Individual Economists

China To Impose Mining Controls On Strategic Minerals

Zero Hedge -

China To Impose Mining Controls On Strategic Minerals

The Trump-Xi meeting is now history, so Beijing can go back to doing what it does best: squeezing US supply chains with its near chokehold on most strategic and rare-earth supply chains.

China plans to impose mining controls on certain strategic minerals to ensure supply security and protect the finite resources, Beijing revealed in a government notification published by the official Xinhua News Agency. 

The new rules will take effect from June 15 and allow Beijing to control total output, restrict mining entities and run security reviews on foreign investments in mining that could pose a risk to national security.

Xinhua didn’t specify which minerals will be impacted. Any adjustment to the list of strategic mineral resources will assess factors like economic importance, national security, domestic requirements and supply chain resilience, according to the regulation.

China currently has similar controls on production of rare earths, critical materials vital for high-tech manufacturing, through annual production quotas to a few licensed domestic companies. 

 

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 18:50

Pentagon Concedes That US Provided Most Of Israel's Missile Defense During Iran War

Zero Hedge -

Pentagon Concedes That US Provided Most Of Israel's Missile Defense During Iran War

Via The Libertarian Institute

The US fired hundreds of its most advanced interceptors to protect Israel from Iranian missiles during the first five weeks of the war. 

According to a Department of War assessment described to The Washington Post, the US used 200 Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) interceptors and over 100 SM-3 and SM-6 missiles in defense of Israel.

Image source: DoD/Department of War

In comparison, Israel only used 100 Arrow interceptors and 90 David’s Sling missiles

Speaking about the imbalance, an administration official told The Post, "In total, the U.S. shot around 120 more interceptors and engaged twice as many Iranian missiles." The official added that "The imbalance will likely be exacerbated if fighting restarts."

The imbalance occurs because Washington and Tel Aviv developed a strategy for the defense of Israel, where the US advanced interceptors handled the bulk of the Iranian missiles. The official said that the policy resulted in a significant "drawdown" of the US interceptor stockpile

During the conflict, the US used about half of its stockpile of advanced interceptors, including Patriots, SM-3, SM-6, and THAAD interceptors. WaPo further quotes the following analyst who said—

"The numbers are striking," said Kelly Grieco, a senior fellow at the Stimson Center. "The United States absorbed most of the missile defense mission while Israel conserved its own magazines. Even if the operational logic was sound, the United States is left with roughly 200 THAAD interceptors and a production line that can’t keep pace with demand."

The US intelligence community says Iran has over 70% of its pre-war launchers and missiles. Additionally, Tehran has resumed drone production, and it’s rebuilding its military production at a surprising rate. 

A US official also told The Post that Israel's offensive capabilities were slowing down. They explained that by the end of March, Israel was conducting 50% fewer strikes against Iran because its air force was exhausted by operations against Lebanon and Yemen. 

In recent days, President Donald Trump has threatened to restart the war against Iran if Tehran does not comply with his demands. However, the President had made similar threats throughout the six-week-long ceasefire and has always backed down. 

The Post reports that the US has positioned additional naval assets near Israel to assist with missile defense in the war restarts.

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 18:25

CEO Saves His Failing Company By Firing Entire HR Department

Zero Hedge -

CEO Saves His Failing Company By Firing Entire HR Department

When Elon Musk purchased Twitter and took the company over in 2022, he proceeded to fire approximately 80% of the social media company's bloated 7500 person workforce.  This included almost all HR related employees.  The company roster was pared down to a lean 1500 people.  Everyone in the establishment media claimed that Twitter (now called "X") was going to collapse. 

The political left and their corporate allies did everything in their power to make this happen, including advertising cancellations and even government intervention, but they failed.  X's monthly active user (MAU) count has grown over the past 5 years - rising from roughly 360 million in 2021 to over 550 million by early 2026.  Part of the reason for this success despite the constant attacks was Musk's removal of internal saboteurs. 

The majority of corporations today have inflated their teams with people who do not add value - Rather, they create problems from thin air and drag the company down.  The primary vehicle that facilitates this sabotage is the Human Resources department. 

HR departments were originally created as a means of monitoring compliance with state and federal laws to avoid liability.  In many cases this revolved around "sexual harassment" or "discrimination" in the workplace, but it ended up becoming a progressive crusade to make women, LGBT and minority groups a protected class of workers that are difficult to fire because HR is more concerned with lawsuits. 

This lack of accountability based on gender and minority privilege reached its peak during the height of the woke era and DEI.  Companies were rife with useless employees who did little work while raking in six-figure salaries. 

Today, the situation is changing rapidly.  A wave of layoffs has hit the white collar sector since 2025.  The end of DEI is leading to mass cuts which are largely affecting women, with minority women making up the bulk of the job losses

One company CEO, Ryan Breslow of Bolt, saved his company from implosion by a simple change which allowed him to more easily make a number of other changes:  He fired his entire HR department. 

Breslow, who stepped down as CEO in 2022 but returned in 2025, cut 30% of the workforce in April and replaced HR with a smaller “people operations” team focused on training.  “They were creating problems that didn’t exist,” Breslow, 31, said at Fortune’s Workforce Innovation Summit. “Those problems disappeared when I let them go.”

Bolt was founded in 2014 and makes checkout payments technology. The company saw a whopping valuation collapse from $11 billion in 2022 to $300 million in 2025.

But HR wasn’t the only group to lose their jobs. Breslow said employees had grown complacent during the boom years. He gave workers 60 days to adapt to a leaner culture but said 99% couldn’t make the shift. “There’s a sense of entitlement that had festered across the company,” he said.

He fired nearly the entire leadership team and eliminated four-day workweeks and unlimited PTO.  Bolt now operates with about 100 employees, down from thousands. “We have a team a quarter of the size, who are much more junior, who work a lot harder, who have better energy,” Breslow says.

The CEO's observations echo across the corporate world in the US and in Europe, and it's the reason why many DEI related jobs are disappearing and why so many college graduates with psychology and communications related degrees can't get hired to save their lives.

It makes sense; Human Resource employees are 75% to 80% women and 18% LGBT, far above the averages in most white collar fields.  These demographics commonly lead to a grievance-based work environment and an entitlement culture.  These are the groups who often create problems from thin air as a means to manipulate the policy courses of companies and they are difficult to eject because of liability fears. 

Placing them in a position of power with the ability to drum up internal conflicts is a detrimental mistake. 

Time, however, is healing.  The era of easy salaries for low value employees is quickly coming to an end.  Numerous tech companies and venture capital companies that expanded during the last decade are cutting the dead weight.  The viral TikToks of women spending most of their workday in corporate cafeterias and yoga rooms are disappearing.  The free ride is over, and soon there may not be any HR department's left to protect the barnacles from being scraped off the ship.      

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 18:00

Japan To Welcome First Crude Cargo Via Hormuz Since War Began

Zero Hedge -

Japan To Welcome First Crude Cargo Via Hormuz Since War Began

By Tsvetana Paraskova of OilPrice.com

A supertanker carrying 2 million barrels of Saudi crude is set to arrive in Japan early next week after clearing the Strait of Hormuz in late April, in the first shipment of Middle East crude to Japan via the chokepoint since the Iran war began on February 28.

The Idemitsu Maru very large crude tanker; Photo: MarineTraffic

The very large crude carrier (VLCC) Idemitsu Maru, which had departed from Saudi Arabia’s Ras Tanura port in the Persian Gulf in mid-March, is expected to arrive in Nagoya on May 25, data on MarineTraffic showed. As of early Friday, the supertanker was close to the coasts of Japan.

The cargo is destined for the Aichi refinery of local refiner Idemitsu Kosan, according to a briefing document of Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry cited by Bloomberg.

The imminent shipment will mark the first cargo from the Middle East and the Strait of Hormuz to have made it to Japan since the conflict erupted at the end of February and halted most energy supplies via the strait, which is blocked by Iran and separately blockaded by the U.S. in the Gulf of Oman to prevent Iranian oil exports.

Another Japan-bound tanker, Eneos Endeavor, cleared the Strait of Hormuz last week. The Eneos Endeavor, currently in the Malacca Strait, is expected to arrive in Kiire, Japan, on May 30, per data on MarineTraffic. It departed from Mina Al Ahmadi in Kuwait on February 28, the day on which hostilities began.

Meanwhile, Japan in April imported the lowest volume of crude oil from the Middle East on record dating back to 1979 as the Iran war and the de facto closure of the Strait of Hormuz choked supply from the region.

Japan’s crude imports from the Middle East plummeted by 67.2% in April compared to the same month of 2025, provisional trade data from Japan’s Finance Ministry showed on Thursday.

Since the war in the Middle East began, Japan has scrambled to secure crude oil supply from alternative sources and released stocks from reserves as its dependence on crude from the Middle East passing through Hormuz was more than 90% of all crude imports

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 17:40

China Restricts Fentanyl Precursor Chemical Exports To North America After Trump-Xi Talks

Zero Hedge -

China Restricts Fentanyl Precursor Chemical Exports To North America After Trump-Xi Talks

One week after President Donald Trump's China summit with President Xi Jinping, where the two superpower leaders focused on issues ranging from bilateral trade to the Hormuz chokepoint, there appears to be measurable progress on one key 'MAGA' issue: the flow of fentanyl precursor chemicals into North America.

