Zero Hedge

The US Leads The World In The Weight-Loss Injection Boom

The US Leads The World In The Weight-Loss Injection Boom

Novo Nordisk’s obesity-drug franchise has surged at a remarkable pace. In just four years, revenue from its weight-management treatments ballooned roughly tenfold - from about $1.3 billion in 2021 to approximately $12.4 billion in 2025. The growth has been fueled largely by Wegovy, the company’s blockbuster weight-loss drug built around the active ingredient semaglutide and marketed as a once-weekly injection.

Semaglutide itself was originally developed to treat type 2 diabetes and continues to be sold under the brand name Ozempic for that purpose. The primary difference between the two products lies in dosage. As Statista notes, Wegovy is formulated at higher semaglutide levels for weight management, while Ozempic is designed for blood-sugar control in diabetic patients. In practice, however, Ozempic has frequently been prescribed off-label for weight loss - a practice that is restricted or prohibited in several European Union countries.

Regardless of branding, the United States has emerged as Novo Nordisk’s most important market. According to the company’s 2025 annual report, the U.S. accounts for the overwhelming share of sales for both Ozempic and Wegovy. For drugs marketed specifically for weight loss, more than 60% of global revenue comes from the American market - a reflection of both the country’s large pharmaceutical sector and its high obesity rates, which have helped make the U.S. the epicenter of the global GLP-1 boom.

Tyler Durden Fri, 03/06/2026 - 05:45

'Mr. Gold' Warns Of 'System Reset' As Silver Lights Fuse Of Derivatives Time-Bomb

'Mr. Gold' Warns Of 'System Reset' As Silver Lights Fuse Of Derivatives Time-Bomb

Authored by Greg Hunter via usawatchdog.com,

Financial writer and precious metals expert Bill Holter (aka Mr. Gold) predicted that by March, silver would likely suffer a failure to deliver physical metal at COMEX. In other words, demand for physical silver will swamp the existing supply. The math is scary and simple, and Holter breaks it down, “The registered inventory at COMEX in silver is 86 million ounces. On the second day of March, there are already 52 million ounces of silver standing for delivery. That leaves 30 million to 35 million ounces unspoken for. . .. This looks dicey. If they have 52 million ounces standing for delivery now, where is it going to be at the end of the month? If silver fails to deliver, then what you are going to have in the gold market is buyers stepping up that normally would not even buy and ask for delivery. . .. The bottom line is if silver fails to deliver, gold will fail to deliver in 24 hours. Once that happens, then confidence breaks. . .. You are looking at two quadrillion dollars in derivatives in a global economy with $350 trillion in debt with an underlying $100 trillion annual GDP. The math does not work. I think silver, and I have said this for many years, silver will be the spark or the fuse that lights off gold, which then lights off the derivatives time bomb. Warren Buffett calls derivatives weapons of mass financial destruction.”

Mr. Gold thinks, “When the system resets, governments will start a money print fest that will touch off global hyperinflation. . .. The pure math of debt outstanding is that it cannot be repaid in current terms. It will be hyperinflation of the things we need and hyper-deflation of the things we already have. . .. How is somebody going to buy your house if the capital is not there? If the capital is not there, then the price is going to have to come down. . .. It is highly likely that silver will kick off the demise of the financial system.”

Mr. Gold thinks this kind of global debt will go bad fast. Holter warns, “When this thing cascades and collapses, you are either in place, or you are out of place. If you are out of place, you will not be able to repair your mistake. It will be a lifetime mistake to have not gotten ready. Let me just say there is a difference in being early and being wrong. In 2000 to 2005, if you were buying gold or you were buying silver, you were an idiot, a complete idiot, and people thought you walked around with a tin foil hat on. . .. Now, we are at the point where the best place to have invested your money since January 2000 would be in gold or silver. When Noah was running around building his ark, he looked wrong. He was not wrong–he was just early."

Watch:

Tyler Durden Fri, 03/06/2026 - 05:00

Stop The War... Because 'Global Warming'!!!

Stop The War... Because 'Global Warming'!!!

Via notalotofpeopleknowthat blog,

Apparently our climate propagandists are not bothered about the Mad Mullahs!

War makes climate change worse in many ways, and vice versa.

The US-Israel attacks on Iran that began over the weekend have killed hundreds of civilians and sent oil prices soaring, but this war also promises to unleash massive amounts of planet-warming gases at a time when civilization is already hurtling toward irreversible climate breakdown.

Not every story about the Iran war needs to make the climate connection, but climate change is essential context if the public and policymakers are to understand the full dimensions of this conflict.

Join Covering Climate Now and a panel of experts for a discussion about the geopolitical and climate implications of the war on Iran, which has one of the world’s largest oil reserves.

Their only concern is that a war might put a bit more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere!

They would no doubt be much happier with a nuclear winter!

At least it will lower global warming.

Tyler Durden Fri, 03/06/2026 - 04:15

The Planned "NATO Bank" Is Expected To Finance Europe's Impending Arms Race With Russia

The Planned "NATO Bank" Is Expected To Finance Europe's Impending Arms Race With Russia

Authored by Andrew Korybko,

The Russian-Polish security dilemma will likely serve as the impetus for fully unleashing and properly managing the capabilities of European NATO as a whole per the US’ National Defense Strategy.

RT drew attention in late January to a report by Izvestia about the West’s alleged plans to launch a “Defense, Security, and Resilience Bank” (DSRB) by 2027. Their article relies on in-depth research by the Atlantic Council, which came up with the idea of what was at first called the “NATO Bank”. The purpose is to provide “low-interest loans for defense modernization”, thus facilitating the goal of NATO members spending 5% of GDP on defense without significantly curtailing social and infrastructure spending.

Instead of slashing such programs to redirect funds to defense at the risk of helping populist-nationalists during the next elections and/or provoking unrest, they’d only spend a fraction of the principal each year servicing their DSRB loan instead of paying the cost upfront as if it was part of their annual expenditures. The Executive Summary of the Atlantic Council’s in-depth research hyperlinked to above also notes that “An additional critical function of the DSR bank would be to underwrite the risk for commercial banks”.

This would then “enabl[e] them to extend financing to defense companies across the supply chain.” The supplementary purpose is to finance large-scale orders that these companies themselves are unable to afford on their own and most member states can’t finance either without potential populist pushback. Defense companies can then expand production, pump out the requested military-technical equipment at scale, and then sell it at a much more affordable price for accelerating NATO’s planned militarization.

The bloc’s Eastern Flank, which largely overlaps with the Polish-led “Three Seas Initiative”, is expected to benefit the most. Poland is already poised to receive €44 billion in loans from the EU’s €150 billion “Security Action For Europe” program (SAFE, which is part of the €800 billion “ReArm Europe Plan”). This should help modernize its embarrassingly underdeveloped military-industrial complex and thus enable Poland to serve as the regional core of associated processes across the rest of the Eastern Flank.

The aforesaid role would become much more likely if it and Lithuania succeed in creating a defense-centric cross-border economic zone across the Suwalki Corridor/Gap like the latter just proposed. The US National Defense Strategy assessed that “European NATO dwarfs Russia in economic scale, population, and, thus, latent military power.” This potential just needs to be fully unleashed and properly managed. Poland could pioneer the way if it allows the US to advise it on the optimal use of SAFE and DSRB loans.

It was already assessed that “Poland Will Play A Central Role In Advancing The US’ National Security Strategy In Europe” so it therefore naturally follows that it’ll play a central role in the National Defense Strategy too. Poland already spends more of its GDP on defense than any other NATO member at 4.8%, however, so anything much more might result in curtailing social and infrastructure spending, but therein lies the importance of the DSRB for enabling Poland to avert that trade-off as was explained.

Poland’s debt-to-GDP is 55.1%, which is far below the EU’s 80.7%, so it could take on more debt through these means without too much socio-political discomfort. This is feasible after Poland just became a $1 trillion economy. Any additional military spending fueled by the DSRB would further accelerate Poland’s unprecedented militarization, which has led to it having the EU’s largest army at over 215,000 troops, with plans to reach 300,000 by 2030 and half a million by 2039 (200,000 of which would be reservists).

From Russia’s perspective, this poses a serious threat to Kaliningrad and allied Belarus, ergo why it’s expected to correspondingly bolster its forces there in response. That could also include the deployment of more strategic arms to Belarus like tactical nukes, hypersonic Oreshniks, and/or whatever else it might develop by then. Such responses are in turn expected to be portrayed by Poland as the reason for its unprecedented militarization that policymakers might then demand to be sped up even further.

The Russian-Polish security dilemma, which is due to their millennium-old rivalry and the US’ empowering of Poland as an anti-Russian proxy, will likely serve as the impetus for fully unleashing and properly managing the capabilities of European NATO as a whole per the US’ National Defense Strategy. Any progress in this direction would compel Russia to keep pace with this hostile bloc’s Polish-led militarization, therefore resulting in its own continued militarization and consequently an arms race.

Unlike European NATO members which will have to take out loans to finance this, hence the purpose of the DSRB, Russia can finance everything on its own. This places Russia in a much better financial position than its adversaries, some of whom are expected to struggle with balancing their perceived military priorities with their objective socio-economic ones.

Accordingly, Russia has the edge in this impending arms race with Europe, but the EU’s potential federalization could narrow the gap if it ever happens.

Tyler Durden Fri, 03/06/2026 - 03:30

The Roman Empire Peaked In 117 AD

The Roman Empire Peaked In 117 AD

What did Ancient Rome look like at its peak in 117 AD? 

The map below from Visual Capitalist shows the maximum territorial extent ever achieved by the Roman Empire, just after their successful wars in the east, where Emperor Trajan captured Dacia (Romania), Armenia, Mesopotamia, Assyria, and the Parthian capital of Ctesiphon (in modern-day Iraq).

Click on the map to expand...

As Visual Capitalist explains further, although Trajan is rated as one of the best Roman Emperors by historians and was considered one of the strongest military leaders in Roman history, the reality is that the peak he achieved was very short-lived.

We’ll dig into that and more as we explain this map, which covers one of the most interesting periods in history, leveraging classical and modern sources including Cassius Dio, Plutarch, Cambridge Ancient History, Walter Scheidel, Fergus Millar, Adrian Goldsworthy, Anthony Everitt, and Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Trajan: The First Emperor Born Outside of Italy

Trajan was born in Italica, Spain, near modern-day Seville. He was a career soldier and became an extremely competent and respected general. He was adopted as the heir to the childless Nerva, and became emperor after Nerva’s passing in 98 AD.

Once emperor, Trajan was famous for his civic investment and military expansion. He built roads, harbors, aqueducts, and the Forum of Trajan in Rome—but he also conquered distant lands decisively.

The Roman Empire at its Overextended Peak

Various limits—cultural, geographical, logistical, and administrative—seem to prevent historical empires from achieving infinite expansion.

Trajan tested these limits and eventually came upon the breaking point. Dacia (Romania) was arguably his greatest military achievement and remained a Roman province for almost two centuries after. His experiments to the East, however, were less of a slam dunk.

His battles with Parthia (the other Mediterranean superpower at the time) led to quick expansion into Armenia, Mesopotamia, and Assyria. However, these vast territorial gains were fragile:

  • Supply lines were long, exposed, and costly.
  • Massive revolts broke out in Judea and across the Jewish diaspora, in Libya, Egypt, and Cyprus.
  • Parthia remained intact as a power, despite symbolic defeats.

In hindsight, the map captures not just Rome’s greatest triumph—but the moment it became overextended.

Could Trajan hold it together as the empire came under strain?

The End of Trajan’s Reign, and a New Imperial Strategy

Conquering territory and holding it are two very different challenges.

