bank of Japan held its benchmark interest rate in a 6-3 vote, despite forecasting a sharp rise in inflation as the war in the Middle East sends commodity prices higher and clouds the global economic outlook while testing Japan's given its exposure to rising energy prices.

While the decision on Tuesday to keep rates at about 0.75% was in line with market expectations, it came via a rare six-to-three vote split of the Monetary Policy Committee, the biggest divergence of opinion under governor Kazuo Ueda, and since the launch of the bank’s negative interest rate policy in 2016.

The three dissenters called for an immediate rate increase to 1%, reflecting fears that the BoJ is at risk of falling even further behind the curve by postponing rate increases as it seeks to “normalise” monetary policy at a time when Japan's inflation is dangerously overheating due to sharp wage increases in recent years. 

After the BOJ announcement, traders were convinced that rates will rise after the next meeting in June.

Speaking at a press conference later on Tuesday that was widely interpreted as hawkish, Ueda said the central bank would make appropriate decisions “so that we do not fall behind the curve”, yet even now he refused to outline a formal timeframe for the BoJ to decide whether conditions were right to raise rates.

“Given the high level of uncertainty around the conflict in the Middle East, the likelihood of achieving our forecasts has declined,” said Ueda. 

He added that the central bank “wants to spend a little more time scrutinizing how the Middle East conflict affects the economy and prices, and whether the risk to growth and inflation could change”.

While two of the three dissenters, Naoki Tamura and Hajime Takata, are known hawks who have voted against the governor at previous meetings, analysts noted the addition of the more dovish Junko Nakagawa.

“Three dissenting votes is not a huge surprise, but Nakagawa being one of them is,” said JPMorgan senior Japan economist Benjamin Shatil. “The Board is sending a clear signal that it is ready for a June rate hike. Whether global conditions have settled sufficiently and tacit government approval is in place by then is another question.”

In the BoJ’s stagflationary outlook statement, the bank warned that Japan’s economic growth was likely to slow in the current fiscal year; at the same time it also significantly raised its inflation forecast over the same period.

The committee said core CPI was expected to reach 2.8% for the current fiscal year ending in March 2027, up sharply from its previous forecast of 1.9% issued just three months ago. 

“The rise in crude oil prices reflecting the impact of the situation in the Middle East is expected to push down corporate profits and households’ real income,” the BoJ said.

The statement added that the risks to economic activity were “skewed to the downside and risks to prices are skewed to the upside”. In other words, a classical staglationary setup. 

Japan is particularly vulnerable to energy shocks from the crisis in the Gulf. The country is heavily reliant on imported energy, and sources more than 90% of its crude from the Middle East.

The BoJ was the first of five major central banks making rate decisions this week, with the Fed, the European Central Bank, the Bank of England and Bank of Canada all expected to follow its lead and keep rates on hold as they asses the war-related risk of prolonged inflation.

Marcel Thieliant, head of Asia-Pacific at Capital Economics, underlined the BoJ’s upward revision of inflation forecasts, including that inflation will average 2.2% in fiscal 2028.

“Barring a renewed escalation in the Middle East, the bank will probably lift its policy rate again at its next meeting in June,” he wrote in a note to clients.

Goldman's Akira Otani said that July is still his base-case scenario for the next rate hike. "However, uncertainty over the timing of the rate hike is high. While it could come earlier than July depending on inflationary pressures, we would expect it to be pushed back from July to H2 if the Japanese economy were to fall into a recession through factors like a deterioration in the terms of trade."

"Even if tensions in the Middle East were to stabilize, we believe a July rate hike is more likely than a June one. Uncertainty over crude oil production and transportation in the Middle East will remain high for the time being and the impact remains uncertain even in a de-escalation scenario. Under such circumstances, and with no signs of groundwork being laid with the government for a rate hike, data and information showing the Japanese economy is unlikely to suffer a significant negative impact and is likely to achieve moderate growth will become more important, in our view. Therefore, while the possibility of a June rate hike cannot be ruled out, we see no need to change our base-case scenario of a July rate hike."

The BoJ’s hawkish statement pushed the yen higher against the US dollar, before the Japanese currency weakened back to around ¥159.62, and was lower on the day. The widely watched Nikkei 225 Average, which surged to an all-time high of 60,537 points on Monday, shed 1%, while the Topix, which has a heavier weighting of banks and financial companies, was up 1%. 

Tyler Durden Tue, 04/28/2026 - 11:25

US Energy Chief Says Hormuz Can Reopen Without Clearing All Mines, Warns Iran Shut-ins Could Be Devastating

Zero Hedge -

US Energy Chief Says Hormuz Can Reopen Without Clearing All Mines, Warns Iran Shut-ins Could Be Devastating

US Energy Secretary Chris Wright said that not all mines placed by Iran in the Strait of Hormuz need to removed for ships to resume transiting the vital passageway: “You just need a pathway for ships to be moved in and out,” Wright said in an interview on the sidelines of the Three Seas Summit and Business Forum in Dubrovnik. “I think that can happen quickly” he added suggesting that a restart can happen far sooner than the full demining timeline. Fully clearing the strait of mines could take six months, a Pentagon official said during a classified Congressional briefing last week, the Washington Post reported.

Iran has said it laid mines along the most frequently used routes of the narrow waterway, which has been effectively closed since February 28, and through which roughly one-fifth of the world’s oil and gas transited before the US and Israel launched a war on the Islamic Republic.

Understandably, shipping companies have been highly reluctant to attempt to navigate Hormuz, fearing seizure, mines, and a lack of other safety guarantees.

The longer the Strait of Hormuz is shut the longer a historic energy disruption will continue. In the US, a surge in pump prices comes months before President Donald Trump’s Republican party faces midterm elections.

Wright also said the US plans to announce “historic” pipeline agreements that will lead to increases in the amount of US oil and natural gas Europe imports as part of the Trump “Peace Pipeline Agenda.”

Last but not least, the US energy secretary repeated verbatim what we said over the weekend, when we pointed out that a prolonged shut in would be devastating to Iran's oil reservoirs as over half of them are low pressure "putting them at risk for permanent loss after shut-ins, via near-wellbore water emulsions, clay swelling, and water blockages."

Fast forward to this morning, when Wright told Bloomberg TV that "Iran does not have a lot of oil storage capacity and its old reservoirs are not suitable if the country decides to shut down production." That's because they’ve got old reservoirs that are low pressure, which means it’s much more destructive if they have to shut in their production."

With Iran having about 10-15 days before hitting tank tops (depending on how many tankers they use for storage), we'll find out in a few weeks if he is right. 

 

Tyler Durden Tue, 04/28/2026 - 11:05

Collateral Damage

Zero Hedge -

Collateral Damage

By Molly Schwartz, Cross-ASset Macro Strategist at Rabobank

Negotiations between the US and Iran are going nowhere. In fact, they’re not really even happening at all. Over the weekend, Axios reported that Iran gave the US a proposal to reopen the Strait — not to end the war. The proposal includes extending the ceasefire and an assertion that any conversations about Iran’s nuclear program are off the table until the Strait is open and the US blockade is lifted. The US has not indicated whether it will accept or reject the proposal at the time of writing.

Assuming the US does agree to extend its indefinite ceasefire, a flimsy ceasefire extension, even if agreed to by both parties, holds little water. Remember, keeping the Strait open was a condition of the current ceasefire as agreed to on April 8, and we can all see how well that held up. Just take a look at the prices at the pump.

While conversations between the US and Iran stall, Iran is making friends elsewhere. Iranian Foreign Minister Araghchi met with Putin yesterday, as Bloomberg reported that Araghchi told Putin he is “committed to strengthening the country’s partnership with Russia” and that “the Iranian people are able to ‘resist US aggression and will be able to overcome it.’”

As Iran and Russia are making nice, the US and Germany are not. During a visit to a school in western Germany, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said that the Trump Administration was being “humiliated” by Iran: “The Iranians are clearly stronger than expected and the Americans clearly have no truly convincing strategy in the negotiations either. A whole nation is being humiliated by the Iranian leadership.” Trump has not commented on Merz’ claims at the time of writing.

The longer the Strait remains closed, the longer the European economy, and energy complex, is squeezed. Germany has rejected Trump’s calls to join the war under NATO, despite German leaders softly echoing support of US military efforts. Europe has drafted a plan to re-open the Strait after the war has ended, that is not enough to appease Trump, who has made his demands for NATO participation in the Iran war clear. But the question remains just how much collateral damage Europe is willing to be subject to in the pursuit of keeping its hands clean.

Europe’s reliance on energy from the Middle East and direct flows through the Strait of Hormuz suggest that they are in for more pain than the US under a prolonged closure. At the same time, they don’t have a fanatic obduracy to tolerate it like the Iran (or rather, the IRGC at the expense of the Iranian people). If negotiations fail to result in a somewhat peaceful re-opening of the Strait and conclusion of the US naval blockade, Europe may have no choice but to get involved.

It’s probable that the Trump Administration is aware of this. Trump has lambasted European leaders for refusing to support the US and in some cases, outright refusing to cooperate. If the US keeps the Strait closed and inflicts enough second-hand damage on Europe, Trump may be able to achieve the NATO military “cooperation” he has been asking for.

Crude oil futures have continued to grind higher, trading up to highs of $109/bbl yesterday. Futures prices have started to converge with the physical market, which is currently pricing crude at $113/bbl, narrowing the spread from highs of $35.9 earlier this month to only $4, which would be more consistent with levels seen pre-war.

Meanwhile, the Fed drama saga continues. The path to Warsh’s confirmation as Fed chair seems to have cleared as the US Department of Justice (DOJ) has dropped its criminal probe into Powell with regard to the Federal Reserve’s renovation budget. However, whether Powell will stay on the Board is not yet certain. While Powell’s term as Chair ends in May, he is allowed to stay on the Board of Governors until January 2028.

Despite it being a highly popular question from reporters during the Fed decision press conference, Powell had been tight lipped about his plans for a while, until confirming more recently that he would stay on the Board until the DOJ investigation levied against him was concluded.

However, while the DOJ has dismissed the case, that doesn’t mean that Powell’s troubles are over. Rather, this means that the case has now landed on the desk of the Fed’s Office of Inspector General (OIG), though according to the Fed’s own article about the renovation, the OIG has had full access to all financial records and information throughout the duration of the project.

Given the dropped charges against Powell, that has opened up Senator Thom Tillis to vote to officially confirm Warsh as Fed Chair. Whether or not the Fed meeting tomorrow will be Powell’s last is still TBD. Read more from our Fed whisperer, Philip Marey, here.

A little farther north, Canadian Prime Minister, Mark Carney, announced the creation of a Canadian sovereign wealth fund, called the “Canada Strong Fund.” The fund is designed to further lower barriers to business and investment in Canada—something the Carney has spoken about extensively as a part of his mission—by “investing in strategic Canadian projects and companies.”

A more financially-savvy Canadian government does not come without drawbacks. Carney has recently come under scrutiny by some after his ethics disclosure, which has led some to question the dissonance in Carney’s insistence that Canada needs to diversify away from the US, while he himself is heavily invested there.

Tyler Durden Tue, 04/28/2026 - 10:15

Conference Board Confidence Unexpectedly Jumps To Highest In 2026

Zero Hedge -

Conference Board Confidence Unexpectedly Jumps To Highest In 2026

Despite war (and rising gas prices) now fully embedded in respondents' minds, it is perhaps surprising that The Conference Board's Consumer Confidence rose considerably more than expected to 92.8 in April (89.0 exp) from an upwardly revised 92.2.

Present Situation dipped very modestly from 124.1 to 123.8 (120.1 exp) while Expectations rose from 71.0 to 72.2 (69.2 exp)

Source: Bloomberg

That is the highest headline print in 2026.

“Consumer appraisals of current and expected business conditions declined moderately compared to last month," said Dana M Peterson, Chief Economist, The Conference Board.

"This was offset by modest improvements in consumers’ perceptions of the labor market, both current and expected, as well as income expectations, which were slightly more optimistic in April.”

While the overall trend is still lower, The Board's indicator signaled a pick up in the labor market...

Source: Bloomberg

A two-week ceasefire and a rebound in stock market indices within the survey-sample period (April 1–22) likely helped ease concerns about financial indicators somewhat in April after spiking in March.

Still, consumers remained wary.

Consumers’ average and median 12-month inflation expectations ticked downward but continued to be elevated. The percentage of consumers saying interest rates over the next 12 months will be higher on net rose to nearly 50%. Expectations for higher stock prices a year from now ticked up.

 

Among demographic groups, confidence continued to trend downward on a six-month moving average basis for consumers aged 35 and up while younger consumers were a tad more confident in April. Respondents under 35 remained the most optimistic and those 55 and over the least.

On a six-month moving average basis, confidence improved among Millennials and Gen Z but declined among older generations. By income, confidence on a six-month moving average basis varied, but most income groups expressed less optimism.

By political affiliation, Republicans remained the most optimistic, while confidence fell for Independents and improved slightly for Democrats.

Tyler Durden Tue, 04/28/2026 - 10:11

'Quality Learing Center' And 20 Other Somali-Linked Businesses Raided By FBI, Homeland Security In Minnesota

Zero Hedge -

'Quality Learing Center' And 20 Other Somali-Linked Businesses Raided By FBI, Homeland Security In Minnesota

Federal agents from the FBI and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) executed court-authorized search warrants at more than 20 locations across the Minneapolis area early Tuesday morning, targeting businesses primarily linked to the Somali-American community as part of an ongoing criminal fraud investigation.

Fox News congressional correspondent Bill Melugin reported that the Department of Justice confirmed the operation to the network, stating it involves "court-authorized law enforcement activity as part of an ongoing fraud investigation." A separate DHS statement emphasized that HSI, working with federal, state, and local partners, carried out the warrants "relating to the rampant fraud of U.S. taxpayers dollars." Sources indicated approximately 22 warrants were served, explicitly tied to fraud schemes rather than immigration enforcement.

