Individual Economists

USS Gerald Ford Carrier Hit By 'Sewage Crisis' As Record Deployment Endures

Zero Hedge -

USS Gerald Ford Carrier Hit By 'Sewage Crisis' As Record Deployment Endures

The USS Gerald R. Ford carrier is traversing the Mediterranean, reportedly set to dock in Israel's port of Haifa next, following a prior stop in Crete early this week, after having been ordered from the Caribbean to the Middle East area as the US threatens Iran.

Coming off Venezuela operations and being ordered to the Central Command (CENTCOM) has meant its deployment is being extended. The Ford and its some 4,500+ personnel on board have already surpassed 240 days at sea, ranking this deployment is among the longest in modern naval history.

via AFP

But this significantly extended stint has witnessed some major internal problems - most especially centering on the supercarrier's strained infrastructure a mere decade after its commissioning. 

The Navy's flagship carrier is reportedly beset by chronic sewage system failures, various reports which stretch back to January have found.

According to the highly reputable military news source 19fortyfive, "While the carrier projects unmatched power, internal reports reveal a fleet under duress: sailors are missing major life events, and the ship's complex vacuum sewage system is suffering daily clogs."

The Wall Street Journal was able to get US Navy confirmation of the problem, though the US military still maintains this is not significant enough to hamper the mission:

Prosser said his son had mentioned problems with the toilets on the ship, without going into detail. NPR first reported in January that a number of toilets on the Ford were out of commission.

The Navy official said the Ford’s sewage system, which uses vacuum technology to transport waste from roughly 650 toilets on board, has experienced issues during the deployment, averaging about one maintenance call a day. But the situation is improving and the problems haven’t impacted the carrier’s ability to carry out its mission, the official said.

The WSJ had elsewhere in the article written, "One sailor missed the death of his great-grandfather. Another is thinking about leaving the Navy after almost a year away from her toddler daughter. Two more said the ship had sewage problems."

The story added, "President Trump’s decision to extend for a second time the deployment of the aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford is taking a toll on the ship's sailors and their families, and leading some to consider leaving the Navy when they return to home port, according to interviews with sailors on board the ship and their family members back home."

Some critics of America's anti-Iran posture have mocked the situation of the high-tech mega carrier not being able to keep up with its sewage...

However, the ship's command has reminded the crew that this is what they signed up for, and that when the country calls, they must fulfil their mission.

Some reports have said that the vessels apparent persistent plumbing problems can ultimately be remedied only when the carrier comes back to US port and undergoes more thorough maintenance. 

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 11:45

Home Depot Posts Biggest EPS Beat In 16 Quarters As Big Remodeling Projects Sidelined

Zero Hedge -

Home Depot Posts Biggest EPS Beat In 16 Quarters As Big Remodeling Projects Sidelined

Shares of Home Depot are up 3.5% in early U.S. trading after the home-improvement retailer reported what Goldman consumer expert Scott Feiler called the "biggest EPS beat in 16 quarters."

Feiler explained:

We had positioning marked as just a 3 out of 10 in our pre-EPS positioning scorecard. That compared to LOW at a 5. Historically, we rarely have HD below a 5.

A small sales miss was expected and instead, we got a beat. This was also the first time they beat operating margins in the last 5 quarters and led to their biggest EPS beat in 16 quarters. The upside was driven by gross margins, so we will need to hear if that's sustainable.

Is this a thesis changer? No. However, it removes some of the recent near-term concerns that had begun to be more discussed (margin misses, small top-line miss/negative comps had been expected and no current buyback to support EPS upside).

Fourth quarter details:

4Q EPS of $2.72 vs. Consensus $2.53, with revenues ~30 bps ahead and comp sales of +0.4% vs. Consensus -0.4% (think bogey was -0.5% to -1%). Gross margins beat by 40 bps and SG&A was in line, leading to a nice operating margin beat. The FY guide is exactly in line with what they gave at their analyst day on December 9th, which was expected (EPS 0 to +4% and comps 0 to +2%).

The results suggest that the appetite for home renovation projects is steady despite a frozen housing market and inflation concerns. Home Depot gained market share last quarter and achieved double-digit e-commerce growth for a third straight quarter.

Multiple Wall Street analysts point to better-than-expected gross margin, with RBC analysts citing likely support from lower shrinkage, supply chain efficiencies, and better product mix. 

Here's more from Wall Street analysts (courtesy of Bloomberg):

RBC (sector perform), Steven Shemesh

  • "4Q results exceeded fairly muted expectations," with comp sales growing +0.4% (RBC -0.2%/consensus -0.4%) and adj. EPS coming in ~7% ahead

  • The beat was driven primarily by stronger-than-anticipated gross margin, which Shemesh expects was supported by lower shrink, supply chain efficiencies and product mix

  • The annual guidance is in-line with the company's preliminary guide on 12/9, but on a "higher EPS base implies some upside to current consensus positioning," according to the analyst

Bloomberg Intelligence, Drew Reading 

  • "Home Depot's 4Q same-store sales exceeded expectations, as a higher average ticket offset a drop in transactions, suggesting volumes remain muted by depressed housing turnover and cautious consumers, who continue to delay big-ticket projects," Reading writes

  • The reiterated the annual flat to +2% comp. sales growth outlook reflects a "relatively flat home-improvement market"

  • "Professional and e-commerce investments should drive market- share gains and position Home Depot well for a rebound," in his view

Stifel (hold), W. Andrew Carter

  • Carter expects the stock is likely to trade higher on the stronger 4Q performance with reiterated guidance driving positive revisions

  • "We believe performance validates the lofty valuation," he adds

Bernstein (market perform), Zhihan Ma

  • Ticket growth drove comp. sales gain as traffic declined, Ma writes

  • HD reached an "all-time high" in average ticket ($90.6) for the full year whereas transactions (1,601.5m) remained below pre-Covid levels

  • "A key question will be how HD manages to drive more traffic into stores and whether this requires more promotions" this year, she says

  • Sales result came in "largely in line with management expectations, reflecting a lack of hurricane-driven repairs activities and ongoing weakness in housing/home improvement demand," Ma adds

  • Overall, she maintains her cautious outlook and expects a "gradual path to a home improvement market rebound"

  • "Despite near-term catalysts such as tax refunds and potential rate cuts, we still believe that a fundamental inflection point is some ways away," the analyst says

  • She is also montioring the tariff situation, which could introduce margin upside should there be a refund and/or some relief in cost pressures

Even with the stronger 4Q performance, CFO Richard McPhail said in a Bloomberg interview that customers "have been on the sidelines" for large remodeling projects "for three years now."

McPhail added: "The homeowner is one of the healthiest customer cohorts out there, but they tell us that uncertainty is growing, that there's concern around housing affordability, and around job losses."

In a separate report, The Wall Street Journal cites The Freedonia Group's data showing that a frozen housing market has curbed demand for appliances, cabinets, and flooring, among other products.

Here's the latest read on the 30-year fixed mortgage rate from Bankrate, with rates hovering around 6.15%.

Latest news about the housing market ahead of the spring selling season: 

Millions of Americans feel trapped in their homes or apartments as the Trump administration tries to thaw the nation's frozen housing market. The fallout has shown up across the housing ecosystem for the last few years, hitting firms from window manufacturers to retailers like Home Depot.

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 11:30

Iran 'Ready' For 'Any Step' To Achieve US Deal, Oil Slides Ahead Of Trump SOTU

Zero Hedge -

Iran 'Ready' For 'Any Step' To Achieve US Deal, Oil Slides Ahead Of Trump SOTU

Tonight, when President Donald Trump will step into the House chamber to deliver his State of the Union address, it will undoubtedly be overshadowed by the prospect of coming conflict with Iran. 

Tehran will be up late (or early), carefully scrutinizing every word of the US leader, anticipating the what's next at a moment of massive Pentagon build-up in the region, including no less than two carrier groups. Iranian leadership, looking toward the big Trump speech tonight, has just offered that it's ready to do anything necessary to reach a deal to stave off an attack.

Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Majid Takht-Ravanchi has declared Tuesday that his country is "ready to take any necessary step to reach a deal with the US" but coupled with a warning that "a strike on Iran is a real gamble." This momentary or rhetorical 'concession' sent oil prices sliding...

Crude Oil Futures Price (WTI)

The big question tonight is whether President Trump will signal if he's still betting on diplomacy in the days ahead, or if he'll prepare the American public for full military action if talks fail.

The prospect of a new conflict in the Middle East remains deeply unpopular among Americans - even among many Republicans - recent poll after poll have demonstrated.

Again, the buildup toward a potential military confrontation with Iran has overshadowed the run-up to the address and all other issues - whether immigration, the economy, or even the Supreme Court's tariff halt decision.

With some 400 million barrels currently stuck on sanctioned tankers, it remains that a breakthrough Trump-Iran deal would suddenly release these supplies on the global market and prices would plunge.

As for Iran's 'readiness' to do 'anything' - it's really still anything but clear whether the Islamic Republic would actually enter into dialogue on conventional missile limits. This remains unlikely, as reducing this capability would in effect neuter Iran's ability to defend itself or fight a war.

Will Trump tip his hand? "Bloomberg’s Courtney Subramanian framed Iran as one of the major flashpoints Trump may address as he tries to reset the national mood after a Supreme Court ruling struck down his global tariff regime," writes one regional source seen as close to the Israeli establishment. Citing Bloomberg, the same source says the SOTU speech "could provide a moment for Trump to explain why military action might be necessary, even as negotiations led by envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner continue in Geneva."

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 11:15

Yen Tumbles After Japan's PM Voices Concerns About Further Rate Hikes To BOJ

Zero Hedge -

Yen Tumbles After Japan's PM Voices Concerns About Further Rate Hikes To BOJ

The yen was already sliding on Monday after Nikkei Asia reported that the sharp swing we saw in USDJPY in January was initiated by FX intervention from US Treasury Secretary Bessent not Tokyo, even if Washington, D.C. is open to coordinated forex moves if requested by Japan. FX traders took this as evidence that, contrary to previous conventional wisdom, Japanese authorities were prepared to allow the USDJPY to continue climbing on Jan. 23 and it was only US action which prevented a print at 160, or higher. At the time, investors were leaning toward the upcoming Japanese election as a reason for intransigence, but this report made it seem more like benign neglect of the currency.

Then yen then dropped some more after China added 20 Japanese firms - including affiliates of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries - to an export control blacklist, escalating the dispute between the two nations. 

But it was the third drop that was the biggest, and sent the USDJPY above 156, after Japan's Mainichi daily reported that Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi expressed reservations about additional interest rate hikes during her meeting with Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda last week. 

The report, if true, signals growing friction over monetary policy that could complicate the BOJ's timetable as coordination with the newly strengthened administration becomes more delicate, and as the new PM does what every other politicians has been so willing to do in recent years: support the stock market at all costs, surging inflation be damned. Oh, and by not hiking rates, Japan can pretend that its Japanese bond market game of musical chairs can extend a little bit longer. 

Ueda had (mis)characterized the meeting last Monday as a general exchange of views on economic and financial developments, and had said the prime minister had not made any specific monetary policy requests.

Takaichi herself has been coy about the particulars of their meeting, saying only that she hoped the central bank would work closely with the government to durably achieve its 2% inflation target accompanied by wage gains. 

The meeting was held amid raging speculation that the rising cost of living, driven in part by the weak yen - but mostly by the surging price in rice which the BOJ has no control over - could prompt the central bank to raise interest rates as soon as March or April. In December, the BOJ raised rates to a 30-year high of 0.75% and signaled further hikes were possible.

A Reuters poll this month showed that a majority of economists expect the BOJ to raise its key rate to 1% by the end of June, with some anticipating a move as soon as April because of mounting concerns about inflationary pressures and a weak yen. Odds of a rate hike have certainly tumbled after last night's report. 

Following the Mainichi report, the yen tumbled, and the USDJPY surged by 100 pips, rising to 156, the highest price it has been in 2 weeks.

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 11:00

After Four Years Of War, Zelensky Wants All Land Back

Zero Hedge -

After Four Years Of War, Zelensky Wants All Land Back

Authored by Dave DeCamp via AntiWar.com,

Tuesday marks four years since Russia first launched its invasion of Ukraine, and, despite President Trump promising to end the war quickly, there's no end in sight to the conflict as Russian and Ukrainian leadership haven't budged on their core demands for a peace deal.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reaffirmed in an interview with the BBC over the weekend that he wouldn’t cede the territory Ukraine still controls in the eastern Donbas region and defined "victory" as Ukraine regaining all of the land it has lost to Russia since February 2022.

Zelensky awarding a medal to a Ukrainian soldier on February 23, 2026 Source: Office of the President of Ukraine.

Ukraine ceding the Donbas is a key Russian demand to end the war, and President Trump has repeatedly called for Zelensky to do so, arguing that Ukraine will likely lose the territory in bloody battles in the coming months and years. When asked by the BBC interviewer if he thought it was a “reasonable request” for a ceasefire, Zelensky said he didn’t agree.

"I see this differently. I don’t look at it simply as land. I see it as abandonment – weakening our positions, abandoning hundreds of thousands of our people who live there. That is how I see it. And I am sure that this ‘withdrawal’ would divide our society," Zelensky said.

When asked whether he still sought to regain all the land Ukraine has lost, Zelensky answered in the affirmative but suggested he needed more help from his Western backers to do so.

"We'll do it. That is absolutely clear. It is only a matter of time. To do it today would mean losing a huge number of people – millions of people – because the [Russian] army is large, and we understand the cost of such steps. You would not have enough people, you would be losing them. And what is land without people? Honestly, nothing," Zelensky said.

"And we also don’t have enough weapons. That depends not just on us, but on our partners. So as of now that’s not possible but returning to the just borders of 1991 without a doubt, is not only a victory, it’s justice. Ukraine’s victory is the preservation of our independence, and a victory of justice for the whole world is the return of all our lands," he added.

Another major sticking point in the negotiations is the issue of security guarantees. Zelensky and many European leaders want troops from NATO nations to deploy to Ukrainian territory with the backing of US airpower after a peace deal is signed, but Russian officials have repeatedly rejected the idea and made clear that the condition is a non-starter.

Zelensky said in the BBC interview that he wants whatever security guarantee he gets from the US to last 30 years. He made the comments when asked about the Trump administration’s call for him to hold elections, saying that US security guarantees would need to be in place before that happened.

Russian and Ukrainian officials held talks in Geneva last week, but there’s been no sign of progress. Russia maintains it won't agree to a deal unless its key demands are met, which include Ukraine ceding the territory and guarantees on Ukraine not joining NATO, and has made clear it's willing to continue the grinding war to achieve those goals.

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 10:45

Former Norway PM Attempts Suicide After Epstein-Linked Raid, Corruption Charges: Report

Zero Hedge -

Former Norway PM Attempts Suicide After Epstein-Linked Raid, Corruption Charges: Report

Norway's former Prime Minister Thorbjørn Jagland was hospitalized a week ago after a failed suicide attempt, days after he was charged with "gross corruption" after a police probe into his ties with the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, local outlet iNyheter reports

Thorbjorn Jagland, a former prime minister of Norway, in Oslo February 12th. 

Jagland, 75, who gave Barack Obama a Nobel peace price less than nine months into his presidency, was charged on February 12 after police carried out an extensive search of his properties - including apartments in Oslo and in Risør.

According to the report, Norway's Økokrim - which investigates economic and environmental crimes - took the serious step of sending a letter to the Council of Europe requesting that Jagland's immunity be lifted. It was revoked one day before the raids took place. In the letter, Økokrim says that Jagland and his immediate family used Epstein's private apartments in Paris and New York multiple times between 2011 and 2018, and stayed at Epstein's villa in Palm Beach, Florida - with travel being likely covered by Epstein in connection with one of the stays. 

Epstein also reportedly paid for travel and hotel costs for Jagland and five other adults in the Caribbean, and reportedly asked Epstein for a loan, though it's unclear whether that was actually made. 

If convicted, and he doesn't successfully kill himself, Jagland faces up to a decade in prison if convicted. 

In one 2018 email exchange, Epstein wrote to Jagland suggesting that "I think you might suggest to Putin, that Lavrov, can get insight on talking to me."

Jagland served as Norway's Prime Minister from 1996 to 1997, and held other prominent international roles - including Secretary General of the Council of Europe (2009-2019) and chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee. 

Apparently Epstein was in bed with several top Norwegians;

Other prominently placed Norwegians are also facing new scrutiny, including Crown Princess Mette-Marit, Borge Brende, an ex-foreign minister who now runs the World Economic Forum, and Mona Juul, who this week was suspended from her role as ambassador to Jordan and quickly resigned. There has been fallout from the release of the Epstein files around the world, and though seemingly no region’s elites have been immune, Norway has been hard hit. -NYT

Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store says he supports an independent inquiry and will testify if asked about his time as a former foreign minister. 

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 10:30

1, 2, 3, 4, 5 And 5, 4, 3, 2, 1

Zero Hedge -

1, 2, 3, 4, 5 And 5, 4, 3, 2, 1

By Michael Every of Rabobank

Depressingly, today marks the start of the fifth year of the Ukraine War: a battered Ukraine is still standing against a bruised Russia; the US is still aiming for a peace deal so it can pivot to Asia; and Europe --even as it knows it has to look after both Ukraine and its own conventional defenses after decades of having this provided for it-- is still trying to get its act together.

Despite its rhetoric, with a few notable exceptions European rearmament isn’t happening with appropriate scale and speed. Is Ukraine supposed to hold on until 2035, when EU defense budgets will be at the promised 3.5% of GDP? 

EU ministers also just failed to agree their 20th sanctions package on Russia, and Hungary is blocking the €90bn loan to Ukraine the EU had thrashed out. As such, the EU’s Kallas is reopening the controversial Russian frozen assets option shelved in December, which Belgium refused to go along with it. That’s as the UK Telegraph reports that “Kremlin spies” are acquiring ‘Trojan horse’ networks of sites in residential homes near European military bases that could be used to launch sabotage campaigns.

