Tuesday, 23 December 2025

Christmas 2025 A. D.

 

Christmas 2025 A. D.

Peace on Earth, Good Will Towards Men.

 

nicolas-front-2412_1549086f

A Merry Christmas to one and all.

 

J.S. Bach, Christmas Oratorio, bwv 248.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yBvhqbAOvc8

Leopold Mozart - Sleigh Ride.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EWHzu1FJaOk&feature=related

And in honour of Christmas 2025, a double bonus.

Charpentier - Marche de Triomphe H.547

Charpentier - Marche de Triomphe H.547

Bing Sings "O Sanctissima"

Bing Sings "O Sanctissima"

 

Normal LIR service resumes on Saturday the 27th.

 

Stocks, Gold, Silver Soar. No Chocolate, Chocolate.

Baltic Dry Index. 1979 -44     Brent Crude 61.93

Spot Gold  4515                        Spot Silver 69.59

US 2 Year Yield 3.44  -0.04

US Federal Debt. 38.443 trillion  US GDP 31.658 trillion.

“Bah,” said Scrooge Starmer, “Humbug.”

With apologies to Charles Dickens.

With dollar debasement in full swing and likely to accelerate next year as President Trump gets to pack the US central bank  with low interest rate picks, stocks, gold and silver are soaring.

Add to the debasement play, President Trump seems set on regime change by any means in Venezuela and a growing shortage of physical silver in London, NYC, and Shanghai, while industrial demand is soaring as the world switches to electrification and AI data centres, and there’s little reason to think the stocks gold and silver boom will end any time soon.

Stock futures are little changed after S&P 500 notches three-day win streak: Live updates

Updated Tue, Dec 23 2025 7:13 PM EST

Stock futures traded near the flatline Monday night after a strong start to a shortened trading week.

Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 9 points. S&P 500 futures were little changed, while Nasdaq 100 futures advanced about 0.1%.

The S&P 500 is coming off of its third winning session, boosted by a 1.5% jump in chipmaking giant Nvidia and advances in Micron and Oracle. Ten out of 11 sectors saw gains in the session. Materials and financials were the top performing sectors, with Newmont and Freeport-McMoRan jumping 3% as gold and silver futures hit records.

The 30-stock Dow advanced about 228 points, or 0.5%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite climbed 0.5%.

“This market is still rather healthy. Valuations are not high enough at this level. We don’t see the frothiness that we saw back then, and the commercial aspect is so much better now that it was in the late ’90s,” Chris Harvey, head of equity and portfolio strategy at CIBC Capital Markets said on CNBC’s “Closing Bell,” comparing the hype around AI stocks to the froth of the dot-com bubble.

Harvey noted that unlike the internet investment craze of the late 1990s, financials have led the market higher in recent weeks as investors have rotated into cyclical areas of the market. JPMorgan Chase shares have also outperformed a sizable portion of tech names over the past three and five years, Harvey pointed out.

The New York Stock Exchange will close early on Wednesday at 1 p.m. ET on Christmas Eve and will be closed Thursday for Christmas Day.

Stock market today: Live updates

Asia-Pacific markets mostly climb after AI trade lifts Wall Street overnight

Published Mon, Dec 22 2025 6:41 PM EST

Asia-Pacific markets opened mostly higher Tuesday, after AI trade lifted major Wall Street indexes overnight.

Nvidia shares rose more than 1% after Reuters said the company was looking to start shipments of its H200 chips to China by mid-February. Micron Technology climbed around 4%, while Oracle advanced more than 3%.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 rose 1.11% and is on pace for a fourth straight day of gains.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 was flat, while the broad-based Topix gained 0.56%, led by financials and healthcare stocks.

On Tuesday, Japan’s Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama reportedly said the country had a “free hand” in dealing with the yen’s recent sharp depreciation, signaling a currency intervention was not off the table.

The yen weakened sharply on Friday, despite the Bank of Japan raising interest rates to a 30-year high, hitting a low of 157.77 against the dollar before strengthening on Monday and Tuesday. It was last trading at 156.27.

Katayama said that the Japanese currency’s fluctuations do not reflect economic fundamentals, describing them as “speculative.”