One prominent target was the Quality Learning Center (aka "Quality Learing Center") on Nicollet Avenue. The site, which previously operated as Salama Child Care Center, received roughly $1.9 million in Minnesota Child Care Assistance Program funds in fiscal year 2025 alone. It gained national attention in late December 2025 after independent journalist Nick Shirley released a video showing the center appearing largely empty during business hours, with a prominently misspelled sign. Shirley alleged widespread "ghost" operations billing government programs for nonexistent services and children.

The center voluntarily surrendered its state license in early January amid heightened scrutiny. It had a prior federal footprint: in May 2015, the same location was raided by the FBI and Minnesota DHS over allegations of billing state programs for non-existent children, leading to license revocation actions for safety violations.

A Pattern of Massive Fraud

Today’s raids continue a months-long federal surge into Minnesota’s social-services programs, which have been plagued by some of the largest fraud cases in recent U.S. history. The most notorious remains Feeding Our Future, a nonprofit that prosecutors say orchestrated a $250+ million scheme to steal federal child nutrition funds during the COVID-19 pandemic through fake meal sites, inflated attendance rosters, and money laundering. Dozens of defendants—predominantly Somali-American—have been charged, with multiple convictions and sentencings continuing into 2026.

Other active investigations include:

  • Autism and early intervention (EIDBI) services fraud
  • Housing Stabilization Services
  • Integrated Community Supports
  • Medicaid personal-care assistance schemes
  • SNAP benefit trafficking (including "Operation Cold SNAP" raids in April 2026)

In January, Federal authorities reported issuing over 1,750 subpoenas, executing more than 130 search warrants, and interviewing over 1,000 witnesses across these cases.

FBI Director Kash Patel publicly described the Minnesota situation as "the tip of a very large iceberg," prompting a surge of bureau resources to the state. DHS has conducted hundreds of door-to-door inspections under initiatives such as Operation Twin Shield.

Political and Community Context

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison have faced sharp criticism from congressional Republicans and House Oversight committees for what critics call inadequate oversight of high-risk providers and slow state-level responses. State officials have countered that many centers serve legitimate low-income families (including large Somali-American populations) and that enforcement actions predate viral videos.

Rep. Ilhan Omar, whose district encompasses much of the affected Minneapolis area, has condemned the fraud as "reprehensible" while warning against broad stigmatization of the Somali community.

Her office has distanced itself from charged individuals, though some Republican lawmakers have pointed to past legislative efforts (such as expansions of child nutrition programs) and constituent ties as areas of scrutiny. No charges have been filed against Omar or her immediate family in these matters.

Somali community leaders have expressed concerns about economic fallout and reputational harm to legitimate businesses, while federal prosecutors stress that the investigations target criminal conduct and protect funds intended for vulnerable populations.

As of early Tuesday, no arrests or specific new charges from today’s warrants have been publicly detailed. More information is expected from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Minnesota, the FBI’s Minneapolis Field Office, and DHS. 

Tyler Durden Tue, 04/28/2026 - 09:50

Chaos, Black Rain, Evacuations: Tuapse Oil Facility Struck For Third Time This Month

Zero Hedge -

Chaos, Black Rain, Evacuations: Tuapse Oil Facility Struck For Third Time This Month

Rosneft's sprawling oil refinery in southern port town of Tuapse has been struck by Ukrainian drones once again, unleashing a huge fire and significant destruction, in what marks the third such attack just this month.

"Another serious incident has occurred in Tuapse. A large-scale fire broke out at an oil refinery due to an enemy drone attack," Krasnodar region Governor Veniamin Kondratyev wrote on Telegram, amid large-scale evacuations of the civilian population from the area.

Tuapse disaster in wake of Ukrainian attack, via Wiki Commons

Regional aviation hubs in nearby Krasnodar, Gelendzhik, and Sochi were closed as a result of the blaze which sent a large black smoke plume into the air stretching for at least 100km, regional reports indicate.

"For the safety of residents living near the refinery, evacuations are underway. A temporary accommodation center has been set up at local School No. 6. I urge residents to follow all recommendations," the regional government statement continued.

According to Ukrainian media:

The Ukrainian monitoring Telegram channel CyberBoroshno reported that at least four tanks were burning at the refinery following the strike.

“If in previous attacks the tank farm was hit, this time the refinery itself was directly targeted… There is a possibility that the fire could spread to neighboring tanks,” the report said.

Reuters says that as a result of the several waves of attacks on Tuapse, operations at the plant have remained halted since April 16 - which was the first big strike of the month.

One is left wondering, what about Russian defensive measures and why have these failed so spectacularly? First, it should be noted that small drones have become efficient and their size advantage is seen in evading conventional radar and anti-air missiles, by and large. TASS only has this to offer by way of official statement:

"Intensive efforts are underway" to prevent Ukrainian strikes on Russian territory.

All details about targets hit by the Kiev regime are classified: "As for any information regarding targets hit as a result of strikes by the Kiev regime, the details are classified; we will not discuss them publicly at this time."

Measures to deal with the aftermath of the Ukrainian drone strike on the oil refinery in Tuapse are being taken "at an appropriate level."

The complex processes some 12 million metric tons of crude annually and remains a crucial and major export route for naphtha, fuel oil, and diesel.

The attacks have made parts of the sky black and the aftermath poses a safety risk for residents, also with reports of 'toxic rain' over the town, as the environmental situation spiraling - also with significant amounts of crude said to be leaking into the Black Sea.

Currently the globe's attention is largely focused on the Iran war and the Hormuz Strait blockade, and with that efforts to reach a political and peace settlement in Ukraine have faded as well.

Tyler Durden Tue, 04/28/2026 - 09:35

US Home Prices Dipped In February For First Time Since June 2025

Zero Hedge -

US Home Prices Dipped In February For First Time Since June 2025

For the first time since June 2025, US home prices (in the largest 20 cities) fell in February (by 0.05% MoM) according to the latest (admittedly lagging and smoothed) Case-Shiller data.

The decline comes after prices surged into the turn of year and has now dragged the YoY gain in prices down to just +0.9% - the weakest since July 2023. 

The trend is clear across almost every city...

Given the lag in Case-Shiller data, one could argue that prices should be starting to rise here...

But the oddly tight coupling with Fed Reserves suggests the path is lower...

Is this Trump's 'affordability' plan kicking in? Or just lagged rates finally impacting reality.

Tyler Durden Tue, 04/28/2026 - 09:25

Transcript: David Gardner, Co-Founder, The Motley Fool

The Big Picture -

 

 

The transcript from this week’s MiB, David Gardner, Co-Founder, The Motley Fool is below.