Bloomberg reports Friday morning that China imposed new export controls on three chemical compounds shipped to the U.S., Mexico, and Canada, targeting key precursor ingredients used to make fentanyl.

Beijing's announcement now requires special export licenses for the restricted chemicals and signals growing cooperation between Xi and Trump on narcotics enforcement.

"The Presidents also highlighted the need to build on progress in ending the flow of fentanyl precursors into the United States, as well as increasing Chinese purchases of American agricultural products," the White House wrote in a readout of the summit last week.

The Trump team continues to maintain a 10% tariff on Chinese imports tied to Beijing's years of failure to stop the flow of fentanyl precursor exports into North America.

Beijing has dismissed Washington's accusations over the opioid epidemic that, at one point, was killing 100,000 Americans every year.

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated early in Trump's second term that Beijing may be "deliberately" flooding America with fentanyl in a "reverse" form of the mid-1800s Opium Wars that weakened China's international standing.

Ahead of Trump's trip last week, New York Post columnist Miranda Devine spoke with White House Counterterrorism Director Sebastian Gorka about how China weaponized fentanyl to weaken America from within.

"They see our 'city on a hill' as the newest version of the British Empire, and it is now payback time for the Opium Wars," Gorka said. "Many have said that, and I think there is something to that.

Here's the fentanyl supply chain: Chinese chemical suppliers → Mexican cartels → fentanyl production in Mexico → smuggling into the U.S.

Between 2015 and 2024, the U.S. recorded about 815,100 drug overdose deaths, a death toll larger than many U.S. wars combined. And, in fact, China didn't even have to fire a shot.

Simultaneously, while the drug epidemic fueled by cartels and China-sourced precursor chemicals ravaged communities and cities nationwide, Democratic-led cities accelerated the crisis by pushing forward with nation-killing progressive policies that enabled open-air drug markets, weakened enforcement, and allowed the public-health emergency to spread. Why?

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 17:20

House Democrats Unanimously Vote Against Women's History Museum... Can You Guess Why?

Zero Hedge -

House Democrats Unanimously Vote Against Women's History Museum... Can You Guess Why?

Authored by Jonathan Turley,

House Democrats unanimously voted this week against legislation to build a new women’s history museum on the National Mall.

The reason was an amendment that limited the exhibits to biological women to the exclusion of transgender figures.

The museum failed 204-216 as House Democrats hoped that they could still secure a museum including transgender figures once they retake power after the midterm elections.

The amendment drafted by Rep. Mary Miller, R-Ill., states in part, “The Museum shall be dedicated to preserving, researching, and presenting the history, achievements and lived experiences of biological women in the United States.”

It further mandated that the museum would not depict “any biological male as female.”

The vote was notable after the release of the DNC “autopsy” report that flagged how transgender and identity politics contributed to the defeat in the last election.

The report specifically noted the success of Trump’s “Kamala is for they/them, President Trump is for you” ad.

The report noted that “If the Vice President would not change her position — and she did not — then there was nothing which would have worked as a response.”

The fact that this was a unanimous vote among Democratic members is particularly notable and suggests that transgender issues will remain a rallying point for the Democrats.

Democratic members called the exclusion a “poison pill” amendment.

In the meantime, transgender issues continue to occupy the courts with a major decision by the Colorado Supreme Court this week that ordered Colorado’s largest provider of gender-affirming care for young people to resume medical treatments like puberty blockers and hormone therapy.

That puts  Children’s Hospital Colorado in direct conflict with the Department of Health and Human Services, which has moved to block federal support for institutions providing such care.

Justice William Wood III wrote that “We conclude that the actual immediate and irreparable harm to petitioners outweighs the speculative harm CHC may face if the federal government further acts against it.”

In his dissent, Justice Brian Boatright said that this was hardly a speculative matter, but “a decision driven by the direct threat to the viability of the entire hospital.”

Here is the opinion: Boe v. Child.’s Hosp. Colo.

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 17:00

Iconic American Beer Brand Discontinued After 177 Years

Zero Hedge -

Iconic American Beer Brand Discontinued After 177 Years

Schlitz Premium, the storied lager once billed as “the beer that made Milwaukee famous,” is heading into retirement. Pabst Brewing Co. confirmed this week it is placing the brand on indefinite hiatus, ending production of the nearly two-century-old beer label founded in Milwaukee in 1849 that grew into one of America’s most iconic brews.

The decision, driven by rising storage and shipping costs amid softening demand for the value-priced brand, marks the latest chapter in a turbulent corporate saga. Wisconsin Brewing Co. in Verona will produce a final 80-barrel batch on May 23, with limited release scheduled for June 27. Pre-orders open this week.

"Unfortunately, we have seen continued increases in our costs to store and ship certain products and have had to make the tough choice to place Schlitz Premium on hiatus," Pabst brand manager Zac Nadile told Milwaukee Magazine. "Any brand or packaging configuration that is put on hiatus is still a cherished part of our history and hopefully our future. We continually look for opportunities to bring back beloved brands, and customer feedback is important in shaping those discussions."

Brewmaster Kirby Nelson of Wisconsin Brewing Co. said the brewery was intent on providing the brand with a proper goodbye.

"We decided that, Schlitz being what Schlitz was, it deserved a proper sendoff. One with dignity and respect," Nelson said.

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 16:40

The Coup Abides

Zero Hedge -

The Coup Abides

Authored by James Howard Kunstler,

"Leftists can’t name & blame specific individuals for the 2024 loss because they’re an undifferentiated blob who function unconsciously according to enmeshed group think."

- Aimee Therese on X

In all the chatter about the Democratic Party’s 2024 election “autopsy” report you might have missed one little important detail: autopsies are generally performed on the dead. Stephen Colbert’s final week on CBS’s Late Night Show was the funeral. It was like the zombies’ ball. Poster-boy old Bruce Springsteen plugged a self-parody song about “King Trump” that might have been a rare case of career suicide on live TV.

Kings, indeed. These showbiz cretins actually have it better than kings — they have all the money, glitz, and adoration, but none of the onerous duties of real royalty. They amount to a weird court of effete elitists endlessly congratulating each other on their moral superiority, and that’s where it begins and ends: a Cluster-B hall of mirrors.

Of the common good, the know absolutely nothing. Nobody believes their tired buzzwords anymore: “Our democracy” . . . “conspiracy theories” . . . “baseless” this and that. . . their foolish vaccine worship. . . their avatars, the guffawing baboon Kamala Harris, the erstwhile phantom “Joe Biden,” and, most of all, their good sportsmanship trophy, Barack Obama, last seen confabbing with Canada’s Mark Carney, Globalism’s paladin of the last resort.

The Lefty-left’s heroes are on-the-run, but tripping over each other badly as they scatter into the thickets to re-group for the midterm elections — which they are suddenly and seemingly likely to lose now that SCOTUS erased about a dozen race-based congressional districts . . . and then Virginia’s Supreme Court tossed Governor Spanberger’s ballot ploy to make the Old Dominion a one-party state (like back in slavery days).

The corpse of the Democratic Party might be dead, but not a few of its agents, cells, and parasitical organisms are ‘out there’ still twitching and plotting. The decade-long coup abides. The lawfare ninjas — Norm Eisen, Mary McCord, Marc Elias, et al. — still plot tirelessly behind the scenes, rigging up evermore legalistic chicanery disguised as legality, and they are rolling in dough from Soros, the Tides Foundation, Neville Roy Singham, and countless NGOs dedicated to overthrowing the republic.

The coup abides for two reasons:

1) its players are desperate to evade prosecution for their vast and various crimes of the past ten years (and prosecution is coming at them down the track like the old Union Pacific US-4 “Daylight” locomotive); and

2) the Democratic Party is desperate to preserve the revenue flows that support all its racketeering operations. Without its rackets, the money funnel to pay off its countless “oppressed” client-constituent-victims, there is no party. That’s all it was in its final stage of life.

Minnesota, of course, is the case-study for that kind of corruption and now the DOJ is going after the place hard, announcing fifteen new prosecutions this week for $90-million in Medicaid fraud, “just the beginning,” the lead US attorney, Colin McDonald, said. California, Illinois, New York, Maine, and many more states await the same treatment under the president’s new National Fraud Enforcement Division. The Democrats will go into the midterms revealed to be nothing more than a looting operation.

It’s happening in real time. Just yesterday, one particular public benefits entrepreneur, Aimee Bock, was sentenced to forty years in prison for running a Minneapolis scam called Feeding Our Future that made off with $243-million in taxpayer money. At sentencing, Aimee Bock was ordered to pay roughly $243 million in restitution. That’s a hoot, isn’t it? Federal inmates (Bureau of Prisons) are paid from 12-cents to $1.15 per hour wages for assigned work, depending on the type of job. Forty years might not be enough to git’er done.

