Tuesday, 19 May 2026

Another TACO. A China Warning. As Goes China, So Goes The World?

Baltic Dry Index. 3092 -59     Brent Crude 109.85

Spot Gold  4544                          Spot Silver 76.58

US 2 Year Yield 4.07 -02

US Federal Debt. 39.260 trillion

US GDP 32.132 trillion.

"China is a sleeping giant. Let her sleep, for when she wakes, she will shake the world."

Napoleon, attributed.

Thankfully, renewed Persian Gulf war was postponed by President Trump, blaming it on the leaders of Qatar, the UAE and Saudi Arabia. Well if he says so, I suppose, just don’t say TACO.

Oil prices eased slightly.

In the stock casinos, few noticed.

Trump says he’s postponing ‘scheduled attack of Iran tomorrow’ at Middle East leaders’ request

Published Mon, May 18 2026 3:09 PM EDT

President Donald Trump said Monday he is calling off a plan to attack Iran on Tuesday after the heads of three regional powers in the Middle East asked him to “hold off.”

Trump, in a Truth Social post, said he has informed U.S. military leaders “that we will NOT be doing the scheduled attack of Iran tomorrow” in light of the requests from Qatari Emir Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and United Arab Emirates President Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan.

There had been no clear indication prior to Trump’s post that the U.S. was preparing to strike Iran on Tuesday, officially scrapping its tattered ceasefire with Iran. Trump had told the New York Post in an interview earlier Monday that Iran knows “what’s going to be happening soon,” though he declined to provide details.

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Trump says he's postponing Iran attack at Middle East leaders' request

Asia markets trade mixed as oil eases after Trump delays planned Iran strike

Published Mon, May 18 2026 7:46 PM EDT

Asia-Pacific markets traded mixed Tuesday as oil prices, while elevated, eased slightly following news that President Donald Trump was postponing a scheduled attack on Iran.

International Brent crude futures for July delivery fell 2.04% at $109.81 per barrel as of 12:14 a.m. ET. West Texas Intermediate futures for June was 1.12% lower at $107.44 per barrel.

Investors were assessing Japan’s first-quarter GDP data, which showed the economy grew at an annualized 2.1% in the first three months of the year. The growth was sharply higher than the Reuters-polled analysts’ average estimate of 1.7%, and against the 1.3% in the previous quarter. These figures do not capture the full impact of the Iran war, which started at the end of February.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 gave up early gains and was 0.45% lower, while the Topix added 0.54%.

A summit meeting between Japan’s Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and South Korea’s President Lee Jae Myung later today will also be in focus. South Korea’s Kospi extended its early losses, falling 3.12%, while the small-cap Kosdaq dropped 3.32%.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 rose 1.05%.

Mainland China’s CSI 300 index declined 0.52% while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index added 0.41%.

Standard Chartered’s Hong Kong-listed shares gained 2.54% after the lender raised its 2028 return target to 15%, up by 3 percentage points from 2025. The bank also plans to reduce its corporate functions roles by 15% by 2030.

India’s Nifty 50 rose 0.44%. Shares of companies affiliated with Gautam Adani rose after the U.S. dropped fraud charges against the Indian billionaire. Adani Enterprises rose 1.89%, while Adani Ports and Adani Green added 0.36% and 1.23%, respectively.

Trump said in a Truth Social post that U.S. military leaders were informed to call off a “scheduled attack of Iran tomorrow” after requests from the leaders of Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

“A Deal will be made, which will be very acceptable to the United States of America, as well as all Countries in the Middle East, and beyond. This Deal will include, importantly, NO NUCLEAR WEAPONS FOR IRAN!,” Trump added.

However, Trump cautioned that he has informed his military leaders “to be prepared to go forward with a full, large scale assault of Iran, on a moment’s notice, in the event that an acceptable Deal is not reached.”

Despite the fragile ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran, the vital Strait of Hormuz remains closed by Tehran, while the U.S. continues to blockade Iranian ports.

“As the Middle East conflict enters its third month, there is little prospect of a swift and durable settlement between the U.S. and Iran and with it the full reopening of the Strait of Hormuz,” Moody’s said in a note.

Futures tied to the S&P 500 were up 0.1%, while Nasdaq 100 futures rose 0.2%. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures advanced 25 points, or 0.05%.

During Monday’s regular session, the broad market S&P 500 benchmark dropped 0.07% to end at 7,403.05, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq slid 0.51% and closed at 26,090.73. It was the second straight day of declines for both indexes. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed up 159.95 points, or 0.32%, at 49,686.12.

Asia markets today: asx, sensex, nikkei, kospi, hang seng, csi 300

Oil prices fall as Trump postpones Iran strike, easing supply disruption fears

Published Mon, May 18 2026 8:40 PM EDT

Oil prices fell Tuesday after U.S. President Donald Trump said he would postpone a planned military strike on Iran following requests from key Middle Eastern leaders, easing fears of an imminent escalation that could disrupt global crude supplies. 