You can stream the full conversation on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or Bloomberg.The video version is on YouTube.  The full archive of MiB episodes can be found here.

~~~

Masters in Business: David Gardner Co-founder of The Motley Fool

Barry Ritholtz: [00:00:02] Bloomberg Audio Studios, podcasts, radio News. This is Masters in business with Barry Riol on Bloomberg Radio. [00:00:16] This week on the podcast, I had so much fun chatting with David Gardner of The Motley Fool. I remember The Fool back in 93, 94 when it first launched on a OL. What a fascinating career. If you are a stock picker, if you’re someone who really is committed to finding the best companies and then riding them for decades, you’re gonna find this conversation really fascinating. [00:00:41] I thought his book was really interesting. His whole approach to life to investing is really great. I enjoyed our conversation and I think you will also, with no further ado, my discussion with the Motley Fools David Gardner. Thank

David Gardner: [00:00:55] You, Barry. It’s a delight to be with you. Thank you so much.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:00:59] I have a vivid rec recollection of sitting on a trading desk and watching you guys pop onto TV at various times. And as soon as you guys showed up, I’m like, all right, let me pull up Nvidia and Netflix. I knew they would start running and then soon turn around and fade. So it was always, just intraday, we’ll get a little later to the difference between investing and trading. [00:01:25] Yes, sir. But first, I have to go back to your background ’cause it’s so unusual. University of North Carolina on a Morehead scholarship focused on bachelor’s in English and creative writing. I assume Wall Street was not the original career plan.

David Gardner: [00:01:42] It actually was a career plan. As I came to UNC Chapel Hill as a freshman, I was telling people, I think I’m gonna go to work on Wall Street. I had a formative summer in between my sophomore and junior year where I worked at Solomon Brothers back in the day. The Good Friend era.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:01:59] I think Michael Lewis was writing Liars Poker somewhere around then. Late

David Gardner: [00:02:02] Eighties, I think it first dropped 80 89. [00:02:04] The year was 1986 for me that I was at, oh, she probably

Barry Ritholtz: [00:02:07] Overlap with him at the same time. It

David Gardner: [00:02:08] Was, I don’t recall Michael, and I’m really glad to see where he’s guys, he’s gone on to Great heights. But that was the summer I learned I was never gonna wanna go work on Wall Street. That’s that. That was a really wonderful experience.

I just realized it’s not a culture that I’m gonna probably spend time in with as an, as an adult. And so that was so helpful. I love the markets. I just wasn’t a Wall Street person.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:02:31] And you grew up in a household where markets, investing stocks were part of the daily conversation. Your dad helped you win a high school stock picking con contest. Tell us a little bit about that.

David Gardner: [00:02:41] Sure. It was actually earlier than that. It was fifth grade. It was fourth grade, really. [00:02:45] But my dad probably did what other dads did pick stocks for their son in this all boys school, St. Alvin School I went to in Washington, DC And I remember he had hard court brace Jovanovich, he had Getty Oil. This is bad, these companies aren’t around anymore too much. But that was my stock portfolio. And over the course of three months, I outperformed my classmates.  And so I won a gigantic Hershey bar, like to my 10-year-old eyes. It was the biggest Hershey bar I’d ever seen. But it was a wonderful introduction, back the real exercise. Then Barry was just to look in the newspaper to write down 16 and five eights where the stocks closed. [00:03:21] We would do that once a week over the course of three months and just start understanding the markets. So that was an early experience, but really dad was so formative for me as an investor.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:03:31] It’s always, it’s always fun talking to the youngsters who grew up with Decimalization. Yeah. Because I vividly recall what’s the price Pacini you don’t get that anymore. True.

David Gardner: [00:03:42] It’s a, it’s a whole, it’s a whole, I love [00:03:45] Your listeners Duke, Barry and I get it

Barry Ritholtz: [00:03:47] 16th and right, I get it. Yeah. Right up a stick up a half, whatever it happened to be. And then how did you end up writing for Louis Ru Kaiser’s Wall Street newsletter?

David Gardner: [00:03:56] Yeah, so I started out of college, took a couple years to read and write and travel a lot. Got married without a job, and then it was time at the age of 24 to get my first job. And as it turns out, the newsletter that was supporting Louis Rukeyser, remember his show, wall Street Week Sure. Longest running show on PBS. [00:04:14] And he had a newsletter with a financial newsletter. And I got to write the back page of that newsletter for that first job. We were reaching hundreds of thousands of people and I could pick whatever topic I wanted. So it was really fun, except it ended up not being fun. [00:04:27] And the reason it wasn’t fun is because I would pick a subject like Discount Brokers, which was a brand new amazing thing back then in 1992. Schwab, what’s that? Or Quicken. There’s now software you can DVD load onto your computer and track your finances and your stocks.

So I would write these up and then the edited version would come back with all of my jokes, color and fun stripped. And the second half freshly written by my editor, explaining all the reasons you wouldn’t want to use a discount broker or Quicken. And that’s because I was instructed, I was never, I never took a journalism course, but I was just an English major. But they told me, we have to balance it out here, David, in fact, Ru Kaiser is the personality, he’s the color of this newsletter. [00:05:15] So not you, we’re not, we’re stripping out the color. And also you gotta be, you gotta talk about the downside of discount brokers and quick. And I was like, I don’t wanna do that. I don’t see downside.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:05:23] Well, the [00:05:24] Downside is you’re taking money out of stockbrokers children’s mouths. well said. What’s the, what’s the downside of paying less to trade?

David Gardner: [00:05:33] Yeah. Well, I discovered that the downside was a job that just was kind of creatively deadening. It doesn’t really reflect on Lou Ki Ru Kaiser. It was the goal of that newsletter just to, supplement his TV show and all the rest. [00:05:44] So, but after six months, I quit the job. ’cause I was just like, this is not fun. There,

Barry Ritholtz: [00:05:49] There’s an argument to be had that Ru Kaiser was Peak financial television and it’s been downhill ever since. I like an hour week is plenty. I were, they, was he a half hour or an hour? I don’t even remember.

David Gardner: [00:06:00] Think it [00:06:00] Was an hour a week. I think it was an hour a week. Yeah, it was generally Friday. It would air different and March night.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:06:04] But Friday night, after the, [00:06:06] I remember him from Friday nights.

David Gardner: [00:06:07] And you remember his wit, he always had a monologue

Barry Ritholtz: [00:06:10] Start very dry. Yeah. Right. So let’s go over to our, what was it? [00:06:14] Elves? Wizards, I’m trying to remember. Elves, right?

David Gardner: [00:06:16] I think it was elves.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:06:17] And it was always fascinating. And I, it’s funny, I’ve seen as many of those on YouTube decades later. Yeah. That I saw as many as I’ve seen live on Friday night. [00:06:30] Okay. Like, I got no plans. All right. Let’s see what Louis has to say.

David Gardner: [00:06:34] That’s really fun that you would go back and revisit. I’ll just say he was, he was a wit he was himself outside of Wall Street. he is sort of a journalist, but he en he enjoyed bringing together brilliant minds on Wall Street. he had Peter Lynch, he would regularly focus Lynch and others. [00:06:50] And so

Barry Ritholtz: [00:06:50] Peter Lynch, Lizanne Saunders, you go down the list of people that he had, I’m trying to remember, was it Paul Tudor Jones before the 87 crash might

David Gardner: [00:07:00] Well have

Barry Ritholtz: [00:07:00] Basically saying, I’m, I’m outta stocks. I’m short. I think something terrible is about to happen. And then Black Monday happened was like, you, there was no other place to see stuff like that except we take it for granted today that it, oh, you wanna see something? [00:07:16] It’s out there. Yeah. Bloomberg,

David Gardner: [00:07:18] Right? CNBC. Right. I remember FNN was like the early player,

Barry Ritholtz: [00:07:23] Pre CNBC. Definitely that. And then CNN fn was a another one. You were right.

David Gardner: [00:07:29] So, and then, so now [00:07:30] We’re going down memory lane. Is this what? Yeah. Is this where your audience wants Barry?

Barry Ritholtz: [00:07:34] No.

David Gardner: [00:07:34] Do we to is not what they want. We

Barry Ritholtz: [00:07:35] Stay down memory lane here. I’m [00:07:37] Enjoying it. They do not want that. But so let’s talk about, you go from Ru Kaiser. Where did the idea with you and your brother working in a shed in the backyard, where did the idea come from? Hey, I want to put my own ideas with personality into a newsletter. Like how did that become an actual product?

David Gardner: [00:07:59] Well, I quit that job with nothing to go to. And then my brother’s best friend from Brown University, they both went to Brown. Eric said, Hey, David, I went to Brown, but I shockingly, I really know nothing about investing in the stock market. I’m from great education, great family. [00:08:14] I’m a television sports producer. What’s going on in stocks? So would you teach me? So I spent a couple of nights just sitting down with Eric going, here’s what I look at. [00:08:21] Here’s what I do. I was raised in a family where you buy individual stocks. We’re not just gonna index here. We’re gonna, we’re gonna be cho choiceful. [00:08:31] And we had so much fun, Eric’s like, why don’t we open up? This is a newsletter. You have no job now. You just work for a newsletter. [00:08:36] I was like, okay, let’s do that. And then I flipped through a book of quotations one night and I settled on a fool, A fool, I see a fool of the forest, A Motley Fool. And I just thought, Shakespeare, those were some as you like it, act two, scene seven for those keeping score at home. But for me, this was, a character. [00:08:52] I loved studying, certainly going through school. And everyone loves Shakespeare’s Fools. They could tell the king or queen the truth. And they did so with humor.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:08:59] The, [00:08:59] The only one who could get away with it

David Gardner: [00:09:01] Also. That’s, that’s right. They were given license to tell the truth. So I sort of loved it. [00:09:05] Also li great lines like a fool in his money or a soon parted, gave us a steep hill to climb as we tried to build trust with people. Why would you call yourselves fools? And it started there and it started as a print newsletter. You mentioned that, Barry, it was July of 1993 was the first issue. [00:09:21] $48 a year. The only people who subscribed our parents’ friends, they were the only ones who pay us 48 bucks a year. Our friends sure weren’t going to for our financial advice back then. But as we started that newsletter, 1993, early 94, we were signing on using our modem, our telephone onto a OL Prodigy and CompuServe, the big three in the early private online services battle. [00:09:46] And we were starting to discover this new medium and getting fascinated by it. And

Barry Ritholtz: [00:09:50] I recall a OL as a stock was two or $3 in the early nineties. Something really moderate before it had a hellacious run straight up for that whole decade. What was it like, first of all, you guys got fool.com today.

David Gardner: [00:10:07] Nobody else wanted it.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:10:09] Every proper noun, every dictionary word is taken. Although who knows what AI and the slow shift from Google, from SEO to AI is gonna do to, there you go. All these domains, but like domains changed hands from millions of dollars. It’s kind of crazy. [00:10:28] You went to get fool.com

David Gardner: [00:10:30] No competition. It was, yeah, nobody wanted it. Nobody wants fool.com.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:10:33] Oh my god. What? So the missed opportunity was I could domain squat on every proper No. So you launched the website, how long was it before it was got some traction?

David Gardner: [00:10:44] So we really launched, first of all, Barry, it was August 4th, 1994. It was just on a OL because this is pre Worldwide web, right. People were not using that phrase yet.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:10:52] 97 was Netscape, right?

David Gardner: [00:10:53] Yeah. Something like that. Yeah. I would actually say 96 ish was when we started coming online on the web. [00:10:58] But no, it was just keyword Fool on AOL. But AOL was going through a period of dynamic growth. Unbelievable. So it’s fantastic for us. We launched in August. By November we were written up in the New Yorker in the Talk of the town section. And then we had agents and publishers saying, there’s a book here guys. And we’re on television. [00:11:16] We’re we’re, we have a radio show, coast to coast. We just, we were like the early pioneers who believed in this new medium. And we were going offline Right. As fast as we could to all, everybody else was trying to come on online.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:11:29] Right, exactly. So, [00:11:30] So you were, you were already in, I, it’s almost embarrassing to use the phrase cyberspace. So you were online, but you used

David Gardner: [00:11:38] On the Information Super Highway. That’s

Barry Ritholtz: [00:11:40] Right. But all the traditional media to point towards the website, how long did it take before you kind of said to yourself, Hey, this is a real business, I don’t have to go get a job, I could just

David Gardner: [00:11:52] Build this. We started at such a good time because a OL as you’ll recall, was a pay per hour

Barry Ritholtz: [00:12:00] Service. That’s right. In the beginning anyway. Correct.

David Gardner: [00:12:02] Like $3 25 cents. I think they raised it to four at one point. Right. And so the business model was remarkable for us. [00:12:10] If somebody spent an hour at Keyword Fool, we would get 10% of that. So if they’re paying aol four bucks an hour, 40 cents, 40 cents for any hour that anybody would spend at our site. And so with a tiny staff and a big dog that was mailing out CDs and DVDs to get onto AOL, the services cocktail coasters at parties, we really benefited from that ramp. And so we began to be able to hire other people. [00:12:39] And that when the, so that, yeah, that was it.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:12:41] When the CDs started getting mailing, I think they had moved to like all you can eat $10 Yeah. A month or something like that. It’s

David Gardner: [00:12:49] More like 30 bucks a month.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:12:50] 29 95. Exactly. Yeah. I don’t, I don’t remember exactly what it was. [00:12:53] Yeah, I just remembered that was the end of surprise bills. Oh, it’s infinite. Okay, great. Yeah, I’m on 24 7.

David Gardner: [00:13:01] And that hurt our business a lot. Oh, some It also, it also more traffic, major inflection point. Yeah. Because we had built a site that was really fun to visit. [00:13:11] We had very active forums. We were publishing multiple times a day. Lots of people were showing up. There were even chat rooms back then. [00:13:18] Right. People were spending time online and 40 cents for every hour. So we were starting to hire people. And then within a few years, AWOL went flat rate. [00:13:26] And all of a sudden we had been the stars of AOL. They were putting us forth at their partners conference. We were on the cover of Fortune Magazine just three years after we started print newsletter. We were right out front. [00:13:36] And then we became kind of poison for AOL in this sense, every hour that anybody spent AOL had to pay connect fees. Now

Barry Ritholtz: [00:13:44] It’s a cost instead of a But they’re [00:13:46] Be, yeah. They’re only charging 30 bucks flat a month. Right. And so all of a sudden, magnet sites like ours were not as popular.

David Gardner: [00:13:53] And then meanwhile, a OL understandably, we, no harm, no foul here, but they were starting to launch a OL finance and a OL stocks and competing directly with kind of where we’d camped out and built our base,

Barry Ritholtz: [00:14:05] Hold my beer, we’re gonna launch our own website, whether people access it through you or not. Yeah, that’s fine. So, and we know the how the a OL story ended at that point you’re thinking, oh, this is a big issue. How long did it take before the website hit the same sort of, oh, this is a self-sustaining business?