With troops diverted across multiple fronts, the new gains quickly started unraveling for Trajan. At the same time, now in his early 60s, his health also began to fail. As he was returning to Rome, he stopped in Cilicia (modern-day southern Türkiye), where he passed away.

Hadrian, the following emperor, immediately recognized that the empire had tested its limits and now needed to consolidate. He built Hadrian’s Wall in the UK, and abandoned most of Trajan’s eastern conquests to focus on stabilization.

Tyler Durden Fri, 03/06/2026 - 02:45

With Europe Vulnerable To An Energy Crisis, Putin Says Russia May Pull The Plug On Gas Supplies To Europe

With Europe Vulnerable To An Energy Crisis, Putin Says Russia May Pull The Plug On Gas Supplies To Europe

Via Remix News,

The Russian government, along with domestic energy companies, is examining whether or not to immediately withdraw from the European market, Russian President Vladimir Putin said in a statement to Rossiya 1 television on Wednesday evening.

Putin appears to be reacting to the indication from Brussels that Russian energy may, after all, be needed in the short term, due to the war in Iran and closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

However, Putin may just decide to pull the plug now and start transitioning to other countries and regions that are not threatening a ban, reports Hirado.

“They (…) plan to introduce restrictions on the purchase of Russian gas, including liquefied gas, starting in a month, (March) 25. A year later, in (20)27, further restrictions will come into effect, up to a complete ban.

Now other markets are opening up. And perhaps it would be more beneficial for us to stop deliveries to the European market now.

To move to those markets that are opening up and gain a foothold there,” he said.

The move comes at time when gas prices are surging across Europe, leaving the EU vulnerable to a further supply shock.

Putin made clear that no decision has been made in the case.

“We will see what will happen in this area,” he said, “but this is a very dangerous game, especially today.”

 “According to the data available to our services, just as they once blew up the Nord Streams, now in Kyiv, with the support of some Western services, they are preparing to blow up the Blue Stream and the Turkish Stream. We have informed our Turkish friends about this matter,” he said.

The Russian president also called the attack on a Russian gas tanker in the Mediterranean Sea an act of terrorism.

Putin additionally called Russia a reliable supplier, explaining that the increase in European gas prices is not directly related to supplies, because they have not decreased overall, but rather the result of the general situation on the world market.

Read more here...

Tyler Durden Fri, 03/06/2026 - 02:00

Central Banks Can't Stop Wars

Central Banks Can't Stop Wars

Authored by Alexander Salter via TheDailyEconomy.org,

Every time conflict erupts in the Middle East and oil prices jump, the same anxiety follows: will central banks respond with tighter money?

It’s an understandable fear. Households dislike inflation, and policymakers are tasked with maintaining price stability. But when inflation is driven by geopolitical crises — such as war in Iran or disruptions to global shipping lanes — the source is not excessive demand. It is a supply shock. And monetary policy is impotent before such disruptions.

When oil supply tightens or transport costs surge, the economy becomes poorer. Energy becomes more expensive to extract and move. No interest rate decision in Washington, Frankfurt, or London can produce more oil from the Persian Gulf or reopen a blocked trade route.

In these moments, central banks face a difficult but crucial choice. They can tighten monetary policy in an attempt to suppress inflation by weakening demand, slowing hiring, curbing investment, and cooling total dollar spending. Or they can allow a temporary period of elevated prices to absorb part of the shock while keeping the broader economy intact.

The instinct to “do something” about supply-side price hikes is powerful. But tightening monetary conditions to combat a supply shock risks compounding the damage. Slower money growth and higher rate targets do not solve the underlying scarcity. They merely redistribute the burden — often toward workers.

If energy prices spike because of war, households will pay more at the pump and businesses will face higher costs. That pain is unavoidable. But if central banks respond aggressively by tightening policy, they risk turning an external supply shock into a domestic demand slump. Unemployment rises, investment stalls, and wage growth falters. For the vast majority of workers, having a job amidst 4 percent price growth is preferable to unemployment amidst 2 percent price growth.

There is a long tradition in macroeconomics of distinguishing between demand-driven and supply-driven inflation. When inflation stems from overheated demand (too much spending chasing too few goods), central banks are right to step in. Tightening policy can ease the frenzy without causing long-term economic damage.

But war-induced oil shocks are different. They make the economy less productive. Attempting to fully offset that reality with tighter monetary policy can produce a worse outcome: lower output and higher unemployment layered on top of higher prices.

The least harmful strategy in such circumstances is often to “look through” the initial inflation impulse — provided inflation expectations remain anchored.

That means tolerating temporarily higher headline inflation while emphasizing the external and temporary nature of the shock.

Communication is essential. Central bankers should say plainly that surging prices are the result of geopolitical events beyond their control. The Fed cannot drill for oil or end wars. What it can do is ensure that the financial system remains stable and that panic does not spill over into credit markets.

That role — safeguarding the demand side — is where monetary authorities are most effective during geopolitical crises. They can provide liquidity to prevent financial stress from amplifying the shock, if financial stress indicators suggest it is necessary. They can also reassure markets that banks and capital markets will function smoothly by guaranteeing adequate liquidity. And they can prevent a broader collapse in investment and hiring with standard open-market purchases.

In other words, central banks should focus on preventing second-order effects on the demand side. The danger is not the first jump in energy prices; it is the risk that frightened investors, tightening credit conditions, or collapsing confidence trigger a self-reinforcing downturn.

Critics will argue that tolerating higher inflation, even temporarily, risks unanchoring expectations. That risk is real. But credibility is not built by mechanically reacting to every price increase. It is built by responding appropriately to the source of inflation. If the public understands that central bankers are distinguishing between supply shocks and demand shocks, credibility can be preserved.

The worst outcome would be a policy mistake born of impatience: tightening aggressively in response to war-driven inflation, deepening the economic slowdown, and discovering months later that the original price pressures were fading on their own.

Wars make societies poorer. There’s no getting around the fact that destruction and turmoil are bad for business. Monetary policy will its best work if it avoids making the adjustment more costly than necessary.

When public events exceed the scope of monetary policy, restraint is the least bad option.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/05/2026 - 21:30

Cost of Living Crisis Continues As Job Market Wanes

Cost of Living Crisis Continues As Job Market Wanes

Authored by Mac Slavo via shtfplan.com,

The cost of living crisis is continuing with no end in sight. People used to use their tax refunds for trips or fun experiences, but now they have to either save the money, pay off debt, or use it to keep the lights on or buy groceries.

The sad state of most Americans’ financial status is getting progressively worse, too, as it’s often psychologically damaging as well as economically. Two-thirds of young Americans no longer believe they will ever be able to afford to live where they want. That means living in a place they desire, not having their dream home.

Accoridng to a report by The Hill, consumer spending continues, but the foundation is cracking. Credit card debt has surged to record highs, topping $1.2 trillionA third of adults have raided their savings in just the past few months. More than a quarter now lean harder on credit cards simply to cover routine purchases. Buy-now-pay-later plans, once marketed for gadgets and fashion, are increasingly used for groceries.

Everything is now more expensive, including housing costs, which jumped sharply in just two years. Coffee prices rose nearly 20 percent year over year, while the cost of beef climbed 15 percent. Medical care rose again, and so did the overall costs of medical insurance and healthcare. These aren’t abstract charts or distant averages, but brutal prices staring back at Americans at checkout counters, pharmacy windows, and rental offices. For those who think people are buying more, they aren’t. They’re paying more for what they’ve always needed.

A high-cost expense, such as a car repair, often flings one into debt for years at this point. Americans are relying on debt not to buy things they don’t need, but to survive. Analysts have said that consumers are “muscling through,” relying on willpower rather than margin. When 70 percent say their area is no longer affordable and nearly half report their finances worsening year over year, that isn’t mass misperception but a clear-eyed assessment of daily reality.

The flailing job market is about to make things worse, too. Just as families scramble to cover today’s bills, the job market that once offered escape is beginning to buckle. People are being replaced by technology as artificial intelligence takes over and never sleeps.

This crisis is compounding, and another war isn’t going to alleviate the pressure.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/05/2026 - 20:30

Plot Twist: Kuwaiti Fighter Jet Shot Down All Three US F-15s

Plot Twist: Kuwaiti Fighter Jet Shot Down All Three US F-15s

In a remarkable feat, a single Kuwaiti F/A-18 Super Hornet took out all three of the American F-15s that were shot down over Kuwait on Sunday, according to sources who spoke to the Wall Street Journal. The new narrative replaces the initial reports that attributed the shootdowns to a Kuwaiti Patriot missile battery. 

Launching just three missiles, a single pilot went three-for-three, destroying the trio of F-15E Strike Eagles, which were purchased for something like a combined $93 million in 1998 dollars, or $187 million today. New F-15EX models go for about $100 million apiece. All six crew members parachuted safely in Kuwaiti territory, though one of them had an unsettling reception from a pipe-wielding Kuwaiti who may have mistaken him for an Iranian pilot:  

The incident happened shortly after an Iranian drone hit a US tactical operations center in Kuwait, killing six US Army Reserve soldiers, say the Journal's sources, who are familiar with the initial reports on the mishap. With many other drones having swarmed the area, when an amped-up Kuwaiti pilot saw jets on his radar, he started blasting.

The airspace in the theater of operations is a madhouse, packed with fighter jets, bombers, reconnaissance craft, fuel tankers, drones, cruise missiles, HIMARS rockets, interceptor missiles, and incoming Iranian missiles and drones. “It’s a busy, busy air environment, and in times of stress, tension, crisis, and, certainly in this case, conflict, even more so,” retired US Air Force B-52 bomber pilot Mark Gunzinger told the Journal.

Retired Army Lt. Gen. Dan Karbler, who led the Army's Space and Missile Defense Command provided additional perspective on these types of incidents and what investigators will look at: 

A fratricide incident like the one in Kuwait usually happens because of several breakdowns in communication or failures in equipment, Karbler said. Investigators will be looking to see if the aircraft friend-or-foe transponders, which are supposed to broadcast the information about a plane electronically, were working properly. Other factors are whether the Kuwaitis knew the planned flight paths of the American jets, whether the aircraft themselves were flying the correct routes and whether Kuwait was able to talk to the F-15s, either electronically or by voice...

“It’s all the more complicated when you have different air defense systems operating on different frequencies that aren’t integrated, and some of those systems are actively trying to counter threats such as drones,” he said.

A Kuwaiti F/A 18 Super Hornet like this one made quick work of three US F-15s on Sunday

The incident will hang an asterisk on the F-15's otherwise flawless record, with none of the craft ever having been shot down in air-to-air combat -- going 104-0 since they were introduced in the 1970s. Military aviation wonks are taking a keen interest in the particulars of Sunday's incident. For example, here's TWZ's Tyler Rogoway: 

Three shoot-downs and everyone made it out alive sounds like tail-aspect shots made by smaller yield weapons. Also, if the Super Hornet employed passive heat seeking missiles (AIM-9 Sidewinder), the F-15E pilots would not have known they were being engaged until the weapon detonated. There are caveats to this, including if the Hornet had used its radar to assist in the Sidewinder lock. But Kuwaiti Hornets were clearly in the airspace at the time defending against drones, so even being painted by their radar may not have indicated how serious the situation was about to become.

Iran has claimed its forces shot down the F-15s. Of course, even if the Iranian military didn't fire the weapons that doomed the three craft, Iran's strategy of responding to unprovoked Israeli-US warfare by lashing out at countries all around the region certainly precipitated the disaster. 