International benchmark Brent crude futures for July delivery fell more than 2% to trade at $109.15 per barrel. The West Texas Intermediate futures declined 1.27% to $107.28 per barrel.

Trump said on Monday that he shelved plans for a “scheduled attack of Iran tomorrow” following requests from the leaders of Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

Before his comments on Truth Social, there had been little public indication that Washington was preparing imminent military action against Iran, which would effectively end a fragile ceasefire struck on April 8.

Earlier Monday, Trump told the New York Post that Iran knows “what’s going to be happening soon,” though he did not elaborate.

Axios reported that Trump had been weighing renewed military action after Tehran’s latest proposal in talks aimed at ending the conflict fell short of expectations.

Speaking at a White House event later in the day, Trump said, “we were getting ready to do a very major attack tomorrow.”

“I put it off for a little while, hopefully maybe forever, but possibly for a little while” because “we’ve had very big discussions with Iran, and we’ll see what they amount to,” he said.

ING said oil markets are continuing to price in persistent supply disruptions in the Middle East, noting that hopes that China would help broker progress during recent Trump-Xi talks failed to materialize.

Analysts from the banking and financial services firm said some shipping activity through the Strait of Hormuz has resumed, including several crude tankers and a Vietnamese-bound Iraqi oil shipment, though flows remain well below normal levels and could deteriorate quickly.

“The ongoing supply disruptions mean the market has had to rely largely on inventory and alternative supply, where possible,” they wrote.

Oil prices fall as Trump postpones Iran strike, easing supply disruption fears

In other news, yet another Beijing meeting. Has Beijing replaced Washington?

Since both Putin and Xi speak English, I wonder which language they will use?

Russia’s Putin to meet China’s Xi in Beijing from May 19-20, Beijing and Moscow say

Published Sat, May 16 2026 5:26 AM EDT

Russian President Vladimir Putin will meet his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping in Beijing from May 19-20th, Moscow and Beijing said on Saturday.

The meeting will take place less than a week after U.S. President Donald Trump’s meeting with Xi in Beijing, the second time the leaders of the two largest economies have met in less than a year.

“The Russian President’s visit is timed to coincide with the 25th anniversary of the Treaty of Good-Neighbourliness and Friendly Cooperation, which serves as the basis for interstate relations,” Putin’s office said in a statement.

The two leaders “will discuss current bilateral matters, ways to further strengthen the comprehensive partnership and strategic cooperation between the Russian Federation and the People’s Republic of China, and exchange views on key international and regional matters,” the Kremlin said.

China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed the upcoming meeting in a one-line post on X.

Russia is one of the world’s biggest oil producers, while China is among the largest buyers of fossil fuels.

Russia's Putin to meet China's Xi in Beijing from May 19-20

Xi Travels Less but the World Is Coming to Beijing

May 6th, 2026

In U.S.–China strategic competition, diplomacy is more than just ceremony. It is how leaders allocate scarce political attention toward their key priorities. Leaders cannot be everywhere or do everything, so where they go, whom they host, and how often they travel all reveal priorities that political statements and strategy documents can obscure.

By this measure, Beijing and Washington are pursuing different diplomatic strategies. Since Xi Jinping took office in 2013, and especially since the COVID pandemic in 2020, U.S. presidents have traveled abroad more often than Xi has. But Xi has visited a wider range of countries, and Beijing has welcomed far more foreign leaders than Washington. The contrast is especially striking across the Global South, where Chinese diplomacy has often been broader, more regular, and in many regions more ambitious.

---- The chart below shows that, since 2013, Xi has made 126 visits to 72 countries. Over the same period, Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and Joe Biden made 146 visits to 56 countries. In other words, U.S. presidents have traveled more often, but Xi has reached more places.

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Xi Travels Less but the World Is Coming to Beijing | Asia Society

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

Given our Magic Money Tree central banksters and our spendthrift politicians.

China’s economy loses steam in April as retail sales hit 40-month low

Published Sun, May 17 2026 10:12 PM EDT Updated May 18, 2026

China’s economy stumbled in April with consumption, industrial output and investment growth missing expectations as the fallout from the Iran war dampened momentum in the world’s second-largest economy.

Retail sales grew 0.2% last month from a year ago, sharply missing economists’ forecast for a 2% rise and slowing from 1.7% in March, according to data released by the National Bureau of Statistics on Monday. That marked the weakest growth since December 2022, according to Wind data, as China started to loosen its Covid curbs.

China’s industrial output jumped 4.1% in April from a year earlier, decelerating from 5.7% growth in March, and undershooting expectations for a 5.9% rise in a Reuters poll.