Meanwhile, we appear very close to a new war in the Middle East. Forget Bloomberg headlines and Iranian sabre-rattling. Look to: the USS Ford steaming towards Haifa; US troops removed from bases in Qatar; US staff removed from the embassy in Lebanon; former senior Israeli officials told to return home from abroad immediately; Israel preparing to shutter its embassies; a major underground hospital being opened in Tel Aviv; US Secretary of State Rubio postponing his planned meeting in Israel to next week; Indian PM Modi to speak in the Knesset tomorrow as part of what is claimed will be the announcement of a new extremist coalition (which will also have some EU members); and PM Netanyahu telling the Knesset: “This is not a time to engage in arguing. I am setting that aside. We are in very complex and challenging days. No one knows what tomorrow will bring. We have our eye open and are prepared for every scenario. I have made it clear to the ayatollah regime that if they make an error, perhaps the severest error in their history, and attack Israel, we will respond with force that they cannot imagine…. we must rally the ranks of the nation and stand shoulder to shoulder.”  

Importantly, what looms is not a repeat of the Iran-Israel clashes we correctly predicted following October 7: logically, if it’s to happen, it will be an endgame. The Iranian regime’s response will be appropriate, as seen vs its own people, up to 30,000 of whom may have died while protesting against it. In that respect, if Iran feels it’s going to lose control --which is never has until now-- it will do whatever it can to fan the global flames as high as possible for as long as possible.

In the recent Greenland Crisis, we stressed that in 2026 Europe is the Egypt of 1956’s Suez Crisis and the US is still the US. Iran’s goal will be to try to make the US into the UK and France of 1956 via markets telling Trump to pack up and go home rather than play grand macro strategy in the Middle East.

Of course, that involves energy flows – and it’s Iran’s physical ability to stop them that matters more than the politics or “because markets” of it. Could Hormuz be mined or see suicide attacks on tankers? Could missile attacks hit Saudi oil given reports Iran will have heard that Riyadh now backs a US strike? Could there be terror attacks from sleeper cells across the region and the West against civilians or key infrastructure? None of this is available on Bloomberg, so are you sure?

Look to the cartel violence in Mexico as an example of how one can be relaxing one minute and fleeing from gunfire the next. There, following President Shenbaum’s evacuation to a naval vessel for her own safety, the WSJ reports, ‘Mexico Races to Prevent Cartel War’.

That’s plenty of ‘risk off’ for markets. But there’s far more afoot.

Stocks were rocked by a viral report underlining the devastating impact of AI on the economy as another claimed UK unemployment will rise above its pandemic high within months: you think the UK by-election on Thursday shows a fragmented and polarized polity now? Such views overlook the need for resources to power AI but are worth considering – so is the struggle for those resources, which hardly says we are all going to sit and sing kumbaya together.

The US is leaning on Anthropic to get with the (military-industrial) program or be on the outs; and Anthropic is reporting China set up 16,000 fake accounts to use Claude to train DeepSeek. That effectively allows China access to Nvidia chips indirectly. Again, no kumbaya here but rather more controls on who can get access to US AI ahead – and notably that’s as India is strategically looped into the US AI ecosystem. If we are developing separate supply chains from critical minerals up to chips, how does that allow for a “because markets” free trade in the end product AI? Answer: it doesn’t. Walls will go up. Which/whose side you are on will dictate what AI you can use as a consumer.

Relatedly, Trump eviscerated the ‘supreme court’ (no capital letters) and stressed --correctly-- that their ruling allowed him to “use Licenses to do absolutely “terrible” things to foreign countries,” and that tariffs can “be used in a much more powerful and obnoxious way, with legal certainty.” He later added another point also clear to us: any country that thinks it can wriggle out of US trade deals will face even higher tariffs. Moreover, the WSJ reports Trump is considering new 232 and 301 national security tariffs on large-scale batteries, cast iron and iron fittings, plastic piping, industrial chemicals and power grid and telecom equipment.

Yet as France bans the US ambassador from talking to its government, the EU Parliament put the US trade deal on ice. Expect US-EU tensions to rise further, it seems. By contrast, Japan has underlined that it’s sticking with its trade deal and the $550bn of pledged, and guided, investment into the US. The contrast between the two is stark – and markets should take note.

More so given the Nikkei Asia reports the marked swing we saw in USD/JPY in January was initiated by FX intervention from US Treasury Secretary Bessent not Tokyo, even if Washington, D.C. is open to coordinated forex moves if requested by Japan. In short, FX markets don’t get to focus on simple risk on/off and the likes of rate differentials anymore: they have to focus on the geopolitics of geoeconomics and who wants to help, and hurt, whom, and how.

Similarly, the WSJ reports that crypto firm Binance fired staff who flagged $1bn moving to sanctioned Iran entities, which sounds like something the Treasury and Pentagon might also like a word about. Moreover, the Trump-backed crypto group World Liberty’s stablecoin says it was the subject of a deliberate attack. Bitcoin is also having a bad time of it rather than rallying on all the above uncertainty. And as those at the leading edge of markets thrash around for what the emerging global architecture may be, China is pushing Hong Kong as its global gold trading hub.

All of this is the backdrop to President Trump’s State of the Union address tonight at 9PM US eastern time. Start the countdown clocks to that piece of political theatre – with what surprises for the viewing audience?

Five, four, three, two, one…

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 10:20

Despite Crazy Revisions, Consumer Confidence Rebounds From January's Doom

Zero Hedge -

Despite Crazy Revisions, Consumer Confidence Rebounds From January's Doom

After Boomers and Gen X dragged The Conference Board Confidence measure down to eight month lows to end 2025, expectations were for a rebound to start 2026.

Instead, January was a bloodbath with all the cohorts tumbling. Today sees February's data released with expectations for a rebound, particularly in expectations... and the consensus was right.

  • The headline Consumer Confidence print rose from 84.5 (revised dramatically up to 89.0) to 91.2 (better than the 87.1 expected)

  • Under the hood it was kind of crazy with the dismal Present Situation print for January of 113.7 dramatically revised up to 121.8, which meant the 120.0 print for February was actually a decline MoM (but better than expected).

  • The Expectations sub-index rose from a revised 67.2 to 72.0 (also better than expected).

So, overall, confidence ticked up in February after falling in January, as consumers’ pessimistic expectations for the future eased somewhat.

“Comments about prices, inflation, and the cost of goods remained at the top of consumers’ minds,” Dana Peterson, chief economist at the Conference Board, said in a statement.

“Mentions of trade and politics also increased in February.”

With Expectations at their lowest since COVID...

Source: Bloomberg

The survey cutoff date was Feb. 17, before the Supreme Court struck down most of President Donald Trump’s sweeping global tariffs.

Finally, under the hood, The Conference Board survey shows the trend of a weaker labor market continued to accelerate...

Source: Bloomberg

Circling back to where we started, how exactly do you 'revise' consumer expectations (especially so dramatically?)

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 10:09

Moscow Claims NATO Nuke Smuggling Plot Into Ukraine - UK Denounces 'Heinous' Charge

Zero Hedge -

Moscow Claims NATO Nuke Smuggling Plot Into Ukraine - UK Denounces 'Heinous' Charge

It's hard to know what's true amid the fog of war, but when Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) comes out with whatever new accusation it lodges against Ukraine it usually 'goes big'.

That's true of the latest statement Tuesday, which happens to mark the fourth anniversary of the full-scale Ukraine invasion of 2022. The SVR is newly alleging that France and the UK are plotting to secretly arm Ukraine with a nuclear weapon.

French M51 submarine-launched ballistic missile. Photo credits: Marine Nationale

According to the agency, British and French officials are considering the "covert transfer of relevant European-made components, equipment, and technologies to Ukraine" - and are in parallel laying the groundwork for an information campaign that would misrepresent the nuclear capacity as domestically developed.

Russian sources and state media strongly suggest their belief that this is still just in planning stages, and that several options are being considered, including that Ukraine could be provided with a French TN 75 warhead, currently in the the French Navy's submarine-launched ballistic missiles.

There's also the option of Western assistance to help Kiev build a 'dirty bomb' - which has long been a feared weapon in the context of the grinding Ukraine conflict, given it spreads radioactive material far and wide, among urban areas.

TASS and others have cited the SVR in framing this as an act of desperation given Ukrainian forces are being rolled back piecemeal on the battlefield:

According to its information, the British and French elites are unwilling to accept defeat. "It is believed that Ukraine should be supplied with a ‘Wunderwaffe’ (German for ‘miracle weapon’ - TASS). Kiev would be able to aspire to more advantageous terms of ceasing the hostilities if it possesses a nuclear or at least a so-called ‘dirty’ bomb," the statement said.

The suggestion is that the Western allies supporting Ukraine would do anything rather than admit defeat, even the unthinkable.

Here's more from an official state media translation from the SVR's media office:

"At present, according to the information available to the Russian SVR, London and Paris are actively working over the issue of providing Kiev with a weapon of this kind, as well as with means of its delivery. This involves a covert transfer of relevant European-made components, equipment and technologies to Ukraine. As an option, the French small-size TN-75 warhead from the M51.1 submarine-launched ballistic missile is being considered," the press bureau pointed out. At the same time, "Berlin has prudently refused to take part in this dangerous venture."

According to the Foreign Intelligence Service, the British and the French realize that their plot is "a gross violation of the international law, first of all the Non-Proliferation Treaty, and carries the risk of destroying the global non-proliferation system." "Consequently, the Westerners’ main efforts are focused on making Kiev’s possession of nuclear weapon look like it was developed by the Ukrainians themselves," the statement said. "Great Britain and France are aware that the situation developing in Ukraine leaves no chances for them to achieve the ardently desired victory over Russia with the hands of the Ukrainian armed forces," the SVR noted.

The statement concludes by an allegation that NATO countries are "losing touch with reality" their reckless efforts to impose defeat on Russia in Ukraine, and so are willing to seriously contemplate a 'dirty bomb' - as losses mount.

The Kremlin has meanwhile not been forthcoming with any specific evidence, and the SVR has not revealed the types of sourcing underlying its serious allegations.

But according to RIA, the Russian government is taking all of this seriously enough for Putin's office to say it plans to inform the United States about these potential nuclear aspirations of Ukraine and its European backers.

Downing Street has so far been among the first to dismiss the allegation, with the UK Prime Minister's official spokesman saying: "This is a clear attempt by Vladimir Putin to distract from his heinous actions in Ukraine" and that "there is no truth to this."

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 10:00

Transcript: Hilary Allen on Fintech Dystopia

The Big Picture -

 

 

The transcript from this week’s, MiB: Hilary Allen on Fintech Dystopia, is below.