David Gardner: [00:14:28] Yeah, so we launched the website alongside our a OL site with our first book, the Motley Fool Investment Guide in the summer of 1996. And the website, a OL took part ownership in us. So we gave, we gave a minority interest in our company to a OL and they’re like, guys, go out on the web, compete with your own site, compete with us, Ted Leonis, who is a real visionary. And Ted was like, guys, no one’s making money on the web show anybody how to make money here on the web. [00:14:54] And so we built our website and we started pointing people to our, both our website and our AOL site. And as it grew and as AOL went flat rate, the good news for us is a lot more people came online at that point. 30 bucks a month versus $4 an hour. A lot. [00:15:09] That’s mainstream. Yep. And also good news for us is that we could survive as a free site. So we could now be free for a lot of people. [00:15:17] The bad news was, we’ve shifted business models straight up advertising. Right At that point, it’s all about eyeballs and clicks. And your customer, our customer just changed because our customer had been the beloved fellow individual investor who was taking a risk to even go online back in the day. Right. [00:15:34] And there they were paying four bucks an hour and they loved us, and they were our members and they were paying us directly. All of a sudden they became the product that we sold to advertisers. Right. Because that’s obviously the free ad business is your customers, your eyeballs are now your new product.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:15:51] And as a reminder for the youngsters listening, 96, 97, wait, you want me to give my credit card to a random moment? this is

David Gardner: [00:16:00] Such an important

Barry Ritholtz: [00:16:00] Moment. Like early days of Amazon, early days of AOL. All right. There were a handful of companies you might trust, but there’s a million websites. [00:16:08] I don’t trust any of these guys. I heard that over and over again. How long was it before you people felt, oh, we could subscribe to this newsletter, we could give these people money to manage What was the forward timeline?

David Gardner: [00:16:20] So thank you for that memory, because this is very important. Anytime a new technology shows up, it’s generally we’re fearful about it. What is AI gonna do to jobs? Well,

Barry Ritholtz: [00:16:29] Back then, I had a tech buddy who always used to tell me, if you wanna know where technology goes, watch the X-rated stuff course, they’ll be the, they’ll be the first with micropayments. They’ll be the first with faster than real time and streaming and things like that. And it turns out that’s a big driver of online business even to this day.

David Gardner: [00:16:49] Yeah. And I think that’s that’s true. So you’re right, premium experiences and premium services are where the web has ended up. However, there was a whole shift. [00:16:58] 98, 99, 2000. You really couldn’t charge for anything on the web. If we had tried to say, you now shall pay for our site or there we have a subscription service, we would’ve been laughed at. Right. [00:17:10] At the same time though, as a stock picker, I was picking AOL stock saying, I think this is an amazing company. And it sure enough was it ended up being 150 bagger at its top didn’t end there. But it was still a remarkable investment. And lots of people had followed us into AOL and other stocks like the Amazon. [00:17:28] And it was really going against conventional wisdom at the time to say, buy Amazon, buy AOL. And so I want people to remember that because now it looks so obvious. AOL didn’t end well. Amazon has ended really well.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:17:42] It hasn’t ended. Right. That’s right. So it’s important to remember those moments. [00:17:46] ’cause we tend to forget them. We also forget the dawn of ai. This is first thing in this ball game and people will look back and go, it’s also obvious in retrospect.

David Gardner: [00:17:54] Right. It’s always obvious in retrospect. [00:17:56] It is indeed, Barry. It’s

Barry Ritholtz: [00:17:57] At the time. It’s really challenging. So last question in this segment, if you were starting the Motley Fool in 2026 instead of 1993. So we have social media, we have free trading, we have ETFs everywhere. [00:18:15] The world is so different today than it was 40 years ago. What would you do 30 years ago anyway? What would you do differently? How would you build a site and a business today, this time around?

David Gardner: [00:18:27] Well, I think first of all, one thing that we know today that we didn’t do back then that I think is very helpful in every era is to be a purpose-driven business. And to state what is your mission? What is your purpose? And really hue to that and breathe through that and hire for that and promote because of that. [00:18:44] And conscious capitalism is one of my themes as an investor and a board that I’ve served on. So I now have those eyes that I didn’t have back then. And I think that is such a strong thing. Most of the best companies I know look at crazy business of fast food. [00:19:02] Chicken Chick-fil-A is an amazing company. I wish it were a public market company, it would’ve been one of my stock picks. But they just fundamentally act differently than McDonald’s and their competitors. And it’s because it’s like a leadership academy masquerading as a chicken joint still closed

Barry Ritholtz: [00:19:18] On Sundays.

David Gardner: [00:19:18] Yeah, exactly. Which is their choice. Radical and it, so those are the kinds of companies that I admire. And like, that’s what I’ve always wanted the Motley Fool to be. [00:19:26] So I would do that in earnest today in a way that I think would cut through a lot of the noise and people saying there’s too many choices and all the rest standing for something and then living that every day. Most of the best companies that I can think of do that. So I would be trying to do that, Barry. But yeah, it is a different world. [00:19:42] We, one thing that’s changed, I think for the worse, and I’m an optimist, almost everybody’s mailing it in with index funds these days. Like I was raised in an era where it was kind of normal, at least in my family, buy a stock these days, the conventional wisdom has become, you’d be crazy to buy individual stocks that’s so risky, just index. And while I admire Jack Bogle deeply, and I appreciate indexing and the Motley Fool has always been a big supporter of index funds, have we really got an era where you shouldn’t even pay attention or care anymore. And you can’t probably beat the market because it would just be luck to pick Chick-fil-A over Kentucky Fried Chicken. [00:20:22] I don’t think so. I didn’t think so back then. And so I would be definitely sounding that loud and clear today. There’s even more big dumb money sloshing around than ever before. [00:20:30] ’cause so much is just throwing it at everything and not discerning this one versus that one. Huh.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:20:33] Really interesting. Coming up, we continue our conversation with David Gardner, co-founder of The Motley Fool, discussing his book, rule Breaker Investing, how to Pick the Best Stocks of the Future and Build Lasting Wealth. I’m Barry Ritholtz. You are listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio. [00:21:03] I’m Barry Ritholtz. You are listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio. My extra special guest is Dave Gardner. He’s the co-founder of the Motley Fool and the author of the book, rule Breaker Investing, how to Pick The Best Stocks of the Future and Build Lasting Wealth. [00:21:20] So I wanna talk a little bit about the philosophy around rule breaking investing and stock selection. One of the things that jumped out of the book from your framework was top dog and first mover customer love, visionary leadership, discuss.

David Gardner: [00:21:40] Yeah. Well thank you. These are some of the traits that I’m looking for in stocks. And I think before we start this, Barry, I should just, again underline, I believe it is a worthy thing to choose stocks. [00:21:53] I really want to find the best companies of our time and I wanna own them for a long period of time. And actually it’s, it’s, for many people, it’s actually easier to find Amazon or eBay back in that era or Nvidia more recently. But to actually hold them, to hold them, to allow them to multiply in the way that they will, if you do, in my experience, that’s hardest

Barry Ritholtz: [00:22:15] For most people. Let’s, let’s talk about that. ’cause Amazon, after the.com crash plummeted to single digits. Yep. [00:22:23] Apple has had more near death experiences than I can count Nvidia. Go down the list. Google, Facebook, Tesla, Facebook’s IPO was a disaster. It got cut in half, like within few months of that. [00:22:35] And then they kind of unlocked mobile and it was off to the races. Yeah. Tesla, the, these companies trade more like cryptocurrencies than companies. How do you find the confidence and the commitment to stay with something down 40, 60, 80%?

David Gardner: [00:22:54] So thank you. And I would say first of all, it’s not worth doing that for every investment. Certainly if it were some dodgy crypto, I wouldn’t be holding. But you used an important phrase a minute or two ago, you said top dog and first mover. [00:23:09] So when I look at important emerging industries and I see a company with a large customer base, they may not be profitable yet, but they’re doing good things in this world, a world I wanna live in. And their stocks down, their stocks been cut in half. What’s the reason? Sometimes it’s the CEO like Howard Schultz back in the day with Starbucks, was just occasionally conservative and the analysts were surprised as he under promised. [00:23:35] And then the stock drops 15%, and a week you,

Barry Ritholtz: [00:23:39] You told the story about this going on the view, yeah. The stock ends up down 30%, but, and that was your last appearance. And then what happened to

David Gardner: [00:23:47] Starbucks? It went up 30 times in value. And we’ve never been back on the view, but, and by the way, I’ll return at any time. We’d love to close the loop on that story. [00:23:54] But yeah, that was 1998, early TV appearance. We picked a stock for the ladies of the view and then it was Starbucks. That’s the punchline by the way. I shouldn’t have given that. [00:24:05] But yeah, the stock dropped 30% in just a couple of months. And we went back on the show to update the story and they booed us good naturedly. And they’re like, oh

Barry Ritholtz: [00:24:15] Well. And we’re

David Gardner: [00:24:16] Like, keep holding though. Keep holding. And then they’ve never invited us back since. And it’s gone up 30, 33 times the value from our first appearance, not even including the 33% drop. [00:24:26] So, that was an iconic moment. I didn’t realize it at the time, but as I wrote rule breaker investing, I was just thinking, that’s my story. Because that’s what most people miss. Most people are following the headlines instead of following real progress and they’re chasing stuff. [00:24:42] And if you just look and ask who are the movers and shakers delivering products and services, electric cars, robotic surgery, coffee houses, better fajitas, the list goes on. Who are the,

Barry Ritholtz: [00:24:55] So I’m thinking Stryker, Chipotle, Tesla.

David Gardner: [00:24:58] Yeah. Well actually intuitive surgical. Okay. But yeah. [00:25:01] Yeah. But yes, you’re thinking exactly the comments. I was thinking,

Barry Ritholtz: [00:25:04] I’m seeing the robot that did my surgery.

David Gardner: [00:25:06] Ah, I’m very happy

Barry Ritholtz: [00:25:07] To hear that. And when I recall walking into the surgical theater and looking around and saying, oh, this is where the future is. I’ve just gone 20 years forward. Yeah. [00:25:18] ’cause this whole thing is here’s the big robot with all the like, oh, now I understand. Like the rest of the world. We’re living in the past. This technology is as cutting edge as it gets. [00:25:29] It’s, it’s really amazing.

David Gardner: [00:25:30] I love that. And I’m so glad to hear that for you in successful surgery, which is what we all want, robot or human. But yeah, it turns out there are lots of advantages to robot assisted surgery. Yes. [00:25:40] And Intuitive Surgical has really been the pure place small companies. Stryker is a more bigger diversified company. Yeah. Anyway, but for each of these, like,

Barry Ritholtz: [00:25:48] I just happen to remember what the little logo on the saw, the last thing I saw. That’s

David Gardner: [00:25:52] A good thing to do. Yeah. They’re

Barry Ritholtz: [00:25:54] Like, this’ll help you relax. And then the next thing I know, I’m in recovery. Wow. But the last thing I saw was the Stryker logo.

David Gardner: [00:25:59] Great story. And, so it’s funny you mentioned the future and feeling like you’re living the future. That’s generally where I try to be as I pick my stocks. And just for the fun of it, one of my best stock picks and the last 15 years has been Tesla, which I picked in 2011, still holding. [00:26:15] And I bought, I’ve owned a number of Teslas since, and I was driving around in Tesla in 2013. My license plate in Washington DC is future. Like, no one else thought of it. So I’m, I’m watching out for the future Washington DC and I’m driving around going, I really am inside the future.

And I’m surrounded by not just other cars that aren’t yet, but a whole industry, gas stations, et cetera of things. Right. There’s not as much maintenance needed. So that’s a great iconic example of, for me, whether it’s Starbucks back in the day, which was questionable for a lot of people ’cause it looked like a fad.

That was the big wrap on Starbucks early nineties. Where have coffee houses ever come from in America? There’s no background for this. This is such a fad paying five bucks for coffee. Are you serious? Right. That, so AOL was all just chat rooms. They were all gonna be hyped.

No one will ever give their credit card over the internet. Tesla electric cars will never work. Intuitive surgical. Why would you have a robot when humans can do it just as well do the list goes on at companies

Barry Ritholtz: [00:27:15] All the way around. Why would you have a human when a robot can do it, that

David Gardner: [00:27:17] Is indeed

Barry Ritholtz: [00:27:18] More, not only just as well, but more consistently. Yeah. And it doesn’t matter if they had a bad night, it’s, it’s fine the next day.

David Gardner: [00:27:26] And minimally evasive. Right. And speaking of the next day, you’re walking home the next day, that night it’s most of

Barry Ritholtz: [00:27:30] Two days. Oh no. Same day you walk outta the hospital. It’s kind of terrifying.

David Gardner: [00:27:34] Although you’re still on a lot of drugs at that. Yeah. [00:27:36] So, well one of my heroes is Clayton Christensen, who wrote The Innovator’s Dilemma. And he’s somebody who helped me understand and think about disruptive innovation. And I’ve always invested in the innovators. And back to your earlier question, Barry, I can keep holding my Netflix when it loses two thirds of its value when I believe in Netflix and I see visible proof every day of how important Amazon back in the day, Netflix, Tesla, the list goes on, the companies we’ve mentioned. [00:28:03] So that helps me hold these companies. If you follow the company as opposed to the zigs and zags and the stock charts or the headlines, you’re going to be much more patient, I think, as an investor. And that has been my, that’s been a superhero power for me.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:28:15] So walk us through your stock picking process. How does a company first land on your radar? What sort of analysis do you do? When do you decide you’re comfortable to put it on your buy list? [00:28:28] And are there any non-negotiable check boxes that you say, Nope, that’s a knockout. They don’t

David Gardner: [00:28:34] Have this. every one of those questions I could possibly fill your ears up. So I’ll try to be brief. I love the questions in reverse order, by the way. [00:28:42] I’ll say any non-negotiables. I don’t invest in companies whose fundamental business is to take money from other people. And so you’ll never see me recommend a so-called gaming stock. And I think sports betting is a joke. [00:28:54] And it’s, while I think it always should have been legal, I think it is a sad waste of money for anybody who does the math. And so that would not be on my list. No Mott lethal member has ever received a gaming recommendation from me.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:29:05] And they have been very destructive, primarily to college age men. Yeah. There’s a growing gambling addiction problem. And these companies just, that’s their, that’s their clients.

David Gardner: [00:29:17] Yep. And I will say I love sports. I know you do too. And I’m happy making a bet with friends. [00:29:23] But if you really do the math of a 50 50 prospect where the house takes out its 10% Right. And you just do your expected return and play that forward with all your money, I know where that goes. And you could have had nine to 10% annualized returns.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:29:36] There’s a huge [00:29:36] Difference. You [00:29:37] Knucklehead, there’s a huge difference between doing a box for the Super Bowl or something. Yeah. For March Madness.

David Gardner: [00:29:44] Yeah. Have fun

Barry Ritholtz: [00:29:45] And betting on free throws. it’s, it’s just, it has nothing to do with sports. That’s just the medium by which they are tickling your adrenaline and dopamine. It’s, it’s so, and yet the these have become giant

David Gardner: [00:29:59] Businesses. Yeah. And, even something as innovative as prediction markets, which I am fascinated by, are also being turned into quick money and or sometimes questionable who can influence the outcomes of prediction markets. So these are unfortunate things where I think they’re fascinating to follow, but if you’re serious about your own money and you would like financial freedom one day, you’re making a huge mistake if you go there. [00:30:19] So back to your question, that’s a non-negotiable for me. I don’t like businesses that just fundamentally lead people who don’t know math to give their money away regularly. I don’t feel great about that if I’m a shareholder.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:30:31] So let me roll you back a little bit. How does a company typically find its way onto your ra radar? Is it something you’re using or something you hear about? Like where do most of your these ideas come from?