Urban fixed asset investment, including real estate and infrastructure, contracted 1.6% in the first four months this year from a year earlier, compared with expectations for 1.6% growth. In the January to March period, urban investment had expanded 1.7% year on year.

The investment decline was owed to the property sector, with flows plunging 13.7% this year as of April, deepening from the 11.2% drop in the first three months. Investment in infrastructure and manufacturing grew 4.3% and 1.2%, respectively, in the first four months.

Property investment in the country has nearly halved since its peak in 2021. Further declines in home prices would deepen the hit to household balance sheets, said Lizzi Lee, a fellow at Center for China Analysis, noting that the property downturn has already inflicted significant job losses across construction and related sectors.

Separate data released Monday showed China’s new home prices extended their decline in April, albeit at a slower pace, as the multi-year property downturn drags on.

The strong exports helped to mitigate the weaknesses in domestic demand, but not enough to fully offset it, said Zhiwei Zhang, president and chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management.

China’s exports gathered pace in April as factories scrambled to meet surging overseas demand from foreign buyers stockpiling goods as the Iran fanned fears of higher input costs. Exports expanded 14.1%, sharply beating estimates of a 7.9% growth.

Urban unemployment rate edged lower to 5.2%, from 5.4% in March, data released Monday showed.

While Chinese exports to the U.S. have seen a drop, Washington said Sunday that Beijing had agreed to purchase at least $17 billion of American agricultural products in 2026 and in the following two years, as well as an initial 200 jets from Boeing, following a high-profile meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and China’s Xi Jinping last week.

The two countries also agreed to set up a U.S.-China Board of Trade and Board of Investment to address concerns over market access and expand trade under a tariff-reduction framework.

The Trump administration appears to be backing away from its earlier stance of “explicitly demanding deep structural reform” of China’s economy — a push to shift growth away from exports toward domestic consumption, said Tommy Xie, head of Asia macro research at OCBC Bank.

Washington and Beijing increasingly understand that a full-scale decoupling, or an “uncontrolled conflict” could impose enormous costs on their own economies, Xie said in a note on Monday.

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China's economy loses steam in April as retail sales hit 40-month low

The top foreign holders of U.S. debt may soon dump Treasury bonds and bring their money back home, potentially spiking borrowing costs

May 17, 2026, 1:23 PM ET

For decades, Japanese government bonds offered minuscule returns, forcing investors there to look abroad, especially at U.S. financial markets.

Japanese investors now collectively own about $1 trillion in Treasuries and are the largest foreign holders of U.S. debt.

But that could change soon as the Bank of Japan has been hiking rates while hotter inflation has lifted JGB yields, which are now looking more attractive and emerging as an alternative to Treasury bonds.

Yields for 10- and 30-year JGBs have soared to the highest levels since the 1990s, and the central bank is expected to tighten for the fifth time since 2024 as the Iran war sends oil prices higher.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi is seen boosting government spending as part of her efforts to revive growth and offset the oil shock, adding to inflationary trends.

Of course, U.S. yields have also risen as inflation picks up. But the Federal Reserve’s next move is still expected to be a rate cut, though that timeline is getting pushed back further, perhaps into 2027.

There are already signs that money is being repatriated as March saw the largest monthly inflow ever into Japanese sovereign bond funds.

“The new money that’s being put to work won’t be put to work overseas,” Mark Dowding, chief investment officer at BlueBay, told the Financial Times. “It won’t be going into U.S. corporate bonds. It won’t be going into U.S. Treasuries. It will be going into those domestic allocations.”

The asset manager launched its first Japanese bond fund in March, underscoring the sea change that has taken place in the market.

Next month, investors widely anticipate the Bank of Japan to lift rates again, sending the benchmark from a three-decade high of 0.75% to 1%.

More

The top foreign holders of US debt may soon dump Treasury bonds and bring their money back home | Fortune

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.

Microsoft AI chief gives it 18 months—for all white-collar work to be automated by AI

May 16, 2026, 8:29 AM ET

In a conversation with the Financial Times earlier this year, the CEO of Microsoft AI, Mustafa Suleyman, delivered another in a series of predictions from AI leaders that white-collar work is on the precipice of a radical transformation thanks to AI. His timeline is 18 months until those law school and MBA grads—and many less-credentialed peers—are out of luck. 

Suleyman predicted “human-level performance on most, if not all professional tasks” being done by AI. Most tasks that involve “sitting down at a computer” will be fully automated by AI within the next year or 18 months, he said, naming accounting, legal, marketing, and even project management as vulnerable. Suleyman’s warning echoed the viral essay of the week, a version of which was published at Fortune.com, by AI researcher Matt Shumer, who compared this moment to February 2020, when the pandemic was about to hit America. This will be more dramatic, though, Shumer said.