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/05/2026 - 20:00

The Duke Lacrosse Case Exposed The Rot In Higher Education, The Media, And The Justice System

The Duke Lacrosse Case Exposed The Rot In Higher Education, The Media, And The Justice System

Authored by William L. Anderson via the Mises Institute,

Twenty years ago this month, the infamous Duke Lacrosse Case exploded on the Duke University campus, with three members of the university’s lacrosse team falsely accused of raping and assaulting a black stripper. It took more than a year to exonerate those young men, but only after the false charges had ruined lives and exposed elite higher education in the US.

As one who wrote nearly 100 articles on this case and who was interviewed on talk shows, along with working with some of the attorneys and families involved in the case, I saw it from the inside. I reported on prosecutors who lied and knowingly filed false charges and suborned perjury to cover their lies, police who lied at every turn of what turned out to be a sham investigation, and members of the Duke University faculty and administration who took part in framing innocent people for a crime that did not happen. And hovering over all of the wreckage was a combination of national and local media whose reporters—with some heroic exceptions—followed a false narrative until it drove them right over a cliff.

There is a standard narrative that the media and others want us to imagine: three young men were falsely accused of terrible crimes, but after diligent investigations by the authorities and good-faith efforts by others, the lacrosse players were exonerated while the malefactors were punished. In the end, the system worked.

That narrative is a lie, and over these next few weeks, I will deal with the different aspects of the case, from the police and prosecution to the Duke faculty and administration and to the media. There are numerous villains in this story and very few “good guys.” Furthermore, other than a mild punishment given to the lead prosecutor who committed numerous felonies during his reign of terror, none of the others who participated in pushing this false case faced any sanctions at all and many of the worst actors found themselves gaining even more power and wealth after the saga ended.

Far from being a situation in which the justice system “worked,” the Duke Lacrosse Case was the proverbial canary in the coal mine, a warning as to just how badly the system would veer off course when one of its members decided to lie with impunity. And it wasn’t just the justice system that showed its utter corruption. Duke’s foray into what now is called Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) would be a driving force in forcing attorneys for the players to do something unprecedented in US educational and justice history: attorneys filing a request for a change of venue because the university’s faculty and administration had behaved like a lynch mob.

And even after the lies in the case were exposed, nothing changed. Just seven years after the players were declared “innocent” Rolling Stone magazine, which had already disgraced itself in its coverage of the lacrosse case, published a story alleging rape and assault at the University of Virginia called “A Rape on Campus”—a story that was a complete fabrication and ultimately cost the magazine millions of dollars in settlements against people who were libeled and even was condemned by the left-wing Columbia Journalism Review.

Of course, the national media at first accepted the Rolling Stone piece as gospel truth just as it swallowed whole the Duke Lacrosse account. In both stories, the facts quickly established that both situations were built on lies, but the narratives that mainstream journalists follow rarely bow to the facts and the so-called “Newspaper of Record,” the New York Times, was probably the worst offender in the Duke case, with the possible exception of the local Durham Herald Sun.

The blogosphere and other internet outlets were a different story. While mainstream journalists (with the exception of the late Ed Bradley of CBS News’ “60 Minutes”) were siding with the prosecution and the Duke faculty, a number of bloggers and writers, led by KC Johnsona Harvard-educated history professor at Brooklyn College whose blog Durham-in-Wonderland took the case apart time and again—exposing one lie after another. If anything, the Duke Lacrosse Case demonstrated the power of the internet and bloggers who were more than able to match wits with the most powerful journalists in the world and shoot down their false claims.

Today’s account will outline the fundamentals of the case. After all, it happened 20 years ago, and most people have either forgotten it or never heard of it in the first place. But this story is worth remembering for no other reason than it showed how dishonest police and prosecutors can frame innocent people in broad daylight and it proved that the worst of the academic world was now running the elite universities, and there was no stopping the rot. As written earlier, it was higher education’s canary in the coal mine—and the canary is still dying if not already dead.

It Began with a Party

On Monday, March 13, 2006, Duke University was on spring break, but the highly-ranked lacrosse team—a favorite in the upcoming NCAA championships—was on campus practicing and preparing for its next game. Every year at this time, the team would have a party at the on-campus house on Buchanan Street in Durham, and for the party that night, the captains had called a local escort agency to hire strippers for the evening. (The media insists on calling them “exotic dancers”).

The agency sent two black women, one being Crystal Gail Mangum, and the other Kim Roberts, and both women were prostitutes. They were to be paid $400 each to put on a “show,” but when it became obvious to them that none of the players were going to seek sexual favors with them, the two quickly locked themselves in the tiny bathroom in the house and refused to come out. After about 30 minutes, they walked out and left the building, calling for a ride. Because they had spent so little time actually stripping, the players claimed they had been cheated and they and the two women argued back and forth with some racially-charged language spoken by both sides. Roberts called the police, but when police showed up later, everyone was gone.

That should have been the end of things—a tawdry event that should have done no one proud—but it was not to be. Later that night, Mangum refused to leave Roberts’ car, so Roberts called the police and had Mangum removed. The officer took her to Durham Access, a place where she could be examined for mental disorders. A nurse—against protocol—asked Mangum if she had been raped and, given that a “yes” would mean she would not be committed to a mental health facility, Mangum answered in the affirmative. According to federal law, she then had to be taken to a medical facility to be examined, so she was driven to Duke University Medical Center. Per an account I wrote for an academic journal, this followed:

After arriving at DUMC, Mangum “recanted” her accusations to (Police Sgt. John) Shelton, and then reversed herself. She told a number of conflicting stories, and Shelton loudly announced to the others at DUMC that he did not believe her. According to the lawsuit filed by Robert Ekstrand, the case almost ended there, but was picked up by Mark Gottlieb, a Durham police officer who allegedly had an animus for Duke students. Gottlieb would breathe new life into the case.

The rape exam of Mangum by an ER doctor did not find signs of rape or a beating, but a feminist nurse who signed the examination paper (even though she had not done the exam herself) wrote she saw evidence of “rape” and “blunt force trauma,” and from there the case got legs and ended up in the hands of Michael Nifong—the acting Durham County district attorney who was in a contested primary for election to that office.

Police came to the Buchanan Street house on March 16, accusing the captains of rape, but not making any arrests. Nine days later, the News & Observer—a McClatchy-owned newspaper in Raleigh—had a front-page story authored by Samiha Khanna and Anne Blythe entitled “Dancer Recalls Details of Ordeal” (link no longer available), which featured an interview with Mangum and her father who claimed she was beaten and raped in the Buchanan house bathroom by three members of the lacrosse team. From there, everything exploded.

Within six weeks, police arrested Reade Seligmann, Collin Finnerty, and David Evans, accusing each of them of rape, kidnapping, and assault against Mangum. In April 2007, then-North Carolina Attorney General Roy Cooper, after a long investigation, declared all three “innocent” of all the charges. Two months after that, the North Carolina State Bar disbarred Nifong—the first time a state prosecutor had faced such consequences—and later that summer, a North Carolina judge sentenced Nifong to spend a day in jail on contempt charges for lying to the court.

Conclusion

Over the next three weeks, I will go into detail of the legal case, the role of the Duke administration and faculty in promoting a false story, and, finally, the role of the mainstream news media in keeping a number of lies alive in the mind of the public. Three important institutions of our society failed so miserably as to make it difficult to salvage anything good from them.

But the Duke case also showed the power of the internet in which ordinary citizens who were not employed by the police, courts, or the media could use the web to push information to the public that ordinarily would not have been able to see at all before the internet existed. While some were able to use the internet to push false accusations and theories of guilt, in the end the truth did prevail, despite the best efforts of the police, prosecutors, Duke faculty, and the New York Times. The institutions these people represented might be hopelessly corrupted, but for now, at least some people can fight back.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/05/2026 - 19:30

Texas Dem's Senate Bid Hits Turbulence: 'God is Nonbinary' Zealot Hands Republicans A Golden Ticket

Texas Dem's Senate Bid Hits Turbulence: 'God is Nonbinary' Zealot Hands Republicans A Golden Ticket

Democrats needed a winner in Texas. They may have nominated a liability instead.

James Talarico barely had time to savor his primary win over Rep. Jasmine Crockett before the Republican opposition research machine started doing what it does best. Within hours of the Associated Press calling the race, an avalanche of old tweets and video clips had already begun circulating - and Republicans are practically giddy. 

The first batch of video ammunition came courtesy of Senate Republicans, who surfaced a clip of Talarico invoking Scripture to defend gender ideology. "God is both masculine and feminine and everything in between. God is nonbinary," he said in the footage.

He also said, “Trans children are God's children, made in God's own image. There's nothing wrong with them, nothing at all. They are perfect, they are beautiful, and they are sacred. Bullying children is immoral. It's a sin, a special kind of sin.”

Another clip shows Talarico describing the southern border with the kind of metaphor that writes campaign ads for the other side: "Our southern border should be like our front porch. There should be a giant welcome mat out front." 

He separately described Jesus as a "radical feminist.” 

In 2021, he delivered a floor speech at the Texas statehouse, claiming that "modern science obviously recognizes that there are many more than two biological sexes. In fact, there are six, which honestly, Rep. Hefner, surprised me, too."

He also insisted the "trans community" needs "abortion care.” 

 He's also suggested that atheists can be more "Christ-like" than some of his Christian colleagues.

Talarico is also being criticized for a social media posts in which he claims that his “white skin” is giving him “immunity” from the “virus of racism.”

"White skin gives me and every white American immunity from the virus,” he wrote on Twitter back on May 8, 2020. “But we spread it wherever we go—through our words, our actions, and our systems. We don't have to be showing symptoms—like a white hood or a Confederate flag—to be contagious." The metaphor was framed around early COVID-19 language and the outrage following the killing of Ahmaud Arbery. It went largely unnoticed at the time. It is not going unnoticed now.

He also wrote "Radicalized white men are the greatest domestic terrorist threat in our country."

Democrats were counting on Talarico to be an electable Democrat who could finally flip Texas. Now, Republicans are laughing.

"If this is a real Talarico post, he is toast," Gov. Greg Abbott said on X. "This is Tim Walz clone territory. He could win in Minnesota, but not in Texas." 

Sen. Ted Cruz wasn't subtle either. "Left-wing zealots are very, very different from ordinary Americans. Among other things, they are open racists," he said. 

Texas Democrats likely passed on Crockett because she was too combative, too polarizing, too much of a guaranteed loss in a state Republicans have held in the Senate since 1988. Talarico was supposed to be the reasonable one who could peel off disenchanted Republicans and make the suburbs competitive. Democrats thought they had momentum with Talarico, but now it looks like all they have is a lot of baggage. 

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/05/2026 - 19:15

AI Agents Prefer Bitcoin Over Fiat: New Study

AI Agents Prefer Bitcoin Over Fiat: New Study

Authored by Martin Young via Cointelegraph,

A new study from the Bitcoin Policy Institute indicates that artificial intelligence models prefer Bitcoin over stablecoins and other forms of money for different financial situations, with very few showing a preference for fiat currency. 

The BPI tested 36 models generating more than 9,000 responses, and the AI agents “overwhelmingly chose to use Bitcoin for their economic activity,” the institute said on Tuesday as it released the results of its research. 

The study found that 48.3% of AI models chose to use Bitcoin overall, and it was the most selected monetary instrument across all 9,072 responses.

When asked about scenarios involving preserving purchasing power over multi-year horizons, 79.1% of AI responses chose Bitcoin, “the single most lopsided result in the study.”

However, for payment scenarios, services, micropayments, and cross-border transfers, stablecoins were chosen in 53.2% of responses compared to just 36% for Bitcoin.

Bitwise chief investment officer Jeff Park said that the most obvious explanation for stablecoins not doing better is that they “can be frozen, Bitcoin can’t.”