You can stream and download our full conversation, including any podcast extras, on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube (video), YouTube (audio), and Bloomberg. All of our earlier podcasts on your favorite pod hosts can be found here.

~~~

[00:00:02] Announcer: This is Masters in Business with Barry Ritholtz on Bloomberg Radio.

[00:00:16] Barry Ritholtz: I’m Barry Ritholtz, you’re listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio. My extra special guest this week is Hilary Allen. She is a professor at the American University, Washington College of Law in DC where she specializes in financial regulation, banking, law, securities regulation and technology law. She published a book, FinTech Dystopia, a summer beach read about how Silicon Valley is ruining things, covering the intersection of finance, technology, law, regulation, and politics. It’s a perfect subject for us to talk about. Hilary Allen, welcome to Bloomberg.

[00:00:59] Hilary Allen: Thank you so much for having me.

[00:01:00] Barry Ritholtz: So fascinating conversation, fascinating topic that you write about. Before we jump into that, let’s, let’s spend a few minutes going over your background. You get a bachelor’s in laws from the University of Sydney in Australia, a master of laws, in securities and financial regulation law from Georgetown here in the States. And you graduated first in your class there. What was the original career plan? Was it simply, I’m gonna go be a lawyer? What, what, what were you thinking?

[00:01:31] Hilary Allen: The original career plan was, I’m just gonna be a lawyer, and then I loved law school and I practiced for seven years and discovered there wasn’t so much law always in the practice of law, and I’m a nerd and I missed it. And so the, the drive was to go back to Georgetown, get my master’s, do some academic writing, and then launch a career as a professor where I could really sort of think slowly about the law.

[00:01:56] Barry Ritholtz: And, and you practiced, you were in London, you were in Sydney, Shearman and Sterling here in New York. Tell us a little bit about the sort of legal work you were doing when you were a practicing attorney.

[00:02:06] Hilary Allen: So basically, there’s sort of two broad categories of the work I did. I did transactional work, banking transactional, typically acting for banks in leverage buyouts. But the work I think I enjoyed more was the regulatory compliance advisory. So there was more law in that, especially when you had new financial laws being handed down in Australia and changes in the US with Dodd-Frank and sort of trying to figure out how to comply with those new rules.

[00:02:34] Barry Ritholtz: So how do you go from practicing bank transactions and some regulatory law to ultimately working with the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission? Tell us a little bit about your experiences there.

[00:02:46] Hilary Allen: So that was a, a series of, a series of fortunate events. While I was doing my masters at Georgetown, I had a professor who was tapped to be on the staff of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission, and he pulled me in to work with them two days a week. And we were investigating the causes of the 2008 financial crisis to put together the report that came out, which really was sort of,

[00:03:10] Barry Ritholtz: It’s a nice thick book that they published.

[00:03:12] Hilary Allen: It’s a really thick book with a really thick index even. And the idea was to tell the story, and that’s really sort of stuck with me throughout my career, the importance of being able to explain complex things and how they knit together to cause things.

[00:03:26] Barry Ritholtz: So working with the FCIC, how did that affect how you looked at regulation in general, but more specifically the government’s response to technology, new financial products, the regulatory world in, in general?

[00:03:44] Hilary Allen: So the gift that I got from working with the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission is sort of understanding that there are a lot of things that come together and you need to really look very broadly to understand systemic changes. Another gift that it gave me was, I think, a healthy skepticism of innovation rhetoric, right? Because if you think back to 2008 and what caused it, you know, there were all these stories about, well, these new financial products, these complex new derivatives, we don’t need to regulate them. They’re innovation sophisticated parties involved. We don’t wanna tamp down on innovative potential. And so that, that skepticism has been a helpful skillset as I’ve been navigating the sort of post 2008 financial world where you have the innovation rhetoric from Silicon Valley infiltrating into financial services.

[00:04:34] Barry Ritholtz: You, you raise a really interesting issue that I have to ask about. So how much of what we see is regulation is either an adherence to a, an ideology that sometimes says regulation is good and are guardrails on capitalism. And other ideology says regulation is expensive and anti innovative and reduces job creation. It seems like regardless of the facts on the ground, each side has their belief system. How, how, how do you contextualize that?

[00:05:12] Hilary Allen: Well, I mean, I think, I don’t think there were too many people in the depths of the 2008 crisis who were saying there’s too much regulation, right? I think it’s a function of where you are in a particular time. I think people’s memories fade really quickly, and as soon as regulation has solved the problems it was intended to solve, or the crisis that spurred the regulation has dissipated, people quickly forget why that regulation is there in place. And then it becomes much easier to see it as something that is just a hindrance, something that is just expensive that doesn’t have a role to play. But I think what we’re actually seeing right at this moment is the erosion of the securities laws that really have stood investors in good stead since the 1930s. Not to say they’re perfect, but the, the general sort of investor protection regime that the Securities and Exchange Commission has always implemented has really encouraged trust in the US stock market. And, and it sort of made it the envy of the world and people wanted to list here that’s really getting peeled back right now. And so I think, you know, it’ll be pretty soon a moment where we realize why we had all that regulation and we’ll miss it.

[00:06:31] Barry Ritholtz: So, so heading into the financial crisis, I recall looking at some of what I called radical deregulation prior. And this isn’t by no means the sole cause of the financial crisis, lots of factors led to this. But you had the Commodities Futures Modernization Act, which allowed what was essentially an insurance product to be issued without any insurance reserves. Seems kind of risky. And then you had the repeal of Glass-Steagall that kept depository banks separate from speculative Wall Street banks. Probably didn’t cause the crisis, but certainly allowed it to get much bigger at, at the, at the very least. And yet there didn’t seem to be any desire after the crisis, Hey, maybe we should put these things back into place. Maybe we should repeal what was added and restore what was repealed. Nobody want, they want to go a totally different direction.

[00:07:33] Hilary Allen: Well, I think, again, this is a story of political economy and there are still a lot of people who are mad at the Obama administration for prioritizing healthcare over financial reform because basically they had one shot at doing something big. And if they had, and I, I’m not weighing in to say that this was the right or the wrong move, but if they had gone right outta the gates with financial reform, I think we would’ve seen more of the bigger structural things that you’re talking about. So, you know, in that immediate aftermath of the 2008 crisis, you had Sandy Weill, who had been the head of Citigroup and had sort of engineered the end of the Glass-Steagall legislation and, and from, this is maybe apocryphal, but apparently he had a, a deal toy that said shatter of Glass-Steagall that he kept on his desk. And again, this may be apocryphal, but I heard that he basically sort of had a conversion after 2008, said, Ooh, yeah, probably shouldn’t have done that. Well,

[00:08:33] Barry Ritholtz: Well a lot of people did. Alan Greenspan famously said, I incorrectly assumed people’s concern over their own reputation would’ve prevented some of the excesses we’ve seen. I’m paraphrasing, but that was pretty close to what he said.

[00:08:46] Hilary Allen: Yeah. He said the world sort of didn’t work the way I thought it did. And I think, you know, had they gone straight outta the gates with financial reform, you might have seen some of that structural reform. But by the time they got around to it, you know, Dodd-Frank wasn’t passed till 2010. Right. You know, then, then the political economy calculus had shifted. The industry was in more of a position to sort of argue for weaker rules and, and fewer structural changes. It

[00:09:11] Barry Ritholtz: It’s amazing how rapidly memories fade and people just quickly, oh no, that was then now it’s new. You’ve worked inside the global financial system as well as studying it from the outside. How did being part of the FCIC affect how you perceive technology, new financial products, regulation and deregulation? How, how did that affect your, your perspective?

[00:09:38] Hilary Allen: You know, I didn’t think a ton about technology at that time. That’s sort of been a later addition to the work that I do. But the broader themes of financial innovation regulation, deregulation, you know, I see the value in financial stability regulation in particular. So financial stability regulation are the rules that are supposed to prevent financial crises. And they work often sort of hand in hand with investor protection regulations, but they also aim to do something differently. And part of the challenge when you’re trying to prevent a financial crisis is this silo mentality where people just think about their own little piece of the world and okay, we can deregulate our little piece and we don’t, won’t think about the flow on consequences and what, what incentives it’ll create, et cetera. And so, you know, my real takeaway was always to have the most holistic perspective possible to break down that silo mentality. And later in my career, that meant learning about the new technologies that are sort of infiltrating the, the financial system. So,

[00:10:42] Barry Ritholtz: So I want to talk about technology and I want to talk about FinTech Dystopia, but there is a quote from within that that applies directly to what you’re describing with stability, which was it’s the economic precarity, stupid, paraphrasing James Carville. Tell us a little bit about the economic precarity.

[00:11:03] Hilary Allen: Yeah, so I think a mistake that we have made collectively in recent years is to say, well, look, the economy’s doing well, everything’s fine. And that really doesn’t, you know, mesh with many people’s experience of the economy. So it used to be, well, probably not always the case, but closer to the case in, in the Clinton years where there was less economic inequality than there is now, that you could sort of say a rising tide lifts all boats. But now what we’re seeing is over half of Americans live from paycheck to paycheck, even in a good economy, right? And so in that kind of circumstance, the financial system’s not, and the economy aren’t working for everybody. And so I think when we think about what we’re trying to achieve with our financial system, it should be that we are trying to find a solution to this economic precarity. And also that begs the question of whether the financial system in and investing is actually the way to get there. And maybe we need broader public policies to address that economic precarity so that no one, or at least not half of the population are just scraping by.

[00:12:18] Barry Ritholtz: So we just passed a new set of laws that include thousand dollar accounts for, for newborns. Isn’t that gonna solve financial inequality? All these kids, by the time they’re 30, they’ll be worth millions.

[00:12:35] Hilary Allen: I think you might need to offset against the people losing their health insurance subsidies. I don’t think that a thousand dollars gonna go very far.

[00:12:41] Barry Ritholtz: Right. And, and what’s fascinating is watching just the parade of billionaires come out and no, no, we need to supplement that thousand dollars. So first it was Michael Dell, and then it was Ray Dalio. I don’t know who else is gonna step forward, but it appears, hey, we’re not really paying a whole lot in taxes. We might as well throw some money at some, some babies. That seems to be the philosophy.

[00:13:05] Hilary Allen: Yeah. I mean, I don’t love philanthropy in that sense, supplementing democratically sort of elected policies, you know, it, it, it gives a lot of sort of discretion and power to people as to how they wanna distribute their largesse to, to some degree that’s fine. But again, when we have a society where half of the population is barely scraping by, I don’t think their livability should be predicated on the whims of billionaire largesse.

[00:13:33] Barry Ritholtz: Fair, fair enough. You, you talked about technological innovation. In your book you argue that financial technology innovation is driven largely by legal design rather than technical brilliance. Explain that a little bit. What, what is it about FinTech that seems to be working the perspective from an attorney rather than an engineer?

[00:14:00] Hilary Allen: Yeah, so this was something that, as I said, I came to a little later in my career. I think earlier in my career when I first started looking at FinTech, I generally accepted, you know, the party line. This technology is revolutionary, this technology is making things more efficient, this technology is fixing things. And then I realized that the people who were saying that had something to sell, and I probably should learn a little more about the technology because if you wanna work on financial regulatory policy, now you need to understand the extent to which the technology actually lives up to what is claimed it can do. And so, sort of my first sort of foray into this was, I’ve looked really in detail at blockchain, which is, is truly frankly a terrible technology. It’s a clunky database. And, and, and it’s not something you would ever choose for any kind of financial market infrastructure, but for the fact that it’s been very easy to convince regulators not to regulate it. And so the value add that comes from crypto has never been blockchain technology as a technology. It’s been whipping up stories about that technology that have justified avoiding regulation. And we see it in other instances as well. You know, there are FinTech lending that is replicating some of the, the predatory payday lending that we’ve seen before.

[00:15:22] Barry Ritholtz: The buy now pay later sort of financing or, well,

[00:15:25] Hilary Allen: The payday, payday loans have been around a lot longer than that. This is sort of a, it’s like a $400 loan that you get to bridge you over till your next payday. And you know, there’s been a lot of predation in that market and some states had banned those, those products. Essentially,

[00:15:43] Barry Ritholtz: You, you think 29% interest is not fair. You have a problem with that. We’re just trying to make a profit here.

[00:15:50] Hilary Allen: Some of these interest rates are 300%.

[00:15:52] Barry Ritholtz: Get out. Yeah. That’s in, and, and what is New York top out at like 19%? Something like that?

[00:15:58] Hilary Allen: I, I don’t know about New York. Yeah. But, but, but

[00:16:01] Barry Ritholtz: Normally anything, you know, mid double digits is, is thought of as luxurious. 300% is just next level.

[00:16:08] Hilary Allen: Yeah. I mean they’re not, it’s not set as an interest rate per se, they’re fees, but once you actually convert that into a, a per annum, they can be in the hundreds of percentages. And so that has always been a problem. And we’ve had states act and then we’ve had new FinTech lenders saying, well actually we’re different from payday lenders ’cause we use AI to screen our borrowers, and so you should treat us differently. And yet they’re charging interest rates that are equivalent to what payday lenders do. And then you mentioned buy now pay later. Again, they say, well we’re, we’re not even extending loans. This isn’t a loan at all, so we shouldn’t have to comply with the laws around lending, around disclosure around that kind of

[00:16:45] Barry Ritholtz: Thing. How is that not a loan? You’re buying a product that you don’t have money for? Someone is paying for that. Isn’t that a loan?

[00:16:54] Hilary Allen: I would say so.

[00:16:56] Barry Ritholtz: Okay.

[00:16:56] Hilary Allen: But, but

[00:16:57] Barry Ritholtz: How, what, what’s the counter to this isn’t a loan, this is a, a pre layaway,

[00:17:03] Hilary Allen: Essentially. Yeah, no, we, you know, we, we, we don’t charge interest. There are late fees if you don’t pay, but that’s not the same as interest. You know,

[00:17:10] Barry Ritholtz: That’s fair. Like we, we, we bought a couch no interest for six months. So as long as you pay it off within six months, that sort of thing seems to be interest free.

[00:17:22] Hilary Allen: But then when you look at the business model and you see that a significant chunk of the people are incurring these late fees, then well,

[00:17:28] Barry Ritholtz: That’s their fault, isn’t it? That’s human nature. We, you can’t blame us if we take advantage of people procrastinating and not paying off their fees in time. Well,

[00:17:38] Hilary Allen: It’s not that they’re procrastinating, it’s that they’re choosing between paying rent or paying this off. So this is

[00:17:43] Barry Ritholtz: Food. Yeah. Medicine.

[00:17:45] Hilary Allen: Exactly. So this, this is coming back to, it’s the economic precarity stupid, right? If people are in these dire straits, we should not be surprised that FinTech firms are trying to capitalize on that and profit from it. Which is why I think, you know, what we need are some kind of public safety nets to, to sort of make and, and a higher minimum wage and higher social security benefits.

[00:18:10] Barry Ritholtz: Coming up. We continue our conversation with Professor Hilary Allen discussing her new book, FinTech Dystopia, a summer beach read about Silicon Valley and how it’s ruining things. I’m Barry Ritholtz, you are listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio. I’m Barry Ritholtz. You are listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio. My extra special guest this week is Hilary Allen. She teaches at the American University Washington College of Law in Washington DC where she specializes in regulation of financial and technology laws. So, so let’s talk about the digital only book. Ironic, right? FinTech Dystopia where you describe modern financial technology simply as Silicon Valley ruining things. Explain that. Seems like an extreme example. And, and give us some examples of how Silicon Valley is ruining things.

[00:19:27] Hilary Allen: So just to be clear, not all modern technology is ruining things. There’s a particular business model approach that I think is ruining things and that is derivative in many ways of the venture capital model in Silicon Valley.

[00:19:40] Barry Ritholtz: Venture capital.

[00:19:41] Hilary Allen: Just venture, okay?

[00:19:42] Barry Ritholtz: Yep.

[00:19:42] Hilary Allen: Venture capital model in Silicon Valley. So it’s sort of got this sheen around it that’s iconoclastic and they, they make bets on these moonshots that’ll, you know, save all of humanity and yada yada yada. But in fact it’s, it’s pretty well established as a playbook at this point. You know, there’s a lot of subsidies that go to venture capital by virtue of their having access to pension funds by virtue of sort of capital gains taxation. And so they’ve got sort of, and and especially in low interest rate environments, they attract a lot of money. So they have pretty cheap money available to them, and then they go shopping. And what they go shopping for is not the iconoclastic sort of outlier that we think of, but what we’ve seen and what the evidence shows is that they tend to go shopping for the same things that their friends are going shopping for and they go shopping for the businesses that their friends have developed.

[00:20:36] Hilary Allen: And so there’s this sort of very, sort of insular mentality in what they’re looking for. And they’re also looking for something that they can cash out of very quickly because the, you know, the average venture capital fund has a, what, a 10 year, sometimes 12, but usually 10 year duration. That’s really not that much time to find something to invest in, have it grow and then cash out. And so they’re not looking for things that are going to take decades to develop. They’re looking for things that they can grow quickly and get out of in about five or six years.

[00:21:09] Barry Ritholtz: So give us a few examples. What do you think is this sort of, you know, not adding a whole lot of value venture backed businesses?

[00:21:19] Hilary Allen: So not intentionally, but it just turned out that way as I wrote this, this book, almost every FinTech business I looked at had been funded by Andreessen Horowitz. They had been sort of the lead. So, you know, they, they,

[00:21:33] Barry Ritholtz: They’re the hot VC these days. I, I’ve, full disclosure, I’ve interviewed Andreessen, I’ve interviewed Kaur, I’ve interviewed Horowitz. So I’ve sat with them and talked about a lot of their businesses. But the past few years they’ve been very front and center, very active. Yeah,

[00:21:51] Hilary Allen: No, and they sort of, they have their, as a marquee name as you said, they’re the hot VCs. Once they say they like something, they can basically attract other venture capital to those, those businesses. And so they’re essentially taste makers,

[00:22:05] Barry Ritholtz: Which, which is fascinating you say that. ‘Cause before that it was Sequoia, before that it was Kleiner Perkins. Like, you work your way, there’s a hot firm for a decade. The nineties had it, the two thousands had it, the 2010s had it. They tend not to maintain that position forever. Although to Andreessen Horowitz’s credit, they’ve been the it girl for a good, good run so far.

[00:22:29] Hilary Allen: Yeah. I mean I wouldn’t say that that’s a good thing, but yeah, so, you know, they, they basically built the crypto industry. So, you know, we, we, the, the narrative around crypto is this organic sort of community of cyberpunks and libertarians. But, but they really built that industry. They were early investors in Coinbase. That was their first crypto investment. And then they have plowed a lot of money into the industry and it’s sort of, their seal of approval has been what’s attracted people to it. And you know, part of what Andreessen Horowitz does is it doesn’t just invest, it does aggressive marketing campaigns for the things that they’ve invested in, aggressive lobbying. So they’ve really been at the forefront for trying to get the laws changed to accommodate their business models. So yeah, there’s, there’s crypto, but they’ve also been at the sort of the forefront of, I always, there’s one of the do not pays, I think it’s a firm that’s theirs. I always get mixed up. They, they were very early investors in Robinhood, the FinTech trading stock app, which

[00:23:39] Barry Ritholtz: Originally started out as a stock app and then it became eventually a crypto app and now it’s a bet on anything app.

[00:23:46] Hilary Allen: Yeah. And again, that is a company that by the time it IPO’d had racked up all kinds of fines from the SEC and FINRA because it was violating laws left, right and center. You know, it was one of the first to offer commission free brokerage. Right. But as the chestnut goes, if you’re not paying for the product, you are the product. And it makes most of its money from payment for order flow and was not clear with its customers in the early years about that, how that was going on and how they get paid a lot more for your options trades than your regular stock trades because more

[00:24:28] Barry Ritholtz: Profitable.

[00:24:28] Hilary Allen: Yeah. More profitable for the Citadel Securities of this world to, to take those. Yeah.

[00:24:33] Barry Ritholtz: Huh. Really kind of interesting. And yet at the same time you have a chapter in your book, Silicon Valley Welfare Queen, explain, I thought that these are, you know, Ayn Randian libertarians that don’t wanna suckle off the teat of big government. And these are people that are builders and self-made people. You’re arguing not so much.

[00:25:01] Hilary Allen: Well, they don’t want us suckling on the teat of the state because they might have to fund that with taxes, but, but they’re okay suckling themselves.

[00:25:08] Barry Ritholtz: Right. So, so give us a few examples what companies started out as welfare queens.

[00:25:14] Hilary Allen: Well, I mean, again, the, the whole story of, of tech, the, the internet and smartphone boom is very much based on technologies developed by the government.

[00:25:25] Barry Ritholtz: DARPA and the whole internet.

[00:25:26] Hilary Allen: Exactly. And you know, and, and I think if you look at the iPhone, a lot of the individual technologies that went into that, again came from everything.

[00:25:34] Barry Ritholtz: With microwaves comes outta NASA, right? Yeah.

[00:25:37] Hilary Allen: So, you know, first of all, this, this entirely self-made story falls apart right there, because as I mentioned earlier, if you’ve only got six years to turn around a technology, you’re not really investing in prototypes. In thinking really hard about physical hardware and how that works, you’re really looking for a software thing that you can gin up pretty quickly. And so the really long-term investment comes from the state and, and has always done. And then it’s commercialized, you know, and I think that that sort of has worked well except that you get to the point where the, you know, the venture capitalists who are commercializing are saying, well, we shouldn’t have to pay any taxes to fund the state that develops these technologies. They also benefit, as I said, enormously from laws that they lobbied for in the late seventies, I believe changes to ERISA, which allowed pension funds to invest in venture capital, basically didn’t exist before. Hmm. And at that same period, they were lobbying for changes to the capital gains taxation.

[00:26:42] Barry Ritholtz: Well you have the carried interest loophole. Exactly. Which continues to persist. I’m drawing a blank on the author’s name. There’s a book, Americana, 400 years of technological innovation that makes the argument you’re making go back to the telegraph funded by Congress, go back to railroad, like every major technological innovation or most major innovations got seeded with the government and then eventually the private sector takes over. And what has changed in recent years is that public private partnerships seems to have broken.

[00:27:20] Hilary Allen: Yeah, actually, so the book I really like on this is Margaret O’Mara’s book The Code, who does, she does a great history of Silicon Valley. And yeah, I think the, the understanding that there was a quid pro quo has sort of fallen away. So always the private sector has commercialized this, this technology, but if we have an unwillingness to sort of pay any taxes, if we have an unwillingness to invest in government capacity to invest in universities where so much of this stuff is developed, you know, you take Marc Andreessen, he, you know, he got his start because he was lucky enough to be a student at the University of Illinois at the time where they had a special grant to look at the beginnings of the internet. He worked on a team there that developed a prototype internet browser and then he went into the private sector and they let him build one from the private sector and that was Netscape and that’s how he made his fortune. So he was sort of in the right place at the right time to take advantage of public investment in this kind of thing. And yet this is the kind of thing that we’re seeing that these leading venture capitalists wanna shut down.

[00:28:36] Barry Ritholtz: Huh. Really, really interesting. Since we’ve been talking about books, you’ve, you’ve criticized Abundance, which is by Derek Thompson. And Ezra Klein has, the whole concept of abundance is sort of a sexy way to make excuses for techno solutions. Tell us a little bit about that.

[00:28:55] Hilary Allen: Yeah, so this is, this is something I get into a lot of conversations with people these days because I think there are some elements of the original sort of abundance agenda that are very appealing to people in terms of, for example, increasing housing capacity. And I, I do think that that is something that needs to happen and has to be done in the right way. But if you look at who is funding the abundance movement, they have conferences, et cetera, it is Andreessen Horowitz and other people from Silicon Valley. And it seems to be this attempt to essentially put a, a happier face on the deregulatory project that Silicon Valley is looking for to sort of make it seem kinder, gentler and more progressive. Because the abundance movement is sort of in a nutshell is supposed to be, well we shouldn’t have artificial scarcity, we should build more of what we want to do, that we should take away some of the roadblocks that are getting in our own way. And when you say it like that, it’s sort of hard to disagree with, well

[00:29:55] Barry Ritholtz: That works for housing. You, you have NIMBYism with housing, but when you take that away, it also means you’re gonna end up with perhaps high rises or multifamily units in a suburban area that some people don’t want in their neighborhood. There’s always a series of trade-offs with people who are already there versus people want to get there. What is the specific problem with abundance as a philosophy towards building more of what we want as a society?

[00:30:27] Hilary Allen: Because it’s who gets to decide what more of what we want is. And if you look at who’s funding the abundance agenda, it is the billions of the tech elite. And these are people who have really shown that they are quite willing to run roughshod over regulations that are there to protect the public from harm if that enables them to profit. And so I am just skeptical that a movement that is funded by these people is really going to be prioritizing the kinds of projects that would benefit the economically precarious. I think it’s more likely that it’ll be benefiting themselves and will lose protections for people with less voice that are currently in place.

[00:31:08] Barry Ritholtz: So what sort of overhyped products do you think best explain the problems with this approach? Like what are these companies putting out that either is a result of regulatory capture or just don’t do what they promised? ‘Cause you would think that in the world of venture, either your product finds an audience, it finds a customer base or it doesn’t and fails and that goes outta business.

[00:31:37] Hilary Allen: Yeah. So that’s sort of the perverted part of this is that that market logic, like, you know, survival of the fittest because of all the subsidies that benefit venture capital, that doesn’t really apply that logic anymore. So, you know, give

[00:31:50] Barry Ritholtz: Us an example.

[00:31:51] Hilary Allen: Crypto, crypto should have died many times already. Particularly it should have died in 2022. When we had the big crypto winter at that time, particularly Andreessen Horowitz crypto had this huge war chest of funds that they had raised and they stopped investing in crypto startups at that point because, you know, everything was done. But what they started using that money for was lobbying political spending. And they really worked very hard on members of Congress to essentially create laws that would allow the crypto industry to keep doing what they’re doing, which was not allowed under the securities laws as they were. So the whole business model was regulatory arbitrage. They wanted laws that would sort of give a patina of legitimacy and hopefully encourage institutional investment, attract more money to the space, but not actually make them have to, for example, like Coinbase combines the functions of a broker dealer and an exchange that’s not allowed in securities. You can see why there’s all kinds of conflicts of interest that come,

[00:33:02] Barry Ritholtz: Right? Either you’re an exchange or a brokerage firm, not both.

[00:33:05] Hilary Allen: But in crypto you’re both right. And so if you applied the securities laws to crypto, they would have to disaggregate and basically would probably destroy their business model. So what they wanted was a law that said, no, it’s fine, crypto special, you do both. And so that, that really an industry that should have failed is, you know, again, rising, being propped up all through this sort of aggressive political spending. And, and I mean, I’ve talked to people in Congress off the record who have said that they’ve only voted for these laws because they’re afraid that if they don’t, that crypto industries will target them.

[00:33:48] Barry Ritholtz: Hmm. What other products do you think are, are overhyped and, and fail to satisfy their markets?

[00:33:55] Hilary Allen: Well, right now the obvious answer is a lot of the AI products, the anything sort of, it, it’s hard when you talk about AI because it’s such an umbrella term for so many different things, right? I

[00:34:06] Barry Ritholtz: I have Perplexity on my phone. It, it does a better job with search than Google does. I get better, more comprehensive answers. What’s wrong with AI?

[00:34:18] Hilary Allen: Well, let me disaggregate it first because there’s plenty of AI that there’s nothing wrong with, right? So AI is not intelligent in any way, shape, or form, right? It’s a marketing term. What it is is it’s an applied statistical engine. You have an algorithm that looks for patterns in data and then acts accordingly. And that kind of technology has been around for a long time. It does. Like for example, it’s great for fraud detection in a bank for credit card transactions for example. So that, you know, that’s, that’s an A plus use of, of AI. But the last few years everybody has been pouring everything they’ve got into these LLM based tools, these large language model based tools. So these are tools that can, you know, old AI tools would just sort of classify something, put something in a group or, or predict something. But, but now we have these tools that generate content, particularly text, but also, you know, video, music, et cetera. And there are so many problems with this technology because it’s being sold as technology that can replace humans, right? That that can basically, it’s worth throwing trillions of dollars into this because of the productivity gains that will get by firing all the humans, essentially is, is the story they’re telling. First of all, that would be great,