South Korea’s Kospi climbed 0.43%, but the small-cap Kosdaq slipped 0.79%. Shares of shipbuilding firm Hanwha Ocean surged 10% after U.S. President Donald Trump said the company was going to work with the U.S. Navy to build its new frigates.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index rose 0.1%, while mainland China’s CSI 300 was up 0.35%.

Chinese newcomers lit up the Hong Kong market on their debut Tuesday, with QingSong Health Corporation and Nuobikan Artificial Intelligence Technology jumping 134% and 323%, respectively, after their strong albeit small IPOs. 

QingSong Health Corporation’s Hong Kong IPO was met with overwhelming demand, with the domestic tranche subscribed 1,421 times, according to its exchange filing, raising nearly 602 million Hong Kong dollars (about $77 million). Nuobikan, saw its Hong Kong public tranche subscribed 188.74 times, raising HK$303 million.

In Southeast Asia, Singapore will release its November inflation reading, with economists polled by Reuters expecting the city-state’s inflation rate to climb to the highest in 2025.

Overnight in the U.S., the S&P 500 gained 0.64%, posting its third positive day in a row. The Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 0.47%, and the Nasdaq Composite climbed 0.52%.

Asia markets mostly climb after AI trade lifts Wall Street overnight

Gold hits record high on safe-haven demand; silver climbs to new peak

By Sherin Elizabeth Varghese  December 23, 2025 5:34 AM GMT

Dec 23 (Reuters) - Gold soared to a record high on Tuesday, coming within a whisker of breaching the $4,500-per-ounce level, as investors flocked to the safe-haven metal on U.S.-Venezuela tensions, while silver also rallied to a fresh peak.

Spot gold was up 0.8% at $4,479.18 per ounce, as of 0527 GMT, after hitting a record $4,497.55 earlier in the day. U.S. gold futures for February delivery jumped 1% to $4,511.50.

"U.S.-Venezuelan tensions are keeping gold on the radar for investors as an uncertainty hedge," said Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at KCM Trade, adding that gold had surged this week as part of a broader positioning shift with U.S. interest rates projected to ease further.

Waterer said buyers continued to see precious metals as an effective way to diversify portfolios and preserve value, adding that "I don't think we are at the high watermark yet for gold or silver."

U.S. President Donald Trump last week announced a "blockade" of all oil tankers under sanctions entering and leaving Venezuela.

Further support for gold came from reports that Trump could name a new Federal Reserve Chair by early January, with markets pricing in two rate cuts for next year amid expectations of a more dovish policy stance.

Bullion, a classic refuge in times of geopolitical and economic unease, has surged more than 70% this year, riding a potent mix of geopolitical risks, rate-cut bets, central bank buying, de-dollarisation and renewed exchange-traded fund inflows.

"With year-end approaching, thinner liquidity conditions could amplify price swings," said Frank Walbaum, a market analyst at Naga, noting that gold might remain especially sensitive to geopolitical headlines and shifts in rate expectations.

Spot silver was up 0.5% at $69.39 after touching a record $69.98, with its year-to-date gains topping 141% and outpacing gold on supply deficits, industrial demand and investment inflows.

Michael Brown, a senior strategist at Pepperstone, said some consolidation was possible over the festive period as liquidity thinned.

He, however, said the rally should resume in earnest once volumes returned, with the $5,000 level a natural target for gold next year and the $75 mark a longer-term objective for silver.

Spot platinum jumped 1.9% to $2,165.67, its highest in more than 17 years, while palladium rose 1.9% to a three-year high of $1,792.51, tracking strength in gold and silver.

Gold hits record high on safe-haven demand; silver climbs to new peak | Reuters

In other news.

Why the chocolate in your holiday candy could be ‘fake’ this year

Published Sun, Dec 21 2025 6:02 PM EST

If you’re unwrapping chocolate this holiday season, it might not contain any actual cocoa.

Market turbulence, ethical concerns and sustainability questions have sparked a movement among some chocolate makers to scrap cocoa in favor of alternative ingredients — prompting calls that the real deal could soon become a “luxury” for consumers.  