Many more will be going down in the months ahead for similar shenanigans, and the voting public might notice as it rolls out. But fraudsters such as Aimee Bock are mere lumpen foot-soldiers in the regime. The more spectacular action will be the Democratic Party’s field marshals getting nailed, and that’s hardly begun. Coup Central is the Southern District of Florida where a “grand conspiracy” case, or possibly many cases and sub-cases, are already in the grand jury stage — meaning probable cause has been established en route to indictments. Many political celebrities labored hard since 2017 to overthrow the executive branch of the government. Hair is on fire everywhere you look.

One small fish was reeled in this week: one Carmen Mercedes Lineberger, a senior supervisory US attorney, indicted on two felony counts of mishandling evidence from “special prosecutor” Jack Smith’s botched Mar-a-Lago documents case. She labeled the purloined docs in her personal computer as dessert recipes (e.g., “bundt cake”) en route to leaking them. Lineberger has pleaded innocent. Don’t doubt that a negotiated plea deal is in play with her, and that Jack Smith will be sweating the outcome of that as Lineberger flips and talks.

But the odious Jack Smith will only be one of many bigger fish turning up in the Fort Pierce dragnet, probably including the whale, Barack Obama, the president who foolishly tried to destroy his successor-in-office. You may know that the DOJ observes an unwritten custom of not issuing indictments inside sixty days of an election (a custom that Jack Smith violated in 2024 when he issued a superseding indictment against candidate Donald Trump). So, there are 105 days remaining within the current window before the 2026 midterms for formal charges to be lodged against the coupsters.

So, now everyone’s expecting a hairy-scary summer of Democratic Party inspired mayhem, a ratcheted-up “No Kings” orgy of riots, the last remaining gambit to goad Mr. Trump into emergency action so they can holler, “Look: king!”

It’s only a question of what might spark it off. I’ll venture to predict that spark will be the indictment of Barack Obama. If you think the Lefty-left is crazy now, wait until that happens.

At least Stephen Colbert won’t be around to turn it into a song-and-dance act.

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 16:20

Singham Network Mobilizes To Defend Raúl Castro After DOJ Indictment

Zero Hedge -

Singham Network Mobilizes To Defend Raúl Castro After DOJ Indictment

Via American Greatness,

Key organizations and activists tied to the CCP-linked Singham Network rapidly moved to defend former Cuban dictator Raúl Castro following this week’s Justice Department indictment tied to the 1996 shootdown of civilian aircraft flown by Brothers to the Rescue.

The indictment, unveiled by the United States Department of Justice, charges Castro and others in connection with the deaths of four men after Cuban MiG fighter jets destroyed two civilian planes over international waters near Cuba nearly three decades ago. Prosecutors said the aircraft were outside Cuban territory and heading away from the island when they were attacked.

In response, a collection of far-left organizations linked to Marxist businessman Neville Roy Singham quickly launched a coordinated public campaign condemning the indictment and echoing talking points from the Cuban Communist government.

Among the groups defending Castro were Party for Socialism and Liberation, The People’s Forum, Code Pink, and Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research.

Code Pink, co-founded by Singham’s wife Jodie Evans, accused the Trump administration of fabricating the case to justify military action against Cuba.

“They’re not seeking justice for a downed flight. The Trump administration is fabricating a pretext for military intervention,” the group said after Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche announced the indictment.

Code Pink later called the indictment a “sham” and defended Cuba’s actions in shooting down the civilian aircraft. The group argued that “International law guarantees any country, including Cuba, the right to respond to airspace violations after exhausting diplomatic means to do so.”

The DOJ indictment, however, alleges the planes were flying over international waters and that the pilots received no warning before being destroyed by the Cuban military.

The Party for Socialism and Liberation similarly condemned the charges, describing them as “a transparent pretext for escalating aggression against a sovereign nation.”

Its affiliated media outlet, Liberation News, argued Castro acted lawfully under international law and claimed Cuba had the right to defend its territory against “US-based terrorist groups like Brothers to the Rescue.”

Manolo De Los Santos, a top leader within the Singham-linked activist ecosystem, also praised Castro and accused the United States of hypocrisy.

“The world stands with Raul Castro, hero of the Cuban Revolution,” declared Vijay Prashad, another senior Singham Network figure who also holds a position at a Chinese Communist Party-linked think tank associated with Beijing’s United Front influence apparatus.

De Los Santos described Castro as an “incredibly courageous and revolutionary hero” and defended Cuba’s socialist system in multiple public statements.

The Singham-linked media outlet BreakThrough News also promoted interviews with Cuban leader Miguel Díaz-Canel attacking President Donald Trump and the U.S. government while framing the indictment as an attempt to justify aggression against Cuba.

The defense of Castro is part of an alliance between the Singham Network and the Cuban regime.

Earlier this year, leaders from the People’s Forum and allied groups traveled to Havana for meetings with Díaz-Canel and publicly pledged solidarity with the Cuban Revolution.

President Trump defended the administration’s crackdown on Cuba Wednesday, accusing the regime’s leadership of enriching itself while ordinary Cubans suffer.

“While the people suffer, the regime’s kleptocratic elite have hoarded the island’s remaining resources for themselves and their lavish lifestyle,” Trump said.

“Its military leaders have demonstrated zero care for ensuring the prosperity of the Cuban people.”

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 15:40

Chinese Refining Rates Unexpectedly Plunge To All-Time Lows As Economy Falls Off A Cliff

Zero Hedge -

Chinese Refining Rates Unexpectedly Plunge To All-Time Lows As Economy Falls Off A Cliff

Two weeks ago, when discussing the market "mystery" of sliding physical crude oil prices, we said that the most likely culprit were Chinese refiners, whose refining margins had just collapsed to the most negative on record.

The reason for the margin collapse was China’s domestic fuel policy: it has long been Beijing's policy to soften price hikes to help shield consumers and avoid social unrest; which while beneficial to end, consumers is catastrophic to refiners and processors who are prohibited from passing on rising costs. In other words, Chna’s "energy security" was the dominant theme, and if it meant an entire industry has to suffer huge losses if it continues to purchase oil and process it into various product grades, so be it.

Ordered to process as much available inventory as possible, that's what the refiners have done, and refining rates in Shandong province, China's hub for smaller refineries known as teapots, ramped up over April to the highest level in almost two years, as processing margins cratered to record negative levels meaning refiners are losing record amounts on every barrel they process

“I would not be surprised if the teapots are prioritizing politics over economics with an eye to their long-term survival,” said Erica Downs, a senior research scholar at Columbia University’s Center on Global Energy Policy. “They may be calculating that if they do their part to help China weather the energy crisis, then maybe they will build up some goodwill in Beijing.”

While Downs is right, and teapots are prioritizing politics, they are also certainly keeping an eye on economics to the extent they can avoid Beijing's wrath, and predictably the logical consequence of this centrally-planned policy to force "independent" refiners (who are not really independent if they have to do whatever Beijing instructs them) to make fuel at record losses to ensure energy security, is for them to slash purchases of Iranian crude.

Sure enough, as we reported two weeks ago, Chinese crude oil imports cratered: China's April imports plunged to a multi-year low of just 8.2 million barrels a day, down by about a quarter from a prewar level of around 11.7 million. The 3.5-million barrels a day swing almost matches the total consumption of Japan and is double the amount supplied by the United Arab Emirates pipeline that circumvents Hormuz. 

Meanwhile, as imports collapsed, inventories at sea soared: Kpler reported that as of the start of May, there were about 16 million barrels on ships anchored in the Yellow Sea off the Chinese coast, almost 40% higher than the level prior to a US blockade of Iran’s ports in mid-April as oil that was ordered previously remains unused. 

Amid this collapse in Chinese imports and aggressive stockpiling at sea, industry executives have noticed something odd: Chinese state-owned oil companies have been reselling some of their oil cargoes to European and Asian rivals. The behavior suggests surpluses, which is "odd" to say the least during a supply shortage. Where is this excess oil coming from?

The shift has not only capped benchmark oil prices, but also helped to trigger a collapse in the premia that traders pay above them to secure physical crude. The immediate outcome has been a very beneficial one: physical barrels that in early April went for $30 above benchmark prices were recently changing hands at premiums as low as $1. Talk of discounts has even started to emerge.

Underscoring this point, North Sea oil traders were no longer desperate for crude for immediate delivery anymore, compared to the panic buying of late March and early April

While the collapse in refining margins was a clear clue to the plunging oil imports, other questions remain: chief among them how is China importing far less crude than before without running down stocks? In the past, the country clearly bought more oil than it needed, building a huge emergency stockpile. Today, China has nearly 1.4 billion barrels in its reserves according to media reports, well above the 400 million of the US and Japan’s 260 million. As we reported in late 2025, China probably bought one million barrels a day more than it needed last year. By simply stopping beefing up the reserve, China can cut imports a lot without affecting its underlying oil needs.

The shift can explain, perhaps, a third of the import cut. But the rest? Here’s where oil traders speculate with different theories. The most likely argument is that Chinese economic activity is far weaker than previously thought, and thus oil consumption growth is also lower. That's precisely what we learned earlier this week, when we discussed that  "Shockingly Bad" Chinese Econ Data Stuns Wall Street, Sparks Hard Landing Concerns; in a nutshell virtually every component of China's economy printed below the lowest economist estimate, and in many cases the data was as bad as when Beijing was emerging from the covid closure.