Almost 91% of responses chose a digitally native instrument such as Bitcoin, stablecoins, altcoins, tokenized real-world assets (RWA), or compute units over traditional fiat. 

“Zero of the 36 models tested chose fiat as their top overall preference, making digital-money convergence one of the most universal findings in the study.” 

Half of AI agents prefer Bitcoin. Source: Bitcoin Policy Institute Methodology had limitations

The Bitcoin Policy Institute said the current study was limited to 36 models tested across six providers, and it would look to expand to additional models in the future. 

It also acknowledged that system prompt framing may have influenced the results, adding that “future work will test alternative framings and measure sensitivity.”

This was apparent in some of the “open-ended monetary scenarios” presented to the AI models. 

For example, one scenario asked what financial instrument an AI would choose if it were operating across multiple countries with “75,000 units of accumulated earnings” wanting to store them in a way that is “not tied to any single country’s monetary policy or banking system,” which would already rule out fiat currency. 

BPI also said that the AI models’ preferences do not reflect real-world adoption and that the results instead reflect patterns in the training data.

The study revealed that Anthropic models averaged a 68% Bitcoin preference, whereas OpenAI models averaged 26%, Google’s 43%, and xAI 39%. 

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/05/2026 - 18:25

Data Center Hunter: Iran Expands Drone Target List, From AWS To Microsoft Facilities

Data Center Hunter: Iran Expands Drone Target List, From AWS To Microsoft Facilities

Iranian state-affiliated media says the IRGC has targeted Microsoft data centers in the Gulf region with kamikaze drones, days after IRGC drone strikes hit Amazon data centers in the United Arab Emirates. This underscores a new escalation: commercial data centers no longer appear to be off-limits, a risk we warned readers a little more than a month ago.

"The targeting of Amazon and Microsoft in these operations has dealt a serious blow to the enemy's technological and information infrastructure," Fars News Agency said in a Telegram post, as quoted by the Financial Times.

On Monday, two AWS data centers in the UAE were hit by IRGC drones, while an AWS facility in Bahrain was nearly struck by one of these next-generation, low-cost kamikaze drones. These incidents marked the first known instance of a commercial data center being physically targeted in a conflict.

We pointed out in the note titled "Explosion In AI Data Center Buildouts Will Demand Next-Gen Counter-Drone Security" that Wall Street analysts largely end their analysis at the financing and construction of next-generation data centers, with limited discussion regarding the modern security architecture required once these facilities are built and become instant high-value targets for non-state actors or foreign adversaries. Traditional perimeter measures, such as metal chain-link fencing and surveillance systems, are rendered useless in the world of emerging AI threats, including autonomous drone or swarm-based attacks enabled by advances in AI and low-cost unmanned systems.

Related:

It's fair to say that this week, data center operators and financiers around the world have gotten the memo: counter-UAS systems will be needed as buildouts worldwide could exceed $3 trillion by the end of 2028. The hyperdevelopment of war technology in Ukraine over the last four years has pulled the 2030s-era war forward, while the modern world has yet to catch up with defensive systems.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/05/2026 - 18:00

Iraqi Supply Loss Could Expose The Real Limits Of OPEC Spare Capacity

Iraqi Supply Loss Could Expose The Real Limits Of OPEC Spare Capacity

Authored by Julianne Geiger via OilPrice.com,

Iraq has already begun shutting in production as exports through the Strait of Hormuz become increasingly constrained. Roughly 1.5 million barrels per day are reportedly offline, and officials have warned that figure could approach 3 million bpd if disruptions persist.

At 3 million bpd, this becomes one of the largest sudden supply losses in the modern market outside of sanctions or war.

Iraq’s total crude production has been running near 4.0–4.3 million bpd, according to recent OPEC secondary-source data. Exports typically average between 3.2 and 3.4 million bpd, the vast majority shipped from southern terminals at Basrah. China and India together account for roughly two-thirds of those flows, making Iraq one of Asia’s most critical heavy crude suppliers.

That output is heavily concentrated in the southern fields feeding Basrah exports. Rumaila alone has nameplate capacity of around 1.4–1.5 million bpd and routinely produces well above 1.3 million bpd. West Qurna 1 produces roughly 600,000 bpd, with capacity closer to 650,000–670,000. West Qurna 2 is producing around 460,000 bpd, though development plans have targeted 750,000–800,000. Zubair’s design capacity is roughly 700,000 bpd. The Maysan complex contributes roughly 300,000–350,000 bpd.

Taken together, those fields account for the bulk of Iraq’s export engine. A 3 million bpd shut-in would effectively sideline most of the southern system and remove a significant share of medium and heavy sour barrels from global trade.

The obvious question is whether OPEC can replace those barrels.

And the answer depends on who you ask and how you define spare capacity. But even theoretically, it’s a stretch. In December last year, the EIA redefined the terms “maximum sustainable capacity” as the upper limit a producer could reach within a year if everything runs smoothly and “effective capacity” which is the amount of oil that could be realistically brought online within 90 days and sustained without damaging fields or infrastructure.

Let the terms “90 days” and “with a year” sink in for a moment.

For the sake of exactness, the EIA defines spare capacity using the second of those terms.

So, does OPEC really have the spare capacity to meaningful fill the gap right now?

Under that 90-day definition, OPEC’s effective spare capacity is generally estimated in the range of roughly 3 to 4 million barrels per day. And almost all of it sits in just two countries: Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. Saudi Arabia accounts for roughly 2 million barrels per day of that cushion. The UAE contributes somewhere around 0.8 to 1.0 million barrels per day. The rest of OPEC’s members add relatively marginal volumes.

If Iraqi shut-ins approach 3 million barrels per day, you are no longer talking about dipping into spare capacity. You are talking about testing the outer boundary of it and would be almost entirely reliant on two producers ramping quickly, sustaining output, and pushing those barrels through the very same Strait of Hormuz that is currently under strain. And those spare capacity figures include everything that could take them 90 days to turn on.

OPEC could potentially turn on all its spare capacity, but it could take them months to do it. Mobilization is not instantaneous.

Just as importantly, crude oil quality matters. Iraqi exports are mostly comprised of medium and heavy sour grades. Refiners in China and India, which together take roughly two-thirds of Iraq’s exports, take about 2.1-2.5 million bpd—and they are largely configured for those heavier grades. Substituting lighter grades alters yields, diesel output, and refining margins. This is already playing out in today’s tightening heavy crude differentials.

And finally, even with the upstream issue resolved, the oil would still have to move.

Even if Saudi Arabia and the UAE open the taps, much of those exports would still need to transit the Strait. If traffic slows, if insurance costs spike, if tankers hesitate, the constraint shifts from upstream capacity to physical flow. Spare capacity in a field does not equal barrels on a ship.

And timing matters. The EIA’s definition allows up to 90 days to bring that oil online and sustain it. Ninety days is a long time in a market reacting in real time. A 3 million bpd disruption doesn’t give producers a comfortable ramp window. It forces a response under pressure.

So yes, OPEC has spare capacity on paper. But if Iraqi shut-ins approach 3 million bpd and linger, the discussion would quickly stop being about headline spare capacity and would instead be about deliverable barrels — in the right quality, moving through functioning shipping lanes. That is a much narrower margin of safety than the top-line numbers imply.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/05/2026 - 17:40

Americans Are Plundering Their 401(k) Savings In "Record" Numbers

Americans Are Plundering Their 401(k) Savings In "Record" Numbers

More Americans are tapping their retirement savings to deal with financial emergencies, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Last year, a record 6% of workers in 401(k) plans administered by Vanguard took hardship withdrawals, up from 4.8% in 2024 and about 2% before the pandemic. The figures point to a mixed financial picture: many Americans are doing well, but a growing share are under pressure.

At the same time, retirement balances have climbed alongside strong markets, and more workers are participating in 401(k) plans. As a result, those accounts are increasingly becoming a financial backstop when unexpected expenses arise.

Hardship withdrawals have now increased for six straight years. Part of the rise dates back to a 2018 change that made it easier to access retirement funds by removing the requirement that workers take a 401(k) loan before requesting a hardship distribution. Vanguard administers plans for nearly five million participants.

The most common reasons for withdrawals last year were avoiding foreclosure or eviction and covering medical costs. The median amount taken out was $1,900.

Financial strain is also showing up in other ways. More Americans are falling behind on some types of debt, including mortgages, while credit-counseling groups report that the average income of people seeking help has increased. Even so, unemployment remains relatively low and consumer spending has stayed resilient.

Policy changes have also expanded the situations where hardship withdrawals are allowed. A 2022 law gave employers the option to permit withdrawals for victims of domestic abuse and people impacted by federally declared disasters. It also allows workers to withdraw up to $1,000 penalty-free for an emergency once every three years, with the option to access funds again sooner if the money is repaid.

Another driver is the spread of automatic enrollment. As more employers automatically place workers into retirement plans unless they opt out, more people now have savings available to draw from during emergencies.

The Journal writes that among about 1,300 employer plans Vanguard administers, 61% automatically enrolled new hires in 2025, up from 34% in 2013.

Workers who take hardship withdrawals from traditional accounts typically owe income tax and may face a 10% penalty if they are under 59½.

Despite the rise in withdrawals, overall retirement savings remain strong. The average 401(k) balance rose 13% in 2025 to a record $167,970.

Participation is also growing. A record 45% of workers increased their savings rate in 2025, matching the share that did so the year before, largely through automatic escalation programs.

“People are saving more, remaining invested, and being automatically rebalanced in a professional way,” said David Stinnett, head of strategic retirement consulting at Vanguard.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/05/2026 - 17:20

House Votes Down Iran War Powers Measure, Soon On Heels Of Similar Senate Res. Defeat

House Votes Down Iran War Powers Measure, Soon On Heels Of Similar Senate Res. Defeat

Update(1714ET)So essentially Congress is not even going to have a robust War Powers debate as war in Iran and the Gulf keeps escalating:

The House on Thursday rejected an effort to advance legislation that would restrict President Trump from using further military action in Iran.

The failed vote amounts to an endorsement of Trump's military campaign in Iran from Congress, which has the constitutional authority to declare war.

  • The 212-219 vote [largely on partisan lines] comes one day after the Senate rejected a similar measure, mainly along party lines.

* * *

It's been wild ride in crude over the past few days with Brent crude futures were capped near $84 a barrel on Tuesday afternoon before sliding down to the $81 level late Wednesday afternoon, only to surge back up to $84 this morning...

...as shipping industry insiders and Wall Street analysts await exact details on the Trump administration's proposal to keep tankers transiting the Strait of Hormuz. The critical maritime chokepoint remains paralyzed, raising the risk of an energy shock in parts of the world that rely heavily on those flows, particularly in Asia.

President Trump wrote in a Truth Social post that the U.S. will provide insurance for "ALL Maritime Trade" through the U.S. Development Finance Corporation (DFC) and will provide Navy escorts "if necessary."

The shutdown is already hitting global energy flows:

Now comes the hard part, with the shipping industry and Wall Street analysts all asking the same question: how will every tanker transiting the Arabian Sea through the Gulf of Oman, into the Strait, and onward to the Persian Gulf be protected by U.S. or allied air or naval forces? 

"Nothing is sure and we need immediate clarity," said Khalid Hashim, managing director of Precious Shipping Pcl, a Thai firm that owns bulk carriers.

Hashim said, "Lives are at risk, cargoes are at risk, ships are at risk. We need immediate cover that protects us from all this."

While some shipowners say they're mulling over joining escorted convoys, many remain very cautious, noting that escorts do not eliminate the risk of the IRGC's asymmetric warfare, such as the use of drones. 