Suleyman cited the exponential growth in computational power as a flashing red signal that AI could replace large swaths of professionals. As “compute” advances, he said, models will be able to code better than most human coders. Shumer and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman have both written about their alarm, even sadness, at watching their life’s work rapidly grow obsolete. 

If Suleyman’s warning sounds familiar, that’s because it was the tune of early 2025, when many CEOs issued similarly apocalyptic prophecies. Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei warned last May AI could wipe out half of all entry-level white-collar jobs (though recently changed his tune). Ford CEO Jim Farley said AI would cut in half the number of white-collar jobs in the U.S. 

In The Atlantic, Josh Tyrangiel argued the U.S. wasn’t prepared for the coming AI disruption, comparing CEOs’ recent silence on the subject to seeing “a shark fin break the water.” 

But that drumbeat is beginning again, with SpaceX CEO Elon Musk saying in Davos in January that he thinks artificial general intelligence—AI that matches or exceeds human-level intelligence—could arrive as early as this year.

AI’s real impact on professional jobs: mixed results so far

However, as AI experts hypothesize about when, and if, AI will disrupt white-collar work, the technology thus far has made only a small splash in professional services. A 2025 Thomson Reuters report found lawyers, accountants, and auditors are experimenting with AI for targeted tasks like document review and routine analysis. But while the results have shown marginal productivity improvements, they fall short of signaling mass job displacement.

In fact, in some instances, AI has had the reverse effect: making workers less productive. A recent study from nonprofit Model Evaluation and Threat Research (METR) on AI’s impact on software developers found the technology actually made the workers’ tasks take 20% longer.

Any returns the economy is seeing are largely confined to the tech industry, suggesting that AI disruption has been limited in the real economy. Recent research from Apollo Global Management chief economist Torsten Slok found that while profit margins in Big Tech increased by more than 20% in the fourth quarter of 2025, the broader Bloomberg 500 Index has seen almost no change. A few days earlier, Slok had noted that “investors do not believe AI will result in higher earnings outside the tech sector,” citing consensus Wall Street expectations for the S&P 500.

Still, there are early signs AI is leading to job displacement. About 49,135 job cuts so far this year were AI-related, according to employment consultancy Challenger, Gray & Christmas. While not citing AI as a reason for cuts, Microsoft last year let go 15,000 workers. In a memo released last July following job eliminations, CEO Satya Nadella said the company must “reimagine our mission for a new era.”

Despite marginal workforce reductions, the markets are reacting violently to the technology’s potential. In February, software stocks suffered a huge selloff out of fears of automation (analysts dubbed it the “SaaSpocalypse,” for the software-as-a-service sector). The selloff came after Anthropic and OpenAI announced the launch of agentic AI systems for enterprises that perform many of the key functions of SaaS organizations.

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Microsoft AI chief gives it 18 months—for all white-collar work to be automated by AI | Fortune

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org) 

In politics stupidity is not a handicap.

Napoleon Bonaparte

Monday, 18 May 2026

Warsh’s Fed In Big Yield Trouble. Oil Stockpiles Warning.

Baltic Dry Index. 3151 -44     Brent Crude 111.36

Spot Gold  4544                           Spot Silver 75.78

US 2 Year Yield 4.09 +09

US Federal Debt. 39.256 trillion

US GDP 32.129 trillion.

Gold is money. Everything else is credit.

J. P. Morgan

An ever more desperate President Trump, trapped in a Persian Gulf war he can’t seem to end, made matters worse on Sunday threatening to restart his bombing hot war on Iran.

Crude oil prices moved higher in response.

Meanwhile the Strait of Hormuz remains closed to most shipping causing massive, increasing supply chain disruptions in a global economy heading rapidly towards recession, if not worse. How long before America and Europe run into a diesel crisis?

My guess is we will be in global recession around July 4th, when the USA celebrates its 250th founding anniversary.  But if Trump restarts his hot war and Iran retaliates, as seems likely, the global economy could slip into recession in early June.

Perhaps the G-7 finance ministers meeting in Paris today and tomorrow, could phone Trump in D.C. or Palm Beach and inform him of the consequences of more insanity, restarting a hot war in the Persian Gulf.

Asia-Pacific markets mostly fall as Trump’s Iran warning stokes fresh oil supply fears

Published Sun, May 17 2026 7:45 PM EDT

Asia-Pacific markets fell Monday as investors weighed renewed geopolitical tensions after U.S. President Donald Trump warned Iran to "get moving, FAST," raising fears of further escalation in the Middle East and potential disruptions to global oil supplies.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump on Sunday said "the Clock is Ticking" for Iran and warned there "won't be anything left" if action was not taken soon, adding that "TIME IS OF THE ESSENCE!" He did not elaborate on the steps he wanted Iran to take or the consequences that could follow.