What is shocking is that it is common knowledge that Beijing traditionally massages its economic data to present itself in the rosiest possible light: the fact that it allowed data this ugly would suggest that the picture on the ground is much uglier. 

Goldman's Delta One head Rich Privorotsky captured this sentiment well, writing this morning that "overnight news from China showed economic data materially below expectations. Industrial production, retail sales and fixed asset investment all missed meaningfully. It’s hard to tell whether this reflects genuine demand destruction but perhaps it helps explain how the oil market has managed to balance despite ongoing supply concerns. I genuinely can’t remember a period when Chinese data, which tends to be heavily massaged, missed by anything close to this magnitude. Negative read through for consumption related categories."

What’s the catalyst for that slowdown? Perhaps the impact of the war on several of China’s clients in the region, including the Philippines, Vietnam and Thailand (just don't look for validation in Chinese economic "data" - like everything else, it took is centrally planned and Beijing would never confirm its economy is being hit due to the Iran war as that would mean reduced political leverage).

Whatever the cause may be, the result is the same and we got the final confirmation that China's petroleum industry is in a tailspin overnight when Mysteel OilChem reported that China’s state refineries cut run rates below 67% of capacity in the week to May 21, the lowest on record. Specifically, state runs edged lower to 66.9% of capacity over the week, while independent refiners in Shandong cut runs to 52.54% of capacity, lowest since Feb. 27.

This was the missing link in the Chinese oil picture, because while one can debate whether China was filling the product pipeline with strategic reserve oil instead of imported, or was merely draining offshore stock, the fact that suddenly Chinese refining has absolutely cratered, indicated that far from thriving, demand for China's product - both domestically and internationally - has fallen off a cliff, suggests that China and/or the broader Asian region is now at or near recession, something China's all important credit impulse strongly hinted at (for a great discussion of China's slowdown through the lens of credit impulse, see the following note from TS Lombard).

The good news: the tangent to a recession is widespread demand destruction, and since China suddenly needs far less oil, the price of physical will stay where it is until something changes. Of course, if Chinese demand falls even more, oil prices will slide, but then the question becomes how long can the US and the rest of the world avoid recession if Asia is already in it?

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 15:20

Uber Builds Large Stake In Germany's Delivery Hero As Takeover Speculation Builds

Zero Hedge -

Uber Builds Large Stake In Germany's Delivery Hero As Takeover Speculation Builds

Uber is exploring a potential takeover of Delivery Hero after building a large stake in the rival German food delivery company, Bloomberg News reports. This follows an earlier report that Uber had built a 19.5% stake.

On Monday, Uber disclosed that it owns 19.5% of Delivery Hero, plus an additional 5.6% through options. The position was built with the help of Morgan Stanley traders, according to people familiar with the matter.

Uber's move to acquire Delivery Hero could be an attempt to expand Uber Eats' global footprint and improve its competitive position against DoorDash outside the US.

Delivery Hero operates in more than 60 countries, giving Uber exposure to markets where it is either underscaled or trailing its competitors.

Map of Operatoins of Delivery Hero Brands

"While Uber's ultimate intentions on further stake-building remain unclear, we view the move as a clear endorsement of the strategic attractiveness of Delivery Hero's asset base for Uber," JPMorgan analysts wrote in a note.

Earlier, Uber said it "currently" has no intention of increasing its stake in Delivery Hero beyond 30%.

Delivery Hero shares in Frankfurt are up nearly 50% this year and have more than doubled from their March lows of around 15 euros. Uber shares were marginally lower in early afternoon trading.

Berenberg analyst Wolfgang Specht wrote in a note that Delivery Hero's investment case has changed following news of Uber's stake. He said it now seems prudent to assign value to scenarios that include a potential takeover.

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 14:45

India's Power Demand Hits Record High As Heat Drives Coal Use

Zero Hedge -

India's Power Demand Hits Record High As Heat Drives Coal Use

Submitted by Irina Slav of OilPrice.com

India’s power generation rose to a new all-time high amid hot weather that drove air-conditioning demand up, with thermal generation, most of its coming from coal power plants, covering 62% of demand.

Power demand on Thursday hit 271 GW, on the “fourth consecutive day when the peak power demand (solar hours) reached a new all-time high,” India’s power ministry said, as quoted by AFP.

After milder temperatures tempered demand growth in the fiscal year to March 2026 to the lowest level in six years, demand is now beating peak consumption records amid heat waves at the start of this year’s summer.

India’s coal demand from power plants is set to rise by 11.5% in the April to June quarter amid the peak electricity demand season in the country in May and June, sources with knowledge of the matter told the Economic Times in April.

Besides coal, which dominated India’s grid this week, solar power covered 22% of demand, the power ministry also said, while hydro and wind provided another 5% each. India has been putting a lot of effort into diversifying its sources of electricity to reduce its reliance on imported fuels and cut emissions, of which it is the third-largest generator in the world.

India expects to nearly quadruple its solar power capacity and triple wind power-generating assets within ten years, according to the new Generation Adequacy Plan published by the country’s Central Electricity Authority earlier this year.

Challenges, however, remain, mostly in transmission, reflecting the broader global picture, where grid upgrades lag behind wind and solar installations, prompting so-called curtailment, which in the first quarter of the year reached 300 GWh. Coal-fired power generation and capacity installations, meanwhile, continue to rise, and coal remains a key pillar of India’s electricity mix, with about 60% share of total power output.

 

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 13:45

Tulsi Gabbard Resigns As Director Of National Intelligence

Zero Hedge -

Tulsi Gabbard Resigns As Director Of National Intelligence

Tulsi Gabbard is stepping down from her role as Director of National Intelligence (DNI) to support her husband, Abraham, as he battles an extremely rare form of bone cancer, according to Fox News.

Gabbard informed President Donald Trump of her decision during a meeting in the Oval Office on Friday. Her last day at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) will be June 30, 2026.

In her formal resignation letter, obtained exclusively by Fox, Gabbard expressed deep gratitude to Trump, writing:

"I am deeply grateful for the trust you placed in me and for the opportunity to lead the Office of the Director of National Intelligence for the last year and a half. Unfortunately, I must submit my resignation, effective June 30, 2026. My husband, Abraham, has recently been diagnosed with an extremely rare form of bone cancer."

She added that her husband "faces major challenges in the coming weeks and months," and that she must step away from public service to be by his side.

"Abraham has been my rock throughout our eleven years of marriage... His strength and love have sustained me through every challenge. I cannot in good conscience ask him to face this fight alone while I continue in this demanding and time-consuming position."

Gabbard noted the significant progress made during her tenure, including major declassification efforts (more than half a million pages), reducing the size of the intelligence community and saving taxpayers over $700 million annually, dismantling DEI programs, and establishing a "Weaponization Working Group" to address government weaponization.

The news comes roughly a week after a controversy involving the CIA reclaiming approximately 40 boxes of sensitive documents - including files related to the JFK assassination and MKUltra - from the ODNI. The incident sparked accusations of a “raid” on Gabbard’s office by some lawmakers, though her team pushed back against that characterization amid her broader push for declassification.

Gabbard was confirmed as DNI in early 2025 and has been a key figure in advancing transparency within the intelligence community.

//--> //--> Tulsi Gabbard out by June 30?
Yes 27% · No 73%
View full market & trade on Polymarket

This is a developing story.

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 13:07

Crowd Burns Ebola Treatment Center In Congo Amid Dispute Over Body

Zero Hedge -

Crowd Burns Ebola Treatment Center In Congo Amid Dispute Over Body

Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times,

People set fire to an Ebola treatment center in a town at the heart of the outbreak in eastern Congo on May 21 after being stopped from retrieving the body of a local man, witnesses and police said.

“The police intervened to try to calm the situation, but unfortunately they were unsuccessful,” Alexis Burata, a local student who said he was in the area, told The Associated Press.

“The young people ended up setting fire to the center. That’s the situation.”

An Associated Press journalist saw people break into the center at Rwampara Hospital and set fire to objects inside, and also to what appeared to be the body of at least one suspected Ebola victim that was being stored there. Aid workers fled the treatment center in vehicles.

The crowd set fire to two tents fitted with eight beds run by a medical charity called The Alliance for International Medical Action (ALIMA), said Deputy Senior Commissioner Jean-Claude Mukendi, head of the public security department in Ituri Province.

Mukendi said the youths had not understood the protocols for burying a suspected Ebola victim.

“His family, friends, and other young people wanted to take his body home for a funeral even though the instructions from the authorities during this Ebola virus outbreak are clear,” Mukendi said. “All bodies must be buried according to the regulations.”

Mother Speaks Out

Family members of a man who died, soccer player Eli Munongo Wangu, wanted to bury their loved one themselves.

Munongo had played for several local teams and was a well-known figure in his neighborhood. He had been admitted to the hospital days earlier. A doctor said he was a suspected Ebola case, and the hospital had taken samples to run tests.