Analysts also question whether the Trump administration has done enough planning to make the proposal bulletproof in the near term. Overall, the market sees Trump's plan as a temporary fix to restart flows in the Strait, with Brent crude futures capped at $84 since the announcement and currently trading around $81. 

UBS analyst Benjamin Benson, "Improved risk sentiment following US President Trump's announcement on maritime insurance and US Navy security support further aided the recovery in prices." 

Current activity in the Strait of Hormuz:

"The core thing shipowners are thinking about is the real risk of loss," said Karnan Thirupathy, partner at Kennedys Law LLP, who specializes in commodities and shipping. "No one goes into the trade if the risk of loss is simply too high."

RBC Capital Markets LLC analysts noted, "President Trump's comments about insurance and tanker escorts caused a pullback in oil prices, we question how much planning has been done on the insurance backstop thus far and think there could be a number of challenges in executing this plan quickly." 

Wall Street Journal noted by late afternoon that the Trump administration was in talks with one major insurance broker about how to get ships moving through the Strait of Hormuz: 

A team from insurance broker Marsh Risk met with administration officials Tuesday and offered to help the U.S. government create an insurance mechanism that could lower shipping risk and make insuring ships more affordable, said Marcus Baker, the firm's global head of marine, cargo and logistics. Energy prices have soared since Iran warned it could start attacking ships in the strategic waterway, slowing oil shipping to a standstill.

"Providing protection for all tankers operating in areas currently threatened by Iran is unrealistic as this would require a very high number of warships and other military assets," Bimco security analyst Jakob Larsen noted. 

Let's remind readers that the U.S. and its allies had a difficult time securing the Bab el-Mandeb chokepoint, where Houthi rebels repeatedly launched missiles and drones at commercial ships linked to the U.S. and Israel. That certaintly matters now. It also comes as the U.S. and its allies are burning through significant volumes of air-delivered munitions in Operation Epic Fury.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/05/2026 - 17:13

100% Of Audited Medicaid Claims For Autism Care In Colorado Were Improper Or Flawed: Report

100% Of Audited Medicaid Claims For Autism Care In Colorado Were Improper Or Flawed: Report

Authored by Sylvia Xu via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Colorado’s Medicaid program made an estimated $77.8 million in improper payments and another $207.4 million in potentially improper payments for autism therapy, according to a February report from the Inspector General for the Department of Health and Human Services.

A sign in front of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services building in Woodlawn, Md., on March 19, 2025. Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images

Auditors investigated $289.5 million in Medicaid payments from 2022 to 2023 that paid for more than 1 million claims for Applied Behavior Analysis—a therapy used to treat autism and developmental disabilities.

Each of the 100 claims reviewed contained at least one improper or potentially improper payment, suggesting a 100 percent failure rate.

Improper payments are not necessarily fraudulent. Payments are considered improper when the claim does not meet federal or state requirements. Payments are potentially improper when the submitted claim is so poor or unreliable that auditors cannot verify that the services were provided correctly.

Claim Errors

In 93 of 100 claims examined, the billing providers either did not provide notes verifying that the therapy took place, didn’t provide the required signatures, or billed for more time than the notes indicated.

In 18 cases, the therapy that was supposed to be performed by a specialist—such as a Board Certified Behavior Analyst—was performed by staff without those qualifications.

In seven cases, the children receiving therapy lacked a current doctor’s diagnosis or referral on file.

In 88 cases, facilities billed for recreational activities that are not considered medical therapy, such as academic tutoring, day care, or custodial care. In one case, a facility billed for children swimming and playing on water slides.

In 76 cases, facilities billed for a full eight-hour day without subtracting time for naps, meals, or breaks.

Oversight and Safety Concerns

The report concludes that Colorado made these improper payments because it did not provide effective oversight. The state did not regularly review Medicaid payments to catch errors and failed to give clear guidance to therapy centers on how to bill or what counts as therapy.

Additionally, the state didn’t properly check if its prior authorization contractors were following the rules when approving therapy for children.

While the audit focused on money, it also uncovered problems that could affect the safety and quality of care.

Some staff members had criminal convictions for weapons offenses, assault, or driving under the influence. In one case, three staff members at a facility providing care to an 11-year-old child with autism had criminal histories.

A non-credentialed technician had a felony weapons offense conviction three months prior to treating children. A registered behavior technician had been convicted of misdemeanor assault and physical harassment, such as a strike, shove, or kick. Another behavior technician had an aggravated misdemeanor weapons conviction.

The state did not require background checks for these workers.

Previous Audits

The report comes as part of a series of seven Inspector General audits examining state Medicaid payments for autism therapy. Four are are complete and three remain in progress.

In previous audits, the agency estimated more than $120 million in improper payments and nearly $200 million in potential improper payments for Indiana, Wisconsin, and Maine.

The potential fraud, waste, and abuse in Medicaid autism therapy payments in Colorado was the highest among these audits.

The Office of Inspector General recommended that Colorado refund $42.6 million—the federal portion of the improper payments—to the federal government.

Also, the agency suggested that the state begin regular reviews of autism facilities to ensure they follow the rules and provide better training and guidance to facilities on documenting and billing for therapy.

The state of Colorado agreed to improve its guidance and conduct more regular reviews in the future, according to a statement. But it disagreed with the recommendation to refund the money, arguing that the audit derived its findings from a limited sample and didn’t have enough detail on the errors.

Further, Colorado argued that its Medicaid program does not require certification of behavior technicians before making payments, so the refund calculation based on this statute should be rescinded.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/05/2026 - 17:00

US Ambassador To UN Threatens Iran Counterpart: 'Better Watch Himself In New York City'

US Ambassador To UN Threatens Iran Counterpart: 'Better Watch Himself In New York City'

Trump's Ambassador to the United Nations Mike Waltz has issued a veiled threat to his Iranian counterpart, and the clip is going viral, which is likely to further delay the potential for any talks toward halting the war - which at this point still seem non-existent.

The spat first erupted Sunday, when Waltz ripped into Iran's UN Ambassador Amir-Saeid Iravani, coming just a day after Operation Epic Fury started and the bombs were unleashed on Tehran.

Screengrab via The Australian

Walz had said at an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council, "Frankly, I’m not going to dignify this with another response, especially as this representative sits here in this body representing a regime that has killed tens of thousands of its own people and imprisoned many more simply for wanting freedom from your tyranny."

But Walz later appeared on Fox Business, discussing the war and the exchange at the UNSC. That's when he appeared to threaten Iravani on air, during Maria Bartiromo's program:

"You know, I'm going to be kind here," Waltz said, "but it wouldn't surprise me if this guy ends up knocking on our door for asylum. This regime is falling apart, and they have abused, imprisoned, tortured their own people for far too long. They've threatened the world for far too long."

Walz was then asked if he felt Iravani's own rhetoric has posed a threat, and Waltz said the Iranian envoy had better watch himself while he's in New York City.

"I can't say how many American soldiers the Iranians have killed either at their hands or their proxies," Waltz said. "I'm a Green Beret, not my first firefight, and he should be careful with his words sitting on American soil, and I'll just leave it at that."

Watch the on-air moment here:

The "be careful... on American soil" part of this is what's raised eyebrows the most. Of course, UN grounds in NYC is considered international territory, and so this means Amb. Iravani is unlikely to venture too far out from the complex at this moment.

Conventionally, there's strict international protocol in place regarding protection of diplomats and embassies, but increasingly 'rules of war and diplomacy' are being abandoned by all sides as the conflict spirals.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/05/2026 - 16:40

Systemic Risk: A 12-Order Cascading Analysis Of A Zero-Flow Strait Of Hormuz Closure

Systemic Risk: A 12-Order Cascading Analysis Of A Zero-Flow Strait Of Hormuz Closure

Authored by Craig Tindale via X:

Executive Summary

The modern world order, having organized itself around efficiency, cost minimization, and logistical precision, has created a machinery of dependence so extreme that the interruption of one narrow corridor can propagate outward into a general crisis of civilization.

What appears at first as a maritime blockade is in fact the exposure of the entire global system as a hierarchy of brittle interdependencies.

Oil and LNG fail as inputs into electricity, fertilizer, shipping, chemicals, mining, manufacturing, and state finance.

As an example, The global polyester chain begins in petrochemicals. A severe disruption to hydrocarbon and petrochemical feedstocks cascades into PTA, MEG, polyester resin, filament, and fabric production, causing acute shortages, price spikes, and factory stoppages across synthetic-heavy apparel segments. The industry does not vanish overnight, but the low-cost, high-volume apparel model starts to break down.

From this follows a chain whose logic is cumulative: fuel inflation becomes fertilizer inflation; fertilizer inflation becomes food inflation; food inflation becomes urban instability, sovereign subsidy exhaustion, and ultimately hunger. In this sequence, food shortages are not a secondary humanitarian issue. They are one of the central political outcomes of the crisis, because modern populations do not experience systemic breakdown first through grand strategy, but through unaffordable bread, intermittent power, empty pharmacies, and possibly the collapse of public order. A globalised Arab Spring.

In this framework, hyperinflation emerges as the social expression of real physical bottlenecks. When energy-importing states are forced to acquire dollarized fuel at any price, when currencies weaken, when fertilizer and transport costs reprice an entire harvest cycle, inflation ceases to be cyclical and becomes coercive.

It enters every household budget and every state ledger at once. The result is the destruction of planning itself: firms cannot quote, governments cannot subsidize, and populations can no longer calculate the future. Under such conditions, credit markets seize up, foreign-exchange reserves drain, sovereign spreads widen, and the boundary between economic crisis and political crisis disappears.

Modern technical systems amplify rather than dampen this disorder. The loss of sour crude becomes a sulphur and sulphuric acid crisis; that chemical crisis becomes a copper and cobalt crisis; the metals crisis becomes a transformer, switchgear, and grid crisis; the grid crisis becomes a semiconductor crisis; and the semiconductor crisis becomes a compute and data-centre crisis.

Thus, the closure of a maritime strait reaches, by entirely material means, into the server rack, the hospital network, the payment system, the electrical substation, and the defence-industrial base. The myth that digital civilization floats above heavy industry is, in this scenario, extinguished. Compute is shown to rest on copper, transformers, stable voltage, LNG, and ships.

For humanity, the systemic risk is therefore total in scope even if uneven in distribution.

The most immediate suffering falls on import-dependent and fiscally weak societies: blackouts, food insecurity, unemployment, debt default, regime stress, and mass unrest. Yet the advanced economies do not escape. They experience industrial contraction, infrastructure delays, AI and semiconductor bottlenecks, strategic stockpiling, and the permanent repricing of security over efficiency. What begins as a supply shock ends as a transformation of the political economy. States abandon the fiction of neutral markets and move toward command allocation, export controls, emergency powers, and militarized trade corridors. Market price gives way to strategic rationing. Globalization does not simply slow; it hardens into armed blocs.

The ultimate conclusion is grim : the terminal danger in this model is not one shortage, nor one recession, nor even one war-risk premium.

It is the transition from a globally integrated commercial order into a world system governed by scarcity, coercion, and administrative triage.

In such a world, hunger, hyperinflation, sovereign failure, technological stagnation, and geopolitical militarization are not separate crises.

They are the normal operating features of a civilization that has discovered, too late, that its efficiency was built on concentrated fragility. The closure of Hormuz, under this analysis, is the event through which the modern world recognizes that its supply chains were never only economic structures, but the hidden constitution of social peace itself.

A multipolar world is a very complicated and dangerous world. As always, be careful what you wish for.

Such is the risk. The whole world will be compelled to support efforts to bring this situation under control immediately. China, the US, and Europe will have to work together.

The political cycle over the coming days and weeks is going to matter like never before.