Market upheaval

Poor agricultural conditions in Ghana and Cote d’Ivoire — the world’s leading cocoa producers — have damaged crop yields in recent years, sending cocoa prices on a rollercoaster ride. After surging to all-time highs of more than $12,000 toward the end of last year, cocoa futures have tumbled more than 50% over the course of 2025 amid tentative signs of crop recovery.

Price volatility has left businesses in the industry on edge, and it’s ultimately found its way into consumer goods, with data from Circana and the U.S. Bureau for Labor Statistics showing chocolate prices surged 30% in the year to October.

In its third-quarter earnings report, Mondelez International — the maker of Cadbury, Milka and Toblerone — flagged “volatility of cocoa” and its “ability to effectively hedge against” related cost pressures as potential problems that could derail the company from meeting its financial targets.

As manufacturers grapple with that unpredictability, some are opting to reduce their exposure to the cocoa market by shaking up their ingredient mix.

Earlier this year, a change to the composition of McVitie’s Club and Penguin candy bars made waves in the U.K., when it was reported that the products could no longer be referred to as chocolate. Both products must now be labeled “chocolate flavored,” after parent company Pladis cut the cocoa content in a bid to reduce costs.

‘Real’ chocolate becoming a luxury

Pladis declined to comment on whether the changes had impacted sales when contacted by CNBC.

However, according to Massimo Sabatini, co-founder and CEO of Italian startup Foreverland, a move away from cocoa is gaining traction among international confectioners, so much so that it could become the norm to see “fake” chocolate used in more budget-friendly products. Foreverland uses carob, pumpkin seeds, and chickpeas to produce a chocolate-like product that’s sold to companies producing confectionery, baked goods, and ice creams.

“In the chocolate space there are many products, from [bars] to products in which cocoa is not really the protagonist but a participant,” he told CNBC, referring to goods like cookies, chocolate flavored cereal and chocolate-coated snacks. “I believe the alternative chocolate will substitute this big market, while [pure chocolate bars] will be more and more a luxury product.”

Sabatini pointed to the recent Dubai chocolate trend to illustrate his point, noting that some of these chocolate bars were selling for as much as 80 euros ($93.09) per kilogram.

″[The chocolate market] is already going in this direction,” he argued.

More

Why the chocolate in your holiday candy could be ‘fake’ this year

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

Given our Magic Money Tree central banksters and our spendthrift politicians, inflation now needs an entire section of its own.

Stagflation will derail one of the biggest drivers of the stock market rally next year, Apollo's top economist says

20 December 2025

A top economist is back with a stagflation warning.

Torsten Sløk, the chief economist at Apollo Global Management, said he believes stagflation is still one of the biggest risks facing the Federal Reserve next year, even as investors breathe a sigh of relief after a light November inflation print.

That risk is jeopardizing a key source of fuel for the stock market rally: the prospect of more rate cuts.

"I still think that stagflation is a risk because there's still some headwinds coming, especially if AI does not deliver," Sløk said, pointing to the downside risks to growth and upside risks to consumer prices heading into the new year.

"Given that inflation is very sticky and now has the risk of going up over the next six months, then the key issue for the FOMC becomes: can we even cut in that environment?" he later added.

Stagflation, which is often referred to by market pundits as one of the worst-case scenarios for the economy, describes a situation where growth remains sluggish while inflation remains elevated. That's a difficult combo for policymakers to respond to, as hot inflation prevents the Fed from cutting interest rates to boost economic growth.

On paper, things seem to be moving in the opposite direction. GDP is expected to have expanded a robust 3.5% over the third quarter, according to Atlanta Fed economists, while inflation cooled to a 2.7% year-over-year pace, per the November CPI report.

But the US's vulnerability to stagflation is real, Sløk suggested. He pointed to the risk that AI firms will start to slow their spending on the technology, or that the billions they've already poured into AI won't produce the returns investors are expecting.

Meanwhile, the ISM Services Prices Index, one forward-looking inflation indicator, clocked in at 65.4% in November, well within expansionary territory.

Central bankers also seem to be worried about stagflation, Sløk said. The number of FOMC members who said they believed the risks to inflation and unemployment were skewed to the upside far outnumbered those who said they believed risks were skewed to the downside, he wrote in a note to clients this week.

"In other words, the Fed continues to forecast stagflation and is concerned that we in 2026 may experience rising inflation and rising unemployment at the same time," Sløk wrote.