His mother told Reuters she believes her son had died of typhoid fever, not Ebola.

Authorities buried Munongo safely on Friday.

Calm Restored

Army and police reinforcements arrived to bring the situation under control, according to Mukendi.

Patrick Muyaya, Congo’s communication minister, said on X that “calm has been restored and care is continuing normally” at the center in Rwampara.

Muyaya and ALIMA said that six patients were being treated in the part of the facility set on fire.

They have all been located and are being cared for at a hospital. Security measures have been strengthened, Muyaya said.

Charred hospital beds stand in a smoldering Ebola treatment center in Rwampara, Congo, on May 21, 2026. Dirole Lotsima Dieudonne/AP Photo

Condemnation

Mukendi told reporters that “this is precisely a misunderstanding due to young people who do not understand the reality of this disease.”

ALIMA condemned in a May 21 statement what it called “the endangerment of human lives and the destruction of medical equipment essential for the safe care of patients, in the context of a particularly critical epidemic.”

It also warned against “the spread of incorrect or unconfirmed information on social media and the internet, which is likely to fuel fear, misinformation and mistrust towards health facilities and the teams involved in the Ebola response.”

Congo Health Minister Samuel Roger Kamba told a briefing on May 19 that the first known Ebola patient in the current outbreak was placed in a coffin after dying, but that the coffin was damaged.

Family members of the patient put the person in a different coffin, “thus spreading the infection,” Kamba said.

He said that the virus that causes Ebola is mainly spread through touching and improperly handling dead bodies.

“It was from this first case, from this funeral ceremony, that the virus exploded,” he said. “Everyone who was around, of course, was probably infected, and many developed the illness, and everyone thought it was the coffin that was causing it.”

Latest Figures

As of May 20, there have been 64 confirmed cases, 671 suspected cases, six confirmed deaths, and 160 suspected deaths linked to the outbreak, according to the Congolese government.

The World Health Organization declared the outbreak a public health emergency of international concern, and multiple other countries have barred some or all flights from Congo, including Uganda and the United States.

Congo’s government said that the cases and deaths have all been in Ituri province or neighboring North Kivu province.

Rebels holding South Kivu province, though, said Thursday that an Ebola case has been confirmed there. Local officials said there were two suspected cases, including one who died.

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 13:05

White House And Pentagon Clash Over $80M ReElement Critical Minerals Deal

Zero Hedge -

White House And Pentagon Clash Over $80M ReElement Critical Minerals Deal

The Pentagon is reconsidering an $80 million conditional loan to rare-earths refiner ReElement Technologies, raising tensions with the White House over efforts to reduce US reliance on China for critical minerals, according to Bloomberg.

The loan, announced in November through the Pentagon’s Office of Strategic Capital (OSC), was part of a broader $1.4 billion critical-minerals initiative alongside Vulcan Elements. But officials reviewing the deal have questioned ReElement’s ability to scale production and meet long-term revenue targets, according to people familiar with the matter.

The loan has not been canceled, and no funds have been disbursed. Pentagon officials emphasized from the outset that ReElement still needed to pass financial, legal, and technical due diligence before receiving funding.

The dispute highlights a broader divide inside the Trump administration between moving quickly to build domestic rare-earth supply chains and conducting rigorous vetting. White House trade adviser Peter Navarro criticized OSC’s review process as too burdensome for emerging companies, calling ReElement “exactly the kind of asymmetric bet we should be making.”

Bloomberg writes that Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell defended OSC’s oversight, saying the office balances speed with disciplined dealmaking. The effort is overseen by Deputy Defense Secretary Stephen Feinberg.

ReElement CEO Mark Jensen said the company’s work with the government is ongoing and confirmed plans to continue developing its Indiana refining facility.

Under the agreement, ReElement would produce rare-earth oxides from recycled materials, while Vulcan would turn them into magnets used in defense and energy technologies. The Pentagon previously said the companies aimed to produce up to 10,000 metric tons of magnet materials over the coming years.

Despite concerns, the government’s backing helped ReElement attract additional private investment, including a $200 million strategic equity agreement with Transition Equity Partners announced in January.

ReElement, formerly a subsidiary of American Resources Corp., was described in a 2025 filing as being in a “pre-revenue development stage.”

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 12:50

White House And Pentagon Clash Over $80M ReElement Critical Minerals Deal

Zero Hedge -

White House And Pentagon Clash Over $80M ReElement Critical Minerals Deal

The Pentagon is reconsidering an $80 million conditional loan to rare-earths refiner ReElement Technologies, raising tensions with the White House over efforts to reduce US reliance on China for critical minerals, according to Bloomberg.

The loan, announced in November through the Pentagon’s Office of Strategic Capital (OSC), was part of a broader $1.4 billion critical-minerals initiative alongside Vulcan Elements. But officials reviewing the deal have questioned ReElement’s ability to scale production and meet long-term revenue targets, according to people familiar with the matter.

The loan has not been canceled, and no funds have been disbursed. Pentagon officials emphasized from the outset that ReElement still needed to pass financial, legal, and technical due diligence before receiving funding.

The dispute highlights a broader divide inside the Trump administration between moving quickly to build domestic rare-earth supply chains and conducting rigorous vetting. White House trade adviser Peter Navarro criticized OSC’s review process as too burdensome for emerging companies, calling ReElement “exactly the kind of asymmetric bet we should be making.”

Bloomberg writes that Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell defended OSC’s oversight, saying the office balances speed with disciplined dealmaking. The effort is overseen by Deputy Defense Secretary Stephen Feinberg.

ReElement CEO Mark Jensen said the company’s work with the government is ongoing and confirmed plans to continue developing its Indiana refining facility.

Under the agreement, ReElement would produce rare-earth oxides from recycled materials, while Vulcan would turn them into magnets used in defense and energy technologies. The Pentagon previously said the companies aimed to produce up to 10,000 metric tons of magnet materials over the coming years.

Despite concerns, the government’s backing helped ReElement attract additional private investment, including a $200 million strategic equity agreement with Transition Equity Partners announced in January.

ReElement, formerly a subsidiary of American Resources Corp., was described in a 2025 filing as being in a “pre-revenue development stage.”

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 12:50

Rising Interest Rates: Why The Narrative Fails Against The Data

Zero Hedge -

Rising Interest Rates: Why The Narrative Fails Against The Data

Authored by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

Last Friday closed with the 10-year Treasury yield at 4.60%, a one-year high, and the doom commentary about rising interest rates was waiting before the bell even rang. Hyperinflation. Bond market breakdown. Paradigm shift. A 1981 fair-value retest. The Fed is about to “push the brrrr button” or pop “the everything bubble.” If you spent any time on social media over the weekend that followed, you saw a version of every one of those.

So I posted a short thread that Friday, making a simple point. Over time, yields track growth and inflation. The chart that drew the strongest pushback roughly showed that relationship, and a wave of responses argued that the framework is broken, debt is about to break the bond market, supply-side inflation has changed everything, and rates have nowhere to go but higher.

However, let’s slow down and look at what the data actually says. Some of those critiques are weak. A few are partially right. And one of them deserves a serious answer. I’ll work through them in order. After 30 years of watching market cycles, the pattern in this setup is more familiar than most commentary suggests.

Rising Interest Rates Follow A Framework That Has Held For Six Decades

Start with the basic identity behind rising interest rates. Of course, a bond yield is what an investor demands to hold a piece of paper for ten years. That demand has two main inputs: the opportunity cost of economic growth and the inflation rate that erodes the dollars being repaid. If real growth is 2.5% and inflation is 3.5%, then a 6% nominal yield breaks even before any term premium. The investor isn’t going to lend at 2% in a 6% nominal economy because that’s a guaranteed loss of purchasing power and a worse return than the broader economy offers.

Importantly, that isn’t a theory I invented. It’s the framework Wicksell wrote about more than a century ago, and it shows up cleanly in the data when you plot yields alongside nominal GDP growth, which is just real growth plus inflation.

Notice how closely the two lines move together. Through the 1970s inflation spike, both lifted. Then, through the Volcker disinflation that began in 1981, both fell. After that, through 30 years of declining inflation and slower trend growth, both drifted lower. Through the COVID shock, both swung. And as inflation rebounded in 2022 and 2023, yields rebuilt the relationship. In short, rising interest rates have consistently mapped to rising nominal growth, and the reverse has been true on the way down.

However, the relationship deserves a more precise statement than “yields track nominal growth.” Over the full 1953 to 2026 monthly history, the 10-year yield has averaged about 0.77 percentage points below nominal growth. Not above, below. So the right way to think about the framework is that yields run slightly below the nominal economy in a stable long-run relationship, and the gap between them has fluctuated within a band rather than collapsing or exploding.

Where does that put us now? Real GDP grew at an annualized rate of 2.0% in Q1 2026. Headline CPI ran 3.8% year over year in April. Together, that puts nominal growth on a 6.04% pace. The 10-year at 4.60% sits about 1.7 percentage points below nominal growth, a gap roughly a full point wider than the long-run average. By the mean-reversion logic the framework implies, the fair value of the 10-year is closer to 5.3% than to 4.6%.