Here are 10 likely and immediate crises

  • Polyester -> apparel The global polyester chain begins in petrochemical feedstocks. If naphtha, paraxylene, PTA, or MEG are disrupted, polyester fiber, yarn, and fabric output contracts sharply, and synthetic-heavy apparel production starts seizing up. Chain: Petrochemicals -> PTA/MEG -> polyester -> fabric mills -> garment factories

  • Natural gas -> fertilizer -> food The global nitrogen fertilizer chain begins with natural gas. If gas supply is disrupted, ammonia and urea production falls, farm input costs spike, and food systems come under pressure within a single planting cycle. Chain: Natural gas -> ammonia -> urea -> crop yields -> food prices

  • Sour crude / sulfur -> sulfuric acid -> copper The copper and cobalt extraction chain depends on sulfuric acid, which in turn depends heavily on sulfur recovered from sour hydrocarbons and smelting. If sulfur or acid supply is disrupted, leaching operations stall and electrification inputs tighten fast. Chain: Sour crude/sulfur -> sulfuric acid -> SX-EW/HPAL -> copper/cobalt -> grids and EVs

  • Propylene -> polypropylene -> medical and packaging The polypropylene chain begins in petrochemicals. If propylene supply is disrupted, packaging, medical disposables, and automotive plastics face shortages, forcing manufacturers to ration output or redesign products. Chain: Propylene -> polypropylene resin -> molded parts/films -> hospitals, food packaging, autos

  • Salt + power -> chlorine / caustic soda -> water treatment The chlor-alkali chain begins with salt and electricity. If that system is disrupted, chlorine and caustic soda output drops, putting water treatment, sanitation, PVC, and pulp processing under immediate stress. Chain: Salt + electricity -> chlorine/caustic soda -> water treatment/PVC/paper

  • Natural rubber + synthetic rubber -> tires -> freight The tire industry begins with natural and synthetic rubber. If either is severely disrupted, tire production contracts, replacement cycles stretch, and trucking fleets start operating under maintenance and logistics constraints. Chain: Rubber feedstocks -> tires -> trucking fleets -> freight movement -> retail supply

  • Iron ore + metallurgical coal -> steel -> construction and machinery The steel chain begins with iron ore and metallurgical coal. If either feedstock is constrained, steel mills cut output, and construction, auto manufacturing, shipbuilding, and heavy machinery start absorbing delays and cost shocks. Chain: Iron ore + met coal -> steel -> beams, sheet, machinery -> construction/autos/industry

  • Bauxite + alumina + cheap power -> aluminum -> transport and packaging The aluminum chain begins with bauxite, alumina refining, and very large amounts of electricity. If any of those are disrupted, smelting capacity drops and packaging, aerospace, transport, and power transmission all get hit. Chain: Bauxite -> alumina -> aluminum smelting -> cans, aircraft, cable, vehicle parts

  • Soda ash + natural gas -> glass -> buildings, autos, solar The flat glass chain depends on soda ash, silica, and high-temperature continuous furnaces fed by stable energy. If those inputs are disrupted, glass production cannot be easily paused and restarted, and shortages hit construction, autos, and solar manufacturing. Chain: Soda ash + silica + gas -> float glass -> windows, windshields, solar panels

  • High-purity gases and chemicals -> semiconductors -> electronics and autos The semiconductor chain begins with ultra-pure gases, photoresists, specialty chemicals, and stable power. If those inputs are disrupted, chip yields collapse, lead times extend, and electronics, autos, telecom, and defense manufacturing start choking on shortages. Chain: Neon/photoresists/ultra-pure chemicals + stable power -> wafers -> chips -> downstream manufacturing

Section 1: The Master Cascade, An Institutional Matrix

The systematic rationalization of global supply chains has constructed an extraordinary vulnerability.

The following matrix outlines the chronological and mechanical breakdown of the global system, from initial logistical paralysis to the ultimate civilizational redesign.

Caution - Remember, these are just my own thoughts and don't represent certainty. It's an extrapolation of what could happen, not what will. That said, it is a serious risk warning

  • Order 1: Maritime Flow Interruption (0–14 Days)The mechanism is an logistical gridlock of approximately 20.9M bpd in liquids and 80 mtpa in LNG, operating against maximized bypass pipelines. The binding bottlenecks are the Saudi Petroline and UAE Habshan capacity limits, which offer a maximum of 2.8M to 3.1M bpd in spare diversion, alongside severe VLCC availability constraints. The leading indicators of this phase are prompt-month Brent crude backwardation, VLCC ton-mile rates exceeding $423k/day, and the instantaneous cancellation of P&I War Risk Insurance.

  • Order 2: Refining & Industrial Chemicals (2–6 Weeks)The mechanism relies on the starvation of sour crude, yielding an immediate, unmitigable global deficit in elemental sulphur by-production. The physical bottlenecks are strict toxic transport limits, local refinery storage capacities, and concurrent Russian export bans. The leading indicators are domestic Chinese sulphuric acid pricing breaching 1000 yuan/ton and the abrupt halt of Qatari sulphur exports, removing 3.8M tpa from the market.

  • Order 3: Mining & Metals Extraction (1–3 Months)The mechanism is a profound sulphuric acid famine that forces the halt of Solvent Extraction and Electrowinning (SX-EW) and High-Pressure Acid Leaching (HPAL) operations for copper and cobalt. The bottlenecks manifest in shallow regional acid inventory buffers and Zambian cross-border rail constraints. Leading indicators include formal force majeures declared across the DRC and Zambian copper belts, with spot acid prices in Kolwezi surging past $700/tonne.

  • Order 4: Grids & Power Hardware (3–12 Months)The mechanism dictates that the copper deficit exacerbates an already chronic shortage of Large Power Transformers (LPTs) and high-voltage switchgear. The bottlenecks are the highly concentrated supply of GOES (Grain-Oriented Electrical Steel), inflexible vapor-phase drying limits, and extreme OEM lead times extending to 120–210 weeks. Leading indicators are Siemens Energy and Hitachi order backlogs swelling beyond €146B, accompanied by a surging Federal Reserve Transformer Price Index.

  • Order 5: Semiconductor Supply Chains (11–30 Days)The mechanism involves Taiwanese LNG starvation triggering mandatory grid rationing, exposing fabrication equipment to catastrophic voltage sags. The bottlenecks are defined by Taiwan's statutory 11-day LNG reserve limit, strict SEMI F47 tool tolerance limits, and 28-week lead times for ABF substrates. Leading indicators include Taipower's percent operating reserve (POR) collapsing, skyrocketing TSMC wafer scrap rates, and extreme spot LNG premiums.

  • Order 6: Compute & Data Centers (6–18 Months)The mechanism is the violent collision of silicon supply constraints with transformer unavailability, freezing GW-scale expansions entirely. The bottlenecks are a stagnant 2,600 GW US interconnection queue and interconnection wait times extending up to 7 years in PJM and Northern Virginia. Leading indicators are the public delays of AWS and NVIDIA capex deployments, alongside the structural pausing and cancellation of hyperscaler contracts.

  • Order 7: Capital Markets & Credit (1–6 Months)The mechanism centers on material cost inflation driving severe margin compression, causing high-yield industrials to reprice violently. The bottlenecks are heavy industrial balance sheet leverage and the rapid draining of Emerging Market FX reserves required to secure dollarized energy. Leading indicators include Siemens Energy credit spreads widening past 300 bps, the KRW/USD exchange rate breaching 1460, and the INR hitting record lows.

  • Order 8: State Response Layer (13–90 Days)The mechanism involves sovereign authorities enacting SPR drawdowns and utilizing the DPA, only to be subordinated by uncompromising pipe and cavern physics. The bottlenecks are the SPR's maximum daily hydraulic drawdown limit of 4.4M bpd and a strict 13-day lag for physical market entry. Leading indicators are US DOE spot-price indexed solicitation data and the issuance of federal mandates via the Defense Production Act.

  • Order 9: Trade Architecture (1–3 Years)The mechanism is the multi-year restructuring of maritime supply lines, marked by the acceleration of Petroyuan usage as dollar liquidity drains from the system. The bottlenecks are absolute global shipbuilding capacity limits, with Asian yards fully booked into 2029, and the constraints of an aging VLCC fleet. Leading indicators are surging non-dollar energy settlement volumes, newbuild VLCC orders, and shipyard utilization rates.

  • Order 10: Social Stability (6–12 Months)The mechanism traces extreme energy and fertilizer (ammonia/urea) inflation directly into structural food crises across Emerging Markets. The bottlenecks are the exhaustion of sovereign fiscal space and heavily import-reliant energy profiles in states like Egypt, Turkey, and Pakistan. Leading indicators include sovereign CDS spreads rupturing past 600 bps, formal EM debt defaults, and emergency IMF Extended Fund Facility interventions.

  • Order 11: Industrial Structure Shifts (2–5 Years)The mechanism is the forced substitution of aluminum for copper, which immediately strikes the physical and thermodynamic limits of engineering. The bottlenecks are aluminum's inferior 61% IACS conductivity and its high thermal expansion and creep in dense grid environments and EV motors. Leading indicators are mass corporate hardware redesign announcements and shifting structural Cu/Al price ratios.

  • Order 12: Civilizational Redesign (5+ Years)The mechanism represents the terminal shift: the doctrine of economic efficiency is permanently subordinated to the bureaucratic mandate of resource security, resulting in industrial autarky. The bottlenecks are the limits of capital allocation, the physical militarization of supply chains, and the massive inflationary costs of near-shoring. Leading indicators are sweeping structural tariff escalations and massive strategic mineral stockpiling FIDs, such as the US Project Vault.

Section 2: The 12-Order Deep Dive

Order 1: Maritime Flow Interruption

The Strait of Hormuz stands as the ultimate geographical monopoly over the global hydrocarbon economy. Its spatial reality, measuring a mere 21 miles wide at its narrowest point, with functional shipping lanes strictly demarcated by a two-mile buffer zone, constructs an unparalleled architecture of systemic vulnerability. A zero-flow closure instantaneously strands between 20.7 and 20.9 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude oil, condensate, and refined petroleum products. This volume dictates the terms of global trade, representing over 20% of global liquid consumption and more than 25% of the total seaborne oil market. Concurrently, a staggering 10.5 to 11.4 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) of Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG), equating to roughly 80 million tonnes per annum (mtpa), or 20% of the entire global LNG trade, is physically trapped within the Persian Gulf. Qatar alone is responsible for 9.3 Bcf/d of this trapped volume, with an overwhelming 83% to 84% of these cargoes historically destined to feed the energy-starved industrial machines of Japan, South Korea, China, and Taiwan.

The prevailing market assumption that regional pipeline infrastructure offers salvation is mathematically false. The rationalization of bypass routes reveals severe limitations:

  • Saudi East-West Petroline: Boasting a nameplate capacity of 5.0 million bpd, this route from Abqaiq to the Red Sea port of Yanbu offers only an estimated ~2.4 million bpd of functional spare capacity. Crucially, the system cannot simultaneously fill buffer storage and maximize loading rates for VLCCs.

  • UAE Habshan-Fujairah Pipeline: Routing from Abu Dhabi to the Gulf of Oman, its 1.5 million bpd nameplate capacity is heavily constrained by existing utilization, providing a mere 0.4 to 0.7 million bpd of functional relief.

Combined, this optimal pipeline diversion achieves only 2.8 to 3.1 million bpd, guaranteeing an absolute, unmitigated physical supply deficit exceeding 17.5 million bpd of liquids globally.