"The bottom line is, in the next six months, and especially when we get to April, we'll begin to see some fairly meaningful risks that inflation is still going to be elevated," he later told CNBC.

The outlook for rate cuts looks dim heading into the new year. The probability that the Fed will trim rates another 25 basis points in January ticked up following the November CPI report, but investors are largely expecting the central bank to keep rates steady at its next policy meeting, with the odds of a cut at the March meeting at just 45%, per the CME FedWatch tool.

Stagflation will derail one of the biggest drivers of the stock market rally next year, Apollo's top economist says

Covid-19 Corner

This section will continue only occasionally when something of interest occurs.

 

Technology Update.

With events happening fast in the development of solar power and graphene, among other things, I’ve added this section. Updates as they get reported.

This solvent-free process makes graphene both conductive and easy to disperse

December 21, 2025

Graphene has dazzled scientists for years with its extreme strength, thinness, and ability to carry electrical current with almost no resistance. However, outside the laboratory, this miracle material has remained stubbornly difficult to use. 

The main reason is not cost or performance, but chemistry. Graphene clumps together instead of spreading evenly through liquids or plastics, making it hard to turn into coatings, inks, or composites. 

Attempts to fix this problem usually ruin what makes graphene special in the first place, i.e., its conductivity. A new study shows that this long-standing trade-off is not inevitable. 

By using mechanical force and a common amino acid, researchers have demonstrated a way to make graphene both electrically active and easy to process, and that too without toxic chemicals, extreme heat, or high environmental costs.

Our “method could achieve a high yield (80%) under ambient temperature and pressure, with significantly lower energy demand than conventional approaches,” the researchers note.

Grinding graphite into something smarter

The central challenge researchers faced was balancing two opposing needs. Graphene must interact with surrounding materials to disperse well, but modifying its surface too aggressively breaks the network of electrons that allows electricity to flow. 

Nitrogen atoms offer a clever solution because they can introduce polarity without destroying conductivity. However, most nitrogen-doping techniques are far from practical. Some rely on furnaces hotter than 760°C, others on pressures comparable to deep-sea environments, and many involve hazardous compounds such as hydrazine or melamine. 

Even newer mechanical approaches still depend on unsafe nitrogen sources or energy-intensive post-treatment steps. The Monash University team took a different route. Instead of heat or solvents, they relied on mechanochemistry, where chemical reactions are driven by physical impacts. 

In a rotating planetary ball mill, graphite flakes were mixed with potassium hydroxide and glycine, a simple amino acid found in living organisms. The milling ran at 400 revolutions per minute for 20 hours, all at room temperature and normal atmospheric pressure.

As the hard balls inside the mill collided with the graphite, the material was repeatedly fractured and peeled apart into thin graphene sheets. At the same time, potassium hydroxide activated glycine by stripping a hydrogen atom from its amino group. 

“This one-pot process enables simultaneous exfoliation and nitrogen incorporation, producing pyrrolic, graphitic, and pyridinic functionalities, delivering a unique balance of conductivity (30% of Graphite powder) and long-term dispersibility in a range of solvents (up to one month) rarely achieved through conventional functionalization methods,” the study authors note.

The method produced an 80 percent yield, which is unusually high for solid-state graphene processing, with a nitrogen content of about 2.3 percent. The presence of graphitic nitrogen is particularly important because it supplies extra electrons, helping preserve electrical conductivity. 

More

This solvent-free process makes graphene both conductive and easy to disperse

Next, the world global debt clock. Nations debts to GDP compared.

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)

“Scrooge followed to the window: desperate in his curiosity. He looked out.

The air was filled with phantoms, wandering hither and thither in restless haste, and moaning as they went. Every one of them wore chains like Marley's Ghost; some few (they might be guilty governments) were linked together; none were free”. 

 Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol.

Monday, 22 December 2025

USA – Costly Coffee, Cheaper Drugs. Oil Nervous.

 Baltic Dry Index. 2023 -48     Brent Crude 61.18

Spot Gold  4440                        Spot Silver 68.78

US 2 Year Yield 3.48  +0.02

US Federal Debt. 38.439 trillion  US GDP 31.656 trillion.