Oil prices advanced more than 1%. International benchmark Brent crude futures for July gained 1.90% to trade at $111.34 per barrel. U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures for June advanced 2.17% to $107.71 per barrel.

In Australia, the S&P/ASX 200 fell 1.32%.

Japan's Nikkei 225 lost 0.92%, while the Topix was 0.77% lower. South Korea's Kospi reversed losses at the start of the session, rising 1.15%, while the small-cap Kosdaq fell 1.65%.

Yields on the Japanese 10-year government bond jumped over 9 basis points to 2.793%, extending the selloff on the back of a rise in global bond yields as inflation fears mounted.

Hong Kong's Hang Seng index fell 1.49%, while the mainland CSI 300 was down flat. Taiwan's Taiex declined 1.02%.

Tensions between Washington and Tehran have remained elevated despite a fragile ceasefire reached in early April. The U.S. has continued its blockade of Iranian ports, while Iran has kept the Strait of Hormuz shut since the conflict began.

U.S. stock futures were little changed following a record-setting week, with traders awaiting quarterly results from Nvidia and major U.S. retailers.

Dow Jones Industrial Average futures slipped 100 points, or 0.2%. S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100 futures hovered around the flatline.

Last week on Wall Street, the major indices closed lower on Friday, weighed down by losses in technology stocks and a rise in U.S. Treasury yields after a summit between President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping ended without major policy breakthroughs, leaving traders worried.

The S&P 500 shed 1.24% to end at 7,408.50, while the Nasdaq Composite slipped 1.54% to 26,225.14. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 537.29 points, or 1.07%, and closed at 49,526.17.

Investors took profits in tech after the group saw sharp gains recently. Notably, Intel retreated more than 6%, while Advanced Micro Devices and Micron Technology lost 5.7% and 6.6%, respectively. Nvidia dropped 4.4%, while Cerebras Systems — which surged 68% Thursday after it began trading on the Nasdaq — shed 10%.

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

Wall Street Week Ahead

May 17, 2026, 7:26 AM ET

Wall Street heads into a pivotal week led by Nvidia (NVDA) earnings, fresh economic data, and continued enthusiasm around AI and gaming themes.

Nvidia’s (NVDA) results on Wednesday are expected to be the week’s marquee event, with investors focused on hyperscaler spending, sovereign AI demand, and commentary around data center growth. Options markets imply a roughly 6% move in the stock following the report, with semiconductor and AI-linked names likely to react in sympathy.

Tech will remain in focus throughout the week. Alphabet (GOOG) (GOOGL) hosts its Google I/O developer conference, while Dell Technologies World (DELL) will feature appearances from Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang. Investors will also monitor whether a SpaceX (SPACE) IPO prospectus emerges during the week.

On the macro side, flash PMI data on Thursday will provide insight into the economic impact of ongoing Middle East tensions, while the Federal Reserve will release minutes from its last meeting on Wednesday.

Retail earnings from Walmart (WMT), Target (TGT), Lowe’s (LOW), and TJX (TJX) will offer another read on consumer spending trends.

Elsewhere, Take-Two Interactive (TTWO) could see heightened volatility amid speculation around a new Grand Theft Auto 6 trailer and potential preorder announcements.

Wall Street Week Ahead | Seeking Alpha

Kevin Warsh comes into the Fed facing a big ‘family fight’ over cutting interest rates

Published Sat, May 16 2026 9:41 AM EDT

If new Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh is still itching for a “good family fight” over monetary policy, he is likely to get one if he sticks to his guns on interest rate cuts.

With inflation spiking and Treasury yields surging, Warsh is likely to confront a Federal Open Market Committee in no mood to ease. In fact, several officials of late have stressed the need for the Fed to keep its options open for rate hikes ahead.

If it looked like outgoing Governor Stephen Miran was a lone wolf howling for reductions, seeing a Fed chair trying to defy his fellow policymakers and push for cuts will loom even larger.

Those who have watched Warsh over the years, from his prior stint as a Fed governor through his high-profile public disagreements with Fed policy since, expect him to put up strong arguments for cutting. The problem is, he’s likely to lose at least in the short term, a situation that sets up some interesting communication issues for the new central bank leader.

“I saw him in action. He does base his decisions on his view of the economy, and even his arguments for why he would favor rate decreases in general were based on his read of what’s happening structurally in the economy,” said former Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester, who served with the Philadelphia Fed during the prior period when Warsh was on the board. “I just don’t think right now he can make those arguments in a credible way, because we have an inflation problem.”

Indeed, surging inflation will be Warsh’s first and primary policy challenge.