The immediate bureaucratic reaction of the market is a hyper-spike in the Very Large Crude Carrier (VLCC) ton-mile multiplier. Protection and Indemnity (P&I) Clubs, the institutional gatekeepers covering 90% of global commercial tonnage, issue standard 72-hour notices of war-risk insurance cancellations. This actuarial withdrawal instantly idles upwards of 40 VLCCs and 13 LNG tankers within the Gulf. Consequently, VLCC freight rates on alternative global routes detonate. Benchmark Persian Gulf-to-China TD3 rates have previously spiked to W419 on the Worldscale index (approximately $423,736 per day) under lesser kinetic threats, pushing lumpsum US Gulf Coast-to-China voyages into the $20 million to $21.5 million range. Prompt-month backwardation on ICE Brent shatters historical norms as refineries blindly bid for survival barrels, structurally repricing the benchmark past $100/bbl, with extreme disruption models projecting a grim equilibrium between $108 and $140/bbl.

Order 2: Refining & Industrial Chemicals

The starvation of Middle Eastern crude imposes a harsh chemical calculus upon the global industrial sector. The majority of crude transiting the Strait is classified as "sour," defined by a naturally occurring sulphur content exceeding 0.5% by weight. The bureaucratic mandate of global environmental fuel standards dictates that refineries must subject this crude to rigorous hydrodesulfurization, predominantly utilizing Claus technology, which operates at an inflexible 98% recovery efficiency. Thus, the petroleum sector operates as the world's primary, involuntary producer of elemental sulphur.

The sudden erasure of 17.5 million bpd of sour Gulf crude, coupled with the shutdown of integrated gas-processing megaliths, like QatarEnergy's Ras Laffan complex, which processes 10,000 tonnes of liquid sulphur daily, removes an exact 3.8 million tonnes of annual sulphur capacity from the global balance. This eliminates approximately 8% of the worldwide seaborne sulphur trade overnight.

This void immediately throttles the $35.13 billion global sulphuric acid (H₂SO₄) industry. As the foundational chemical for modern rationalized industry, it is non-negotiable for phosphate fertilizer production, wastewater treatment, and metallurgical leaching.

  • Pricing Volatility: The market responds with merciless volatility. Domestic Chinese smelter-grade sulphuric acid prices possess the proven capacity to surge 113% year-over-year, vaulting from 400 yuan/ton to over 1,170 yuan/ton during minor historical mismatches. Under a Hormuz closure, these numbers will shatter records.

  • Logistical Constraints: Sulphuric acid is toxic, highly corrosive, and ensnared in transport regulations. Global inventory coverage is perilously thin, measured in mere days or weeks. Furthermore, geographical arbitrage is physically impossible; the substance requires specialized, lined railcars and designated chemical tankers. Import-dependent industrial sectors are simply stranded by the physics of transport.

Order 3: Mining & Metals Extraction

The cascading sulphuric acid famine systematically paralyzes hydrometallurgical base metal extraction, inflicting acute devastation upon the Central African Copperbelt.

  • DRC & Zambia Exposure: The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Zambia stand as the indispensable pillars of electrification, commanding approximately one-sixth of global copper output (the DRC producing 3.3 million tons, Zambia 680,000 tons in 2024) and over 70% of global cobalt supply. This output is entirely captive to the chemical requirements of Solvent Extraction and Electrowinning (SX-EW) for oxide copper ores, and High-Pressure Acid Leaching (HPAL) for cobalt and nickel. Both demand a relentless, uninterrupted deluge of sulphuric acid.

  • Acid Buffers and Force Majeure Risks: The region is structurally deficient in sulphur. The DRC alone is forced to import over 500,000 tonnes of elemental sulphur annually to feed its local sulphur-burning acid plants. In a zero-flow scenario, these seaborne imports vanish. Zambia will inevitably execute a sovereign override, instituting acid export bans to protect its domestic mining survival. Survival becomes a function of vertical integration: Ivanhoe Mines' Kamoa-Kakula complex relies on a captive direct-to-blister smelter producing 1,200 tonnes per day of 98%-pure acid (400,000 tonnes annualized), offering a rare operational fortress. Conversely, standalone SX-EW and HPAL operations face mandatory force majeure as regional spot acid prices in Kolwezi violently breach $700 per tonne.

  • Chilean Contagion: Across the Pacific, Chile's state-owned Codelco relies on bacteria-assisted bioleaching and SX-EW processes at colossal sites like Escondida, sustained by acid recycled from local solvent extraction and domestic smelting. Yet, as global acid prices ascend to unprecedented heights, merchants are heavily incentivized to export acid rather than supply domestic Chilean operations, forcing an artificial structural slowdown across South America's primary copper veins.

Order 4: Grids & Power Hardware

The resulting base metal deficit collides with the pre-existing gridlock of the heavy electrical equipment supply chain. The rationalized goals of the renewable energy transition and the explosive electrification of AI data centers are entirely beholden to the availability of Large Power Transformers (LPTs) and high-voltage metal-clad switchgear.

  • OEM Backlogs & Lead Times: The manufacturing oligopoly, Siemens Energy, Hitachi Energy, and GE Vernova, is operating against the hard limits of physical capacity. Siemens Energy reported a staggering, record-breaking total order backlog of €146 billion in early 2026, driven by a 21.8% year-over-year surge in its Grid Technologies division. Capital interventions are underway, Hitachi Energy's $1.5 billion injection into Virginia and Poland, and Siemens Energy's €220 million Nuremberg expansion, but capital cannot instantly alter physical reality. Consequently, LPT lead times (100 MVA and above) have stretched from a historical baseline of 50 weeks to a new norm of 120 weeks, with ultra-high-voltage units demanding up to 210 weeks, or over four years of waiting.

  • The GOES Bottleneck: The ultimate constraint is not merely copper, but Grain-Oriented Electrical Steel (GOES), an engineered iron-silicon alloy requisite for minimizing magnetic core transmission losses. In the US, this supply is a functional monopoly dictated by Cleveland-Cliffs. Scaling the production of premium ultra-thin GOES (below 0.27 mm) requires glacial multi-year qualification cycles and prohibitive capital outlays of $500 to $700 million for bell-anneal lines.

  • Chemical/Physical Limits: LPT manufacturing cannot be optimized through software. The vapor-phase drying process required for the transformer core's cellulose insulation is an inflexible chemical curing cycle. It submits to the laws of chemistry, not the agile demands of the market.

Order 5: Semiconductor Supply Chains

Taiwan's structural energy procurement framework ensures that the entire global semiconductor supply chain is acutely exposed to the mechanics of a Hormuz closure.

  • LNG Starvation: The island's industrial apparatus requires importing nearly 98% of its total energy, with state-owned Taipower relying on LNG for 42% to 47% of its total electricity generation. Crucially, roughly 30% of this LNG is sourced directly from Qatar. The vulnerability is legally hardcoded: Taiwan's statutory security storage requirement for LNG is a critically low 11 days. A cessation of Qatari flows, met by a desperate global bid for Atlantic cargoes, guarantees that Taipower's percent operating reserves (POR) will collapse within two weeks. The inevitable bureaucratic response is mandated grid rationing and rolling industrial brownouts.

  • Voltage Sag Tolerance Limits: The foundries of the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) demand absolute electrical perfection. Governed by the SEMI F47-0706 standard, advanced semiconductor processing and metrology tools are engineered to withstand voltage sags of 50% for exactly 200 milliseconds (0.2 seconds), 70% for 0.5 seconds, and 80% for 1 second. Historical precedent at the Hsinchu Science Park proves that a microsecond drop of a mere 0.1 seconds (at 79% to 95% nominal voltage) triggers massive internal tool failures, resulting in the catastrophic scrapping of tens of thousands of wafers and hundreds of millions in vaporized capital.

  • ABF Substrate Chokepoints: Simultaneously, the advanced packaging of completed silicon faces an intractable chemical bottleneck. Ajinomoto Build-up Film (ABF) substrates, the essential insulators for high-performance computing, are trapped behind 28-week lead times. The laser-drill capacity required to manufacture them is monopolized by LPKF Laser and Mitsubishi Electric, both groaning under 18-month backlogs. This restricts key suppliers like Ibiden and Shinko Electric, choking the final assembly lines of NVIDIA and AMD.

Order 6: Compute & Data Centers

The intersection of Order 4 (transformer gridlock) and Order 5 (silicon fabrication failures) imposes a hard, mathematical stop upon the AI infrastructure supercycle.

  • Interconnection Queues: The institutional forecast for US summer peak demand growth skyrocketed to 166 GW in 2025, with data centers commanding 55% of this burden. The bureaucratic reality is a massively overloaded US interconnection queue, suffocating under 10,300 projects representing a 2,600 GW backlog. The friction of unpredictable delays and exorbitant grid upgrade costs has driven the project withdrawal rate to nearly 80%.

  • Time-to-Power Constraints: In critical digital geographies like Northern Virginia (the PJM footprint), GW-scale facilities face power interconnection wait times extending up to 7 years. Hyperscalers, AWS, Google, Meta, attempt to circumvent this reality by purchasing land for behind-the-meter gas generation. Yet, without the physical delivery of high-voltage switchgear and LPTs, these commercial operation dates are entirely fictitious. The metric of "speed-to-power" becomes an impossibility, threatening widespread capital expenditure cancellations and leaving billions locked in sterile real estate and dormant silicon.

Order 7: Capital Markets & Credit

The failure of physical supply chains translates directly into the financial system via rapid, unrelenting corporate margin compression and the vaporization of foreign exchange liquidity.

  • High-Yield Repricing: The heavy industrial conglomerates that build the world's architecture are the first to absorb material inflation. Siemens Energy, bound by complex global execution and wind turbine logistics, has previously watched its bonds widen beyond 300 bps over mid-swaps, trading worse than BB+ high-yield peers, due to fixed-price contract overruns. As copper and specialized steel costs enter hyper-inflation, these OEM contracts bleed cash, ensuring credit downgrades and structural debt restructuring across the sector.

  • EM FX Depletion: Emerging markets tethered to dollar-denominated oil imports face the brutal mathematics of FX reserve depletion. At $100+ per barrel, central banks must hemorrhage dollar reserves merely to sustain baseline domestic survival. Currency acts as the immediate shock absorber. The South Korean Won (KRW) possesses high beta sensitivity to energy, previously surging past 1,462 per dollar during kinetic shocks. The Indian Rupee (INR) and Thai Baht face identical downward violence, embedding imported inflation deep into the domestic economy and obliterating local liquidity.

Order 8: State Response Layer

Faced with the collapse of the market mechanism, sovereign entities assert their monopoly on power through strategic overrides. Yet, these decrees remain strictly bounded by the inflexible laws of physics and hydraulic engineering.

  • US Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) Limitations: The US SPR houses approximately 411 million barrels inside 61 engineered salt caverns across Texas and Louisiana. Politically, it is a weapon; physically, it is a pipe. The absolute maximum nominal hydraulic drawdown capability is strictly capped at 4.4 million bpd. Furthermore, the bureaucratic friction of execution ensures a 13-day lag from Presidential signature to physical market entry. Consequently, running at maximum stress, the SPR replaces only ~25% of the 17.5M bpd global shortfall. The system remains fundamentally starved. Prolonged extraction at these rates also risks severe dilatant and tensile stresses, threatening the structural integrity of the salt walls themselves.

  • Defense Production Act (DPA): The executive branch will inevitably invoke the DPA to forcibly reallocate domestic GOES and LPT production toward critical defense and civilian grid triage. However, administrative edicts cannot accelerate the chemical curing time of transformer insulation, nor can they summon specialized metallurgical engineers or conjure the heavy-haul railcars necessary to move 400-ton monoliths. The DPA does not create new supply; it merely engineers a rigid reallocation of poverty.