Therefore, yes, there is modest upward pressure on rates from here. However, that is a very different statement than “7% rates and a debt crisis.” It is a slow drift back toward a long-established relationship, not a paradigm shift.

The Fisher Decomposition

Behind the chart above lies an economic principle nearly a century old that still does the heavy lifting in any serious discussion of long-term interest rates. In 1930, Yale economist Irving Fisher published The Theory of Interest, in which he proposed that any nominal interest rate can be cleanly decomposed into two parts. The first is a real return that compensates an investor for locking up capital. The second is an inflation premium that compensates the investor for the loss of purchasing power between the day the loan is made and the day it is repaid. The relationship, in its approximate form, is simple:

The equation looks trivial. The implications are not, because each component has its own economic anchor. Once you understand what anchors each one, you understand what can and cannot cause yields to permanently move to a new regime. That is the practical question every investor worried about rising interest rates is actually asking, even if they have not phrased it that way.

The real return on a long Treasury bond is anchored to the productive economy. Think of it as the opportunity cost of capital. If the real economy grows at 2.5% a year over the next decade, then on average, businesses are earning a 2.5% real return on capital deployed in real activity.

An investor with money to lend has a choice. They can place that capital in the real economy and earn approximately the real growth rate. Or they can lend it to the Treasury for ten years at a fixed yield. If the Treasury offers a real yield of 0.5% when real growth is running 2.5%, the investor is giving up 200 basis points per year for a decade. That trade does not hold up. Over time, capital migrates between the bond market and the real economy until the real component of yield lines up reasonably with the real return potential of the broader economy.

This gravitational pull is what economists call the natural rate of interest, often denoted as “R-Star” or “r*”. It moves slowly, anchored by productivity growth, labor force expansion, and savers’ time preferences. However, it is not a number set by the Federal Reserve, but rather one it estimates. Critically, it has been running around 0.5% to 1.0% in real terms for two decades, consistent with the U.S. trend real growth of roughly 1.8% to 2.0%. That has not changed.

The second component is more direct. If a bond pays a fixed nominal coupon and inflation runs at 4% over the life of that bond, every dollar the investor receives back is worth less than the dollar they originally lent. Therefore, bond buyers demand compensation for inflation on a point-for-point basis. If they expect inflation to average 3% over the next ten years, they want at least three percentage points added to whatever real return they require. If they expect 5%, they want five points. The framework is built on the assumption that bond buyers are not in the business of giving away purchasing power.

The word expected matters more than most casual observers appreciate. The Fisher equation is not about what inflation prints today. It is about what investors expect inflation to be over the bond’s remaining life. If headline CPI runs 4% in April but the bond market believes inflation will average 2.5% over the next decade, the 10-year yield will reflect that 2.5%, not today’s 4%. This is exactly why short-term inflation spikes do not always translate one-for-one into yield spikes. Markets are pricing the forward path, not the rearview mirror. So when commentary points to a hot monthly print and asks why yields are not breaking out, the Fisher framework is the answer.

Why The Two Pieces Add Up To Nominal Growth

Put the two components together. Nominal yield equals real return, which is anchored to real growth, plus expected inflation, which is anchored to the inflation outlook. Add the anchors together, and you arrive at something that, over the long run, looks remarkably like nominal GDP growth. Because real growth plus inflation equals nominal growth by definition.

That is why Chart 1 shows what it shows. The 10-year yield and nominal GDP growth move together over decades because they measure the same economic forces from two different vantage points. The Treasury yield is the bond market’s pricing of growth and inflation over a 10-year horizon. Nominal GDP growth is the realized output of growth and inflation looking backward over a one-year window. Both are samples of the same underlying economy. They will not match perfectly month to month, because one is a forward-looking expectation and the other is a backward-looking realization. But over time, they have to converge, and they do. That convergence is illustrated in Chart 2, with each year as a single data point.

Why The Correlation Isn’t 1.0

The framework predicts that yields and nominal growth move together. The data confirms that they do. However, the year-to-year correlation is around 0.5 rather than 1.0, and the relationship shows visible deviations across decades. Both of those deserve an explanation that does not require throwing out the framework.

Four mechanisms account for most of the noise.

  1. The term premium changes over time. Investors sometimes demand more or less compensation for the risk of holding long-duration paper, depending on the perceived volatility of inflation and the macro outlook.

  2. Expected and realized inflation can diverge sharply, especially at turning points. In 1980, realized inflation was high, but expectations were already falling as the Volcker tightening took hold, so yields topped before headline CPI did. In 2021, the opposite happened. Realized inflation jumped, but markets initially treated it as transitory, so yields lagged the move.

  3. Central bank balance sheet policy can hold yields down (quantitative easing) or push them up (quantitative tightening), independent of fundamentals.

  4. Supply and demand for Treasuries from foreign reserve managers, pension funds, and bank balance sheets shift at the margin and produce real moves in yields without changing the underlying growth or inflation picture.

None of those mechanisms breaks the Fisher decomposition. They explain why the relationship is noisy at high frequency and stable at low frequency. When you smooth the data with a three-year moving average, which absorbs most of those frictions, the correlation between nominal growth and yields rises to 0.68. When you look at decade-over-decade averages, it rises further. The framework holds. The market just takes its time.

An Interesting Asymmetry Inside The Composite

One observation from the data is worth surfacing because it sharpens the doom debate. When you decompose the composite into its two pieces and run the correlations separately, CPI inflation alone correlates with the 10-year yield at r = 0.63. Real growth alone correlates at essentially zero, about -0.07. The inflation component is doing almost all of the explanatory work, and the real growth component is barely registering at the monthly frequency.

That looks puzzling for half a second, then resolves once you remember what bond buyers actually care about. They care about purchasing power first, and opportunity cost second. The inflation premium is the more reactive component, because every percentage point of expected inflation is a percentage point of nominal compensation the investor demands. The real return component, in contrast, is anchored to slow-moving fundamentals like productivity, demographics, and the stance of monetary policy. Those things do not change month-to-month. They change over the years and decades. So in any given year, bond yields move primarily with inflation expectations, and real growth shows up indirectly through the real-rate channel rather than directly through the nominal yield.

This asymmetry is useful for thinking clearly about what would actually break the framework. A regime shift in nominal yields, the kind the doom case is forecasting, would require a regime shift in inflation expectations. Not a one-year inflation spike. Not a quarter of hot prints. A permanent re-anchoring of what bond markets expect inflation to average over the next decade. That has happened exactly once in U.S. modern history, between 1968 and 1980, and it took twelve years of policy mistakes, oil shocks, and lost central bank credibility to produce it. The current setup, however uncomfortable, is not that.

Pull this together and apply it to the present moment.

  • Real growth potential, by every credible estimate, including those of the Congressional Budget Office and the Federal Reserve staff, is around 1.8% to 2.0%.
  • Long-run inflation expectations, as measured by the five-year forward breakeven and survey-based measures, are anchored near 2.4%.
  • Add those two and the framework points to a steady-state 10-year yield in the neighborhood of 4.0% to 4.5%, plus a small term premium.

Today’s 10-year at 4.60% is right inside that range. Slightly elevated, perhaps, but not screaming regime shift.

This is where the doom case falters.

The doom case says yields are detaching from growth and inflation, that they will float higher due to debt, deficits, or supply-side forces, and that the long-run relationship is breaking down. For that claim to be correct, the Fisher decomposition has to fail. It has not failed in the United States in any sustained way over the seven decades of clean data we have. It is possible to bet against that, but it is important to be honest about what is being bet against. That bet is against a hundred years of one of the most robust regularities in financial economics, dating back to Fisher’s original work and confirmed by every subsequent empirical study.

The “Debt = Higher Rates” Argument Doesn’t Survive Contact With The Data

Now, for the most common pushback against the framework. The thread of responses ran along these lines.

“We print $2 trillion a year. The debt is exponential. Econ 101 supply and demand says rates have to keep going up.”

Or

“,,,with $39 trillion in debt and rates above 4%, the math doesn’t work. The Fed will either print or hyperinflate. There is no third option.”

Or more simply

“Are you sure debt has little to do with rates?”

Yes, I’m sure. Not because I’m dismissive of debt levels, but because the data over the last 45 years is unambiguous. Here is U.S. federal debt as a share of GDP, plotted against the 10-year yield, since the start of the modern era.

However, I want to be precise about what this does and doesn’t say. It doesn’t say debt is irrelevant. In fact, there’s a real literature on term premium, and large supply shocks at specific auctions can move yields on the day. The 2023 Treasury refunding episode is a clear example in which a shift in expected coupon issuance pushed the term premium higher for several months.

What it does say is that the simple “more debt equals higher rates” thesis fails the empirical test over any meaningful horizon. The reason is that the inflation-and-growth channel runs the other direction. Rising debt service crowds out productive investment, suppresses the marginal return on capital, and slows trend growth. In turn, lower trend growth means lower inflation, which means lower yields. The whole thing self-corrects, just not in the way the doom narrative wants.

If you want the cleanest counterexample to the “rising debt means rising interest rates” theory, look no further than Japan. I’ve made this case in prior work, but the comparison is worth refreshing with current numbers.