Officially, Warsh has echoed much of the Trump administration’s position on the current run of price surges — mainly that they are temporary and will fade once the fighting in Iran ceases and various disinflationary forces, such as increased productivity, take over.

However, those arguments face a tougher audience now with inflation levels at multi-year highs.

Warsh made the “family fight” remarks during his Senate confirmation hearing, a remark, along with other caustic comments he’s made about the Fed, that central bank observers privately say could come back to haunt him.

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Kevin Warsh comes into the Fed facing a big 'family fight' over cutting interest rates

The bond market is flashing a warning over Iran. A veteran of energy geopolitics explains the risk

Published Sat, May 16 2026 10:01 AM EDT

Don’t look now, but the pain from high energy prices might be about to bite Americans twice. 

With no end in sight to the war in Iran and oil prices stuck above $100 a barrel, bond traders worried about inflation have sold off long-term government debt in the U.S. and developed economies in recent days. That has the effect of raising bond yields, including on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, which rose nearly 24 basis points in the past week to end Friday near 4.6%. 

The 10-year Treasury yield influences the cost of mortgages, auto loans, credit card rates and other consumer debt. When it goes up, consumers feel the pinch. Its rate is set by the market, not the Federal Reserve.

To unpack what’s happening at the intersection of geopolitics, energy, and global debt, CNBC reached out to Daleep Singh, vice chair and chief global economist at asset manager PGIM. Singh has seen global energy conflicts up close: As deputy national security adviser under President Joe Biden, he designed that administration’s economic effort to cut off Russia’s oil revenue. Earlier in his career, Singh ran the New York Federal Reserve Bank’s markets desk, a sensitive position that looks directly into the guts of the global financial system.

Singh may have been appointed by a Democrat, but he isn’t singing the party line. He began by praising Kevin Warsh, the conservative economist appointed by President Donald Trump and confirmed by the Senate on Wednesday to chair the Fed.

The transcript of Singh’s conversation has been edited for length and clarity. He spoke over Zoom on Friday.

Q: How do you think Kevin Warsh will fare as Fed chair? 

Daleep Singh: I’m optimistic about Kevin Warsh. His intellectual work has been centered on how to sustain the Fed’s most important asset, which is its credibility. That could not be more important at a time when the central bank is under political assault. I think he is going to be thoughtful and deliberate about judging the trade-offs that are necessary to preserve the independence of monetary policy, maybe to the detriment of other responsibilities the Fed once held.

It’s also super important to have a Fed chair who has been battle-tested. Warsh has been, through the global financial crisis. [Warsh was a Fed governor from 2006 to 2011.] He was credited by almost everyone as being the eyes and ears of the Fed into Wall Street, and how that was going in terms of transmitting the response to the real economy.

People who dismiss him as reflexively partisan are missing a lot of what he brings to the table in terms of working across the aisle.

Having said that, look, I do not think the Fed should be cutting rates in this moment. We’re going to find out really soon how much scope he has to do the right thing.

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The bond market is flashing a warning, energy geopolitics expert warns

Iran energy crisis enters new phase as peak summer season approaches

Emergency measures spread as oil stockpiles run low

18 May 2026

Nearly 80 countries have now introduced emergency measures to protect their economies as the world approaches a new, more dangerous phase in the energy crisis driven by the Iran war.

Governments are stepping up their responses ahead of a looming tipping point, when traders warn that oil prices could jump again sharply unless more fuel trapped in the Gulf can be exported through the blockaded Strait of Hormuz.

Paul Diggle, chief economist at fund manager Aberdeen, said his team was now examining a scenario where Brent crude rockets to $180 a barrel, causing surging inflation and recessions in a host of European and Asian countries.

Demand for air conditioning and holiday travel at the start of the northern hemisphere’s summer will put further strain on supplies of crude oil, gasoline, diesel and jet fuel, when global stocks are already falling at the fastest rate on record.

Australia has pledged to spend $10bn to boost its fuel and fertiliser stockpiles, while France has said it will “change the scope and scale” of its support to shield its economy from the crisis. India has urged the public not to buy gold or holiday abroad as it tries to shore up its reserves of foreign currency.

The International Energy Agency estimates that the number of countries that have already been forced into emergency measures has reached 76, up from 55 at the end of March.

Economists and traders warn the next phase of the crisis could bring another sharp jump in energy prices, broader fuel rationing, industrial shutdowns and a significant slowdown in global growth. 

If the Middle East conflict “does not end in the coming weeks and we don’t have the reopening of the Hormuz strait, I’m afraid a world recession could be on the table”, the EU’s transport commissioner Apostolos Tzitzikostas told an FT conference in Athens on Thursday.

Since the outbreak of the conflict, the world has been existing beyond its energy means.

The IEA estimates that between March and June global oil consumption will run roughly 6mn barrels a day above production. Some analysts believe the shortfall could be closer to 8mn-9mn barrels a day.