David Gardner: [00:30:43] So the ideas come from, first of all, I’m an early adopter, so I’ve got a closet full of things where I bought the thing early first gen and it’s not really working or wasn’t relevant anymore. And so, but it also meant I bought Tesla very early on. I, and I tried online services with my scratchy phone. That sound we can all hear if you’re over 40 years old today of logging onto AOL.

So I love the new, I’m excited by ai and that’s not an industry by the way, that is a plate tectonic shift for our society that’s gonna create many industries, many of which don’t even exist yet. Just as we were excited about the internet with Amazon, where my cost base is today, is 16 cents still holding? Uber hadn’t even shown up yet. Google hadn’t shown up yet.

It’s, it will be years before AI companies that are amazing, that are great stocks show up. So no one should feel anxious that they don’t have an AI portfolio yet. But anyway, so I’m an early adopter and then I’m connected to a community, the Motley Fool community, our forums, discussion boards, meeting people of book signings. The list goes this conversation right now.

Barry Ritholtz: You mentioned Stryker. I probably need to look back at that one. I’m curious how it’s done. So I’m just always listening.

David Gardner: Of course, social media is full of these kinds of opportunities. So intellectual curiosity is the flame that will burn my whole life long. And in many of my fellow fools, and I think my host today as well. So I think that if you’re curious and you’re asking questions about where society’s headed and you’re specifically looking for products and services that will improve our lives and our kids’ lives, you’re going to be looking, you’re gonna be fishing in the right pond.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:32:14] So once something falls on your radar, you have six rule breaker criteria. Walk us through those six. Yeah, I’ll do really that’s the heart of the analysis that you do, right? It

David Gardner: [00:32:24] Is, it’s, it’s six traits that I’m looking for. And that’s the middle of my book. And I didn’t start the book that way. And we could talk about that later if you like. [00:32:30] But let me just rattle right now through my six traits of rule breaker investing. And by the way, I’ve used these now into my fourth decade. I didn’t just come up with these yesterday. This is exactly what caused me to pick AOL, Amazon, Tesla, Nvidia, the list goes on.

And it’s, some of them are so contrary, which is why I think it works. Number one, top dog and first mover in an important emerging industry. We already spoke to that one. We could go deeper.

You might. So for today, that might be Nvidia, it might be Broadcom, it might be aASM lithography, it might be AMD, it could be any of the semiconductors or some of the software companies. Google, Microsoft, whoever.

Yeah. And also by the way, restaurant companies, retail, and every industry I’m asking who’s the innovator? I wanna know who the Inno And if you honestly just only focus your stock market attention on the biggest innovator in each industry. Some of them are small emergent, some of them are big. [00:33:25] You’re gonna do so much better as an investor.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:33:27] So Starbucks the third place. Yeah. That was the big driver of them. Chipotle, they came up with a way to assembly line fresh food.

David Gardner: [00:33:35] Yeah. The fact that it better quality, the fact that it happens to be Mexican based is almost revent irrelevant. You see Kava today doing the same thing with Mediterranean. And I’m sure there are dozens of others coming up. [00:33:47] There are, and by the way, not all of these work out as stocks. I certainly have a closet full of bad stock picks as well. And we could talk about that later. But that’s very important. [00:33:56] If you have sort of a venture capital mentality as you look at the public markets, which is how I describe myself, you need just like a vc, you need to be comfortable with losing. It’s,

Barry Ritholtz: [00:34:05] It’s okay. In other words, it’s, you’re, you’re looking for here a hundred investments, 50 A aren’t gonna work out 30 will do. Okay. But it’s the top two or three that make it worthwhile.

David Gardner: [00:34:15] Yeah. And I truly go into all hundreds saying, I like this company. I believe in it, I hope it works out, but I’m never loading up on one, et cetera. So top dog and first mover and important emerging industry of my six traits, that’s the most important. [00:34:29] So number two, we’re looking for a sustainable competitive advantage.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:34:34] A moat as Buffett likes

David Gardner: [00:34:36] To say, you bet. And because we’re holding stocks for a dead minimum of three years, preferably three decades, sustainable competitive advantage really matters. And that takes many forms. We could talk about that. [00:34:50] Number three. So the first two are about the company, the third is about the stock. And this is, I’m looking for a strong stellar past price appreciation in the stock.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:35:01] In other words, you’re not looking for the cigar stub to use Ben Graham’s the opposite phrase. You’re looking for something with a little momentum and where more and more investors are stepping in.

David Gardner: [00:35:13] There’s a chapter in my book and it was an eye-opener as I wrote it and realized it, where I listed out seven of my best stock picks from intuitive surgical to Netflix, to Apple, to Amazon, to Nvidia and a couple of others. And I noticed, and I only realized this in retrospect, that in the three to nine months leading up to my first pick of them, on average they had risen 30 to 90%. And a lot of people, I think most people when they are researching a stock, it goes up 50%. They’re like, oh that’s missed it.

Barry Ritholtz: Right? It’s done. Right.

David Gardner:  Yeah. And so part of the reason rule breaker investing works is because I’m willing at that point, not just to buy it, but to actually be more excited about it. Because clearly the market is noticing what’s happening now. And when companies rise, reflexivity starts to show up, Barry, they start having more resources. [00:36:04] They’re getting mentioned on Bloomberg radio, all of a sudden a lot of good stuff starts coming to them that strengthens them. That’s not a reason to look for another cigar bot and ignore Nvidia. So that is trait number three, stellar past price appreciation in a world where most people are like buy low, sell high, right? I’m looking to the 52 week low list friends, not the 52 week high. And when I say friends, I mean that’s the average person speaking. I’m looking for the 52 week high.

Barry Ritholtz: Give us four, five, and six.

David Gardner. [00:36:31] So number four, it’s all about the people. We’re looking for smart backing and excellent management. So it’s the human capital. And this is again, in some ways obvious.

Yeah, we’d love to have Steve Jobs be our CEO. Yeah, we’re glad that Jeff Bezos is our CEO or Warren Buffett. But keep in mind, and this is a really hidden in plain sight, I think profound insight that most people don’t see, even though I, it’s hidden in plain sight, there is no number to express the value of the CEO running companies. So we have a whole Wall Street world that’s built on valuation rate ratios, generally off of earnings or cash flow, sometimes off of assets.

And they’re not including that Elon Musk is the CEO of the company. And by the way, there are a lot of CEOs who are subtracting value from their companies and there’s nothing to express that. And so we have a whole world driven off algorithms that increasingly is computer trading. It’s not even humans anymore. [00:37:29] And they’re not noticing or caring. I think about trait number four, who the heck’s running this thing and who’s backing it? That matters deeply to me, especially if I’m holding as I do for three decades. Number five, we’re looking for strong consumer brands.

I love companies that have raving fans. And it doesn’t mean every time that they are a consumer brand. Stryker Drilling, intuitive surgical, these are not consumer brands per se, although Intuitive Surgical with its Da Vinci surgical robot, you will hear your local on your local radio if you still listen to it, you’ll hear an ad for the hospital bragging in some cases, right, that they have a Da Vinci. So there is some brand recognition there. [00:38:07] But Starbucks, Netflix, Amazon, these are all my best stock picks and I bought them years ago and still hold them today. And they all exhibit that strong consumer appeal. And the final probably my favorite secret sauce. So if you’re following us, the first two are about the company, the third was the stock, then the next two, four, and five, the people and the brand are about the company. [00:38:30] Number six is about the stock. And it’s specifically that the stock is generally considered capital o overvalued by the, by the world at large, by Wall Street commentators by people in Barons, CNBC, never Bloomberg Radio

Barry Ritholtz: [00:38:45] Course. So a little, so a little contrarian perspective,

David Gardner: [00:38:47] We are specifically wanting people to call out Tesla as ridiculously overpriced. Amazon will never make money. Intuitive surgical, when I first recommended it over a hundred bagger ago, it was at 73 times earnings. There are people, if they even do pay attention to stocks anymore that say I would never buy a stock with a priced earnings ratio of 73. [00:39:06] The list goes on.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:39:07] So a lot of times when we see stuff, especially with a company that’s relatively young, you start to see the company grow into their valuation. And NVIDIA’s a great example. It was a semi maker then. It was a floating point chip maker for gaming before it did the pivot to full ai. [00:39:29] ’cause FPU are turns out to be better than CPUs for large language models. And I don’t pretend to be a wizard on that CPUs

David Gardner: [00:39:38] Than GPUs, graphic processing’s units.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:39:40] Yeah. I dunno what F is floating point unit, but GPUs, that’s exactly right. But, two years ago Nvidia was like a 75 pe. Now it’s like a 40 PE and falling can’t some of these overpriced companies just grow.

David Gardner: [00:39:58] Apple is another example. For the longest time people looked at Apple in the two thousands when that Newfangled iPod came out and said, oh they don’t have any profits whatsoever. Why would I wanna own Apple in oh four or oh five? [00:40:15] So I think that first of all, let’s be clear, there are things that are overvalued that you and I would not wanna buy. But if you’re following our conversation, if you’re buying a top dog and first mover in an important emerging industry with a sustainable competitive advantage, stellar past price appreciation, excellent management, smart backing, strong consumer appeal, it has all five of those things in place. And then some guy on CNBC is telling you it’s blatantly overvalued. It’s crazy. [00:40:43] No one should ever buy that stock. Amazon do bomb cover of Baron’s. That is the special sauce that causes me to say, bam. Now we’re buying and well the Amazon, it’s so contrary.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:40:54] The Amazon bomb was, I wanna say January, 2000. And we did see a giant collapse. What was the QS fell about 82% pizza trough. That’s a pretty

David Gardner: [00:41:05] Big block. I experienced it all the way. In fact, our cost basis 16 cents, it had gone up. It was a 30 bagger. [00:41:12] And again, when I’m picking stocks, this is not for my, this is not for my own portfolio. This is not, this is lots of people following the Motley Fool. This, these are people subscribing to us. So right. [00:41:21] When I pick a good stock, it feels really good. It’s not about me. When I pick a bad stock, it doesn’t feel very good. It’s not about me or a

Barry Ritholtz: [00:41:29] Big, a good stock that hits a buzz saw when a market gets shellacked. Exactly. And you could own anything during the financial crisis. Everything still got cut in half more or less. [00:41:38] It was quite a, quite a

David Gardner: [00:41:40] Crash. You’re right Barry. And the truth is that if you follow any of these companies, I’ve, I’ve littered our conversation with 15 to 20 company names that are really 15 to 20 generationally great stocks. Every single one of these stocks has lost 50% or more of its value more than once. [00:41:57] Which means that if you’d followed Motley Fool advice, depending on your timing, you might love me or not like me. You might be like, yeah I got in there but got cut in half and I got out. We’re holding all the way through. We’re buying and we’re holding. [00:42:11] So I have watched Amazon go, this is kind of pre-split. It was at three when we first recommended. It went to 95 down to seven during that two 2001 era I recall for sure.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:42:22] Incredible. More splits soon after. Yeah,

David Gardner: [00:42:24] Yeah. It’s now split down to 16 cents, which by the way is also my cost base is on Nvidia. Thanks to the magic of stock splits, they both got me at my 16 cent. Cost base is still holding. [00:42:34] So, but to do that like Nvidia just three years ago lost half. Its value in one year. This is one of the largest

Barry Ritholtz: [00:42:41] Companies. It was like four months in the it get cut in half. Yeah. Right.

David Gardner: [00:42:43] So

Barry Ritholtz: [00:42:43] This is just gonna happen.

David Gardner: [00:42:44] 2022, it really got [00:42:46] Shellacked. This is not gonna happen for companies that are not dynamic, this is not gonna happen so much for cyclicals. I mean there will be some cyclicality, these are rule breakers, these are stocks that by most popular view were blatantly overvalued. You should never have bought Amazon all the way through, et cetera. [00:43:02] And so they’re gonna be more volatile. Netflix was gonna get put outta business by Walmart. I don’t know if you remember this, but back in the day of the red envelopes, all of a sudden Walmart said, Hey, you can just drop it off at your Walmart, your DVD, you don’t have to mail it back to Netflix. That was gonna, Netflix was supposedly toast then. [00:43:18] So I’ve a OL was gonna be toast. It eventually was kind of toast, although it sold out the

Barry Ritholtz: [00:43:23] Merger was the problem. Yeah.

David Gardner: [00:43:24] But I’ve watched, it’s such a key indicator, trait number six when people say it’s toast that not for every stock, but for the rule breakers, that is magic. It has been for me.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:43:36] Huh. So I wanna ask you about the first stock you purchased where you said, oh this checks all six boxes. This is my rule

David Gardner: [00:43:47] Breaker. It was a OL. Yeah, definitely

Barry Ritholtz: [00:43:50] AOL 19 91, 4, 5, 6.

David Gardner: [00:43:52] We literally picked it the day we launched on a OL 1994, August 4th, 1994. And from that point I watched a OL and again we were, I mean we’re always fully transparent. People are like, wait, you guys are on a OL, is there a conflict of interest? You’re recommending AOL stock? [00:44:07] No, we know what it is because we’re on it. We see what this can do for investors and what the future of the company is. It’s pretty self-evident, you [00:44:16] Know, you’re right. And yet not everybody would’ve felt that way back then. But it was, I mean we had no inside view of a OL. We were separately domicile, but we watched a OL grow and it was such an object business lesson as an entrepreneur for me. [00:44:31] And, but as a stock picker, I was watching it get called out as the most overvalued stock repeatedly by August. Bodies like the world economic, it’s not the world Economic forum today, but basically all the economists in the world would get together every summer and two summers in a row. It was like 96 and 97. They voted the most overvalued stock and it was the stock that we had backed. [00:44:53] And our members were like, guys, they’re calling it the most overvalued again. We’re like, this is an amazing company. It went up 150 times in value. And I learned so much from that experience. [00:45:03] And as we mentioned, it didn’t end there. It started to drop back and fell back and eventually just kind of got taken over. And, it emerged with time Warner. When

Barry Ritholtz: [00:45:12] When people stop calling stuff over valued and every analyst on the street has a strong buy on it,

David Gardner: [00:45:18] That’s usually

Barry Ritholtz: [00:45:18] When you wanna be on the other side of that. Right. That

David Gardner: [00:45:22] Can, that can be true. I will also say though, not always, but No. I definitely appreciate the sentiment and I smile at that ance with you as well. I will say that we typically just hold, well longer than whatever analysts are thinking or saying. [00:45:35] We don’t really pay attention. So you’re not

Barry Ritholtz: [00:45:36] Quarter to quarter, is that what you’re saying?