Yes, Japan’s 10-year is now at 2.6%, the highest since 1997. The bond vigilantes, the “doom crowd” that has been waiting for 30 years, did finally show up, just much later and much more politely than the script demanded. However, that’s not the point. The point is that Japan has been carrying more than 200% debt-to-GDP for over a decade. By the supply-and-demand-of-debt theory, Japanese yields should have spiraled long ago. They didn’t, because debt isn’t the dominant driver. In fact, inflation, growth, and central bank policy are.

Germany makes the same point in reverse. German debt-to-GDP is 64%, half the U.S. ratio. However, the Bund traded at 3.13% last Friday, well below the U.S. 10-year. If debt were the binding constraint, then Germany would have the lowest yield in the developed world. It doesn’t, because growth differentials, currency dynamics, and ECB policy matter more than the absolute size of the debt stack.

Rising Interest Rates And The Real Debt Service Question

Here is where I want to give the doom side credit, because one of the responses to last Friday’s post hit on a genuine problem. The question was simple. “How much does it cost to service the national debt at 7% interest rates?” That’s the right question. In fact, the fiscal cost of carrying $39 trillion in debt at higher rates is real, and it’s accelerating.

The numbers, pulled directly from Treasury and CBO data through April 2026, look like this. Net interest in fiscal year 2025 ran $970 billion. That was the third-largest line item in the federal budget, behind only Social Security and Medicare, and ahead of national defense. Furthermore, the CBO projects fiscal 2026 net interest will cross $1 trillion. By 2036, under current law, it’s projected to be $2.1 trillion.

That isn’t nothing. That is a serious fiscal problem. However, it’s important to separate the two arguments. The argument that high debt service is a fiscal problem is correct. On the other hand, the argument that high debt service drives yields higher is not the same as the second one, and the second one doesn’t follow from the first.

Here’s the part that matters for portfolio thinking. Historically, when interest costs have climbed toward unsustainable levels, the resolution has not come through a permanent rise in long-term yields. Instead, the resolutions have come through some combination of three things. First, financial repression, where the central bank caps long rates and inflation slowly erodes the real burden. That’s what happened after World War II. Second, recession, which crushes nominal growth, collapses inflation, and pulls yields down through demand destruction. That’s what happened in 1991, 2001, 2008, and 2020. Third, structural reform, which is politically rare and historically slow.

Notably, none of those resolutions involves yields ratcheting permanently higher to compensate for fiscal strain. Italy’s debt-to-GDP has been above 130% for a decade. Italian yields hit 7% during the 2012 eurozone crisis. Today, however, they’re 3.75%, well below the U.S. The mechanism that pulls yields back is the same mechanism that creates the fiscal stress in the first place: slower growth.

The doom narrative tends to skip this loop entirely. It assumes debt service rises, then yields rise, then debt service rises more, and the spiral takes the system out. However, that’s not how the loop has worked in any modern advanced economy. It’s how it worked in Argentina, but Argentina is not the comparison.

About That Oil Shock

Several of last Friday’s responses raised what, on its face, is the more interesting argument behind rising interest rates. Yields are rising because of supply-side inflation. Iran. The closed Strait of Hormuz. Gasoline at $4.50 a gallon. Electricity demand from AI data centers. Base metals, lubricants, and the physical economy. Rate cuts can’t fix supply bottlenecks. So we’re in a stagflationary regime, not a recessionary one, and yields are repricing accordingly.

Importantly, that argument has more weight than the simple “debt = rates” framing. The current setup really is supply-driven. For example, CPI jumped from 2.4% in February to 3.3% in March and 3.8% in April. Energy is up 17.9% year over year. Gasoline is up 28.4%. That’s not a demand-led rebound. Instead, that’s a price shock running through the system from the supply side.

However, here is the historical record on supply-side oil shocks. They don’t sustain. Every modern oil shock has followed the same arc.

I want to be careful not to overstate this. For instance, the 1979 episode includes Paul Volcker deliberately driving the U.S. into a double-dip recession to break inflation expectations, which is a specific policy choice that may or may not repeat. Similarly, the 2008 oil spike happened inside an already-developing financial crisis. The histories aren’t identical.

However, what is common across all four is the demand destruction mechanism. Higher oil prices act like a tax on consumers. As a result, consumers cut discretionary spending. Businesses face higher input costs and slower revenue growth simultaneously. Earnings get squeezed. Capex slows. Hiring slows. Demand falls. Consequently, the inflation caused by the oil spike begins to unwind, sometimes within months of the price peak.

“The need to save to service debt depresses potential growth. Absent true investment, public spending can lower r*, passively tightening for a fixed monetary stance.”– Stuart Sparks, Deutsche Bank

If the current Iran situation persists for another 6 to 9 months, the lag effect on consumer balance sheets becomes the dominant story, not the headline CPI print. In fact, we’re already seeing the early signs. Real wages went negative in April for the first time since April 2023. Furthermore, consumer delinquencies are rising. The labor market is cooling. None of that is yield-bullish on a 12-month view, regardless of where the spot oil price is.

“Rates Are At Modern History Highs” Doesn’t Quite Survive A Long Chart

One of the responses worth addressing directly was the claim that yields have hit “the highest in modern history.” That’s a real argument, and partially true if you draw the window narrowly. For instance, UK 10-year gilts are at 5.18%, the highest since 2008. German Bunds are at 3.13%, the highest since May 2011. Japanese 10-year JGBs are at 2.6%, the highest since 1997. Indeed, yields have moved up globally.

However, the U.S. 10-year at 4.60% is well within its long-run range, not above it. The framing of “modern history highs” only works if you treat the 2010s as the normal baseline.

In fact, the 2010s were the anomaly.

That re-framing matters. Critics arguing yields are at “modern history highs” are anchoring on the 2010s, which was the most artificially suppressed yield environment in modern U.S. history. Specifically, that period featured:

  • an aging demographic,
  • two rounds of QE,
  • ZIRP, and
  • then a global pandemic with another round of QE, and ZIRP.

Pulling yields out of that bucket and noting they’re “high” is like measuring temperature against an arctic baseline and concluding spring is a heat wave.

The honest framing is that we’ve spent the last six years normalizing.

The 2020 low at 0.9% was a once-in-a-century print driven by the pandemic shutdown. Therefore, anything heading back toward the long-run average is going to look elevated relative to that. Globally, yields have risen as monetary policy has normalized, inflation has reasserted itself, and central banks have stopped buying every duration auction. However, that doesn’t make today’s yields a regime shift. It makes them a regime reset.

Rising Interest Rates: What This Means For Investors

Stepping back from the framework and the rebuttals, here is the practical takeaway on rising interest rates.

  1. Yields can absolutely stay elevated.
  2. Yields can spike further if the Iran situation worsens or oil pushes through $120.
  3. The term premium can widen.

Clearly, the next six months are not going to be smooth.

However, the structural pull on yields is downward over a 12 to 24-month horizon, for three reasons.

  • First, the framework. Nominal growth is the gravitational pull, and nominal growth is already softening as real wages turn negative and consumer credit metrics deteriorate.
  • Second, the oil shock is a tax on the consumer, not a sustainable demand-led inflation. Notably, the 2008 parallel is the closest, and the 2008 setup ended in a 200-basis-point yield rally as the recession unfolded.
  • Third, the debt-service problem is a fiscal problem that gets resolved through some combination of repression and recession, not through permanently higher long yields.

For portfolios, that points to a few practical implications.

  • Long duration is reasonable to begin layering in at these yields, recognizing that the path could be choppy and that further short-term yield spikes are possible.
  • Pure equity risk needs to acknowledge that earnings pressure from energy costs is building, particularly in consumer-discretionary names.
  • Gold and commodity exposure make more sense as a hedge against the supply-shock tail than as a core inflation play.
  • Cash is paying you to wait at the front end.

The binary framing some of last Friday’s critics offered, “either crash or hyperinflation, there is no middle scenario,” does not reflect how modern advanced economies typically resolve fiscal and inflation strain. In fact, the middle scenario, muddle through with volatility, is by far the most common outcome historically. So position for that as the base case, and stress-test for the tails.

Closing Thoughts

The 10-year at 4.60% isn’t a paradigm shift. It’s a yield doing what yields have done for 60 years: tracking the rate of nominal economic growth around it. Of course, the current setup includes a genuine oil shock, real fiscal pressure, and global yield repricing. However, those facts mean the simple “debt explodes, rates explode” thesis is incorrect. None of them means we’re heading into a Weimar paradigm. Instead, rising interest rates only mean we’re in a supply-led inflation that historically resolves through demand destruction, which in turn lowers yields.

If you want to bet against that pattern, then you’re betting against every modern oil shock and every modern debt cycle in advanced economies. Some bets are worth taking. However, that one has a poor base rate.

I’ll keep watching the data and remain honest when something in the framework breaks. But, in context, last Friday’s move doesn’t break it. In fact, it confirms it.