The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectable.

John Kenneth Galbraith

It is nearly Christmas and the stock casinos and commodity markets are edgy. Normally in a holiday shortened trading week, in thin trading conditions it’s easy to dress up the stock casinos higher, but supposing President Trump chooses Christmas to invade Venezuela driving oil prices higher?

And what if the AI circular investment scheme unravels?

Look away from soaring gold and silver now.

Asia-Pacific markets trade higher as investors assess China’s key lending rate decision

Published Sun, Dec 21 2025 6:34 PM EST

Asia-Pacific markets climbed Monday as investors parsed China’s central bank’s decision to keep its loan prime rates steady.

The People’s Bank of China kept its 1-year and 5-year loan prime rates unchanged at 3% and 3.5% respectively, holding them for a seventh straight meeting, in line with a Reuters survey. The one-year rate influences most new and outstanding loans, while the five-year benchmark affects mortgages.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index rose 0.55%, while the mainland CSI 300 advanced 0.55%.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 rose 0.54% in early trade.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose 1.58%, while the Topix was 0.86% higher. The Bank of Japan raised its policy rate by 25 basis points to 0.75% —a three-decade high— last Friday.

South Korea’s Kospi jumped 1.83% and the small-cap Kosdaq rose 0.99%.

Last Friday in the U.S., stocks rose for a second winning day, boosted by Oracle, as the artificial intelligence trade regained its footing after experiencing volatility.

Oracle shares were up 6.6% after TikTok agreed to sell its U.S. operations to a new joint venture that includes the software giant and private equity investor Silver Lake.

The Nasdaq Composite rose 1.31%, closing at 23,307.62. The S&P 500 added 0.88% to close at 6,834.50. The Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 183.04 points, or 0.38%, and settled at 48,134.89.

Asia-Pacific markets: Nifty 50, Hang Seng Index, Nikkei 225, China LPR

Stock futures rise as traders look ahead to holiday-shortened week: Live updates

Updated Sun, Dec 21 2025 6:16 PM EST

U.S. stock futures rise on Sunday night ahead of a shortened holiday week, as traders deliberate whether tech can regain its footing before the year’s end.

Dow Jones Industrial Average futures rose by 83 points, or 0.2%. S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures climbed 0.2% and 0.3%, respectively.

Wall Street is coming off a mixed week for the major averages. A late-week surge in tech stocks helped lift the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite to their third winning week in four, up 0.1% and 0.5%, respectively. The 30-stock Dow, which has outperformed this month, fell 0.7%, snapping a three-week winning streak.

Artificial intelligence stocks enjoyed a resurgence last week after their recent underperformance. Shares of Oracle, a major laggard, jumped after TikTok agreed to sell its U.S. operations to a new joint venture that includes the software giant and private-equity firm Silver Lake. Nvidia also made a comeback.

However, investors are watching to see whether AI stocks can retain their leadership heading into the year-end, especially as investors rotate into cheaper parts of the market amid concerns about lofty tech valuations. There’s also doubt about whether a “Santa Claus rally” will materialize, as the S&P 500 struggles to hold a key technical level.

“My view a couple of weeks ago was an end of year grind,” said Justin Bergner, portfolio manager at Gabelli Funds. “And I think that’s become an end of year churn.”

The New York Stock Exchange will close early on Wednesday at 1 p.m. ET on Christmas Eve and will be closed Thursday for Christmas Day.

Stock market today: Live updates

Oil up on news the US intercepted an oil tanker off Venezuela

December 22, 2025 4:35 AM GMT

SINGAPORE, Dec 22 (Reuters) - Oil prices rose on Monday after officials said the U.S. had intercepted an oil tanker in international waters off the coast of Venezuela, raising fresh supply uncertainty.

Brent crude futures rose 46 cents, or 0.8%, to $60.93 per barrel by 0400 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude climbed 46 cents, or 0.8%, to $56.98.

"The market is waking up to the fact that the Trump administration is taking a hardline approach to the Venezuelan oil trade," said June Goh, senior oil market analyst at Sparta Commodities.

"Oil prices have thus been supported by this geopolitical news alongside the simmering Russian-Ukraine tensions in the background in an otherwise very bearish market fundamentally," said Goh.