David Gardner: [00:45:38] Not, yeah. No. I mean we love following business. By the way, one thing you asked me to think a little bit about is there anything that people should be talking more about, especially if something that troubles me. [00:45:48] And a quick example would be, I really think we should have companies reporting every three months their financial results. And you may know there’s a movement afoot. Yes. To allow some companies just to report twice a year. [00:45:58] I think that’s a really bad decision. And I hope we don’t do that. I hope companies will self-report and choose to be transparent on a regular basis with their results.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:46:07] Yeah, I’m gonna take it a step further than you and say, and I wrote this before AI was ubiquitous. If you want to get rid of quarterly reporting instead of going once or twice a year, make it real time and 24 7 really cool because you could update that. You could set up technology to update, here’s where we are, here’s how close we are, here’s our range. You can Monte Carlo what we would likely to do each quarter. [00:46:34] And so the problem is the focus on quarterly. If it was all the time, like you can look at your portfolio or your checking account 24 7, you shouldn’t, but you can. And it’s made, I remember in the nineties or in the two thousands, we would be printing stuff out, folding ’em up, sticking ’em in envelope, sending them out. And the quarterly report was a, when I was a junior, having to do that crap in the mail room, it was a big deal. [00:47:05] The quarterly report. Yeah. Now nobody really thinks about your portfolio quarterly. ’cause you can access it whenever you want.

David Gardner: [00:47:13] It’s kind of, I think it’s absolutely heading in the wrong direction. Yeah. Well [00:47:16] So more transparency is, the theme here. But, so for me, I think a lot about, what is gonna be in the best interest of armchair investors like me because Barry, we are, we’re individual investors and so I’m there representing anybody who is in an investment club or was given a portfolio of stocks and they’re trying to figure out how to make better decisions. And I think it’s so rewarding to pick stocks in a world where it’s increasingly called out as crazy talk to actually buy an individual stock.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:47:49] So we talked earlier about stocks like Apple and Nvidia, Netflix and Amazon that have all gotten cut in half repeatedly. How do you tell the difference between a stock that’s just going through, so sort of regular volatility versus GE got sliced in half. We look at, I’m not even talking about the Lehman Brothers or the WorldComs of the world, I mean just stocks that their best days are behind them. How do the difference between just a regular stumble and beginning of the end?

David Gardner: [00:48:23] Well, [00:48:23] First of all, I’d say you can’t know. it would be two headstrong of me to say, here’s what, here’s what you do, here’s how. So for me, I just like to keep my stocks in place and recognize some of ’em are gonna trip. I love horse racing metaphors and not every horse is gonna win the race. [00:48:39] Not everyone’s gonna make to the race. Some get out to great start and don’t finish well and I can’t always know. But by holding I allow the ones that clearly will win to win. So grandly, when you make more than a thousand times your money on Amazon or Nvidia, it doesn’t actually matter that you had some dogs in your portfolio. [00:48:57] So you can be wrong and that’s okay. ’cause being right is so much more valuable. I will also add though, to answer your question a little bit more directly, usually the companies that fall and don’t come back are being disrupted. Earlier I mentioned Clayton Christensen innovator’s Dilemma. [00:49:14] You can usually kind of see it that the world is changing. The company might still be best in class and it may have a famous CEO that everybody loves, but all of a sudden there’s this upstart might be a whole industry of new players. And when I see that in a company going down, I may not wanna hold onto that stock. But if Netflix, which has been ascendant now for 20 plus years, every time if it’s down two thirds of its value, which has happened more than once, including Quickster, I keep holding that one. [00:49:43] Right? So the question is, does this company remain a rule breaker? Is it a top dog and still first mover in an emergent industry? And when it is, I’m gonna keep holding that stock.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:49:54] Coming up, we continue our conversation with David Gardner, co-founder of the Motley Fool, discussing his book, rule Breaker Investing, how to Pick The Best Stocks of the Future and Build Lasting Wealth. I’m Barry Ritholtz. You are listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio. I am Barry Ritholtz. [00:50:27] You are listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio. My extra special guest is David Gardner. He’s the co-founder of the Motley Fool and the author of the book, rule Breaker Investing, how to Pick The Best Stocks of the Future and Build Lasting Wealth. When did you realize that Blockbuster was being disrupted by Netflix and ps? [00:50:50] At one point in the two thousands, Netflix tried to sell themselves to Blockbuster for $50 million and they turned them down.

David Gardner: [00:50:58] Yeah, it’s, it’s like Yahoo could have bought Google. You love those stories. Yeah, but, I would say that I never really thought too much about Blockbuster as a stock. I remember we had the CEO on our Motley Fool radio show, and at that time, blockbuster maybe had 25 million customers and Netflix had 1 million. [00:51:14] And he was like, we’re watching what they’re doing. It’s, it’s neat what they’re doing. I don’t think it’s a, it’s not a big scaling thing, right?, it’s kind of a niche thing. [00:51:22] Do you wanna mail your DVD back and forth? And that, I think it was John anco, but good man, probably, but wrong. He was wrong. And so it wasn’t so much that I ever cared or love Blockbuster, I just was watching this rule breaker emerge and it was doing crazy stuff. [00:51:38] Like you can’t just drop it off two blocks away at your blockbuster. You have to mail it and keep a queue and send it back and forth, but

Barry Ritholtz: [00:51:46] The queue is half the value of it. Here’s all the movies I wanna see, which, by the way, every time I roll into Blockbuster, it’s rented. And I’m not even talking about a Saturday night, like on a Wednesday. What do you mean you don’t have this? [00:51:59] Remember those

David Gardner: [00:52:00] Days? So instead just working through the queue, Netflix was like, so that the initial question is, wait, you want me to nail DVDs back and forth to, oh, I see how this works, but this’ll never replace Blockbuster to no late fees. Oh my God, why do I want to give anything to Blockbuster? And it was super disruptive before online streaming

Barry Ritholtz: [00:52:25] And as a, as a master of business administration. Actually, I don’t have an MBA neither, but I know I’m neither a master of business, God beautiful. But as students of the game, as people who love business, what actually was happening was Netflix was changing the business model of the consumer proposition and the whole industry, right? Because as you just pointed out, blockbuster was a transactional late fee driven, and all of a sudden you’re subscribing to Netflix, you’re now in a subscription relationship, very disruptive. [00:52:52] There was no, there was really no precedent for that in that industry. So it looked like this crazy thing, and it was easy to mock. Why wouldn’t you just drop it off a block away, mail it to these people? And yet it fundamentally changed the business model forever. [00:53:08] And then we’re not even talking about streaming, which we don’t have to, but they keep innovating. And, [00:53:11] And the interesting thing is, you men, we were mentioning late fees. if you get a late fee from your bank or a bounce check fee or something, it’s part of your statement. It’s not the same thing as showing up and having someone say, gimme another seven bucks. What do you mean give you another seven bucks? [00:53:31] It was just like so annoying it and alienating, like, I think it’s a good rule of thumb. Try not to really piss off all of your clients, all of your customers. Not a good long-term strategy.

David Gardner: [00:53:44] I have a small confession to make that Wall Street Summer, I referenced when I went to Solomon Brothers, we did, we had a video out from Blockbuster and we kept it the whole summer. We just kept not returning. We were irresponsible college sophomores. And at the end of the summer, I’m not even sure, like we had racked up a triple digit late fee,

Barry Ritholtz: [00:54:01] Right? And the video is 20 bucks to buy. Exactly. Just go buy another

David Gardner: [00:54:05] One. So we had a friend of ours who is British, go in with a British accent and explain to Blockbuster that we were renting his place. He doesn’t really know about it, but here’s this video that he found. And so we kind of got out of that one. [00:54:17] It wasn’t totally above board. So I’m happy now to admit that this is helpful for me. But yeah, that was kind of the state of things, the anxiety, the angst around returning a video late and not feeling great, from a consumer branding standpoint. Right.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:54:32] So yeah, Netflix love them. So, [00:54:34] So let’s talk about rule breakers today. They’re gonna be in different spaces, biotech, defense, tech, obviously ai, and a lot of these areas don’t have a whole lot of earnings or, and they do have a massive cash burn. So how do you think about valuation in the space? Does it not matter if the growth is there? [00:54:54] Define the modern era of rule breakers.

David Gardner: [00:54:58] So I would always be, first of all, looking at industries and you just did that some, and, even something like biotech, which you said, right? That’s, as, Barry, that’s multiple industries, right? there’s, there’s, so the internet was never an industry. AI is not in industry. [00:55:14] So we’re talking about, again, huge technologies. I was saying earlier, plate tectonic shifts for our society. And you’re looking for the beneficiaries and you’re looking for the visionaries who are starting something that might sound a little crazy, like mailing DVDs back and forth, or an electric car. And you wanna get invested in those. [00:55:33] Assuming that you agree with the vision, you think the person is great. You and I were referencing investment research circa 1980s, nineties, an annual report being mailed to you through the mail. That was about all you had. There weren’t online forms or anything these days. [00:55:47] You can watch long form YouTube videos watching any CEO be interviewed and learn a lot about their character, which carries, which matters deeply to me, I’m a big character person, so I wanna feel really good about the people I’m invested in across my portfolio. So we’re looking at important emerging industries, and we’re not trying to force things that don’t exist yet. There’s no ultra AI stock. Nvidia has been an amazing hold for us now 21 years in counting. [00:56:13] It was not an AI company when I first recommended it, but we’re still holding. But, these things are gonna emerge. I already mentioned earlier things like Uber, Airbnb didn’t show up till more than 10 years after the internet had really started to penetrate American life. And so for me, it’s just keeping our eyes out, whether it’s genomics or some Duolingo, a video game on your, on your phone where you’re learning languages. [00:56:42] Again, all of these are from different industries, but they are the innovator. And so yeah, we’re, we’re staying focused in the modern day go forward on what are the companies that are going to add value to our world in a way that is consumer noticeable, and when they’re called overvalued, that’s even better for us as rule breaker investors.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:57:01] So let me share some criticism that you share with Warren Buffett of all people, when I’m doing my research for this conversation. One of the things that came up was you have this really good long-term con track record, but if you’ve been involved in more recently, in the past 10, 15 years, well all those Amazon’s Netflix, apples from the early two thousands are driving most of your gains. From what I’m hearing from you’re implying that doesn’t really hold true. If you look at the Teslas and the Ubers and the more modern positions respond to that criticism, Hey, if you weren’t in it in oh three, you really didn’t get any benefit.

David Gardner: [00:57:43] I, well, first of all, I would say that invest every day of your life every two weeks if you can, young people, the first thing you should do is open an account if you haven’t already save. And with every paycheck, try to put up to 10% away and put it in if you want. You can index, but I think you should be buying stocks as well alongside that and learning as you go. And anybody who’s playing the long game in the markets as they start to hit their 30th or 40th year, which is where I am, it’s always gonna look like all your big winners we’re the first 10 years, because of course they are. [00:58:16] Literally, Amazon is now more than a thousand times of value for me. I’m not trying to be Amazon guy, you don’t walk me, you don’t see me walking around going, I’m the guy who had Amazon 16 cents. I also have that for Nvidia. But just by the nature of compounding Barry, which I think you understand as well as anyone, it’s always gonna look like all your big winners were early, but, whether it’s Tesla, Pickton, 2011 or Shopify in 2016, these are all rule breakers. [00:58:45] They’re not gonna hit right away. Shopify has been up and down, but mostly up. It’s a great example of a rule breaker circa the last 10 years, not the first 20 years, but I never want people to forget. We were right there at the beginning with a OL, and we were picking a OL and Amazon and Starbucks, by the way. [00:59:02] And the list goes on. So I would just say compounding numbers are always gonna make it look like all of your big winners are early in your career.

Barry Ritholtz: [00:59:10] So before I get to my favorite questions is just one question I’m excited to ask you when you’re looking ahead, what trends, what businesses, what ideas generally get your curiosity going?

David Gardner: [00:59:23] Well, this is, this is, and in the same way that seven Up was the uncola back in the day, this is an unanswer because by

Barry Ritholtz: [00:59:32] The way, you’re talking to a generation

David Gardner: [00:59:33] I know that

Barry Ritholtz: [00:59:34] Has no idea what that means.

David Gardner: [00:59:35] I but you and I do though. Yeah, course. And we got some of our peeps listening. Right. [00:59:39] For sure. So, yeah, I should have just answered the question. So I look for companies that are conscious capitalism kinds of companies. I want companies that first of all are doing good in this world by my perception. [00:59:56] A lot of people think it’s a trade off in life. They think capitalism is greedy and evil and, you’re abusing workers and it’s all about maximizing shareholder value. I completely disagree in many cases, sure that exists in the world, but that’s not the story of Amazon. Amazon is a big, beautiful, amazing enterprise that helps save lives during COVID. [01:00:15] And yes, they’ll get criticized for some of the things that they’ve done. And Jeff Bezos is considered an egomaniac by some. But net, please, Amazon is a huge value contributor. So that’s an example of a company, Reed Hastings and what he created at Netflix. [01:00:30] There’s a whole 80 page slide a lot of entrepreneurs have seen about how Netflix does culture that they just kind of shared out. And you could see why they’re so successful. ’cause how they treat their employees and the standards that they hold where doing good actually leads to doing well. And again, many people think that’s a trade off, or they don’t actually think that’s real. [01:00:49] So I specifically want you and I to make our portfolios reflect our best vision for our future. And so every company that I already like, invade against the entire industry, the gaming industry earlier, sorry, gamers, but by the way, I’m a gamer, but I play video games and board games, not 50 50, and the house takes 10% game. But I would say that you’re looking for the people who are doing good or within their industry, they’re admired for how they treat their employees, how they win for their customers, and how their partners and suppliers are proud to be associated with them. And guess what, usually the stocks end up outperforming in a world where many people think it’s too risky to even buy individual stocks. [01:01:28] So the more there’s big dumb money sloshing around out there, Barry, the easier it is for stock pickers like me, like you, if you like anybody listening to us, to actually pick and discern the good companies, hold them longer than Wall Street, longer than the headlines than CNBC will be talking about and do really well.

Barry Ritholtz: [01:01:48] So let’s jump to our speed round, our favorite questions. Love it. In the last five minutes we have, starting with, who are your early mentors who helped shape your career?

David Gardner: [01:01:57] So my father, who at the age of 18 said, here you go, David, I’ve been investing in this for you from birth. This is all you’re ever getting from me, really. And I’ve taught you how to value line that big black tome, the numbers of investing. And I know you love sports statistics. [01:02:12] Another of my mentors Bill James, the awesome baseball statistician, actually he was a journalist, but James who influenced Moneyball, of course, of course. So who I met before, but, these are early people who convinced me of the fun of life and that it could be counted with numbers. I’m an English major, but there’s a, there’s a big left brain going on with me with loving numbers and baseball stats and college basketball stats. Ken Palm, by the way, Ken Palm, that is a $25 subscription any sports fan would enjoy. [01:02:45] So the Peter Lynch, I’m thinking about Clayton Christensen, I mentioned. These are all people who really have helped me think about what wins.