[00:35:40] Barry Ritholtz: Right? That’s a problem in and of itself. The, the way I have heard it described that’s a little less catastrophic is this is gonna make everybody more efficient, more productive, it’ll make companies more profitable and we’ll all be able to do more with our existing staff than having to go out and hire hundreds of more people.

[00:36:06] Hilary Allen: But that is not true, sadly. That’s the pitch line, right? So these, these tools make a lot of mistakes. You know, even the very best ones make mistakes. It’s,

[00:36:17] Barry Ritholtz: We, we’ve seen a lot of attorneys, you and I are both attorneys, a lot of judges have been calling out attorneys who theoretically are supposed to be doing this on their own and instead are outsourcing it to AI and all of its hallucinations and citing cases that don’t exist. The assumption is that’s gonna get better eventually.

[00:36:37] Hilary Allen: But it won’t. So this is, this is the problem. But it won’t, but it won’t. So these things are statistical engines, right? They, they can’t check for accuracy ’cause they don’t understand accuracy as a concept, right? There’s no reasoning. It’s, it’s literally, the, the most statistically most likely word after the last word I gave you is this word. There is no way to make that care about accuracy. ‘Cause it’s, it’s, it’s not a, it’s not a thinking machine. And I think there’s increasing acceptance that these, these models have hit a wall and they are as accurate as they are going to get. Really?

[00:37:15] Barry Ritholtz: Yeah. That’s kind of, that’s kind of fascinating. My concern was, at least on the legal side, hey, you have this existing body of work and all this research and brief writing and arguments that exist as of now, if you’re gonna replace people from doing that, are you gonna freeze the state of legal knowledge at 2026 and five or 10 years from now? If you don’t have people writing these briefs, you don’t have people writing these decisions, how can AI respond to what’s taken place over the past 10 years if we don’t have the humans actually doing the grunt work?

[00:37:51] Hilary Allen: Yeah, I mean there’s a, there’s, I mean I think those kinds of concerns have been expressed very much in the cultural context. You know, if, if, if we disincentivize creators from making new music and new art or is this it, are we stuck with, with what we’ve got with something like the law? One of the challenges is that, you know, these large language models, they don’t get updated on a day-to-day basis. You know, there’s, there’s sort of a stop point and then they, they don’t know, well they don’t know anything that they don’t have the data from after a certain date. So that, that’s a limitation. But the thing I worry most about with the law is that you have to be able to spot the hallucinations or you’re gonna get yourself in very big trouble. And I think this is true for a lot of different fields.

[00:38:40] Hilary Allen: And, and this is again just to digress a little, why the, the profitability narrative is not true, right? Because the only place where you can just put this content out and just leave it there is in very low stakes places, right? Where it doesn’t matter if you get something wrong, but even, you know, things that you wouldn’t think are such a big deal have proved to be quite high stakes. So Air Canada had a chatbot that told a customer that if they wanted to apply for a bereavement discount for a flight, they could do that after their flight was done. Now that’s not Air Canada’s policy. They, you had to do it in advance. And so this customer tried to get their refund after the fact. And Air Canada said, well the chatbot got it wrong. Too bad. So sad for you and it’s your

[00:39:27] Barry Ritholtz: Chatbot, you own, you are responsible for it. Exactly. Not, not my mistake. Your mistake.

[00:39:31] Hilary Allen: Exactly. And so even in these sort of reasonably low stakes customer service interactions, there’s reason to be really worried about inaccuracy. Now you start dialing up to things, to medical advice, legal advice, you know, it’s just you, you can’t rely on them. And I worry that we’re putting people in a very difficult position because it’s a, it’s a lot easier to get something right when you write it yourself than it is to find mistakes in something someone else has put together. Right? So

[00:40:01] Barry Ritholtz: Let me push back a little bit ’cause I’ve been watching the AI reading medical scans and at some point last year, or maybe it was two years ago, the, the technology theoretically passed the accuracy rate of humans, fewer false positives, more identifying missed negatives that should have been positive than people. Is, is that not accurate or where, where are we with, with the medical application of that?

[00:40:37] Hilary Allen: So this is why I think it’s so important to disaggregate the different kinds of AI because that is not sort of LLM based AI and some, as I said, some of those tools are great, I can’t weigh in on medical imaging and things like that. So it may very well be the case. What I’m talking about is, you know, what, if you’ve got, you know, a doctor coming up with instructions for a care plan for their patients and they let the AI do it, right? If there’s a mistake in there, they’re much less likely to catch it. If the AI, because you, you know, you know how things go, you’ll be expected to look at more of these ’cause you’re not generating them yourself. Right? And it’s always easier to get things right when you do it yourself than when you’re reviewing someone else. I mean, when we were lawyers, we used to, that’s why you wanna have the pen on contracts. You wanna, you wanna hide things from the other side and now it’s, now it’s the AI hiding stuff from you. And I worry that especially with younger lawyers coming up through the ranks who are encouraged to rely on these tools from the beginning, who won’t actually develop the skills because you, you don’t learn well when you sort of don’t process it yourself. So if you’re, you spent your whole career using AI, you’re not gonna be able to spot the problems in the AI and

[00:41:53] Barry Ritholtz: The, you’re not gonna have the skillset.

[00:41:55] Hilary Allen: No. And so then I’m worried about, you know, those young lawyers getting sued for malpractice because they missed something that the AI generated, but they were never even given the opportunity to learn how to spot it themselves. It’s,

[00:42:06] Barry Ritholtz: It’s a problem with the rungs on the ladder being removed, especially we see that now manifesting itself, the unemployment rate of the under 30 is about double what it is for the national unemployment rate. And I can’t help but wonder how much of that is somehow related to the proliferation of AI tools for white collar jobs.

[00:42:30] Hilary Allen: I think, you know, Cory Doctorow who does a lot of work in the tech space, has a great quote on this that I’m gonna butcher a little, not say it quite as well as he does it, but he said the AI can’t do your job, but the AI salesman can convince your boss to replace you with AI that can’t do your job. Right. So it’s, I think you’re right that there is at this moment a, you know, a, I mean it’s also hard to say how much of this is AI washing as opposed to real AI displacement, right? The economy’s not in a great place right now. People don’t wanna hire anyway. It looks a lot better if you say, well we’re not hiring ’cause we’re replacing them with AI than just, huh, we’re having a rough time. We’re not hiring.

[00:43:14] Barry Ritholtz: AI washing is a, a phrase I haven’t heard used in modern parlance yet, but it certainly makes a whole lot of sense. The line I heard, and I don’t know where I’m stealing this from, is you’re not gonna be replaced by AI. You are gonna be replaced by somebody with a greater facility working with AI than you have. And it sort of creates a self-fulfilling arms race to make sure you, you learn how to use that tool. Otherwise you’re at risk for being replaced by somebody who knows how to use that tool.

[00:43:44] Hilary Allen: I’ve heard that too, but I don’t think these tools are that hard to use, right? I mean, that’s a failure on the part of the AI companies if they’re so hard to use, right? It wasn’t hard to use Google search.

[00:43:54] Barry Ritholtz: Perplexity and, and even ChatGPT is, is absolutely easy as pie to use. I don’t, I don’t find them difficult. Sometimes you have to keep changing the prompts to get an improved answer. Like if you just ask a question and walk away, well then you’re getting what everybody gets. But if you, I, I don’t, I don’t really buy into the prompt engineer job title, but a little exposure is the more you ask it and the more you vary it, you get a variety of answers and eventually you come up with something, oh, that’s interesting and different. Let me, let me take a look at that.

[00:44:31] Hilary Allen: So I, I mean I have strong feelings about this as an educator because if these tools are worth their salt, it shouldn’t take our students long to figure out how to use them, right? Right. So why are we bringing them into education where what they really need to learn is how to spot hallucinations, how to think critically so that if they are going to use these tools later, they can use them to the best of their abilities. This whole arms race sense of, well they need to use them in school so they don’t get left behind. I’m like, it, it didn’t take long to learn how to Google, they’ll be fine.

[00:45:01] Barry Ritholtz: Hmm. You’ve been pretty critical of things like crypto and stablecoin. We’re going to get to those in a moment. I wanna talk about some other things you’ve discussed. You’ve brought up the whole idea of technology as a branding exercise. Phrases like democratizing finance, disruptive technology, banking the unbanked. You’ve described these as just, you know, marketing and not really accomplishing anything. Tell us a little bit about those and, and give us some examples.

[00:45:38] Hilary Allen: Sure. I mean, I think at the heart of all this is, is innovation speak and innovation worship, right? When we alluded to that earlier, the sense that anything that is innovative is inherently good and must therefore be permitted at all costs. And that is sort of the font of a lot of the rhetoric and narrative that we get out of Silicon Valley that ultimately is there to attract funding, yes, but also to procure legal treatment that facilitates what they wanna do. It, it actually creates often an unlevel legal playing field where you have the incumbents who have to comply with all the laws and then the disruptors, as you say, who don’t have to comply with all the laws and can succeed on that basis, even if their product isn’t superior in the way we would typically expect a disruptor’s product to be. So yeah, I mean, disruptive innovation, you know, goes back to Clayton Christensen and, and the Innovator’s Dilemma, this sense that if you, if you stay still and just make good products, you’ll be outcompeted by someone who is trying to do things a little differently. But you know, there, there’s no real formula that you can take away from that as to what, you know, disruptive is in the eye of the beholder.

[00:47:00] Barry Ritholtz: So, so let me push back on that a little bit. And all my VC friends, I could just hear their voices in my head and the pushback is, look, most new companies fail. Most new technologies crash and burn. Most new ideas never make it. And even the best of the best VCs, they’ll make a hundred investments for that one moonshot that works out. And most of the other 99 are at best break even, but mostly losers. How could you say this is true? Oh, and real innovation often finds itself in between the regulatory regime because the technology that’s being created was never anticipated by the regulators or, or anybody else. Fair, fair pushback.

[00:47:51] Hilary Allen: A lot of points that I would quibble with there. Some’s fair, quibble away, quibble away. Alright, so there’s this idea that the law is a barrier to innovation because law is old and innovation is new and the law couldn’t possibly have contemplated the innovation. The story about the innovation is what makes it new, right? Most of the things that we’re seeing in the FinTech space, they’re not that new, right? As I said, you know, we’ve got FinTech lending has a lot of the things that we didn’t like about payday lending, right? Why shouldn’t the laws from payday lending apply? Crypto, basically, I mean the, the crypto markets for all the world looked like the stocks and bonds in the unregulated markets of the 1920s. We saw how that ended. They ended in such a spectacular crash that we ended up with the securities laws. Why shouldn’t they apply?

[00:48:39] Hilary Allen: What’s, what’s so different, right? So this construction of novelty is something that is done intentionally as, as a narrative. Now I fully appreciate that we need the optimists in this world who are gonna try new things. And, and, and I say that very early on in the book, the people who these stories are useful because they attract funding to new things. So I’m not saying we should do away with it completely. My argument is that the, the yin and yang, the balance between the optimists and the realists is badly out of whack because we give so much deference to the stories about innovation, about disruption, about how technology can solve problems that have been with us for centuries. We can magically get rid of intermediaries now with blockchain technology apparently, except

[00:49:30] Barry Ritholtz: We can. Well that was one of the, that was one of the story narratives was disintermediation and until it no longer was the story, but, but let’s talk about some specific companies that you’ve mentioned that you’ve written about, and I, and I wanna get your sense on it. And, and the oldest one was PayPal. To this day. And, and I was a PayPal user back in the 1990s with eBay and those sort of things. To this day, I don’t understand what they did that was any different than a credit card other than being a bit of middleware that eventually became a rentier. Why not just use a credit card? Why do I need PayPal between me and Amazon or me and eBay?

[00:50:16] Hilary Allen: So this is really an interesting story and I learned a whole lot about this in research for this book by reading Max Chafkin’s book, The Contrarian about Peter Thiel and the start of the beginning of PayPal. And in fact, the idea for PayPal came from the same place that the idea for crypto has come from, which is this, this techno libertarian idea of we don’t like regulation, we don’t like central banks, we would like to have private money and we would like technology to help us have private money. And PayPal wasn’t the only one of these kinds of startups back in the early .com bubble. So PayPal I think succeeded because it sort of lucked into this deal with eBay, as you said, right? It, it sort of had no distinguishing features as far as I can tell that made it any superior to the Beans and the Floos of this world. It lucked into this deal with, with eBay. And so,

[00:51:13] Barry Ritholtz: And eventually eBay buys them to solve their, I guess, credit card management problem. I don’t really understand. Yeah. I still, you know, 20, 25 years later, I still don’t understand why they were necessary.

[00:51:28] Hilary Allen: I think, yeah, I mean my, my knowledge of this comes primarily from reading Max Chafkin’s book, which I highly recommend, but that’s, that’s my understanding too. And so, you know, they are a payments technology. I too struggle to sort of understand what they offer that a credit card doesn’t in many ways. One thing they are though is they are sort of the OG regulatory arbitrage story in FinTech, right? So, you know, I’ve said so much of FinTech is actually about arbitraging the law rather than technological superiority. PayPal from the beginning was flaunting quite aggressively the banking laws because only banks are allowed to accept deposits and people were keeping money in their PayPal wallets and for all the world that looks like keeping a deposit. Peter Thiel from the beginning was very aggressive on the lobbying to make sure that that was not considered deposit taking. Early on, there were multiple states that were investigating it because they thought it was the unlawful taking of deposits. He lobbied heavily in Congress and lobbied heavily at the FDIC and ultimately, you know, that worked. And so I think that has sort of been the prototype, that blitzscaling prototype. I think people perhaps underestimate the degree to which blitzscaling is really about playing it on an unlevel legal playing field.

[00:52:54] Barry Ritholtz: Let, let’s talk about stablecoins. What sort of value do they provide?

[00:52:59] Hilary Allen: Again, unless you are trying to do illicit transactions or gamble, not a whole lot, right? So,

[00:53:05] Barry Ritholtz: Well, a stablecoin is worth a dollar and it promises to always be worth a dollar. Don’t we have dollars? Why do I need a stablecoin?

[00:53:13] Hilary Allen: Well, you need a stablecoin often to do illicit payments. So if you want, you know, if you’re, they’re, they’re very popular, for example, with all kinds of drug cartels and they’re good for sanctions evasion. They’re also very good if you want to gamble in crypto and you wanna use it as sort of a cash management tool in between crypto investments, kind of like a money market mutual fund in your brokerage account for parking funds in between crypto gambling, but they’ve really never had any utility in any big way as a legal payments mechanism.

[00:53:48] Barry Ritholtz: Alright, so what about, you mentioned the blockchain. I keep reading that blockchain is gonna allow us to use smart contracts and have things happen automatically that now have to be manual. What, what’s the problem with blockchain?

[00:54:04] Hilary Allen: Well, first of all, smart contracts can work without a blockchain. Smart contracts predate blockchains, they can run on all kinds of databases. So if, if you want that kind of functionality and it has pros and cons, and I’ve written about this a ton, you can have that without a blockchain. The reason why you don’t wanna have it on a blockchain, and this is something that does not get anywhere near the attention it needs, is that there’s all kinds of operational risks associated with the blockchains themselves. So blockchains are software, they are maintained by, in the case of the Bitcoin blockchain, just a few individuals, in the case of the Ethereum blockchain, it’s the Ethereum Foundation. They’re not regulated at all. They have no obligation to invest in cybersecurity, to invest in getting the blockchains up and running again. Should something go wrong. You’re just, you’re really sort of, as I sometimes say, YOLO-ing operational risk with regards to these, these blockchains. And so if you want smart contract functionality, like don’t use a blockchain.

[00:55:11] Barry Ritholtz: Huh? Coming up we continue our conversation with Professor Hilary Allen discussing her new book, FinTech Dystopia, a summer beach read about Silicon Valley and how it’s ruining things. I’m Barry Ritholtz, you are listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio.

[00:55:43] Barry Ritholtz: I am Barry Ritholtz. You are listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio. My extra special guest this week is Hilary Allen. She teaches at the American University, Washington College of Law in Washington DC where she specializes in regulation of financial and technology laws. So we’ve mentioned stablecoin, we’ve mentioned blockchain. Is there any value in any of the crypto coins, be it Bitcoin or Ethereum? I know we, we can’t actually describe the last hundred coins that are out there on the radio. We’ll, we’ll violate George Carlin’s seven words, you can’t say on TV or radio, but there’s a, outside of the, you know, the Doge coins and everything below that, what’s the value of the first five or so cryptocurrencies? Is there anything worthwhile to these or is this just a solution in search of a problem? It’s

[00:56:44] Hilary Allen: A solution in search of a problem. I mean, essentially even, so Bitcoin often is seen as the most credible of these because it’s been around the longest and has the largest,

[00:56:53] Barry Ritholtz: It’s Bitcoin and ETH, that’s, those are the two I hear about the most.

[00:56:57] Hilary Allen: But both of them are essentially Ponzi in the sense that there’s nothing backing them. The only reason they have value is because someone else might buy them from you. If they choose not to, it could go to zero. And actually, someone put it to me this way, it’s not that they could go to zero, they could go to less than zero because they don’t even have any assets that could be used to administer a winding up. Right, right. And, and, and that’s expensive. You know, you, you’re gonna get the lawyers and the courts and everybody involved. That’s,

[00:57:25] Barry Ritholtz: Well you’re not suggesting that if you own Bitcoin you may have a liability down the road. Is that, is that the implication?

[00:57:31] Hilary Allen: No, I’m just saying that if, if someone was trying to work out the end of one of these things, there wouldn’t even be, you know, office furniture you could sell to pay the lawyers.

[00:57:42] Barry Ritholtz: Okay. You, you’ve written about startups like Theranos, I remember Juicero,

[00:57:51] Hilary Allen: Juicero is

[00:57:51] Barry Ritholtz: The best. Tell us a little bit about those two and was that just, you know, one of these products that just didn’t work out? What, what’s the problem with that technology solution to our juicing problems?

[00:58:06] Hilary Allen: So Juicero is just my favorite metaphor for all of this. So for those of you who are unfamiliar with the, the gift that is Juicero, so basically this was a machine that cost hundreds of dollars. It was wifi enabled and well

[00:58:19] Barry Ritholtz: Roll back. The, the guy, and you described this in the book, the guy who invented this previously had set up a fairly successful, was it a juicing chain of companies that got bought. And so he had some credibility in the space and now I’m not gonna run restaurants, I’m going to create a technology that people can juice at home.

[00:58:42] Hilary Allen: And it was venture funded. They put a lot of money into this.

[00:58:45] Barry Ritholtz: A hundred plus million dollars.

[00:58:46] Hilary Allen: And these, these, what it did was it squeezed these juice pouches and the problem was that people could just squeeze the juice pouches with their bare hands and get all the juice.

[00:58:56] Barry Ritholtz: Out. There was, there was a notorious Bloomberg article about this, but why it raises the question, did the company already squeeze the juice and put in these pouches? Why didn’t they, like why wasn’t this set up so that you can actually put fresh fruit? Like doesn’t it defeat the purpose if you’re buying pouches or was the whole idea the razorblade model?

[00:59:22] Hilary Allen: So, I mean, the reason why I love this as a metaphor is it, it really gets at this, this techno solutionism, which is one of the concepts that I’m really coming for in this book. And techno solutionism is this idea that everything in our world can be reduced into a technology problem. And that the only reason we haven’t solved certain things is because we haven’t spent enough time and money on developing the technology. And, and what that does is it, it sort of flattens problems into, it gets rid of the human messiness. It flattens problems, it ignores domain expertise. People who’ve been working in particular fields for a long time and know a lot of non-tech stuff, it, it sort of dismisses their expertise. And sadly, you know, there’s just this magic associated with technology at this point. And, and as I said, I’m not anti-technology.

[01:00:11] Hilary Allen: A lot of it’s great, but it doesn’t deserve the level of sort of magical deference that we give it. It can’t solve all our problems. And when we get into this mindset where we think that if we throw enough money at technology, it can solve anything and it will always be the best solutions. We end up squeezing pouches with a machine that we could squeeze with our bare hands. And, and a joke that I try and make in the book, it’s like, with AI, we may be better off squeezing things with our bare minds.

[01:00:39] Barry Ritholtz: So one more company I have to ask about, Theranos. I love the book Bad Blood. What really went into details about how corrosive and co-opting the company itself was for everybody around it, including the attorneys and, and all sorts of other bad actors. Why wasn’t Theranos just an idea that didn’t work? That you can’t, if you wanna draw blood from a vein, you have to draw blood from a vein. You can’t just prick your fingertip and think that’s gonna be the same as venous draws.

[01:01:16] Hilary Allen: Well, so that’s the thing with this techno solutionism, it presumes that everything is a tech problem waiting to be solved. It doesn’t even countenance the possibility that there may not be a technological solution for what you wanna do. That the technology you want may not be able to do the thing you want it to do. And when you have that sort of collective sense that I think we have now that if we throw enough money at any technology, it can solve any problem we give it. You can see how people get so susceptible to being sort of drawn in the stories that outright con people like Elizabeth Holmes might be telling, but also the stories that were being told about, you know, about AI right now and about crypto. You know, the more you know about these technologies, the less impressive they seem and the more clearly it becomes illuminated that, that they just can’t do a lot of the things that they’re going to do. But that’s so counter to how we typically talk about technologies that it sort of, it feels a bit weird to talk like that and, and you sort of, you’re going against societal norms in a way. And so one of the things that I really wanted to do with this is to start making it easier to talk about these things critically to be not such an outlier to express your frustrations. And I think we’re actually having a moment like that about AI. ‘Cause so many people really hate it. Hmm.

[01:02:45] Barry Ritholtz: Really? So, so you use the phrase techno solutionism and Theranos is really the poster child for that. ‘Cause as you’re describing a lot of these things, I am recalling the story. Especially what you’re referring to with domain expertise. She had no medical or medical device training. None of the VCs who put money into Theranos were healthcare, biotech, medical devices. Like they all passed. Eventually she hired a number of people to try and with some background, but they seemed to turn over pretty quickly because no, you can’t do that. What, you just pricking the skin, you’re getting all the interstitial tissue and fluids and you’re corrupting the sample that you want to test for something. You have the, the reason we draw from the vein is very medically specific and yet it attracted Henry Kissinger and all sorts of big law firms and everybody plowed in. She’s the next Steve Jobs, the youngest self-made female billionaire. What is it about us that we’re just so susceptible to buying into these narrative tales that turn out to be nonsense?

[01:04:08] Hilary Allen: So I mean, part of it is that we’re humans and humans have often sort of been snowed by things that are flashy and shiny and exciting. I mean, that, that’s just very much the human condition. Some of the stuff I talk about in the, in the book that I really enjoyed working on was the cognitive psychology aspects of it. You know, sort of when we hear certain stories, it’s very difficult to budge ourselves and, and be contrarian. And I was, as I was saying earlier, so you sort of need a, a collective tipping point where people start to question it. So you don’t feel like an outlier or the norm when you start to question these things. And so I think there’s a role for media here. I think there’s a role for education. Unfortunately, the people who benefit from techno solutionism also know this and have a very big media presence and invest a lot in education. So it’s, it’s an uphill battle to start talking about these things differently. But, you know, ultimately we, we are all human and it’s nicer to believe that something will succeed than that it will fail. I mean, you might not think I’d be much fun at cocktail parties, although I am.

[01:05:24] Barry Ritholtz: And the book is available for free at fintechdystopia.com. Let’s jump to our final questions, our favorite questions we ask all of our guests. Starting with tell us about your mentors who helped steer your career.

[01:05:42] Hilary Allen: So my first mentor is probably my first law firm partner boss in, in Australia, Stephen Kavanaugh. And I had thought I was going to be an IP lawyer, but we had a rotation system and I ended up in his financial services practice. And he was just a wonderful person to work for. It was a time when the law had just changed in Australia and, and he really was willing to hear what I had to say about this, this new law. And so it was just, I just felt very invested in and that was lovely. And then I think as an academic, Patricia McCoy, who I adore sort of, I have had a very non-traditional path to academia. I had more practice experience than is usually the case. I had fewer of the bells and whistles credentials that people usually have. And again, she just saw in me someone who was really passionate about preventing financial crises, about sort of systemic risk and, and sort of was willing to look through the fact that I wasn’t as polished as most of the other people trying to enter academia and support me. And I was very grateful for that.

[01:06:54] Barry Ritholtz: We’ve talked about a run of different books. What are some of your favorites? What are you reading right now?

[01:07:01] Hilary Allen: Oh, I was an English lit major. So I’ve, I have many favorites. I’m, I’m very into the dystopian tracks. So Handmaid’s Tale, surprise, 1984. Yeah, surprise. I just finished The Parable of the Sower in that vein, which was

[01:07:13] Barry Ritholtz: Parable of the,

[01:07:14] Hilary Allen: The Parable of the Sower, Octavia Butler. I also have always had a soft spot for really good children’s literature. So Philip Pullman’s Dark Materials trilogy is one of my favorites. And and right now I’m reading with my kids Catherine Rundell’s books Impossible Creatures and The Poison King. And it’s just, they’re just so good. And then work-wise, I’ve just started Jacob Silverman’s Gilded Rage, which is very much on point for the conversation we’re having.

[01:07:45] Barry Ritholtz: Gilded Rage, you know, we talked about a few crypto related books. Did you see Zeke Faux’s

[01:07:52] Hilary Allen: Of course, Number Go Up.

[01:07:53] Barry Ritholtz: It, it, it really is just an astonishing, astonishing work. What sort of advice would you give to a recent college grad interested in a career in whether it was law, financial technology, regulation? What’s your advice to those people?

[01:08:11] Hilary Allen: It’s a really hard time for them, and I, I talk to my students a lot about the careers and, you know, things are, the ground is shifting under our feet and in this time of uncertainty, it’s really, it’s really hard to figure out what to do. So I would recommend investing in the fundamentals. And I think it’s, it’s hard to do when AI is being pushed, but, but becoming a good communicator, learning how to write and speak to people clearly, will never, I think, go outta fashion. And investing in relationships, again, we’re in this time where everything is sort of becoming technologized and atomized, et cetera. But in my career, having good relationships with people, and I’m pretty sure you’ll agree with this, has been one of the most successful things that has helped me along the way. And so just investing in personal relationships, I think is, is always good advice.

[01:08:59] Barry Ritholtz: And our final question, what do you know about the world of FinTech investing regulation today that might have been useful 20, 25 years ago?

[01:09:11] Hilary Allen: Well, honestly, I’m not sure that there’s much, because the world was very different 20, 25 years ago. You know, I, I always just invested in, in index funds basically. And, and, you know, and, and that worked out frankly, great for me.

[01:09:27] Barry Ritholtz: Worked

[01:09:28] Hilary Allen: Out really well. The challenge is, and I study financial crises, the challenge is that when things go horribly wrong, everything is correlated. Everything is correlated.

[01:09:39] Barry Ritholtz: All correlations go to one in a crisis for sure.

[01:09:41] Hilary Allen: And I think we’re on the brink of a crisis.

[01:09:45] Barry Ritholtz: When you say on the brink, days, weeks, months, years.

[01:09:49] Hilary Allen: Ah, well, John Maynard Keynes said that the markets can stay irrational longer than you and I can stay solvent. So I will never put a timeframe on it, but I, you know, all warning indicators are flashing red at the same time as we are pulling back all regulatory apparatus. So I think it’s safe to say we are on the brink of a crisis. How,

[01:10:06] Barry Ritholtz: How could that ever go wrong?

[01:10:09] Hilary Allen: How could it go

[01:10:09] Barry Ritholtz: Wrong? Just regulation leeches the animal spirits. As long as we’re talking about Keynes, it’s all good.

[01:10:18] Hilary Allen: Perhaps not.

[01:10:19] Barry Ritholtz: Perhaps not. Hilary, thank you so much for being so generous with your time. We have been speaking with Hilary Allen, professor of law at American University, Washington College in DC, an author of the book available for free online, FinTech Dystopia, A Summer Beach Read About How Silicon Valley Is Ruining Things. If you enjoy this conversation, well check out any of the 600 previous discussions we’ve had over the past 12 years. You could find those at iTunes, Spotify, YouTube, Bloomberg, or wherever you find your favorite podcast. I would be remiss if I didn’t thank our crack staff that helps put these conversations together each week. Alexis Noriega is my video producer. Sean Russo is my researcher. Anna Luke is my podcast producer.

I’m Barry Ritholtz. You’ve been listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio.

 