The U.S. Coast Guard is pursuing an oil tanker in international waters near Venezuela, in what would be the second such operation over the weekend and the third in less than two weeks if successful, officials told Reuters on Sunday. The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A rebound in oil prices has been sparked by geopolitical developments starting with U.S. President Donald Trump's announcement of a "total and complete" blockade on sanctioned Venezuelan oil tankers and subsequent developments there, followed by reports of a Ukrainian drone strike on a Russian shadow fleet vessel in the Mediterranean Sea, IG analyst Tony Sycamore said.

"The market is losing hope that the U.S.-brokered Russia-Ukraine peace talks will reach a lasting agreement any time soon," he said.

"These developments are helping to offset ongoing oversupply concerns, and combined with the false break lower last week which has caught the market on the wrong foot, the balance of risks is very close to shifting back toward the upside in crude oil."

Brent and WTI fell about 1% last week after dropping about 4% in the week of December 8.

More

Oil up on news the US intercepted an oil tanker off Venezuela | Reuters

Data center deals hit record $61 billion in 2025 amid construction frenzy

Published Fri, Dec 19 2025 4:15 AM EST Updated Fri, Dec 19 2025 5:59 AM EST

Global data centers dealmaking surged to hit another record high this year, driven by a rush to build out the infrastructure required for energy-intensive AI workloads.

That surge came even as investors grew increasingly wary of inflated artificial intelligence valuations and the financing underpinning the rapid expansion of data centers. Global stocks sold off in November as worries of an AI-fueled bubble persisted.

But S&P Global reported that more than $61 billion has flowed into the data center market this year, up slightly from $60.8 billion last year, amid what it called a “global construction frenzy.”

A surge in debt financing contributed to the record high as hyperscalers increasingly tap private equity markets rather than funding the expensive infrastructure themselves.

That trend has sparked concerns from some investors as they question the value of the advanced tech that data centers house.

Shares of cloud company Oracle fell 5% on Wednesday following a report that Blue Owl Capital was pulling out of a deal to back a $10 billion data center in Michigan. Oracle has denied the report, but BroadcomNvidia and Advanced Micro Devices retreated after it was published. The Nasdaq Composite lost 1.81% in its worst day in nearly a month.

Iuri Struta, TMT analyst at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said his team expects market concerns around AI and Oracle to be temporary and unlikely to have a “massive impact” on data center buildout and M&A in the near future.

“The competitive dynamic among frontier AI model providers, like OpenAI, Alphabet and Anthropic, is changing quickly, and this can have an impact on investor sentiment in public markets. But overall, we see demand for AI applications continuing to grow strongly in 2026.”

Despite the recent pullback in AI stocks, many analysts remain bullish on the sector. ING expects secular trends to point to healthy investment levels in 2026 driven by AI advancements and growing public and private support for digital innovation.

More

Data center deals hit record amid AI funding concerns grip investors

Fed’s Hammack says there’s no need to change interest rates for months, WSJ reports

Published Sun, Dec 21 2025 8:11 AM EST Updated Sun, Dec 21 2025 8:22 AM EST

Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland President Beth Hammack said she saw no need to change U.S. interest rates for months ahead after the central bank cut borrowing costs at its last three meetings, The Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday.

Hammack opposed recent rate cuts as she is more worried about elevated inflation than the potential labor-market fragility that prompted officials to lower rates by a cumulative 75 basis points over the past few months, the report added.

Hammack told the Journal that the Fed didn’t need to change its benchmark interest rate, currently in a range between 3.5% and 3.75%, at least until the spring.

By then, Hammack said, it would be able to better assess whether recent goods price inflation was receding as U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs are more fully digested through the supply chain, the report said.

Hammack said that November’s consumer price index of 2.7% probably understated 12-month price growth due to data distortions, the report added.

“My base case is that we can stay here for some period of time, until we get clearer evidence that either inflation is coming back down to target or the employment side is weakening more materially,” Hammack told the Journal in a podcast interview recorded on Thursday, citing inflation concerns.

Speaking at an event in Cincinnati earlier this month, Hammack said she wanted to focus on high inflation and that she would prefer monetary policy to be tighter.