Barry Ritholtz: [01:02:56] Look, you mentioned Moneyball. Let’s talk about books. What are some of your favorites? What are you reading right now?

David Gardner: [01:03:02] Yeah, so first of all, I’m reading right now the score by Teen Nen. And the score is an amazing, but I think the subtitle is something like How to Stop Playing somebody else’s Game. And Nen is a games philosopher. So people are, philosophers about ideas or art. [01:03:23] He specifically looks at games and his book talks about how social media, for example, is sort of a game. Like as soon as you start imposing likes and follows, you’re playing somebody else’s game. You’re playing Twitter X’s Game or Facebook’s game when you have to accept GPA as a measure of how well you’ve done in college, and it becomes big and bureaucratic and everybody’s using that. You are unfortunately playing somebody else’s game. [01:03:48] Sometimes you have to do it. But being self-aware of what is motivating you, it is an amazing book and I highly recommend this score. I’ve had Tina Nguyen on my podcast a couple of times, love the Guy. we just can’t geek at about board games. [01:04:04] But that’s what I’m reading right now. But, when I think about books, it’s a motley array of books,

Barry Ritholtz: [01:04:09] No pun intended.

David Gardner: [01:04:10] Barry indeed, I mean The Inevitable by Kevin Kelly’s a great book about the future. I’m a big Kevin Kelly fan. He founded Wired magazine. He’s a genius. [01:04:18] I enjoy Arthur Brooks’ columns in The Atlantic. He writes about happiness. I really loved his book. Love Your Enemies talking about the divisiveness in our country and how to solve that. [01:04:27] And I would love to see more of that. Stephen Pinker and all of his data accumulation around technologies, trends in our culture. It seems always to be smart, to be a pessimist. You always sound smarter when you talk something down. [01:04:42] And yet we’re pinch yourself that you’re living today. I know we have a lot of problems. We have many better problems. There were many worse problems in over human history.

Barry Ritholtz: [01:04:52] Stephen Pinker reminds us of that, right? [01:04:54] Our world in Data. Yep. Aunts Ling, same thing. There you

David Gardner: [01:04:57] Go, Barry. Exactly.

Barry Ritholtz: [01:04:58] And I was rudely using my phone to get the exact name of a book that I’m gonna recommend to you. ’cause it’s sitting on my desk and the author is Danny Font. Everybody loses. And it’s all about the tumultuous rise of American sports gambling and why it’s such

David Gardner: [01:05:18] A, I’m glad he wrote that.

Barry Ritholtz: [01:05:19] So I, it’s literally waiting for me to, it’s next up this giant I love it thing, but yeah, it’s writing your, writing your mo Yep. I mentioned earlier some streaming to, and we’ve been talking about Netflix and Amazon. So tell us, what are your favorite Netflix or Amazon Prime videos, or what podcasts are you listening to?

David Gardner: [01:05:43] Thank you. I really enjoyed Apple’s Pluribus, if you saw that. It’s

Barry Ritholtz: [01:05:48] Also in my queue next up.

David Gardner: [01:05:49] Totally. It looks great. Totally recommend that. That’s just season one. [01:05:53] We have a lot of British comedy fans in my family. So shows like Mitchell and Webb, the comedy duo, their clips are all over YouTube, but it crowd hilarious show streaming. Totally recommend that. Not as funny, but very British, all creatures great and small, just an absolute very interesting.

Barry Ritholtz: [01:06:11] The early [01:06:12] 20th century.

David Gardner: [01:06:13] Exactly. Just such a slow horses great show. Apple and, or sure. I love sci-fi, I love all the Marvel stuff, by the way. [01:06:21] Marvel’s been an amazing stock for me. It got bought out by Disney. That’s right. So these days we have a very low cost basis. [01:06:26] You couldn’t have gotten, because when Disney bought Marvel at a huge premium, we marvel shareholders, we happy few buying a rule breaker that looked overvalued. Right? We’ve ended up doing really well. So, but, and are obviously Star Wars and I love brands and I love family entertainment. [01:06:41] So those are some that come to mind.

Barry Ritholtz: [01:06:43] I just flew back from San Francisco and on the flight I re-watched Deadpool and Wolverine and it’s like, I forgot how much fun that movie was. Yeah. Really a blast. Our final two questions. [01:06:55] What sort of advice would you give to a recent college graduate interested in a career in investing?

David Gardner: [01:07:01] Well, I would first of all say that you should pick individual stocks and you should pay attention to the game. And you should love it. You should have a lot of fun. I love sports. [01:07:10] We’ve talked, I know you do too. We’ve talked about that a lot. People follow their sports teams day to day. I follow the markets day to day. [01:07:17] And the difference is, you actually can make serious money by learning and following the market in a way you never will. As a sports fan. And I love sports and, sports can be a little bit more fun day to day, but the markets are open every day. Your NFL team only plays on Sundays and starting to figure out what wins in the marketplace and why is that app on your phone, not somebody else’s app? [01:07:37] What’s in your fridge? What are you wearing? Noticing the things that go on around you. This is gonna lead to riches, but it’s also gonna open your mind to awareness of what’s happening in our society. [01:07:47] And I do think that people who are taught to index and not really care are kind of walking blind in society when they could be poking their feelers up, seeing what’s happening in genomics or robotic surgery or whatever. And I’m an English major and I care about these things and profiting as a consequence. I would also say to any young person, start investing yesterday.

Barry Ritholtz: [01:08:08] And our final question, what do about the world of investing today might have been useful back in 1993 when you were first getting started?

David Gardner: [01:08:16] I would just say that when I first got started in 1993, investing was more of a math exercise for me. I was taught by a dad. I mentioned value line, lots of ratios that we know. I never learned financial statements until I bought how to read a financial statement the year after I graduated college thinking, I kind of missed that. [01:08:35] I never really did that. And so I was very numerically driven. I think what I’ve realized is that using your right brain in a world where many people are just using their left brain is where the real values added. My favorite chapter in my rule breaker investing book points out that most of the things that win in business are not actually on the financial statements. [01:08:58] We’ve already talked about a few of them who’s running the company? That is incredibly important. How about the brand value of a company? Most of those are never expressed anywhere in the financial statements. [01:09:07] The culture of the company. Can it innovate? Those four things are the bedrocks as an entrepreneur. I know I see it in my own company. [01:09:14] When we fail and when we succeed, none of those is being captured in the financial statements and we’re living in a left brain driven algorithmic world. And so I think here now I see, and I only think longer term than I ever did before when I was 30 years ago, I think longer term today at the age of 59 than 29. And I use my right brain, huh.

Barry Ritholtz: [01:09:34] David, thank you so much for being so generous with your time. This has been absolutely fascinating. We have been speaking with David Gardner. He is one of the co-founders of the Motley Fool and author of the book. [01:09:48] Let’s see if I can spit this out. Rule Breaker investing, how to pick the Best Stocks of the Future and Build Lasting. Well, if you enjoyed this conversation, well check out any of the 627 we’ve done over the past dozen years. You can find those at YouTube, Spotify, apple, Bloomberg, wherever you get your favorite podcasts. [01:10:13] I would be remiss if I didn’t thank the crack team that helps these conversations come together each week. Alexis Noriega is my video producer. Sean Russo is my researcher. Anna Lucas, my podcast producer. [01:10:28] I’m Barry Riol. You’ve been listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio.

 

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Israel Just Became Germany's Largest Arms Partner

Zero Hedge -

Israel Just Became Germany's Largest Arms Partner

Authored by Andrew Korybko,

The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), which is regarded as the top authority on the international arms trade, released its latest report about related trends from 2021-2025 last month.

The top takeaway is that “Europe was the region with the largest share of total global arms imports (33 per cent) for the first time since the 1960s”, but there are three other relatively more minor details therein that most observers missed but which are also important to be aware of. They are as follows:

1. South Korea Edged Out The US As Poland’s Top Arms Supplier

Last year’s report covering the years 2020-2024 noted that Poland imported 42% of its arms from South Korea during that period and 45% from the US, yet the last report shows that it imported 47% from South Korea and 44% from the US. This respectively amounted to 46% of South Korean arms exports from 2020-2024 and 58% from 2021-2025. In total, South Korea exported 2.2% of the world’s arms during the first period and 3% during the second, thus showing the global importance of sales to Poland.

Why this matters is that it represents the first time to the best of the author’s knowledge that a NATO member is now supplied more by an Asian country than a fellow Western one. Poland’s enormous military build-up, which has resulted in it now fielding NATO’s third-largest army, is also a boon for the South Korean arms industry. With Poland increasingly demonstrating the quality of these wares to its allies during NATO drills, it’s possible that other members of the bloc might soon follow its lead.

2. Kazakhstan’s Is Gradually Replacing Russian Arms With Western Ones

During the period 2020-2024, Kazakhstan imported 6.4% of its arms from Spain and 1.5% from Turkiye as its second- and third-largest arms suppliers, with Russia far ahead of them with 88% of its supplies. During the latest period from 2021-2025, imports from Spain increased to 7.9% while France replaced Turkiye as Kazakhstan’s third-largest supplier at 3.6%, with Russia’s share slightly decreasing to 83%. The decrease in Russia’s supplies was therefore roughly replaced by the increase in Western supplies.

Why this matters is that it contextualizes Kazakhstan’s decision last December to produce NATO-standard shells, the potential consequences of which were analyzed here as possibly placing it on an irreversible collision course with Russia. The “Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity” across the South Caucasus could also facilitate the flow of more Western arms by reducing transport costs. It’s therefore expected that Kazakhstan will continue to gradually replace its Russian arms with Western ones.

3. Israel Became Germany’s Largest Arms Partner Due To A Mega Arms Deal

Israel’s delivery of the Arrow 3 missile defense system to Germany last year, which was its largest export deal ever at $4.6 billion, led to its share of Germany’s arms imports jumping from 13% during the period 2020-2024 to 55% during the period 2021-2025. At the same time, Israel remained Germany’s third-largest arms client at 10% of its exports from 2021-2025 compared to 11% of them from 2020-2024, with the slight 1% decrease likely being due to three-month-long curb on arms exports to it last year.

Why this matters is because Israel’s new role as Germany’s largest arms supplier might worsen its ties with Russia, especially if exports evolve from defensive systems like the Arrow 3 to offensive ones like the $7 billion deal for 500 rocket launchers and thousands of missiles that they’re now negotiating. Moreover, West Asian geopolitics might radically change after the end of the Third Gulf War, so Russia might not be able to reciprocally sell similar systems to Iran. Israel would then gain an edge over Russia.

What these three trends have in common is their adverse impact on Russian national security. The Kremlin likely assumed that Poland and Germany would continue militarizing, even competing to lead Russia’s containment, but South Korea and Israel’s new respective roles as their top suppliers probably came as a surprise. What it might not have anticipated at all, however, was the West gradually making gains in the Kazakh arms market. Russia will have to deal with these latent threats somehow or another.

Tyler Durden Tue, 04/28/2026 - 07:20

10 Tuesday AM Reads

The Big Picture -

My TACO Tuesday morning train reads:

•  See How the Energy Crisis Is Spreading Across the World: A WSJ visual breakdown of how the latest energy crunch is rippling across electricity, gas, and oil markets — and which countries are bearing the brunt. (Wall Street Journal)

•  Farmers Are Pairing Solar Panels With Livestock — and the Results Are Turning Heads: An Oregon project running sheep underneath solar arrays is delivering gains for both the ranchers and the panels, adding to the case for “agrivoltaics” as a way to defuse rural opposition to utility-scale solar. (The Cool Downsee also Unfounded Health Concerns Are Powering a Solar Backlash: ProPublica on how fears about solar farms — most without scientific support — have driven a wave of local bans and permit fights across Michigan and beyond. (ProPublica)

It’s the Age of Electricity and America Isn’t Ready. Data centers and the power needs of artificial intelligence are actually a small part of a much bigger problem. Our grid is too old and our supply of electricity too small. If we don’t meet this moment, we will face an impoverished future of more expensive, less reliable energy, and slower economic growth. In a worst-case scenario, we could see Americans defect from the grid entirely, raising costs for everyone. Something needs to change now. (New York Times)

•  Robotaxis Are the New Millennial Lifestyle Subsidy: Waymo and the rest of the robotaxi field are still pricing rides well below cost — effectively turning urban millennials into the next generation of subsidized lifestyle-tech consumers, the same playbook Uber and Lyft ran a decade ago. (Sherwood)

•  Reading Palantir: Why the defense tech giant’s manifesto may signal panic inside the company: The more grandiose the manifesto, the shakier the underlying business. A close textual reading suggests Karp doth protest too much. The war tech firm is suffering from a lethal combo of stock price superinflation and midterms anxiety (Gazetteer)

They Dared to Leave Merrill Lynch. How These Top Advisors Became Wall Street Renegades. When a group of financial advisors quit to open their own firm, their departure sparked a wave of resignations at Merrill—and a marathon effort to win over clients and $129 billion in assets. (Barron’s)

‘Wagyu’ Used to Guarantee Quality Beef. What Are You Paying for Today? Behind the scenes, competing forces battle for the’ (New York Times)

•  US is being ‘humiliated’ by Iran’s leadership, says Friedrich Merz: Germany’s chancellor weighs in with rare bluntness on Trump’s Iran posture. The allies aren’t impressed, and Merz isn’t bothering to hide it. (The Guardian) see alsoTrump Seeks to Abolish Iran’s Atomic Stockpile, a Problem He Helped Create: The man who tore up the JCPOA now demands Iran dismantle the stockpile that grew because of it. A fitting policy ouroboros. (New York Times)

Can A.I. Determine Which Artist Made a Painting? This New Brushstroke Detection Tool May Have Solved a Mystery About El Greco. While debating the authorship of “The Baptism of Christ,” one of El Greco’s final works, art experts long relied on their own analysis of brushstrokes. A new study tapped artificial intelligence to peer at the paint at a microscopic level (Smithsonian Magazine)

Season From HeLLLLLLLLLLLL: Miserable Mets Can’t Stop Losing: After 12 straight defeats, surrender flags are out for the mega-payroll New York club. Obviously, it’s the mayor’s fault (Wall Street Journal)

Be sure to check out our Masters in Business interview this weekend with David Gardner, cofounder of The Motley Fool in 1993 (with his brother Tom Gardner). Originally launched as a print investment newsletter based on the idea that ordinary investors could beat Wall St., it gained traction when promoted on America Online (AOL) in 1994; it soon became a major presence on AOL and then Fool.com. His latest book is “Rule Breaker Investing: How to Pick the Best Stocks of the Future and Build Lasting Wealth.”

 

Despite a lot of fear mongering, over the past 3.5 years, the market has doubled

Source: @ryandetrick

 

Sign up for our reads-only mailing list here.

 

The post 10 Tuesday AM Reads appeared first on The Big Picture.

Iran Already Scrambling For Oil Storage After Two Weeks Of US Blockade

Zero Hedge -

Iran Already Scrambling For Oil Storage After Two Weeks Of US Blockade

Trump's blockade is having a predictable effect on Iran's economy and oil industry, with reports that the regime is scrambling to repurpose old and rusty tankers as floating storage.  Kharg Island is hitting capacity and the results could lead to disaster for Iran's oil wells. 