~~~

 

 

 

The post Transcript: Hilary Allen on Fintech Dystopia appeared first on The Big Picture.

Jittery Futures Erase Gains Amid AI Doomsday Fears

Zero Hedge -

Jittery Futures Erase Gains Amid AI Doomsday Fears

A short rebound in stocks fizzled after Monday's drop, as worries about the disruptive impact of artificial intelligence continued to unsettle markets which digested yesterday’s AI scare, and await today’s Claude / Anthropic presentation, while preparing for tonight’s State of the Union address (“SOTU”). Some have suggested that Trump may attack power generation risks during SOTU as he deals with affordability.As of 8:00am ET, S&P 500 futures traded unchanged, erasing an earlier 0.3% gain. The benchmark fell 1% in the previous session following a sharp drop in dealer gamma and a report that rehashes well-known fears about AI. Nasdaq 100 contracts climbed 0.1%, as AMD soared 11% on a $100 billion deal with Meta for data-center gear and a minority investment in the chipmaker. Other Mag7 are all mostly higher while an ETF tracking software firms was flat. IBM remained little changed following a 13% tumble. Nvidia Corp. fell 1.2% ahead of its results on Wednesday. Sentiment was also dented after Jamie Dimon said he’s starting to see parallels with the pre-financial crisis era, when a rush to make loans ended disastrously. At midnight, the US's 10% blanket tariff went into effect with Trump threatening to raise to 15%. Bond yields aso reversed an earlier gain and were unchanged while the USD was bid driven by a spike in the USDJPY after Takaichi pushed back on rate hikes. Commodities are seeing a muted move today with Energy up, Metals down, and Ags mixed; oil has closed in a tight range the last 3 sessions and remains in those levels. Today’s macro data focus is weekly ADP, home price indices, regional Fed activity indicators, and Consumer Confidence. 

In premarket trading, Mag 7 stocks:are mostly higher (Alphabet +0.1%, Amazon +0.1%, Apple +0.4%, Nvidia -0.7%, Meta -0.4%, Microsoft +0.1%, Tesla -0.5%)

  • Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) rises 11% as  Meta Platforms Inc. will deploy 6 gigawatts’ worth of data center gear based on processors from the company.
  • Blue Owl (OWL) slips 2% following a downgrade to hold at Deutsche Bank, which also reduces price targets and estimates across its wider alternative asset manager coverage.
  • BWX Technologies (BWXT) rises 8% after the nuclear power company reported adjusted earnings per share and revenue for the fourth-quarter that beat the average analyst estimate.
  • Hims & Hers Health (HIMS) falls 5% after the telehealth company’s guidance projected subdued profits for 1Q and the full year, citing a step-up in investments. While the full-year guidance implied a growth acceleration beyond 1Q, analysts were more cautious given its copycat weight-loss drugs face regulatory risks.
  • Home Depot Inc. (HD) rises 2% after reporting a key sales metric that beat expectations in the latest quarter on steady demand, though the retailer cautioned that macroeconomic challenges remain.
  • Keysight Technologies (KEYS) rises 15% after the measurement instruments company guided for above-20% growth for revenue and earnings in FY26, beating estimates. Booming AI workloads, along with faster growth in other business areas including wireless and defense, are all boosting growth, according to analysts.
  • Kratos (KTOS) falls 3% after the defense contractor forecast revenue for the first quarter that missed the average analyst estimate.
  • MediaAlpha (MAX) rises 11% after the insurance technology platform reported its fourth-quarter results and gave an outlook. Analysts downplayed the risk of AI-related disruption.
  • Palvella Therapeutics (PVLA) rises 29% after the drug developer said a late-stage trial of its experimental therapy for lymphatic malformations met its main goal.
  • Paymentus Holdings (PAY) falls 9% after the cloud-based bill payment company’s revenue guidance for 2026 came in below the average analyst estimate.
  • Planet Fitness (PLNT) falls 5% after the operator of fitness clubs gave an outlook for 2026 adjusted Ebitda growth that implies the profit measure will fall short of Wall Street expectations.
  • Super Group (SGHC) rises 16% as the gaming company’s full-year revenue forecast exceeded Wall Street’s estimates.
  • Vir Biotechnology (VIR) jumps 57% after the drug developer gave updated data from an early-stage trial for its investigative therapy for prostate cancer and said it is collaborating with Astellas Pharma on the same asset.
  • Whirlpool (WHR) falls 8% after the maker of kitchen appliances  announced concurrent separate underwritten public offerings of shares of common stock and depositary shares.
  • Ziff Davis (ZD) falls 10% after the digital media and Internet company reported fourth-quarter results that missed expectations. It also deferred its 2026 outlook as it evaluates options.

In corporate news, Anthropic is said to be offering some current and former employees the ability to sell shares at a valuation of about $350 billion. Meta and EssilorLuxottica are said to be at odds on pricing for smart glasses as demand surges. Jane Street is being sued for alleged insider trading by the administrator winding up the affairs of Terraform Labs.

After yesterday's market fragility which was sparked by last week's plunge in dealer gamma...

... and reinforced by a hypothetical report which echoed what we first said in 2024, nervousness abounds, and the market will be tested again when Anthropic holds its livestream at 9:30 a.m when even more volatility is likely. Adding to nerves, Jamie Dimon said he’s starting to see parallels with the pre-financial crisis era, when a rush to make loans ended disastrously.

The so-called AI scare trade has become a dominant theme for stocks, with selling spreading beyond software to hit insurance brokers, private credit and even real estate services. The flight is one of several shifts beneath the surface of a US market that is little changed in 2026 after years of tech-led gains. Traders are also contending with a range of other risks, from trade uncertainty to brewing tensions between the US and Iran. Focus on Tuesday will turn to President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address and consumer data that, in the previous reading, plunged to the lowest level since 2014. Anthropic meanwhile, will give a demo of its AI enterprise agents.

“We are reducing our risk levels by a notch,” wrote Mohit Kumar, chief economist and strategist for Jefferies International. “Ongoing concerns over AI disruption and the possible exposure to private credit and private equity have made investor sentiment fragile. If we do get an escalation in geopolitical risks, markets may face some wobbles.”