Hammack said the current policy rate was right, around a neutral level, but would prefer a slightly more restrictive stance to help put more pressure on inflation.

Hammack will be a voting member of the FOMC next year, which oversees important decisions regarding monetary policy and interest rates.

Fed Hammack says no reason to change interest rates for months

In other news.

Nine of the largest pharma companies ink deals with Trump to lower drug prices

Published Fri, Dec 19 2025 2:32 PM EST Updated Fri, Dec 19 2025 5:14 PM EST

Several of the largest U.S. and European-based drugmakers inked deals with President Donald Trump on Friday to voluntarily sell their medications for less, as his administration pushes to link the nation’s drug prices to cheaper ones abroad.

That includes MerckBristol Myers SquibbAmgenGilead, GSKSanofiRoche’s Genentech, privately-held Boehringer Ingelheim and Novartis. In exchange, the companies agreed to a three-year grace period during which their products won’t face Trump’s planned pharmaceutical-specific tariffs — as long as the drugmakers further invest in U.S. manufacturing.

Among the most notable pledges on Friday is that Bristol Myers Squibb will offer Eliquis, its blockbuster blood thinner and top-prescribed product, for free to Medicaid.

The companies make up the majority of the 17 drugmakers Trump sent letters to in July, calling on them to lower prices as part of his “most favored nation” policy. Trump signed an executive order in May to revive that policy, calling for prices to be increased outside of the U.S. and to “end global freeloading.”

“As of today, 14 out of the 17 largest pharmaceutical companies ... have now agreed to drastically lower drug prices for … the American people and the American patients,” Trump said at an event on Friday. “This represents the greatest victory for patient affordability in the history of American health care, by far, and every single American will benefit.”

Johnson & Johnson, AbbVie and Regeneron are the remaining companies among the largest that haven’t signed drug pricing deals. But Trump noted that Johnson & Johnson “will be here next week.”

How the drug pricing deals will work

The full terms of the deals were not immediately released, which makes it unclear how broad their impact will be.

The nine drugmakers agreed to take measures to reduce U.S. drug prices, including selling their existing treatments to Medicaid patients at the lowest “most favored nation” prices, and guaranteeing that pricing for new medicines. Trump said the drugmakers also agreed to list their most popular drugs on his upcoming direct-to-consumer website, TrumpRx, which is launching in January.

Some companies also launched new or expanded existing direct-to-consumer offerings for certain drugs. For example, Gilead said in a release that it will launch a program that will enable patients to access its hepatitis C treatment and cure, Epclusa, at a discounted price.

Sanofi said it will offer discounts of nearly 70% on certain medicines to treat infections and cardiovascular and diabetic conditions on TrumpRx and other direct-to-consumer platforms.

Merck said it will offer three diabetes medications, Januvia, Janumet and Janumet XR, at a roughly 70% discount to cash-paying patients through a direct-to-patient program. That program will be extended to the company’s experimental daily cholesterol pill if it gets approved in the U.S., according to the company.

More

Nine pharma companies ink deals with Trump to lower drug prices

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

Given our Magic Money Tree central banksters and our spendthrift politicians, inflation now needs an entire section of its own.

US coffee drinkers face higher prices even after Trump's tariff reset

December 19, 20252:17 PM GMT

LONDON, Dec 19 (Reuters) - U.S. coffee lovers hoping President Donald Trump's tariff rollbacks last month will soon lower the cost of their daily caffeine hit had better think again.

The widespread import tariffs imposed by Trump mostly over the summer, which included top coffee producers such as Brazil, boosted the price of raw coffee beans. But the added costs are mostly still filtering through supply chains and have yet to reach consumers, according to brokers, traders and industry experts.

High U.S. retail coffee prices have, in other words, been driven mostly by last year's coffee bean supply shortages, which spurred a doubling in raw bean prices in the 12 months to March.

"Most of the (retail) price increases we've seen so far are not in response to tariffs. (They're) associated with the record high (raw bean) market that we've been in since last year," said independent coffee analyst Christopher Feran.

Feran and other industry experts estimate it takes at least nine months for raw bean prices to filter through to coffee drinkers, partly due to roasting times and price negotiations, meaning it could be well into next year before prices retreat.