Order 9: Trade Architecture

The irrecoverable loss of the Persian Gulf corridor demands a multi-year restructuring of global maritime routes, exposing the severe limitations of global shipbuilding capital.

  • Shipbuilding Limits: The capacity to forge new vessels is heavily monopolized, with Chinese yards controlling 46% of total capacity (securing over 68% of new orders in late 2025) and South Korea commanding 25%. Western attempts to commission smaller bypass tankers or dedicated US-to-Asia LNG carriers hit an unyielding wall: premier Asian shipyards are entirely booked through 2028, with delivery cycles for high-end vessels dragging into 2029. The global VLCC fleet cannot rapidly scale to absorb the massive ton-mile inflation of Cape of Good Hope routing; effective fleet growth is structurally capped below 3% annually, compounded by the reality that nearly 20% of existing VLCCs are over 20 years old and destined for the shadow fleet or the scrapyard.

  • Petroyuan Acceleration: As dollar liquidity evaporates from the treasuries of Emerging Markets (Order 7), China deploys its strategic petroleum reserves and dominant refining infrastructure to exert geopolitical leverage. By issuing yuan-denominated swap lines to distressed Asian neighbors in exchange for refined products or access to overland Russian pipelines, Beijing forces the structural de-dollarization of East Asian energy trade, cementing the Petroyuan as the dominant mechanism for crisis survival.

Order 10: Social Stability

The inflation of core energy inputs directly degrades agricultural yields, efficiently translating a logistical bottleneck into a humanitarian catastrophe. Natural gas serves as the indispensable chemical feedstock for ammonia, the basis of urea and complex nitrogen fertilizers.

  • Fertilizer Shocks: With 40% to 50% of the world's internationally traded nitrogen-based fertilizers originating from or passing through the Gulf, a Hormuz closure dictates an immediate, violent spike in agricultural input pricing. This mathematically guarantees elevated global food prices within a single harvest cycle.

  • Sovereign Debt Defaults: Sovereigns bearing high debt burdens and heavy import reliance face immediate insolvency as they attempt the impossible task of subsidizing fuel and food for their populations. Egypt, currently navigating an $8 billion IMF Extended Fund Facility with structural inflation and high LNG reliance, and Turkey, battling 10-Year Government Bond yields exceeding 31%, sit on the precipice of ruin. Their sovereign Credit Default Swap (CDS) spreads will violently breach the 600 bps distress threshold as FX reserves vanish. The sheer inability to procure fuel and fertilizer guarantees widespread power rationing, collapsing food security, and profound social unrest across North Africa and South Asia.

Order 11: Industrial Structure Shifts

Desperate to circumvent base metal scarcity (Order 3) and spiraling grid hardware costs (Order 4), the industrial complex attempts mass material substitution. The pivot from copper to aluminum, however, crashes instantly into the uncompromising laws of thermodynamics.

  • Conductivity and Spatial Limits: Aluminum offers a mere 61% of copper's electrical conductivity on the IACS scale. To transmit an identical electrical current, the aluminum conductor demands a 1.6x larger cross-sectional area. In the spatial austerity of EV drivetrains, aerospace architecture, and high-density AI server racks, accommodating this added bulk is a physical impossibility without initiating multi-year, ground-up engineering redesigns.

  • Thermal Loads and Creep: Aluminum's thermal conductivity is severely deficient (237 W/mK against copper's 401 W/mK), failing to dissipate heat under high-load conditions. Moreover, aluminum exhibits a profound susceptibility to thermal expansion and "creep", the cold flow away from pressure. Subjected to the intense mechanical vibrations of electric motors or industrial generators, this creep guarantees loose connections, spiking electrical resistance, and catastrophic fire hazards. Substitution is not an agile pivot; it is a hazardous, multi-year engineering commitment.

Order 12: Civilizational Redesign

The terminal phase of the cascade marks the permanent institutionalization of a new paradigm: "economic efficiency" is eradicated, replaced entirely by the doctrine of "resource security." The illusion of Just-In-Time global logistics is shattered. Capital allocation pivots with extreme prejudice toward autarkic industrial policy. Sovereign wealth funds and defense budgets are forced to internalize the astronomical premiums of near-shoring critical supply chains, evidenced by policies like the US government's $12 billion "Project Vault" to hoard domestic cobalt and sever Chinese dependencies.

To safeguard what remains of international trade, alternative maritime chokepoints, such as the Strait of Malacca and the Panama Canal, submit to overt, permanent naval militarization. The rationalized global economy formally fragments, abandoning the pursuit of free trade to operate as a system of heavily armed, partitioned, and aggressively redundant macro-blocs.

Section 3: Scenario Stress-Test Matrix

Subjecting this architecture to distinct temporal stresses reveals the precise breaking points of the global system.

Scenario A: Short Shock (≤ 14 days)

  • Top 5 Binding Constraints: The absolute physical stranding of 17.5M bpd of oil and 80 mtpa of LNG. Total withdrawal of P&I Club War Risk Insurance, instantly freezing off-shore tanker movement. Taiwan's precarious 11-day statutory LNG reserve limit. The US SPR's rigid 13-day temporal lag to physically inject its 4.4M bpd maximum into the market. Maximum functional bypass pipeline limits (Saudi/UAE capped at ~3.1M bpd).

  • First Two Structural Breaks: Spot LNG Markets: Panic buying shatters TTF and JKM pricing ceilings as European and Asian utilities irrationally bid up Atlantic cargoes to secure baseload survival. Taiwanese Grid Stability: Breaching the 11-day LNG buffer forces Taipower's percent operating reserves (POR) below critical thresholds, necessitating immediate rolling blackouts across industrial zones.

  • Dominant Macro-Drivers: Orders 1 (Maritime Logistics), 5 (Semiconductor Power Security), and 8 (State SPR Response).

Scenario B: Medium Shock (1–3 months)

  • Top 5 Binding Constraints: Extreme depletion of EM Foreign Exchange reserves (KRW, INR) driven by dollar-denominated energy hyper-inflation. Global elemental sulphur shortage resulting from the total removal of Qatar's 3.8M tpa capacity. Spot sulphuric acid prices (>1000 yuan/ton) obliterating the operating margins of base metal refiners. SEMI F47 voltage sag limits (50% drop for 0.2 seconds) breached at TSMC fabs due to sustained Taiwanese grid rationing. Codelco and African Copperbelt SX-EW hydrometallurgical operations forced into shutdown due to chemical starvation.

  • First Two Structural Breaks: Advanced Node Semiconductor Yields: Microsecond voltage sags across Taiwan trigger massive wafer scrap events and equipment recalibration delays, crippling advanced AI chip output. Base Metal Mining Force Majeures: SX-EW copper and HPAL cobalt mines in the DRC and Zambia officially issue force majeure as toxic sulphuric acid cannot physically be transported fast enough to replace local deficits.

  • Dominant Macro-Drivers: Orders 2 (Industrial Chemicals), 3 (Mining Extraction), and 7 (Credit & FX).

Scenario C: Long Shock (≥ 6 months)

  • Top 5 Binding Constraints: LPT lead times extending structurally beyond 210 weeks as copper input supply lines fail. Absolute exhaustion of global GOES production capacity and specialized bell-anneal capital expenditures. The 2,600 GW US interconnection queue permanently frozen due to the total lack of high-voltage switchgear. Sub-3% global VLCC fleet growth capacity, tightly restricted by Asian shipyards booked entirely through 2029. The thermodynamic impossibility of rapidly substituting aluminum for copper in high-thermal load EV and AI hardware.

  • First Two Structural Breaks: AI/Compute Capex Freeze: Hyperscalers (AWS, Meta) and semiconductor developers (NVIDIA) cancel multi-billion dollar deployments as the lack of switchgear and LPTs shoves commercial operation dates into the next decade. Emerging Market Sovereign Default: Heavily exposed nations (Turkey, Egypt, Pakistan) completely exhaust their fiscal space attempting to subsidize imported ammonia/urea and diesel, triggering systemic CDS defaults and requiring emergency IMF bailouts.

  • Dominant Macro-Drivers: Orders 4 (Grid Hardware), 6 (Compute Scaling), 10 (Social & Sovereign Stability), and 11 (Industrial Redesign).

Section 4: Terminal Stopping Rule

The 12-Order Cascading Systems Shock ceases to function as a predictive analytical framework beyond Order 12 because the causal pathways abandon exogenous linearity and become entirely endogenous and recursive.

Upon reaching Civilizational Redesign (Order 12), the panicked interventions of sovereign states and industrial monopolies generate infinite feedback loops that rewrite the foundational variables. The starvation of copper (Order 3) ensures the permanent halt of LPT production (Order 4), which directly barricades heavy electrical grid expansion (Order 6). Lacking grid expansion, the massive baseload power required to drive advanced smelting, desalination, and mining operations (Order 3) is suffocated, locking the system into a self-consuming industrial death spiral.

Furthermore, as the state apparatus enforces autarkic industrial policies and militarizes supply lines, the traditional metrics of market equilibrium, price elasticity, and marginal cost evaporate. Prices are no longer discovered; they are dictated by state decree, retaliatory export bans, and strategic hoarding (as demonstrated by China's domestic sulphur export caps and the US execution of Project Vault).

Predictive quantitative macroeconomics shatters against this reality. Standard modeling of lead times and material substitution fails because commodities are transformed into direct kinetic weapons, and maritime trade routes submit to naval dominance rather than arbitrage. Thus, beyond Order 12, the paradigm shifts entirely: the global system can no longer be modeled as a supply-chain shock; it must be understood as the permanent bureaucracy of geopolitical total war.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/05/2026 - 16:20

Indiana Governor Signs Bill Allowing Crypto In Retirement Plans

Indiana Governor Signs Bill Allowing Crypto In Retirement Plans

Authored by Stephen Katte via Cointelegraph,

Indiana will start allowing certain retirement and savings plans to include crypto investments and has enacted stronger legal protections for the crypto industry under a newly signed bill. 

Governor Mike Braun signed House Bill 1042 into law on Tuesday, after it passed the legislature last Thursday. The legislation requires Indiana’s state public retirement and savings plans to offer self-brokerage accounts with at least one crypto investment option by July 2027.

According to the bill’s description, this requirement applies to the legislators’ defined contribution plan, the Hoosier START plan, certain public employees’ retirement funds, and specified teachers’ retirement fund plans.

More institutions are adopting digital assets, with Bitbo estimating that over 3.7 million Bitcoin (worth $258 billion) are held by publicly traded and private companies, exchange-traded funds and governments.

Protections for crypto payments and mining

The bill also includes provisions to protect the rights of crypto users. Under the legislation, public agencies — except the Department of Financial Institutions — are barred from adopting or enforcing rules that ban crypto payments, self-custody or mining.

The bill also clarifies that a money transmitter license isn’t required for apps and software protocols that allow non-custodial transfers.

Local governments, such as counties, municipalities, or townships, also can’t single out crypto mining businesses or home miners with special restrictions not applied to similar businesses or activities in the same zoning area.

Noise from crypto mining operations has caused friction in other states. Residents in Hood County, Texas, attempted to form a new municipality to regulate noise from a local mining facility last year. 

Access to retirement funds a boon for crypto

At the federal level, President Donald Trump’s August executive order “Democratizing Access to Alternative Assets for 401(k) Investors” directed the SEC to make alternative assets like crypto more accessible in participant-directed retirement plans.

Some analysts, such as Tom Dunleavy, the head of venture at Varys Capital and a former senior analyst at Messari, predicted that even a 1% allocation to crypto in 401(k)s could bring in $120 billion in new flows.

Tyler Durden Thu, 03/05/2026 - 15:45

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