To cover the shortfall, traders have drained stockpiles of oil on land and at sea and governments have pledged to release their strategic reserves.

More than 2mn barrels a day of emergency crude from strategic reserves are flowing into the system, but many of those releases are scheduled to end by July.

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Iran energy crisis enters new phase as peak summer season approaches

Global oil stockpiles could hit record lows if Strait of Hormuz remains closed

Published Sat, May 16 2026 9:25 AM EDT

Global oil inventories are falling at a record pace to compensate for the big supply disruption in the Middle East and they will approach critical levels if the Strait of Hormuz does not reopen.

Higher prices for oil and fuel are likely ahead of peak demand this summer as a consequence, the International Energy Agency warned this week in its monthly update.

“Rapidly shrinking buffers amid continued disruptions, may herald future price spikes ahead,” the IEA said.

The oil market has not felt the full impact of the supply loss thanks to commercial inventories held by the industry, strategic reserves controlled by governments and tankers in transit, Exxon Mobil CEO Darren Woods said on the oil major’s first-quarter earnings call.

These stocks mitigated the impact of the disruption in March and April, Woods said. But commercial inventories will eventually fall to levels where they can longer serve as a supply source, the CEO said.

“We anticipate as that happens and the strait remains closed, that we will continue to see increased prices in the marketplace,” Woods said.

Stockpiles near record lows

Inventories were near a decade high at just over 8 billion barrels at the end of February, Swiss bank UBS estimated in a Tuesday report. By end of April, stockpiles fell to 7.8 billion barrels, UBS analysts said.

Inventories will approach record lows of 7.6 billion barrels by end of May if demand remains the same month over month, the UBS analysts said. Inventories falling to that level would stress the supply chain, JPMorgan analysts said in an April 30 note.

Billions of barrels in inventory may sound like a lot but the reality is that only about 800 million barrels are available without straining the system, the JPMorgan analysts said. The rest is needed to keep pipelines and tanks filled at minimum levels so the supply chain operates efficiently, they said.

“Like blood pressure in the human body, the issue is circulation,” said Natasha Kaneva, JPMorgan’s head of global commodities strategy. “The system does not fail because oil disappears, it fails because the circulation network no longer has enough working volume.”

Oil inventories would fall to a critically low level of 6.8 billion barrels by September if Hormuz is still closed at that time, JPMorgan forecast. Product inventories would hit critical levels sooner in July or August, according to a forecast from Rapidan Energy.

The global economy would “seize up, with critical transportation infrastructure unable to source fuel at any price,” Rapidan analysts said in May 7 note.

But inventories are very unlikely to reach these critically low levels, the analysts said. Instead, oil and product prices will spike to curtail demand which will cause “a severe economic contraction.”

“That’s likely to happen before 3Q26,” the Rapidan analysts said.

Global oil stockpiles could hit record lows if Hormuz Strait stays closed

In other news.

Are we really headed for a ‘super’ El Niño? What the science says

An El Niño is coming, models say, but Nature spoke to researchers about when and how we’ll know its intensity.

14 May 2026

Headlines have been proclaiming that one of the strongest El Niño weather patterns in recent decades might be starting up later this year. If a big one kicks in, as forecasts currently suggest, it could bring floods, droughts and other weather extremes to many parts of the globe, as well as potentially boost 2027’s temperatures to record highs.

But how sure are meteorologists that this ‘super’ El Niño is on the horizon?

In the past few months, sea surface temperatures in parts of the tropical Pacific Ocean have warmed more than usual, which is the hallmark of an emerging El Niño. Still uncertain, however, is whether winds and other weather factors will either ratchet up that ocean heat or temper it — and therefore weaken the possibility of a strong El Niño.

The latest forecast from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), released today, suggests that there is a strong chance of an El Niño developing between May and July this year, but that there is much uncertainty over its peak strength. This will become clearer during summer in the Northern Hemisphere. (El Niños typically reach their maximum from October to February.)

Intensity uncertainty

El Niño is a complex global event that recurs roughly every two to seven years. The last one, in 2023–24, brought impacts, including drought and hunger, to parts of southern Africa and record floods to southern Brazil. It also contributed to 2024 being the hottest year on record.

This year, sea surface temperatures in the central and eastern tropical Pacific have been warmer than normal, rising by as much as 1 ºC above average in recent weeks off the western coast of South America. On that basis, computer models from various government agencies and research groups suggest that the coming El Niño could peak more strongly than the previous one.

NOAA said in its 14 May report that there is an 82% chance of an El Niño arriving between May and July, and a 96% chance of it developing by December. But on the basis of current observations, the agency predicted only a 37% chance of it being in the topmost categorization, the ‘very strong’ category, in which ocean temperatures in the central and eastern tropical Pacific Ocean are more than 2 ºC above average. The European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts estimated in a report on 1 May that those ocean waters could reach 3 ºC above average by November (see ‘Extreme prediction’).