Coffee drinkers in the U.S., the world's biggest coffee consumer, will have to swallow higher prices for longer. And the White House will have a tricky job trying to cool food inflation before the U.S. 2026 November midterms.

Trump, under pressure from Democratic wins in New Jersey, New York and Virginia linked to voter frustration over rising food prices, last month rolled back "reciprocal" tariffs of between 10-41% on over 200 food items that cannot easily be grown in America, such as coffee.

He also exempted non-native food items from an additional 40% tariff on imports from Brazil, which supplies the U.S. with around a third of its beans.

'COFFEE PRICES RISE MORE QUICKLY THAN THEY FALL'

Raw bean prices account for at least 40% of the cost of producing a bag of roast and ground coffee. They rose sharply last year as the market was unable to bounce back from three seasons of production deficit linked to adverse weather.

Most industry experts expect a coffee production surplus in the current and upcoming 2025/26 and 2026/27 October to September seasons which should, alongside the tariff removal, soften raw bean prices and eventually feed through to U.S. consumers.

But this will take time, analysts say, because U.S. roasters typically hold about two to three months' worth of bean stocks on average and need another two to three months to roast and package their products.

They also tend to negotiate prices with retailers only on a quarterly basis.

In other words, very little of the 18.8% rise in U.S. retail coffee prices in the year to November is due to tariffs.

And the near 35% rise in raw bean prices between August and November when most of Trump's tariffs were in place, is still to hit coffee on supermarket shelves. Also, since Trump's tariff reversal, raw bean prices have fallen just 6%.

More

US coffee drinkers face higher prices even after Trump's tariff reset | Reuters

Covid-19 Corner

This section will continue only occasionally when something of interest occurs.

 

Technology Update.

With events happening fast in the development of solar power and graphene, among other things, I’ve added this section. Updates as they get reported.

2025 officially a record year for UK solar power generation

The amount UK power generated by solar this year has surpassed previous records by some margin, according to official new figures.

Published 19th December 2025

The new findings show a 30% rise in energy generation from the sun alongside other records this year, based on data supplied by the National Energy System Operator (NESO).

An estimated 18,314GWh of solar electricity was generated in 2025, smashing the previous record of 14,067GWh in 2024, according to NESO’s historic generation mix and carbon intensity dashboard.

Solar Energy UK (SEUK) says the steady growth of solar energy in the UK has significantly contributed to the country’s electricity grid supplies having their second lowest carbon intensity ever this year – averaging only 125g of carbon dioxide per kilowatt-hour, down from a peak of 444g recorded 16 years ago.

The surge was also helped by the UK recording 1,622 hours of sunshine over the 12 months to December – the highest amount since official Met Office records began in 1910.

The new figure smashes the previous high of 1,587 hours recorded in 2003. Scotland saw its second sunniest year in 2025, while Wales recorded its sixth. Meanwhile, sunshine in Northern Ireland was well above the long-term average.

The leap in solely generation is also attributed to an 18% surge in capacity in 2025 – jumping from 20.2GW to around 23.8GW by the end of the year.

Approximately 650MW of installed capacity is projected from distributed small-scale systems on residential rooftop installations, while an additional 450MW is anticipated from medium-scale deployments on commercial and industrial building rooftops.

Utility-scale ground-mounted solar farms are expected to contribute to around 2.5GW of capacity.

Chris Hewett, Chief Executive of Solar Energy UK, says the market is “now supplying six times more hydropower, more than half of the output from nuclear, and a quarter of the power generated from natural gas”.

He added: “With capacity set to rise to almost 60GW over the coming decade, we are guaranteed to see records tumble each year, putting the nation on course for cheaper, cleaner power.”

Other 2025 records suggest solar power is rapidly becoming the cheapest form of energy in the UK. A report, published by standards body the Microgeneration Certification Scheme (MCS), showed the number of smaller-scale solar rooftop installations surpassed an annual record of 203,125 that had remained since 2011, based on 250,000 reported installations.

More

2025 officially a record year for UK solar power generation - edie

Next, the world global debt clock. Nations debts to GDP compared.

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)

Under capitalism, man exploits man. Under communism, it's just the opposite.

John Kenneth Galbraith