The regime is reportedly moving to expand crude storage at the island, where around 90% of their energy exports are processed, by reactivating a 30-year-old crude carrier called M/T Nasha.  It's a bad sign for Iran, indicating that the country’s main oil hub is nearing its onshore storage limit.  Maritime analysts say the vessel, which had been anchored empty for years, is being repositioned as floating storage to absorb crude that still has to move out of the system. 

But how much time will decommissioned tankers buy Iran?  Current estimates indicate Kharg Island has roughly 13 million barrels of spare onshore storage remaining at the terminal, while net inflows are running at about 1.0 million to 1.1 million barrels per day.  At that pace, storage could be filled in about 12 to 13 days, which places the saturation point in late April to early May if current flows hold.  A large tanker gives them another potential 2 million barrels of capacity.  In other words, not much. 

This data is a near match to JP Morgan's recent assessment that Iran has between 20 - 26 days of capacity (including emergency measures) before they hit the wall and are forced to shut down their oil fields. 

Trump's assertion on Sunday that Iran's oil infrastructure may "explode in three days" due to the blockade might be a bit optimistic, but with the threat of overcapacity it is likely that the Iranians will be forced to the negotiating table in the near term.

The regime's only other option is to divert the oil away from Kharg to the Jask Oil Terminal at Kooh Mobarak using the Goreh-Jask pipeline.  But this storage is limited and may already be full.

There are also limited reports that Iran is increasing "flaring" at wells to burn off excess.  To keep wells operating safely (avoiding sudden shutdowns that can cause permanent geological issues), operators are flaring off excess associated gas (and possibly some liquid byproducts) at a heightened rate.

If wells are forced to shut down due to lack of storage, this could cause permanent damage and render the wells unusable in the future.  Recovery is expensive and difficult. 

If the current data is accurate, then Iran has approximately two more weeks before their economy is destroyed.  Loss of $430 million per day in export revenues aside, permanent damage to their oil fields would result in a long term economic disaster. 

The danger of well shutdowns is probably the reason why the regime has offered new proposals every few days to open the Strait of Hormuz, though, they continue to call for a separate negotiation on their estimated 970 pounds of enriched Uranium stockpile. 

There is little incentive for Trump to lift the blockade at this time, given the amount of leverage he will have over the Iranian economy if he maintains restrictions on their oil exports for another two weeks.  The regime is trapped between a rock and a hard place, and will have to decide soon if their oil wells are more important to them than their Uranium.      

Tyler Durden Tue, 04/28/2026 - 05:45

12-Year-Old French Girl Collapses After Judge Releases Men Arrested For Gang Raping Her In Airbnb

Zero Hedge -

12-Year-Old French Girl Collapses After Judge Releases Men Arrested For Gang Raping Her In Airbnb

Via Remix News,

Two young men, both adults, suspected of gang rape in an Airbnb in the France’s Décines-Charpieu (Rhône), have been released from custody, shocking the family of one of the victims.

The victim’s lawyer, David Metaxas, spoke on behalf of the victim’s relatives, who told LyonMag that the judge’s decision was “incomprehensible.” Not only have both men been released to roam freely in the streets, but the judge did not even issue a restriction on contact with the victim, which means the two men could approach her once again.

Last week, the two men, aged 20 and 21, were arrested for the rape involving the 12-year-old, as well as a 16-year-old girl who had allegedly led the younger victim to the apartment. After reportedly exchanging messages with the two young men via Snapchat, the teen encouraged her younger friend to come with her to the Airbnb. Alcohol and drugs were allegedly consumed, with an excessive amount of hard liquor given to the 12-year-old.

Falling unconscious, the younger victim recounted waking up “lying on a bed covered in blood,” before realizing what had happened, recounts Lyon Mag. It was when she turned her phone back on that her mother was able to geolocate her, allowing the police to intervene. She is said to have run away from her home in Givors before the incident.

However, now the perpetrators are free. The family of the 12-year-old says her safety and innocence were tossed aside from the get-go, with police allegedly not even asking her to file a complaint initially.

“They were very poorly received, as if they were a nuisance,” said David Metaxas, the lawyer representing the 12-year-old. He pointed to a total lack of support and guidance, adding the very obvious and visible signs of rape suffered by the young girl.

“It is unacceptable that the form to file a complaint was not given to them by the police. It must be remembered that they were dealing with a young girl who had been deflowered, anally and orally penetrated, and who had wounds all over her body.”

Unfortunately, the 16-year-old girl and the accused men all stated that the girl was consenting. “Everyone agrees that she was consenting, or even that she was provoking, even though she is 12 years old and was completely drunk to the point of losing consciousness,” he said, adding that at the hearing, the girl was in an advanced state of shock.

“The lack of coercive measures concerning the suspects […] is incomprehensible,” stated Metaxas, the lawyer representing the 12-year-old, as quoted by LyonMag. He added that the court has failed to demand any judicial supervision or even a restraining order on the alleged perpetrators.  

“They can, if they wish, contact and visit the young girl whenever they want,”  he warns.  “Therefore, there is total incomprehension, not to mention anger, on the part of the family.”

As for the young victim, she allegedly collapsed in the lawyer’s office upon hearing of the decision and was taken to the hospital. “She is in a state of total shock. She couldn’t utter a single word in my office. The justice system needs to take charge of this case very quickly,” he stated.

Metaxas insists he will not let the matter be and will be asking the public prosecutor that “a specialized service be put in charge of the investigation with the implementation of coercive measures to ensure the safety of this minor.”

The two men are still under investigation.

Read more here...

Tyler Durden Tue, 04/28/2026 - 05:00

Pentagon Investigates Mystery Fire At UK Base Used For Bombing Iran

Zero Hedge -

Pentagon Investigates Mystery Fire At UK Base Used For Bombing Iran

The US Air Force has reportedly opened an investigation into a fire that broke out over the weekend at RAF Fairford in the UK. Crucially, it is a key US-allied base hosting a US bomber unit carrying out strikes on Iran as part of Trump's Operation Epic Fury.

The fire started early Sunday inside an "old or disused building" at the airbase, a UK defense ministry spokesperson has said. The Pentagon is investigating alongside local partners: "An investigation has been initiated and is ongoing. More information will be released as it becomes available," a statement said.

source: The Telegraph

No injuries have been reported and officials said the blaze was quickly continued, with no further threat posed to the base and surrounding community. But it was clearly very large at one point, video evidence shows.

The US was permitted starting in March to use the base for Iran-related operations. The Telegraph describes further of the fire:

Several crews were deployed to the incident at RAF Fairford in the early hours of Sunday morning.

Footage taken overnight appears to show smoke billowing from what is claimed to be the base’s commissary, a shop that provides food and equipment. Other pictures from the scene show that the building’s roof collapsed as firefighters brought the blaze under control.

Authorities are suspicious there may have been some kind of act of sabotage at the base, given widespread local opposition to its us by American forces to bomb Iran.

There's also been chatter of Irani-linked 'terror cells' in Europe. According to more from The Telegraph:

While some welcomed the arrival, there had been protests against the decision, with around 200 people gathered at the base on Saturday. Protesters held signs that read “No war on Iran”, “US out of British bases” and “Stop Trump’s deadly wars”.

The use of RAF Fairford halves the time US bombers need to spend in the air. Sir Keir Starmer’s decision to allow US troops to use the base prevented what would have been a 37-hour round trip from Missouri to Iran.

RAF Fairford remains among the few European bases capable of supporting long-range US bombers such as the B-52 and B-2, and thus is an important staging and logistics hub for the Pentagon.

Tensions have of late been strained between the US and UK over the Iran war, with PM Starmer dealing with a lot of domestic opposition, and Trump at the same time pressuring him to do more alongside the US in Iran and the Hormuz Strait.

If the fire was indeed arson, European authorities will likely look at the potential that it could have been Russia-linked, given widespread allegations of Moscow-backed sabotage operations in Europe and the UK, throughout the Ukraine war.

Tyler Durden Tue, 04/28/2026 - 04:15

NATO Minus US: European Militaries Won't Add Up To Deter Russia

Zero Hedge -

NATO Minus US: European Militaries Won't Add Up To Deter Russia

Authored by John Haughey via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s European nations would need to bolster standing militaries by at least 300,000 troops and significantly boost defense spending beyond 3.5 percent of gross domestic product - at least 250 billion euros - while reviving and integrating their industrial base to defend themselves against Russia without the United States.

And they’d need to do that fast, according to a 2025 joint analysis by European think tanks Bruegel and the Kiel Institute for World Economy.

They warn that even with 80,000 American soldiers and airmen stationed on 30 bases on the continent—and the United States’ capacity to rapidly deploy forces—Moscow will test NATO’s resolve “within three to 10 years.”

The once-inconceivable prospect of the United States withdrawing from NATO is now a possibility. President Donald Trump—never a fan of the 32-nation coalition the Pentagon has spearheaded since 1949—has called for a “very serious examining” of the alliance, after its members failed to respond to his appeal to assist in the Iran war or join the U.S. Navy’s Arabian Sea blockade of Iranian shipping. 

Trump has vowed Europeans could face a “reckoning” without American leadership and support. Such a departure would require unlikely congressional approval, but the president’s statements are sparking discussion on both sides of the Atlantic about a restructuring of the alliance that would require Europeans to shoulder more of NATO’s burden.

As widely reported, European allies are actively discussing and preparing for a “NATO minus U.S.” scenario. The idea originated in response to Trump’s demand for Europeans to bulk up support for Ukraine in fighting off Russia’s invasion, his threats to seize Greenland from Denmark, and his characterization of member states as “cowards” unlikely to uphold NATO’s commitments.

While Americans have questioned NATO’s post-Cold War resolve since former President Barack Obama’s administration, Europeans in turn have questioned Trump’s reliability in meeting treaty obligations. 

In response to Trump’s demand that NATO allies commit 5 percent of GDP to defense, members agreed during the alliance’s 2025 summit to commit 3.5 percent to their militaries—roughly matching the percent of GDP the U.S. spends on its armed forces—and 1.5 percent for infrastructure improvements, such as cybersecurity, crisis response, and adapting roads, rail lines, bridges, and ports to military needs.

Ukraine’s Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal (L) and NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte address the audience during a press statement at the NATO headquarters in Brussels on Oct. 15, 2025. Prodding by the United States to be more self-reliant in continental defense was already an urgency in most European capitals after Russia’s February 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Nicolas Tucat/AFP via Getty Images Muscle and Money

The Bruegel/Kiel Institute analysis documents Europe’s armies have a combined force of about 1.5 million troops. In order to withstand a hypothetical Russian invasion, a European-only force would need 300,000 more infantry soldiers, or roughly 50 more brigades, than it had in 2025. It would need a minimum of 1,400 tanks, 2,000 infantry fighting vehicles, and 700 artillery pieces with more than 1 million 155 mm shells—the minimum for three months of combat, the Bruegel/Kiel Institute analysis states. 

That boost in manpower and armaments would exceed the current French, German, Italian, and British forces combined.

And that’s just ground forces.

To match Russian war-footing military production—even with Ukraine attrition—a Europe-only military would need collective arms procurement, common armaments, unified logistics, and integrated military units. Such an army would need to replace stationed U.S. forces and rotational deployments within the 65-mile Suwalki Corridor between Poland and Lithuania, while also establishing bases in Moldova and Romania.

These are but a few of the challenges a “NATO minus the U.S.” would face, military analysts and international relations scholars told The Epoch Times. And as Europeans by necessity assumed a more robust posture on the continent, American forces would need to compensate for the loss of specialties and skills brought by their European allies.

French soldiers dismantle a drone during the Dynamic Front 26 exercise in Cincu, Romania, on Feb. 9, 2026. In response to Trump’s demand that NATO allies commit 5 percent of GDP to defense, members agreed during its 2025 summit to commit 3.5 percent to their militaries and 1.5 percent for infrastructure improvements. Andrei Pungovschi/Getty Images

Non-U.S. NATO forces are well-trained and have some highly competent defense manufacturing industries,” said University of Miami professor of politics June Teufel Dreyer, a senior Foreign Policy Research Institute fellow and former U.S.–China Economic and Security Review commissioner. 

European giants such as Thales and Leonardo would “surely be attracted by the idea of more indigenous investment,” Dreyer said. But, she added, European defense contractors “also know the funds they need aren’t guaranteed” without orders from the U.S. military to, for instance, annually build 2,000 “long-range loitering munitions”—drones—to match Russia’s numbers.

The French and the Germans build highly thought of diesel-electric submarines; Sweden produces great fighter planes,” Dreyer said.

But from a nuclear deterrent perspective, a U.S. departure from NATO is problematic. Dreyer pointed to British Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s June 2025 announcement that Britain would buy at least 12 U.S.-made F-35s to “enhance the interoperability of NATO defense” in its nuclear posture, since these jets would be the UK’s only nuclear deterrent beyond its submarine force. The stealth fighter is the first to carry both conventional and nuclear weapons.

U.S. and European allies’ coordination in defense procurement and production “saves money and the R&D costs for the most advanced weapons,” she said, noting while the projected cost for the sixth-generation F-47 is $4.4 billion, but it is a shared NATO expense.

U.S. Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. David Allvin speaks alongside President Donald Trump in the Oval Office on March 21, 2025. Trump announced F-47, a sixth-generation fighter intended to replace the F-22 Raptor, for the Next Generation Air Dominance program. Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images Specialties and Skills

If NATO ties are severed, the United States will no longer benefit from what retired Navy captain and Epoch Times contributor Carl Schuster calls “amazing capabilities that may prove essential in any conflict.” Those capabilities include aircraft and ship design, special ops, and regional know-how such as mountain operations capabilities and Arctic warfare expertise. 

However, many European military assets are aging, and it was only after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine—and Trump’s threats to pull the United States from the alliance—that leaders showed urgency to address the deficiencies, Schuster said.

He expressed doubts about Spain—which has refused to let the United States use bases on its mainland to attack Iran—and Turkey. 

Spain has rejected any idea of its ground and air forces being committed to combat outside Spanish territory,“ he said. ”So their contribution to NATO defense is more statistical than real.”

Turkey has the alliance’s largest ground force, yet its “willingness to contribute to the defense of Greece, Bulgaria, and Eastern Europe” may be questionable, he said.

Middle East Forum Director Gregg Roman also questioned Turkey’s NATO commitment, in a September 2025 column in The Epoch Times, calling for “an urgent compartmentalization assessment” after Turkey made overtures to China and Iran during the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) summit. 

“Six months later,” he said in April, “that assessment is non-optional. You know, thinking about everything [NATO] is trying to put together—joint air missile defense planning—with an ally like Turkey that is functionally aligned with Iran and the [SCO] bloc that we’re opposing, they can’t be trusted."

Read the rest here...

Tyler Durden Tue, 04/28/2026 - 03:30

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