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 12:30

Taiwan Arms Deal Put On Ice Amid China Pressure, But Pentagon Cites Iran War Stockpile Concerns

Zero Hedge -

Taiwan Arms Deal Put On Ice Amid China Pressure, But Pentagon Cites Iran War Stockpile Concerns

Did the Pentagon just back down amid pressure from China? It appears so. As we reported Thursday, China has been actively holding up a proposed visit by Elbridge Colbythe Pentagon's under-secretary of defense for policy. The move is a transparent effort to pressure President Trump over a looming $14 billion weapons package for Taiwan.

Sources familiar with the talks told the Financial Times that Beijing signaled it "cannot approve a visit until Trump decides how he will proceed with the arms package."

Later the same day, Acting Navy Secretary Hung Cao revealed that the US is indeed pausing the $14BN arms sale in question, though he framed the move as due to the Trump administration's war with Iran. He said this was to make sure there's plenty of missile supply and interceptors to execute the war, especially in the scenario that a full aerial bombing operation is renewed. 

via AFP

Addressing a Senate Appropriations Defense Subcommittee hearing, Cao sought to assure that the US still has "plenty” of missiles and interceptors, amid growing concerns from officials.

"Right now we’re doing a pause in order to make sure we have the munitions we need for Epic Fury - which we have plenty," Cao told Sen. Mitch McConnell. "We’re just making sure we have everything, but then the foreign military sales will continue when the administration deems necessary."

McConnell pressed Cao further on the arms sale to Taiwanto which the acting Navy chief responded that it would be up to Pete Hegseth, to which the Republican Senator from Kentucky replied, "Yeah, that’s what’s really distressing."

While the administration is trying to frame all of this as more out of caution over Iran war supplies, The Hill points out that President Trump had already situated it within dealings with Xi and China:

Cao's remarks appear to contradict President Trump’s stated reason for the pause; last week he indicated he may hold off on the arms sale to Taiwan as a "negotiating chip" with China.

"I haven’t approved it yet. We’re going to see what happens," Trump told Fow News. "I may do it; I may not do it."

Speaking to reporters after a trip to China, Trump said the topic was discussed with Chinese President Xi Jinping "in great detail" before saying he will "make a determination over the next fairly short period."

As for Colby, the Pentagon had been actively discussing a summer trip to Beijing with Chinese officials, but China effectively froze the process and logistics. 

Trump admin officials have been quick to point out that Trump has approved "the sale of more weapons to Taiwan than any other US president." And so it appears that such bravado should come with a cost, in Beijing's apparent thinking.

And yet, Trump has repeatedly publicly touted his personal relationship with Chinese President Xi Jinping as "amazing" - though his recent Beijing trip did nothing to ultimately produce a breakthrough.

At the very least, all of this also suggests that the dragged-out Iran war is weakening the Pentagon's force posture in southeast Asia, after earlier in the war military assets, including anti-air defense systems, were pulled from the region.

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 12:15

Is Take-Two Sandbagging Guidance Ahead Of Grand Theft Auto VI Launch?

Zero Hedge -

Is Take-Two Sandbagging Guidance Ahead Of Grand Theft Auto VI Launch?

Take-Two Interactive slumped in early U.S. cash session after the video-game publisher reported better-than-expected fourth-quarter results but issued what some analysts described as a "conservative" outlook for the year, even as it reaffirmed the November 19 launch date for Grand Theft Auto VI.

TTWO's earnings, released Thursday evening, initially sent shares higher in the after-market, as traders focused on GTA VI remaining on schedule. However, shares fell once the cash session opened, as the market shifted attention to softer-than-expected guidance on bookings and TTWO's cautious fiscal-year assumptions.

Goldman analysts, led by Eric Sheridan, noted that the fourth-quarter report centered on optimism around its video game pipeline, including 29 planned titles through fiscal 2029 and the reaffirmed November 2026 launch date for Grand Theft Auto VI.

Sheridan said TTWO is expecting higher marketing expenses ahead of the GTA VI release, with Rockstar expected to begin its marketing campaign this summer.

The analyst outlined that traders will remain focused on GTA VI news flow, including potential trailer launches, pre-order data, marketing spend, and early title performance after release.

However, potentially what's driving weakness in the stock today is that the outlook for both bookings and adjusted earnings was disappointing...

Positives: a) FQ4'26 Bookings came in above the high-end of guidance range, driven by outperformance across GTA, Red Dead Redemptio,n and continued momentum in the mobile portfolio; b) Solid RCS growth during the quarter (+7% YoY) was supported by continued engagement across GTA Online, mobile, and NBA 2K series; & c) Positive mgmt. commentary surrounding forward content slate, with the company highlighting a multi-year pipeline (incl. 6 additional titles during FY27 & 29 titles through FY29), alongside additional live service updates across key franchises.

Negatives: a) FQ1'27 Bookings guidance came in below GS/Street (FactSet) estimates, with mobile and the GrandTheftt Auto Series expected to decline (albeit offset by HSD % YoY growth for NBA 2K); b) mgmt. Guided to FY27 RCS growth being flat on a YoY basis - largely driven by the lapping of mobile growth during FY26 (and Color Block Jam success), offset by NBA 2K strength and GTA series growth; & c) Operating expenses expected to increase during FY27, driven by marketing spend and increased R&D investments.

1FQ27 & FY27 Estimate Changes:

  • 1FQ27: Bookings of $1.37bn (from prior $1.55bn), Adj. EBIT of $78mm (from prior $8mm), & Adj. EPS of $0.29 (from prior $(0.06)).

  • FY27: Bookings of $8.08bn (from $9.51bn), Adj. EBIT of $1.40bn (from prior $1.76bn), & Adj. EPS of $5.89 (from prior $7.42).

1FQ27, FY27, FY28, & FY29 Estimate Changes

"We reiterate our Buy rating and raise our 12-month price target from $270 to $275 as we adjust our forward operating estimates for this earnings report and management's forward commentary," Sheridan said.

Separately, Citi analysts said, "Investors are likely pleased that GTA VI is still on track for a November 19 release date, and the 4Q26 results were robust." However, they also noted that the forecast for both bookings and adjusted earnings was disappointing, adding, "We suspect investors will take the guidance in stride, given some level of conservatism that's likely embedded in the FY27 outlook."

Vital Knowledge analysts made similar remarks: "While the bookings guide falls short of expectations, many feel this is just management being conservative."

Bank of America analysts also said the same thing, noting that FY27 guidance looks "overly conservative," arguing that the $8.2 billion sales guide implies only about 31 million GTA 6 units, or 21% console penetration.

One X user said that CEO Strauss Zelnick's forecast ahead of GTA 6 "is a generational sandbag" ...

Professional subscribers can read the full GTA VI note here at our new Marketdesk.ai portal

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 12:00

US Lawmakers Renew Strategic Bitcoin Reserve Push With ARMA Bill

Zero Hedge -

US Lawmakers Renew Strategic Bitcoin Reserve Push With ARMA Bill

Authored by Brayden Lindrea via CoinTelegraph.com,

US lawmakers have renewed efforts to codify a US strategic Bitcoin reserve with a new bipartisan bill on Thursday that seeks to acquire around 1 million Bitcoin over five years. 

The American Reserve Modernization Act of 2026 would establish a Strategic Bitcoin (BTC) Reserve and Digital Asset Stockpile for other federally held cryptocurrencies, which would be held by the US Treasury Department, said the bill’s sponsor, Representative Nick Begich.

ARMA, sponsored by 16 members of Congress, builds on the BITCOIN Act, which was introduced in July 2024 and updated in March 2025.

Source: Nick Begich

In an interview on Sunday, Patrick Witt, of the President’s Council of Advisors for Digital Assets, referred to ARMA as “Version 2” of the BITCOIN Act and said the White House has spent considerable time examining the legal implications of a Bitcoin reserve.

“It's a breakthrough as far as getting everything in place, legally sound, properly safeguarding the assets.”

The push for a federal policy comes as the US currently holds 328,372 Bitcoin worth more than $25.5 billion — the most of any nation-state — but has sold portions of those holdings through court-ordered actions over the years.

“The US is already one of the largest holders of Bitcoin in the world. But Congress has never set a federal policy on what to do with that asset,” said US Representative Jared Golden, one of the 16 co-sponsors of the bill.

Under ARMA, Bitcoin must be held for a minimum of 20 years unless it is sold to reduce America’s national debt, which topped $39 trillion on Wednesday.

Like the BITCOIN Act, ARMA also seeks to acquire up to 1 million Bitcoin over five years through budget-neutral strategies, meaning it would avoid using taxpayer money.

US Representative Mike Carey argued that as digital assets continue to grow in importance, the bill could strengthen America’s long-term economic position and help keep it “competitive on the world stage.”

Strive CEO and chairman Matt Cole said ARMA is the “single most important crypto legislation” that could come out of Washington DC.

ARMA could strengthen transparency measures, property rights

Quarterly proof of reserve reports and independent third-party audits of the Bitcoin reserve would be published under ARMA, Begich noted.

The bill also seeks to protect digital property rights by affirming that the federal government may not impair the right of individuals to own or self-custody digital assets.

Tyler Durden Fri, 05/22/2026 - 11:45

Pages