Some researchers use the term super El Niño to describe instances when the ocean temperature rises to 2 ºC or more above baseline. The last El Niño to reach that threshold happened in 2015–16.

Which way the wind blows

El Niño watchers caution that there are many unknown factors that could still affect how this year plays out. “Our current forecasts don’t tell us what type of El Niño we are heading towards,” says Andréa Taschetto, a climate scientist at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia. Whether the Pacific Ocean continues to warm most in the eastern rather than the central region could make a big difference to the intensity of the weather pattern that develops and any damage it might cause, she says.

Winds could have a large effect, says Emily Becker, a climate scientist at the University of Miami in Florida. Just a few days of strong east-to-west trade winds in the equatorial Pacific Ocean could cool waters and weaken a fledgling El Niño, she notes. Conversely, if the trade winds slacken, that “could really kick things into gear”, she says.

Forecasters should know more in the coming weeks, once they get past the notorious ‘spring predictability barrier’, which refers to spring in the Northern Hemisphere. During this period, it is unusually difficult for forecasts to accurately capture the weather variability that can lead to El Niño.

More

Are we really headed for a ‘super’ El Niño? What the science says

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

Given our Magic Money Tree central banksters and our spendthrift politicians.

Gold still represents the ultimate form of payment in the world. Fiat money in extremis is accepted by nobody. Gold is always accepted.

Alan Greenspan

Mounting inflation pressures deepen global bond slide

15 May 2026

A weekslong rout in global government bonds intensified Friday, with fading hopes for a U.S.-Iran peace deal colliding with growing concerns about fiscal policies in two of the world’s largest economies.

Sliding bond prices drove the yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note to its highest level in more than a year, helping pause a stock rally that had just carried the S&P 500 and Nasdaq composite to new records.

Bonds have been hurt for months by the rise in energy prices sparked by the U.S.-Iran conflict. But they came under particular pressure Friday thanks to a confluence of disparate developments worldwide.

The main headwind remains Iran. As the weeks go by without a deal, investors have become increasingly pessimistic that the U.S. and Iran will reach an agreement soon that would reopen the Strait of Hormuz and bring down energy prices. Investors had held out hope that President Trump’s visit to China could yield some progress on that front, but were left disappointed by the results of the trip.

Meanwhile, particularly sharp selloffs in Japanese and U.K. government bonds spilled over into the U.S. and other markets Friday.

In Japan, price declines were powered by hot inflation data and signs that the government will borrow and spend more to blunt the impact of higher energy costs. In the U.K., investors reacted to the growing threat of a leadership challenge to Prime Minister Keir Starmer, which raised fresh questions about the country’s economic and fiscal trajectory.

While concerns about domestic inflation have been growing, “today’s move in yields in the U.S., I think, are a direct result of what’s happening in non-U.S. yields,” said Leah Traub, a fixed-income portfolio manager at Lord Abbett.

Yields on Treasurys, which rise when bond prices fall, are heavily influenced by investors’ expectations for what short-term interest rates set by the Federal Reserve will average over the life of a bond.

As the Iran conflict has dragged on, investors have started betting that energy prices will stay high for longer than originally presumed, pushing the Fed to consider raising interest rates. That is a shift from before the war, when investors expected the Fed to cut rates this year.

When yields rise sharply overseas, U.S. yields typically also rise to reflect the fact that investors can now buy higher-yielding bonds elsewhere.

Yields surged across the world on Friday. The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note—a benchmark for borrowing costs across the economy—settled at 4.595%, its highest closing level since February 2025.

The yield on the 30-year U.S. Treasury bond rose around 0.12 percentage point to 5.127%, its highest closing level since 2007. The Japanese 30-year yield jumped around 0.16 percentage point, while the U.K. 30-year yield surged 0.19 percentage point.

Oil prices also rose in response to the lack of progress toward a Hormuz deal, with U.S. crude front-month futures gaining 4.2% to $105.42 a barrel.

Stocks fell broadly, with the energy sector the lone bright spot. The S&P 500 dropped 1.2%, but still eked out a 0.1% weekly gain. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 1.1%, or 537 points, while the Nasdaq composite gave up 1.5%.

More

Mounting inflation pressures deepen global bond slide

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.

CATL turns to sodium. Approx. 14 minutes.

Why the biggest battery company is betting against lithium

Bing Videos

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org) 

There can be no other criterion, no other standard than gold. Yes, gold which never changes, which can be shaped into ingots, bars, coins, which has no nationality and which is eternally and universally accepted as the unalterable fiduciary value par excellence.

Charles de Gaulle