For Emmanuel Cau, head of European equity strategy at Barclays Plc, fears about labor-market disruption need to be counterbalanced by the job creation that typically accompanies technological progress.  As for software stocks, which have now been mispriced, “it’s very hard to go prove the market wrong on that,” Cau told Bloomberg TV. “What we are trying to do from an equity allocation standpoint is to be exposed to some of these old-economy, more tangible parts of the market.”

The quest for shelter from AI disruption has moved Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to push a new basket of capital-heavy companies, including utilities, miners, some industrial firms and even luxury-good makers. The selection has outperformed a basket of capital-light businesses by 35% since the start of 2025.

“Markets are rewarding capacity, networks, infrastructure and engineering complexity—assets that are costly to replicate and less exposed to technological obsolescence,” the Goldman team, including Guillaume Jaisson, said in a note.

In geopolitics, Trump said an Iran strike would be “easily won” but he would prefer a diplomatic deal.

After Trump’s new 10% global tariff went into effect on Tuesday and a timeline for a proposed higher rate of 15% is still in question, investors will listen for any further comments on trade in his State of the Union speech. “It’s going to be a long speech,” Trump said. The US is also said to be readying a spate of additional national security investigations that would enable Trump to impose new duties. An EU assessment found that Trump’s new policy will increase levies on some exports, including cheese and some agricultural products, above the level permitted in their trade pact. 

“The focus for investors will be on three issues: tariffs, Iran and the Fed,” said Joachim Klement, head of strategy at Panmure Liberum. “Any hint that a military strike against Iran is imminent should trigger another rally in oil and gold prices. If Trump uses his platform to bully the Supreme Court or the Fed, Treasury markets will not take that lightly.”

Home Depot, Keurig Dr Pepper and Fidelity National are among companies scheduled to report results before the market open. Home Depot’s commentary on the housing market will be a key focus and whether consumers remain on the sidelines for big projects due to high interest and mortgage rates. Earnings from HP and Workday follow later.

European equities edged lower on Tuesday with banking and insurance stocks leading declines, while automobiles and utilities were the biggest outperformers. The Stoxx 600 falls 0.2% to 626.46 with 242 members down, 351 up, and seven little changed. Here are the biggest movers Tuesday:

  • Convatec rises as much as 11%, most since November 2024, following full-year results that showed stronger-than-expected second-half revenue performance and raised medium-term growth guidance
  • Edenred shares gain as much as 9.3% after the payment solutions firm delivered better earnings and cashflow than anticipated against a backdrop of low expectations, according to Barclays
  • Endesa shares jumped 6.2% to the highest level since June 2008 after the Spanish utility firm reported net income for the full year that beat the average analyst estimate and gave a new guidance that Jefferies says is ahead of consensus
  • Sika shares gain as much as 3.1% after its board of directors proposes to the Annual General Meeting on March 24 that the gross dividend be increased by 2.8% to CHF3.70 from CHF3.60 previous year, according to a statement
  • Banks are the worst performing sector in Europe on Tuesday, tracking declines for US peers, as fears about AI disruption and private credit lending continue to rattle the market
  • Novo Nordisk shares fell as much as 4.4% on Tuesday to the lowest intraday level since June 2021, after analysts cut recommendations and price targets for the Danish drugmaker
  • Rio Tinto shares drop as much as 1.5% in London after Barclays downgrades to equal-weight from overweight. The analyst says the move reflects near-term headwinds, including iron ore seasonality
  • Galenica falls as much as 8.2%, most since July 2022, after UBS downgraded the stock to sell from neutral, expecting liberalization of OTC drug shipments to pose downside risk to sales growth and margin expansion
  • Wienerberger falls as much as 6.6%, the most in 10 months, after Morgan Stanley said the full-year outlook of the brick manufacturer came in below estimates ahead of its capital markets day
  • MTU Aero shares fall as much as 6.4%, the most since April, after the German engine manufacturer’s cash flow missed expectations

Asian stocks showed resilience after US peers witnessed another selloff on AI disruption fears, as investors snapped up shares of the region’s tech hardware companies — particularly semiconductor makers.The MSCI Asia Pacific Index was up 0.1%, reversing an early decline that followed a 1% slide in the S&P 500 Index on Monday. Chipmaking giants TSMC, Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix were the biggest boosts to the Asian benchmark. They also helped key local gauges in Taiwan and South Korea rally more than 2%. The so-called “AI scare trade” was back in focus after a report by Citrini Research outlined the potential risks to various segments of the global economy, and subsequent warnings from Anthropic and Nassim Taleb soured sentiment. Like in some recent episodes of AI-led selloffs, Asia was able to perform better as the region’s tech sector is dominated by tech hardware firms, notably memory and logic chip makers, which are seen benefiting from sustained demand tied to AI infrastructure build-outs. “Clearly semiconductors are huge winners,” Alap Shah, co-author of the Citrini report, said on Bloomberg Television. “Things that are upstream to semiconductors are huge winners — so everything required to construct a data center.”

In FX, the yen tumbled following local media reports that Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi voiced apprehension about more rate hikes in a meeting with Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda. Currency markets otherwise calm, with Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index up 0.1%.

In rates, treasuries are unchanged the curve flatter as 5s30s spread partly unwinds Monday’s sharp steepening move.US 10-year yield near 4.035% is less than 1bp higher on the day with bunds and gilts in the sector outperforming by 1bp and 2bp respectively; 2s10s and 5s30s curve spreads are 0.5bp and 1.5bp tighter on the day. European bonds marginally outperform following UK’s £3 billion auction of 2033 bonds and French manufacturing confidence gauge. US session includes packed economic data and Fed speaker slates as well as a 2-year note auction at 1pm New York time.

In commodities, gold prices are down and below $5,200/oz, but copper rallying on the return of traders in China after the Lunar New Year break. Oil little changed, with Brent sitting around $71.50/barrel. Bitcoin weaker and getting close to $63,000.

The US economic calendar slate includes weekly ADP employment change (8:15am), February Philadelphia Fed non-manufacturing activity (8:30am), December FHFA house price index, 4Q house price purchase index and December S&P Cotality home prices (9am), February Richmond Fed manufacturing index and consumer confidence and December wholesale trade inventories (10am) and February Dallas Fed services activity (10:30am). Fed speaker slate includes Goolsbee (8am, 9:30am), Collins and Bostic (9am), Waller (9:15am), Cook (9:30am) and Barkin (3:15pm)

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 mini unch
  • Nasdaq 100 mini +0.1%,
  • Russell 2000 mini +0.1%
  • Stoxx Europe 600 little changed,
  • DAX -0.1%,
  • CAC 40 little changed
  • 10-year Treasury yield little changed at 4.03%
  • VIX -0.1 points at 20.93
  • Bloomberg Dollar Index little changed at 1190.43,
  • euro unchanged at $1.1785
  • WTI crude +0.3% at $66.49/barrel

Top Overnight News

  • Trump dismissed reports the Pentagon fears a difficult Iran campaign, saying the Joint Chiefs chairman believes military action would be “easily won.” The president insisted he prefers a diplomatic deal. BBG
  • The Trump administration is considering new national security tariffs on a half-dozen industries in the wake of a Supreme Court decision last week that invalidated many of the president’s second-term levies. The new tariffs being considered could cover industries such as large-scale batteries, cast iron and iron fittings, plastic piping, industrial chemicals and power grid and telecom equipment. WSJ
  • US President Trump will use the State of the Union address to sell the public on the economy and unveil new measures to lower cost ahead of the mid-terms: WSJ.
  • China has restricted exports of rare earth magnets and other critical materials to dozens of leading Japanese companies in an escalation of a dispute with Tokyo. FT
  • Chinese AI startup DeepSeek's latest AI model, set to be released as soon as next week, was trained on Nvidia's most advanced AI chip, the Blackwell, a senior Trump administration official said on Monday, in what could represent a violation of U.S. export controls. RTRS
  • Japanese PM Takaichi expressed reservations about additional interest rate hikes during her meeting with Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda last week. FT
  • The UK announced new sanctions on Russia — its biggest since the early months of the Ukraine invasion — targeting energy firms and suppliers of military equipment. BBG
  • Zelenskyy said Russia and Ukraine were at the “beginning of the end” of Europe’s biggest conflict since the second world war, but urged Washington to see through Putin’s negotiating “games.” FT
  • Trump is implementing a new global tariff at 10% rather than the 15% rate announced over the weekend after his defeat at the Supreme Court. His move to apply a 10% for the time being rather than the 15% tariffs follows a backlash to the higher rate from several US trading partners such as the EU and UK. FT
  • Alap Shah, co-author of a Citrini report that triggered yesterday’s selloff, suggested governments consider taxing AI to cushion the impact of job losses. BBG

Trade/Tariffs

  • US President Trump's 10% global tariff rate takes effect.
  • China's Commerce Ministry called on US to abandon unilateral tariff; will adjust countermeasures and monitor US actions. Willing to hold 6th round of trade talks with the US.
  • China MOFCOM adds 20 Japanese companies including Mitsubishi Heavy Industries to its export control list for military activities which bans exports of dual-use items, while it will add another 20 groups to a watch list.
  • EU warns the US that President Trump's new tariff policy breaks the trade agreement.
  • Japan's finance minister Katayama said will closely examine details of US Supreme Court decision on tariffs, adds will steadily carry out US-bound investment package and Japan must be aware that US tariffs on cars remain in effect.
  • Japan's Trade Minister Akazawa held a phone conversation with US Commerce Secretary Lutnick on Monday, and both sides affirmed investment plans in the call.
  • US President Trump's administration is likely to face tough legal obstacles if it opposes refunds for the tariffs struck down by the US Supreme Court, according to Bloomberg.
  • US President Trump reportedly considers new national security tariffs after SCOTUS ruling, in which new levies on a half-dozen industries would be issued separately from the new global 15% flat-rate tariff, according to WSJ.
  • Taiwan Vice Premier said preferential terms reached with the US under tariff and trade deal would not change, and that they will have proactive talks with the US to ensure their interests protected under deals already reached with Washington.
  • China announces that the hot-rolled steel coil issue with South Korea has been resolved.

A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk

APAC stocks traded with a mostly positive bias as key participants returned to the market and with the region attempting to shrug off the weak lead from Wall St, where sentiment was weighed on by trade uncertainty and AI disruption concerns. ASX 200 struggled for direction as outperformance in the mining, energy and resources sectors was offset by losses in tech, real estate and financials, while participants continued to digest a slew of earnings. Nikkei 225rallied to back above the 57,000 level on return from the long weekend, but is off today's best levels amid losses in tech stocks and after China's MOFCOM added 20 Japanese companies to its export control list, which bans Chinese exports of dual-use items. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were mixed with the mainland boosted on return from a 10-day closure and got the first opportunity to react to the recent US tariff developments, which are seen to benefit China the most, while the Hong Kong benchmark underperformed in a reversal of the prior day's rally amid notable losses in tech and pharmaceuticals.

Top Asian News

  • Several senior US officials said the “rate checks” carried out when the yen weakened in January were initiated by US Treasury Secretary Bessent rather than at Japan’s request, according to Nikkei. US officials indicated that coordinated intervention to buy yen and sell dollars would have been considered if requested by Japan.
  • Japanese Finance Minister Katayama said Japan is keeping close dialogue with the US on Forex, according to the Wall Street Journal.

European bourses (STOXX 600 -0.1%) are broadly weaker, with the IBEX 35 (-0.7%) the clear laggard as Banks weigh on the index. On the other hand, the SMI (+0.6%) is printing modest gains. European sectors, on the contrary, show a positive bias, with Utilities (+1.7%) and Materials (+0.7%) outperforming, helped by the likes of Sika (+1.9%), Givaudan (+2.2%) and Croda (+2.7%). Sika shares are rising this morning as the Board proposes to lift the gross dividend per share by 2.8%. Croda announced its FY25 earnings, with its revenue and EBITDA metrics rising Y/Y and FY26 guidance in line with forecasts. This is helping the broader Chemicals sector rise. On the other hand, Banks (-1.1%) have been hit this morning following weak Q4 earnings by Standard Chartered (-1.9%) and the effects of Anthropic's Claude on jobs as the code can now automate COBOL modernisation efforts.

Top European News

  • French Business Climate Indicator (Feb) 97 (Prev. 99).
  • French Business Confidence (Feb) 102 vs. Exp. 104 (Prev. 105).

FX

  • DXY is mildly firmer this morning, and trades at the mid-point of a 97.69-97.95 range; the high of the day is a pip above its 50 DMA. The theme in the US remains firmly on a) the trade situation and b) the growing woes surrounding AI – spurring increased uncertainty about the US economy, and hence the USD. Nonetheless, the index is firmer this morning, largely thanks to considerable pressure in the JPY (more on that below). For the time being, focus will be on some Tier 2 US data including Consumer Confidence, Richmond Fed Index and ADP Employment Change Weekly – Fed speak today includes, Waller (voter, dove), Cook (voter, neutral), Barkin (2027 voter, neutral), Goolsbee (2027 Voter, Dovish), Bostic (retiring, hawk), Collins (2028 voter, neutral). Thereafter, US President Trump is set to deliver his State of the Union address, where he is expected to speak on the economy, new policies and potentially trade (02:00 GMT Wednesday / 21:00 EST Tuesday).
  • JPY is shunned today, currently off by around 0.8%, with USD/JPY trading at the upper end of a 154.52 to 156.27 range – the pair currently pivots its 50 DMA at 155.97. Overnight, pressure stemmed from reports that US Treasury Secretary Bessent initiated rate checks, rather than those occurring at the request of the Japanese. The weakness in JPY was then exacerbated by source reports that PM Takaichi relayed to BoJ Governor Ueda her reservations about further rate hikes; she was reportedly "stricter than at the previous meeting", in November. As a reminder, the PM and Ueda met last week, where traders assigned some risk that the PM would ask Ueda to cull future rate hikes; despite this, Ueda suggested that the PM "didn't have any particular requests".
  • Finally, G10 peers are broadly incrementally firmer/flat against the USD. Antipodeans benefit from the constructive sentiment seen in the APAC session, and as base metals remain bid. EUR/USD remains steady within a narrow 1.1767-1.1796 range; the low for today is a handful of pips below its 50 DMA at 1.1772.

Central Banks

  • Japanese PM Takaichi reportedly relayed to BoJ Governor Ueda her reservations about further rate hikes, according to Mainichi citing sources.
  • Chinese Loan Prime Rate 1Y (Feb) 3.00% vs. Exp. 3.00% (Prev. 3.00%).
  • Chinese Loan Prime Rate 5Y (Feb) 3.50% vs. Exp. 3.50% (Prev. 3.50%).
  • NBP's Glapinski said monetary policy needs to be cautious.

Fixed Income

  • JGBs were boosted this morning by a Mainichi report that PM Takaichi relayed reservations to BoJ Governor Ueda about further tightening, with Takaichi's stance described by the sources as "stricter" vs their last meeting. This lifted JGBs by around 30 ticks to a 133.10 peak.
  • USTs flat, in a narrow 113-07+ to 113-13 band. Awaiting further updates on the AI disruption narrative, US-Iran and numerous Fed officials. From those, the most pertinent include Cook (voter), who, in early February, said she supported waiting after December to cut again and described tariff price-rises as temporary. Waller (voter) has already spoken post-SCOTUS, saying the impact would likely be limited. The docket also includes 2027 voters, Barkin & Goolsbee, and 2028 voter Collins.
  • Bunds firmer by around 10 ticks, holding just off a 129.73 peak which is just above Monday's 129.71 best. ECB's Lagarde theoretically headlines the docket, though she has spoken extensively recently. As such, the benchmark will likely conform to leads from USTs and the global risk tone if there is an AI/tariff/US-Iran update.
  • Gilts also firmer by around 10 ticks and at a 92.97 peak, taking out the high from January and notching a fresh YTD and contract best. For the UK, the main event is the Treasury Select Committee. Pertinently, Governor Bailey headlines the outing alongside known dove Taylor and the hawkish Greene & Pill. The Governor and the two hawkish members are the focus, for any hint that the recent string of data and/or tariff updates have pushed them towards easing in the near-term. Commentary that will, by extension, inform on the ongoing debate between March and April, with 21bps of easing implied for March and 27bps in April.
  • Italy sold EUR 2.5bln vs exp. EUR 2-2.5bln 2.20% 2028 BTP Short Term & EUR 2.0bln vs exp. EUR 1.5-2bln 1.10% 2031, 1.80% 2036 BTPei.
  • UK sold GBP 3bln 4.125% 2033 Gilt: b/c 3.37x (prev. 3.18x), average yield 4.075% (prev. 4.296%), tail 0.2bps (prev. 0.2bps).
  • Japan's Finance Ministry is said to mull tweaking liquidity-enhancement auctions and reduce super-long supply further to steady yields.
  • Australia sold AUD 1.2bln 4.25% March 2036 bonds, b/c 2.71, avg. yield 4.6969%.

Commodities

  • Crude benchmarks remain mostly firmer amid the ongoing geopolitical update between the US and Iran over the last few week which has seen a gradual escalation over recent weeks. WTI and Brent trade at the upper end of their respective USD 66.16-66.95/bbl and USD 70.87-71.78/bbl, ranges.
  • Spot gold has eroded some of Monday's upside, hovering just below the USD 5,200/oz mark, with recent USD strength weighing. XAU and XAG trade in the lower ranges of USD 5135.135-5250.005/oz and 84.785-88.756/oz, respectively.
  • Copper prices have picked up, coinciding with its largest buyer, China, returning to the market after the holiday period. As such, the red metal trades above the USD 13k/t mark. That aside, there hasn’t been much newsflow regarding the red metal. Currently, 3M LME copper trades in the upper range of USD 13.005-13.061k/t.
  • UBS said spot gold may reach USD 6,200/oz in the near future as the factors fuelling its recent rally remain intact.
  • The UK imposes new sanction on Russia's Transneft oil operation.
  • Shanghai Gold Exchange said it is to cut margin ratio and price limits for some gold and silver contracts from the closing settlement on February 24th.
  • Chevron (CVX) has entered exclusive talks to take over Lukoil's stake in Iraq's West Kerner II oil field (480k bpd), as US sanctions pressure the Russian firm to divest.
  • New Zealand is to lower the price cap on Russian crude oil.

Geopolitics: Ukraine

  • Russia's Kremlin highlights that the special operation goals have not yet been achieved, cannot provide a date for the next round of Ukraine talks.
  • Russian Foreign Ministry Spokesperson said Russia will seek to find a solution to the problem of NATO's expansion to its borders by military or political means. Added that without solving the problem of NATO's expansion to Russia's borders, it is impossible to solve the situation in Ukraine.
  • Ukrainian President Zelensky said we will do everything necessary to ensure a strong and lasting peace.

Geopolitics: Middle East 

  • Iran reportedly nears a deal to purchase anti-ship missiles from China, according to sources.
  • Israeli official tells Yedioth Ahronoth that a US attack on Iran is imminent.
  • US President Trump said top general Dan Caine predicts an easy victory over Iran, which is at a contrast to recent comments by Caine, according to NYT.
  • US President Trump is growing frustrated by the limited military options against Iran, with advisers warning that strikes may not be decisive and risk escalating the conflict, according to CBS News.
  • US President Trump on Truth said "If we don't make a deal, it will be a very bad day for Iran".

Geopolitics: Other

  • China said it is open to nuclear talks in Geneva and urges the US to resume strategic stability dialogue with Russia.
  • South Korea and US are reportedly at odds over war games’ scale with the US pushing back on South Korea's request for smaller drills, forcing the postponement of a major joint military briefing, according to SCMP.

US Event Calendar

  • 9:00 am: United States Dec FHFA House Price Index MoM, est. 0.3%, prior 0.6%
  • 10:00 am: United States Feb Richmond Fed Manufact. Index, est. -4.5, prior -6
  • 10:00 am: United States Feb Conf. Board Consumer Confidence, est. 87.1, prior 84.5
  • 10:00 am: United States Dec F Wholesale Inventories MoM, est. 0.2%, prior 0.2%

Central Bank Speakers

  • 8:00 am: United States Fed’s Goolsbee Speaks on Economy
  • 9:00 am: United States Fed’s Collins Gives Opening Remarks
  • 9:00 am: United States Fed’s Bostic in Moderated Discussion
  • 9:15 am: United States Fed’s Waller Gives Keynote Address
  • 9:30 am: United States Fed’s Cook Speaks on AI
  • 9:30 am: United States Fed’s Goolsbee on Bloomberg TV
  • 3:15 pm: United States Fed’s Barkin & Collins on Panel

Main Rating Changes:

DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

Luke and Galina in my team have published a timely piece (link here) examining a group of global stocks that have sold off sharply in recent weeks amid rising fears of AI-driven disruption. They look at how valuations have adjusted, analysing PE and PEG ratios, and assess how far current prices now sit from our equity analysts’ targets. The most compelling section, for me, comes at the end, where those analysts explain why they believe these companies are far better positioned to withstand AI disruption than the market currently assumes.

It's good timing for the note as just as US equities had fought their way back to flat yesterday, shaking off weekend tariff uncertainty and an early sell off in futures, the AI disruption narrative resurfaced once again. In the final hour or two of European trading, the S&P 500 rolled over sharply, eventually closing -1.04% down on the day, while 10 year US Treasury yields fell by -5.2bps. The declines included IBM posting its worst day since the 2000 tech bubble burst, while the software component of the S&P 500 (-3.82%) dropped to its lowest level since the Liberation Day turmoil last year, with the VIX peaking at 22.0, not far from its YTD high of 23.1. Elsewhere, Brent crude briefly touched its highest level since July on renewed fears of a potential US strike on Iran, before fading to close marginally lower on the day.

Much of the AI-related sell off was attributed to a Citrini Research memo from the future, "The 2028 Global Intelligence Crisis", outlining a hypothetical scenario in which AI adoption drives the US unemployment rate into double digits by mid 2028. The note had been forwarded to me around ten times late last week and was ubiquitous across my social media feeds, so it was something of a surprise to see it cited as the catalyst for the sudden mid afternoon sell off in London. As with Matt Schumer’s viral “Something big is happening” piece a few weeks ago — which was also linked to significant equity losses — the argument leans heavily on narrative and emotion rather than hard evidence. That doesn’t mean it will ultimately be wrong, but in both cases the vibes to substance ratio is undeniably high. I’ll stop there, before anyone accuses my own research of the same thing.

The net result was a renewed sell-off in stocks perceived to be at risk from AI disruption. Software stocks were again affected, with that component of the S&P 500 falling -3.82% (and now -31.8% down from its October peak), including sharp declines for Workday (-6.24%), Adobe (-4.61%) and Oracle (-4.57%). But various other companies were also hit, with IBM (-13.15%) the worst performer in the S&P 500 after Anthropic said Claude Code could modernise COBOL, a legacy programming language run mostly on IBM machines. Meanwhile, several of the names namechecked in the Citrini report, including Capital One (-8.84%), American Express (-7.20%) and Doordash (-6.60%) saw outsized declines, while KKR (-8.89%) led the losses among PE firms as private credit fears again rose. More broadly, the Mag-7 (-1.51%) saw a modest underperformance, and the equal-weighted S&P 500 (-1.12%) also saw a sizeable decline as the broad array of losers outweighed the gains for defensive sectors like consumer staples (+1.46%), healthcare (+1.15%) and utilities (+0.72%). And credit also came under pressure, with US IG spreads +2bps wider and HY +10bps wider.

When it comes to tariffs, the weekend news injected another dose of uncertainty for markets, with big questions surrounding the trade deals the US agreed last year. Notably, the EU have paused the process of ratifying the US trade deal, and the chair of the EU Parliament’s trade committee, Bernd Lange, said yesterday that “We want to have clarity from the US that they are respecting the deal because that’s a crucial element.” The EU concern is that a stacking nature of the 15% Section 122 tariffs would bring total tariff rates for some products above the 15% maximum agreed by the EU and the US. The UK are another with an unclear situation, as they reached a 10% tariff deal last year, but could now face the 15% global tariff rate that would be higher than the deal already agreed to. Indeed, the UK government haven’t ruled out retaliation, with a spokesperson for PM Starmer saying that “Nothing is off the table at this stage”.

Back on the US side, it was also unclear how Trump would respond to these developments. But he did post yesterday that countries which “play games” would “be met with a much higher Tariff, and worse, than that which they just recently agreed to.”

In the meantime, the new Section 122 tariffs have just come into force at midnight Eastern Time. At the moment the rate is 10% with White House officials stating that they are working on a formal order to raise to 15%. Perhaps the stacking concern is delaying things for now. Late yesterday, we also saw the WSJ and Bloomberg report that the administration was preparing new Section 232 national security

investigations into several industries including batteries, telecom equipment and industrial chemicals. Remember that Trump’s delivering the State of the Union address tonight, so it’s possible we might get a better sense of the next steps on tariffs. As I mentioned in my CoTD yesterday (link here), net-net we still think the effective tariff rate will fall this year and that the world post-SCOTUS will see lower tariffs than the pre-SCOTUS world. For more on the latest state of the world of US tariffs, see Matt Luzzetti's latest trade chart book here. 

Elsewhere, geopolitics remained in the spotlight, as speculation continued to mount about a potential US strike on Iran. There wasn’t much fresh news yesterday, although it was reported by multiple outlets yesterday, including Bloomberg, that the State Department had ordered the evacuation of some people from their Beirut embassy. The US-Iran talks are reportedly still ongoing, and Bloomberg also said that the US’ Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner would be in Geneva this week for more discussions on Thursday. Escalation concerns saw Brent crude rise to as high as $72.50/bbl intra-day, its highest since July, but it was down by -0.38% to $71.49/bbl by the close. It's back up +0.6% in Asia.

The risk-off mood boosted US Treasuries, as investors made a push into safe havens. Indeed, the 10yr Treasury yield (-5.2bps) fell back to 4.03%, its lowest level since November, and the 2yr yield (-3.9bps) fell to 3.44%. The front-end rally came despite somewhat less dovish comments from Fed Governor Waller, who said he may favour a pause in rates at the March meeting if the February labour market data showed continued improvement. However, he did add that “if the good labor market news of January is revised away or evaporates in February” then he’d again back a 25bp cut, suggesting that Waller remains among the more dovish FOMC members.

Earlier in Europe, yields also moved lower across the continent, with those on 10yr UK gilts (-3.9bps) and Italian BTPs (-2.4bps) both reaching their lowest level since December 2024, whilst 10yr bund yields (-2.7bps) were down to their lowest since November, at 2.71%. The equity moves were more mixed in Europe, with the STOXX 600 down by a more moderate -0.45%, as the more tariff-sensitive DAX (-1.06%) underperformed but Spain’s IBEX 35 (+0.56%) recorded a record high. Separately, this week is also set to see German Chancellor Merz travel to China, and our economists have a note of what to expect (link here).

Looking at other asset classes, the backdrop around the tariffs, AI and Iran boosted traditional safe havens. Gold rose +2.35% to $5,227/oz, the highest since its record levels in late January, while the Japanese yen (+0.26% versus the US dollar) and the Swiss franc (+0.12%) were the best performing G10 currencies. By contrast, Bitcoin (-4.47%) had its worst day in over two weeks. 

Asian equity markets are mostly shrugging off the US weakness with the KOSPI (+1.99%) again at the forefront of gains in the region, surging to a record high, supported by advances in exporters and local chipmakers. Chinese markets are returning from their week plus break with the CSI (+1.11%) and the Shanghai Composite (+0.94%) in a positive mood along with the Nikkei (+0.99%) after yesterday's holiday. Conversely, the Hang Seng (-2.12%) is the weakest performer, suffering losses in technology and pharmaceutical shares. S&P 500 (+0.22%) and NASDAQ 100 (+0.34%) futures are bouncing back a little with European futures seeing a similar move. US Treasuries are around +1-2bps higher across the curve after the sizeable rally yesterday.

Looking at the day ahead, President Trump will deliver the State of the Union address tonight. Otherwise, US data releases include the Conference Board’s consumer confidence for February, the FHFA house price index for December, and the Richmond Fed’s manufacturing index for February. Finally, central bank speakers include the Fed’s Goolsbee, Collins, Bostic, Waller, Cook and Barkin, the ECB’s Kocher, and BoE Governor Bailey, and the BoE’s Greene and Taylor.

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 08:45

Early Tax Refunds Are Showing A 14% Increase, IRS Says

Zero Hedge -

Early Tax Refunds Are Showing A 14% Increase, IRS Says

Authored by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times,

The average tax refund for American taxpayers has increased on a year-over-year basis, the IRS said in a Feb. 20 update.

The average refund amount increased 14.2 percent in 2026 to $2,476 as of Feb. 13, according to the agency. Last year, the average refund for the same time period was $2,169.

Meanwhile, the average direct deposit refund amount for taxpayers is up 13.1 percent year over year, from $2,252 in 2025 to $2,548 in 2026.

The IRS added that the total number of tax returns that the agency has received and processed is down slightly year over year.

About 32,175,000 tax returns have been filed as of Feb. 13, a 2.6 percent decrease year over year. For the same time period last year, 33,040,000 tax returns were filed, the agency said.

The total number of returns processed by the IRS paints a similar picture. Some 31,795,000 tax returns have been processed as of Feb. 13, a year-over-year decline of 3.1 percent.

“Average refund amounts are strong,” the IRS said in its update, adding that the agency is required by federal law to hold refunds until Feb. 15 for returns that claim the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) or the Additional Child Tax Credit (ACTC).

“It’s important to note this week’s refund numbers do not include millions of EITC and ACTC refunds to these taxpayers. This means the refund numbers expected to be released Feb. 27, for refunds processed through Feb. 20, are expected to be higher.”

Also, since some taxpayers were “still waiting for important tax documents at the end of January, the IRS expects the tax return filing numbers generally will catch up in the following weeks,” the agency said.

The final average refund amount last year was $3,167, IRS figures show.

The data release comes as President Donald Trump and administration officials have been touting their tax plan under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) that was passed in Congress and signed by Trump into law last year.

Late last month, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a Fox News interview that there would be “substantial refunds for working Americans.” He added that once a change in tax withholding is underway, employees “have bigger take-home pay every two weeks” or “every month.”

Multiple new tax law provisions under the OBBBA took effect this year, according to the IRS. Congressional Democrats have been largely critical of the Trump administration’s economic agenda, especially after the Democratic Party had victories in several states during the November 2025 elections.

Democrats have also targeted the administration for what they said are policies that have increased inflationary pressures due to its tariffs, which were dealt a blow by the Supreme Court this past week.

“Housing costs have been skyrocketing. Rent is too high and eating away at the ability for people to save money to own a home. The average age of a first-time homebuyer just hit a record high of over 40 years old,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said in a January statement.

Tax filing season officially started on Jan. 26 and is scheduled to end on April 15, 2026. The IRS Free File started on Jan. 9, while the extension deadline is Oct. 15.

The tax revenue agency said it expects that approximately 164 million individual tax returns will be filed in 2026.

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 08:25

Jane Street Sued For Crypto Insider Trading That Accelerated Terraform Collapse

Zero Hedge -

Jane Street Sued For Crypto Insider Trading That Accelerated Terraform Collapse

For years - literally - we have been pounding the table and pointing out market rigging and manipulation irregularities in the crypto markets which, for reasons of our own, we attributed to one of the world's foremost HFT shops and most profitable "market makers" in the world (if not India), Jane Street. Below is an example from 2023, and here are hundreds of others...

As it turns out someone noticed.

Jane Street was sued for alleged insider trading by the administrator winding up the affairs of Terraform Labs, the firm whose $40 billion collapse in 2022 roiled the crypto markets, contributed to the collapse of FTX and sparked a brutal crypto winter which culminated with the bankruptcy and prison sentence of Sam Bankman Fried.. who just happens to be a former Jane Street employee (along with his polycule partner Caroline Ellison) and the man many claim devised some of the most intricate crypto manipulation schemes operating to this day. 

Jane Street used "non-public information to front-run trading that hastened the collapse of Terraform," Todd Snyder, a bankruptcy court-appointed administrator and co-head of the Piper Sander Restructuring group, claimed in a redacted complaint filed Monday in Manhattan federal court. Illegally using this information allowed Jane Street “to unwind hundreds of millions of dollars in potential exposure at precisely the right time, mere hours before the Terraform ecosystem collapsed.”

For those lucky enough not to remember, Terraform imploded when its stablecoin TerraUSD lost its peg to the US dollar, leading to the collapse of its sister token, Luna. The failure set off a chain reaction across the crypto industry, ultimately sending bitcoin plunging below $20,000. Terraform co-founder, Do Kwon, who was recently sentenced to 15 years in prison, deceived investors about the stability of TerraUSD, which was said to be algorithmically “pegged” to the US dollar. Kwon pleaded guilty to fraud and was sentenced in December to 15 years in prison by a New York judge who called his crime “a fraud of epic generational scale.” 

Terraform filed for bankruptcy in January 2024 and a wind down trust was formally established later that year. 

Snyder was tapped to administer a trust to maximize the recovery for Terraform’s investors and creditors and to close out its operations. As part of his work, Snyder made a stark realization, one which we were aware of all along: "Jane Street abused market relationships to rig the market in its favor during one of the most consequential events in crypto history.”  

“On behalf of injured parties, we will pursue all avenues supported by the facts and the law against those who exploited their position and reaped substantial profits at the expense of Terraform Labs’ creditors,” Snyder said and is now seeking damages from Jane Street, its co-founder Robert Granieri, and employees Bryce Pratt and Michael Huang.

Here are some of the shocking details that the lawsuit revealed:

By late 2018, Jane Street had signed up to trade directly with Terraform but its trading in Terraform’s tokens didn’t take off until February 2022, when Jane Street sent Bryce Pratt, a former intern at Terraform, to establish lines of communication with his former Terraform colleagues. 

Among Pratt’s communications with Terraform was a group chat he set up with his former colleagues, including a software engineer and the head of business development at Terraform. The group named the chat “Bryce’s Secret” and used it as a way to channel Terraform-related information back to Jane Street.

After Pratt started an email chain to introduce Terraform’s head of business development and Jane Street’s “DeFi” leaders, the parties began regularly communicating and discussing a potential Jane Street investment in Terraform, the lawsuit said. But Jane Street turned those communications into a back-channel source for material nonpublic information about Terraform and later used the confidential information it learned to pursue trades to maximize profits for itself.

Specifically, on May 7, 2022, at 5:44 p.m. EST, Terraform withdrew 150 million TerraUSD from the Curve3pool, a liquidity pool where stablecoins could be exchanged one for the other. 

Less than 10 minutes after Terraform’s withdrawal, which hadn’t been publicly announced to the market, a crypto wallet that some analysts have linked to Jane Street withdrew 85 million of TerraUSD from the same liquidity pool, the complaint alleges.

The next day, Kwon said publicly that the 150 million withdrawal was meant to move TerraUSD to a new liquidity pool for stablecoins. However, the exact timing of activities associated with the new liquidity pool, including any withdrawals from the Curve3pool, wasn’t public knowledge.

The trades accelerated the collapse of Terraform by adding selling pressure at a critical moment, while allowing Jane Street to profit (or avoid massive losses).

It didn't end there, however, and after the May 7 trade, Jane Street continued to use confidential information, including what it learned from Jump Trading, to trade TerraUSD to reap more profits, the lawsuit said. 

On May 9, while TerraUSD was depegged but not fully collapsed, Pratt set up a group message with Kwon, Huang and others at Jane Street, expressing the firm’s interest in bidding on either bitcoin or the Luna token. Kwon responded that Bill DiSomma, co-founder of Jump, should have reached out to Jane Street to discuss a fundraise for Terraform.

Snyder's lawsuit against Jane Street is part of a broader effort by the Terraform wind-down administrator to pursue parties allegedly involved in or profiting from the collapse. In December 2025, Snyder filed a separate $4 billion lawsuit against Jump Trading  - another giant HFT "market maker" - accusing it of market manipulation, self-dealing, and helping accelerate the Terra crash through similar alleged misconduct.

A Jane Street spokesperson told Bloomberg the suit “desperate” and “a transparent attempt to extract money." We say that the revelation of market rigging and manipulation that will now emerge, will make everyone's head spin. 

The case is Snyder v. Jane Street Group LLC, 26-cv-1504, US District Court, Southern District of New York

Jane Street Lawsuit by Zerohedge

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 08:11

Moscow Police Targeted In Deadly Car Bombing On 4th Anniversary Of Russian Invasion

Zero Hedge -

Moscow Police Targeted In Deadly Car Bombing On 4th Anniversary Of Russian Invasion

There's been another killing by explosive device in the heart of Moscow - this time coming on the fourth anniversary of the start of the Russia-Ukraine war.

The Russian Interior Ministry has confirmed that a culprit detonated powerful bomb beside a police patrol car in central Moscow early Tuesday, near a public transport hub, which killed one officer and wounded two more.

Anadolu/Getty Images

Based on the details, the attack was clearly targeting the police officers, as the attacker approached their car before quickly setting off the bomb.

The patrol car was badly damaged, with windows shattered, littering the scene with debris at Savyolovsky railway station square - which is one of the capital’s main railway hubs.

Subsequently, there was this bit of strange and contradictory reporting:

The ministry initially said the perpetrator had fled. Minutes later, it said the man was found dead at the site after inspecting the scene and reviewing surveillance footage.

Authorities gave no immediate details about the explosive or the attacker’s motive.

This particular incident comes after a string of assassinations of high profile generals and Russian figures, but also mimics similar prior seemingly 'random' attack on Moscow police.

For example in December 2025 two police officers were killed in an explosion in southern Moscow while attempting to detain a suspicious individual near their vehicle, which occurred just days after a Russian general was assassinated in the same area.

The blast underscored a troubling reality for the Kremlin - that the war's shadow has been creeping deeper into the capital through an apparently intelligence-orchestrated dirty war.

Some local reports are saying this fresh Tuesday attack was the result of a suicide bombing. Russian security services are investigating the scene:

Earlier this month, a senior Russian military intelligence officer was shot multiple times and seriously wounded in an attack authorities squarely blamed on Ukrainian intelligence.

The victim was a high level Russian intelligence official, Vladimir Alekseyev - the deputy head of Moscow's GRU military intelligence. He had long been sanctioned in the West for his alleged role in cyberattacks and allegations that he was behind the alleged 2018 Novichok nerve agent attack in Britain.

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 08:05

AMD Shares Soar After Meta Chip Deal Worth More Than $100 Billion

Zero Hedge -

AMD Shares Soar After Meta Chip Deal Worth More Than $100 Billion

Shares of Advanced Micro Devices surged the most in five months in premarket trading, after Meta disclosed a multi-year deal to deploy up to 6 gigawatts of AMD Instinct GPUs to power its next-generation AI data centers.

Meta will begin deploying these AMD chips in the second half of 2026. The first phase will support the deployment of 1 gigawatt.

AMD stated:

This agreement expands on the companies' existing strategic partnership and aligns roadmaps across silicon, systems, and software to deliver AI platforms purpose-built for Meta's workloads. The first deployment will use a custom AMD Instinct GPU based on the MI450 architecture to deliver AI platforms that are optimized for Meta's workloads at gigawatt-scale. Shipments supporting the first gigawatt deployment are scheduled to begin in the second half of 2026.

Part of the deal includes Meta receiving a performance-based warrant for up to 160 million shares of AMD stock, structured to vest based on specific milestones tied to chip shipments. The first tranche vests with the initial 1-gigawatt of shipments, with additional tranches vesting as Meta's purchases scale to 6 gigawatts.

AMD shares in New York jumped as much as 15% in premarket trading. As of 7:30 a.m. ET, the stock was up about 12%. If those gains hold into the cash session, it would mark AMD's largest intraday increase since early October. Meta's stock was marginally higher in premarket, while Nvidia shares traded down nearly 1%.

"Our ambitions are pretty high," said Santosh Janardhan, Meta's head of global infrastructure, who oversees the company's data centers and their technical architecture, as quoted by Bloomberg.

AMD Chief Executive Officer Lisa Su said, "What we're looking to do is go big and accelerate," adding, "We were on a very good path with Meta, but this actually takes our relationship to the next level."

Meta is already AMD's second-largest customer, and these chip shipments will only set to increase. AMD reported $34.6 billion in sales last year and revenue this year could jump by at least 34% as the AI data center infrastructure cycle gains momentum.

The Wall Street Journal reports that the Meta-AMD deal to buy 6 gigawatts of AMD Instinct GPUs is worth more than $100 billion, potentially giving Meta ownership of up to 10% of AMD's stock.

In October, AMD signed a deal with OpenAI that had terms similar to those of the Meta deal. We view these deals as "circular financing," something we have previously highlighted.

To note, Meta said last week that it would purchase millions of Nvidia's GPUs as well.

"This is an important step for Meta as we diversify our compute," Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg wrote in a statement, adding, "I expect AMD to be an important partner for many years to come."

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 07:45

Lamborghini EV Lanzador Bites The Dust As Electrified Supercar Demand Hits "Close To Zero"

Zero Hedge -

Lamborghini EV Lanzador Bites The Dust As Electrified Supercar Demand Hits "Close To Zero"

Big legacy U.S. and European automakers are frantically dialing back their electric vehicle bets, scaling back once-hyped roadmaps to full electrification as demand for these vehicles implodes.

The latest automaker to reverse course is not a mass-market sedan or SUV maker, but a luxury supercar brand: Lamborghini.

CEO Stephan Winkelmann told the UK's The Sunday Times that he has ended plans to build EVs, saying customers are not seeking quiet supercars and that demand has collapsed.

Winkelmann said that EV development risked becoming "an expensive hobby" for the car company. He stated that the previously announced all-electric concept car, Lanzador, will no longer be part of its future lineup of supercars.

He noted that the "acceptance curve" for EVs in Lamborghini's target market was flattening and "close to zero."

Winkelmann said the Lanzador will be replaced by a plug-in hybrid electric vehicle. He added that the Italian carmaker will produce internal combustion engines "for as long as possible."

"EVs, in their current form, struggle to deliver this specific emotional connection," Winkelmann explained, pointing out that customers who buy luxury cars seek the sound of a roaring engine.

The slower path toward full electrification, or in some cases partial electrification, is not just a Lamborghini story or limited to the luxury auto market. There has also been a sharp reversal by mass-market automakers over the last six months or so, as they dial back EV ambitions or entirely scrap their electrification plans:

The pivot by Western automakers comes as the West dials back on "climate crisis" policies, which have crushed manufacturing bases from Germany to the U.S. Midwest. Deindustrialization trends have proven to be nation-killing, and green spending has been nothing more than the most significant misallocation of human resources in history (read here).

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 06:55

10 Tuesday AM Reads

The Big Picture -

My Two-for-Tuesday morning train WFH reads:

A Yale Professor’s Investment Formula Says You Need More Stocks. See How It Works. James Choi’s research suggests most investors are too conservative with their asset allocation — and he’s got the math to back it up. The formula incorporates income, risk tolerance and other factors absent from typical rules of thumb. (Wall Street Journal)

Winners & Losers of SCOTUS Decision Striking Down Tariffs: The long-awaited Supreme Court decision on tariffs is finally out; it was a 7-2 decision in part, 6-3 decision more broadly. The street doesn’t quite understand the subtle nuances of the case. Take a moment to step back and consider the winners and losers of tariffs. (The Big Picture) see also Part II: IEEPA Tariff Ruling’s Losers: In broad strokes, the winners were the large companies that filed for refunds or sued the US, the dollar, consumers, the separation of powers, the US Constitution, and the Supreme Court. The losers are a bit more nuanced: some are obvious, many are not. (The Big Picture)

•  Inflation May Have Cooled, But Affordability Is Still a Hot Issue: The headline inflation numbers look better. The lived experience of buying groceries, paying rent, and filling a gas tank does not. (Bloomberg)

• Pros and Cons of Artificial Intelligence: We’re in the fun phase of AI innovation — tons of overreactions, wild predictions, and nobody really knows what happens next. A balanced look at what’s real and what’s hype. (A Wealth of Common Sense)

• The Ultra-Rich Are Different from You and Me: The billionaire class doesn’t just have more money — they operate in an entirely different economic and political reality, one that’s increasingly detached from everyone else’s. (Paul Krugman) see also Billionaires Gone Wild: Since Citizens United, billionaires’ share of political contributions exploded 1700% even as their numbers only grew 85%, making the oligarch power grab the defining feature of American politics. Their power grab is a dire threat to American democracy. (Paul Krugman)

• The giant void of nothingness where US financial regulation used to sit: The regulatory apparatus that once policed Wall Street has been hollowed out. What’s left is mostly a void — and the markets know it.‘There has never been a better time to be a crook’ (Financial Times) see also Crypto super PACs have hundreds of millions ready to spend on the midterms: The crypto industry is gearing up to pour enormous sums into the 2026 midterm elections, hoping to lock in favorable regulation before the window closes. With Trump faltering and their policy agenda incomplete, the crypto industry has moved at least $288 million toward the midterms in a desperate bid to keep Republicans in control of Congress. (Citation Needed)

Inside the Gay Tech Mafia: Gay men have long been rumored to run Silicon Valley. WIRED investigates. (Wired)

Judges Grow Angry Over Trump Administration Violating Their Orders: At least 35 times since August, federal judges have ordered the administration to explain why it should not be punished for violating their orders in immigration cases. (New York Times)

• Trader Joe’s wines are sneaky good. Here are 9 budget bottles to try.: The cashier did a double take at the $200 total. But dollar for dollar, Trader Joe’s wine selection punches well above its weight class. (Washington Post)

• Dilbert Creator’s AI Resurrection Not So Comic for His Family: Scott Adams is being digitally resurrected via AI video — and his family is not amused. The line between tribute and exploitation keeps getting blurrier. (The Bulwark)

Be sure to check out our Masters in Business interview this weekend with Hilary Allen, Professor of Law at the American University Washington College of Law. She specializes in financial regulation, banking law, securities regulation, and technology law, with a particular focus on how new financial technologies like fintech, crypto, and AI intersect with financial stability and public policy.

 

Concentrated Markets? Not true We are seeing the broadest rally in history.

Source: @RyanDetrick

 

Sign up for our reads-only mailing list here.

 

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

Trump's Board Of Peace Mulling Stablecoin For Gaza Efforts: FT

Zero Hedge -

Trump's Board Of Peace Mulling Stablecoin For Gaza Efforts: FT

Authored by Turner Wright via CoinTelegraph.com,

The Board of Peace established by US President Donald Trump, which requires a $1 billion contribution for membership, is reportedly exploring a stablecoin for use in rebuilding Gaza's economy following two years of war triggered by a Hamas terror attack in October 2023.

According to a Monday Financial Times report, the board is in the preliminary stages of discussing whether a stablecoin could be used to help rebuild Gaza’s economy. A person familiar with the project reportedly said the stablecoin would not be a meme coin or a replacement for fiat currency, but rather “a means to allow Gazans to transact digitally.”

Trump announced the formation of the board in January. Membership requires countries to contribute $1 billion for a permanent, renewable role, while the US, according to Trump’s social media announcement, pledged $10 billion. The majority of countries in western Europe declined invitations to join, while 26 countries including Israel, Saudi Arabia, Hungary, and El Salvador were founding members.

The FT report did not state which entity could be responsible for issuing a stablecoin should the board move forward. However, the Trump administration has supported policies allowing broader use of stablecoins in the US, including the president signing the GENIUS Act into law in July.

“The current proposal for the Gaza stablecoin is still very premature,” Snir Levi, CEO of blockchain intelligence platform Nominis, told Cointelegraph. “[O]ver the last two years, OTC desks in Gaza have moved over $100 million in stablecoins with almost no restrictions, without the proper framework, same thing will happen with the Gaza stablecoin.”

Trump also reportedly considering tokenized postwar Gaza plan

There has been a ceasefire agreement in place for Gaza officially since October 2025, though Israeli forces have reportedly repeatedly violated the deal. A significant portion of populated areas in the territory have been destroyed or heavily damaged since 2023.

As a result, members of the Trump administration, including the president and his son-in-law Jared Kushner have proposed plans for developing the area.

Trump reportedly mulled a plan to tokenize land and use digital tokens to relocate and rehouse residents during a US occupation of the territory. He said in February 2025 that the US should “take over” Gaza and make it the “Riviera of the Middle East” before a ceasefire was in place.

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 06:30

80% Of The World's Population Will Use Social Media By 2028

Zero Hedge -

80% Of The World's Population Will Use Social Media By 2028

Launched in 2004 as an experiment at Harvard, Facebook is often regarded as the defining social media platform of its era, the one that brought such platforms into the mainstream.

Facebook reached one million users just ten months after its launch; it took Mark Zuckerberg's social network around eight years to reach one billion users.

That milestone was reached in October 2012; by that point, many other social media platforms had become household names, including Twitter (launched in 2006) and Instagram (launched in 2010).

Just over 20 years after Facebook first took the internet by storm, social media use is almost universal.

As Valentine Fourreau shows in the infographic below, based on Statista Market Insights data, over 5 billion people worldwide were estimated to use social media in the world in 2024, a global penetration rate of almost 71 percent. According to Statista estimates, the global penetration rate of social media should reach 82.6 percent by 2029.

 80% of the World's Population Will Use Social Media by 2028 | Statista

You will find more infographics at Statista

In recent years, growing concerns about mental health, online safety and digital addiction have led governments worldwide to take action to limit children's access to social media.

In November 2024, Australia passed the Online Safety Amendment, banning social media for users under 16, and platforms face significant fines if they don't comply.

Several European countries are working on comparable bans, while similar legislation will take effect in Brazil in March 2026.

According to a recent WHO survey, one in ten adolescents worldwide is considered to be a problematic social media user.

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 05:45

'Out Of Africa': Beijing Slashes Investment Up To 85%

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'Out Of Africa': Beijing Slashes Investment Up To 85%

Authored by James Gorrie via The Epoch Times,

For more than a decade, China’s footprint across Africa has expanded at a phenomenal pace.

Railways in Kenya, ports in Tanzania, energy projects across sub-Saharan Africa, and militarized infrastructure in various places have meant billions in state-backed loans. For decades, Beijing has positioned itself as Africa’s largest trading partner and its most aggressive infrastructure financier.

But something has changed.

In some sectors, such as energy lending by Chinese development finance institutions, investment levels have fallen by as much as 85 percent from their peak years. That’s not a rounding error, that’s a strategic retreat.

What’s really going on? Is China walking away from Africa? Or is Africa revealing something deeper about China’s own economic stress?

It’s all of the above and more.

The Pullback Is Real—and Sharp

According to research cited by the Clean Air Task Force, Chinese development finance for African energy projects has declined roughly 85 percent since 2015. That’s a dramatic contraction in capital deployment.

Separate reporting based on data from Boston University’s Global Development Policy Center shows that Chinese lending to Africa has fallen sharply in recent years. In some reports, China’s investment fell nearly 46 percent year over year in 2024.

This isn’t just a pause. It’s a reset.

For years, Beijing fueled infrastructure growth across the continent through state-backed loans tied to its Belt and Road Initiative expansion. Now, the tap isn’t fully off, but it’s not flowing as freely as it used to.

China Isn’t Leaving Africa, but It’s Changing How It Engages

Before jumping to the “China is out of Africa” conclusion, it’s important to note a few critical facts.

For one, China remains Africa’s largest trading partner. Trade volumes remain substantial and have even grown in recent years.

But lending and investment are different from trade.

Instead of large sovereign infrastructure loans, Beijing appears to be shifting toward more commercially viable projects and private sector–led foreign direct investment. Beijing is also favoring trade expansion over debt expansion.

That’s a broad policy shift. An analysis of broader outbound Chinese investment patterns in 2025 shows a more cautious and selective capital strategy globally—not just in Africa.

In other words, China isn’t abandoning Africa—Beijing is abandoning risk.

The Real Story May Be Domestic

But the context may be less about Africa and more about China. It’s no state secret that China’s economy is under real pressure, including a prolonged property sector downturn, persistent and high local government debt, slowing GDP growth, and weak domestic consumption.

Those challenges have led Beijing to ramp up capital controls and financial risk management, both of which are indicators of a markedly different economy than the one for which China became world-renowned.

In short, China’s days of double-digit expansion are long gone. A new malaise has set in that isn’t easily overcome. Chinese authorities are increasingly focused on stabilizing employment, preventing financial contagion, and managing demographic decline.

When capital gets tight at home, overseas mega-projects become harder to justify—especially in politically complex or financially risky environments. Thus, Africa isn’t being punished—it’s being reprioritized.

Even some critics of the “debt trap diplomacy” narrative note that China has become far more cautious as a creditor in recent years.

Strategic Reassessment, Not Strategic Retreat

China’s Africa policy framework still operates through the Forum on China–Africa Cooperation, which continues to promote trade, tariff elimination for least-developed African countries, and development cooperation.

Trade between China and Africa reached nearly $300 billion in recent reporting, underscoring that economic ties remain strong. But there’s a difference between facilitating trade and underwriting sovereign debt.

China’s earlier model, which provided large, state-backed loans for infrastructure, carried political and financial risks. Some projects underperformed, and other countries struggled with repayment, becoming vassals of Beijing amid intensifying global scrutiny.

Beijing appears to have decided to scale back exposure to such risks, tightening standards and investing where returns are clearer. That’s not ideological behavior but balance-sheet management.

What This Says About China’s Economy

An 85 percent reduction in certain categories of overseas investment doesn’t just reflect changing foreign policy. It signals that large-scale overseas lending no longer aligns with domestic priorities and that conserving capital is a necessity, as liquidity and risk appetite have tightened.

Beijing recognizes that as economic conditions decline, domestic stability declines as well. Therefore, the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is prioritizing internal stability by managing debt, stabilizing property markets, and preserving employment. At this point, it’s clear that these rising domestic problems matter more to the CCP than expanding geopolitical infrastructure influence.

It’s not necessarily that the era of unlimited Belt and Road expansion is over, but China is entering a phase of selective, return-driven engagement over broad strategic underwriting.

This is what economic maturation—or economic strain—looks like.

Global Ambitions Meet Financial Reality

The CCP’s global ambitions are now bound by domestic economic reality. Overextension abroad while managing economic fragility at home is a dangerous combination.

Pulling back could signal discipline, economic stress, or both. Economic stress demands financial discipline, and when the world’s second-largest economy tightens its checkbook by 85 percent in key sectors, the story isn’t just about Africa’s financial future—it’s about China’s.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.

Tyler Durden Tue, 02/24/2026 - 05:00

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