Baltic Dry Index. 2484 +130 Brent Crude 95.03
Spot Gold 4830 Spot Silver 80.66
US 2 Year Yield 3.76 unch.
US Federal Debt. 39.123 trillion
US GDP 31.330 trillion.
Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it everywhere, diagnosing it incorrectly and applying the wrong remedies.
Groucho Marx
In his desperation to get the Strait of Hormuz open, and get critical supply chains working again, is President Trump folding?
Settling for a no nukes deal, that Iran had long ago abandoned back in 2003.
Wall Street and the global stock casinos clearly think so.
But what if they’re wrong? What if Iran
just runs out the clock?
Wall Street Hits New Record on Peace Hopes
For markets, it seems that no new bad news
means good news.
April 15, 2026 at 11:14 PM GMT+1
Tehran and Washington appear
to be edging closer to a second round of talks and a ceasefire
extension over the US-Israel war with the Iran. Still, Donald Trump’s decision
to escalate the standoff by blockading Iranian traffic through the Strait of
Hormuz risks doing even more damage to Iran’s biggest oil customers.
Pakistan’s military said a delegation from
the country arrived in
Iran on Wednesday as Islamabad continues
to mediate the exchange of messages between the two sides. Iran sees a
prolonging of the US blockade as “a prelude to a breach of the ceasefire,” said
Ali Abdollahi, the commander of Iran’s joint military headquarters, according
to state TV. Iran’s armed forces “will not permit any exports or imports to
continue in the Persian Gulf, the Sea of Oman or the Red Sea” if the blockade
continues, he said.
On Wall Street today, the lack of bad news
from the Persian Gulf was taken as good news. Stocks extended their streak of
gains, pushing both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 indexes to record highs as
investors piled into equities on optimism over a ceasefire—and
robust corporate earnings. —David
E. Rovella
Wall
Street Hits Record on Peace Bet: Evening Briefing Americas - Bloomberg
S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite close at fresh
records as traders look past Iran war fears: Live updates
Updated Wed, Apr 15 2026 6:39 PM EDT
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite rose to new
all-time highs on Wednesday, building on the week’s strong gains as investors
remained hopeful about the Iran war potentially ending soon.
The broad market index gained 0.80%,
ending at 7,022.95. The Nasdaq Composite advanced 1.59% to 24,016.02,
while the Dow Jones Industrial
Average shed 72.27 points, or 0.15%, to close at 48,463.72. Both the
Nasdaq and the S&P 500 closed at records, with the tech-heavy index posting
an 11th day win streak and the broad market benchmark notching its 10th
positive session out of 11.
Stocks have been riding high this week on
the possibility that a peace deal between the U.S. and Iran could materialize.
The S&P 500, which fully
recovered from its Iran war losses on Monday, has risen 3% this week.
The Nasdaq and Dow, meanwhile, have added nearly 5% and more than 1% week to
date.
“The setup coming into [the war] was that
market participants had de-risked to a degree in anticipation that maybe things
might get bad, and then as that seems like it’s maybe less of a likelihood,
they’re needing to buy,” said Thomas Martin, senior portfolio manager at
Globalt Investments. “People don’t want to miss out on an up market.”
President Donald Trump offered more
hope to investors that the war may not last much longer, saying in an interview
with Fox Business Wednesday that the Iran war is “very
close to over” and claiming once again that Iran wants to “make a deal very
badly.”
A second round of negotiations between
Washington and Tehran is under discussion, a White
House official told CNBC Tuesday. Nothing has been officially
scheduled yet, noted the official, who asked not to be named to discuss the
administration’s internal plans.
“Is there going to be a deal that will
allow the Strait of Hormuz to open up and there to be less rhetoric on stopping
the flow of goods? The market seems to be saying that it thinks there will be,”
Martin said.
Broadcom was
a key winner of Wednesday’s session, rising 4%. This comes on the heels
of Meta Platforms extending
its partnership with Broadcom to deploy custom chips using the
chipmaker’s technology.
Stock
market news for April 15, 2026
Japan’s Nikkei 225 hits record high as hopes for
U.S.-Iran deal fuel broader rally in Asia stocks
Published Wed, Apr 15 2026 7:48 PM EDT
Japan’s Nikkei 225 hit a record Thursday
amid a broader rally in Asia markets, tracking overnight gains on Wall Street
as hopes of a U.S.-Iran deal grew.
Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose 2.19%,
paring earlier gains after hitting a record fueled by technology and consumer
cyclical stocks. Daikin Industries was the top
performer, after activist investor Elliott Investment Management pushed the
company to improve performance and narrow its valuation gap with peers. The
Topix gained 1.33%.
Stocks have rallied this week on the
possibility of a peace deal between the U.S. and Iran. The S&P 500, which fully
recovered from its Iran war losses on Monday, has risen 3% this week.
The Nasdaq and Dow, meanwhile, have added around
5% and more than 1%, respectively.
The Iran war is “very
close to over,” President Donald
Trump said in a Fox Business interview that aired on Wednesday, again
claiming that Tehran wants to “make a deal very badly.”
A White House official told CNBC on
Tuesday that a second
round of negotiations between Washington and Iran is under discussion.
According to the official, who asked not to be named to discuss the
administration’s plans, said nothing has been officially scheduled yet.
Oil prices were volatile in Thursday
trade. The West Texas
Intermediate gained 0.39% at $91.65 per barrel as of 11:46 p.m. ET.
International benchmark Brent
crude was flat at $94.96 per barrel.
South Korea’s Kospi advanced 1.96% while
the small-cap Kosdaq was 1.36% higher. India’s Nifty 50 rose 0.56% higher.
Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 fell 0.32%.
Labor data released Thursday showed that Australian employment rose 1.4% in
March from a year ago, while the unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%.
Mainland China’s CSI 300 index rose 0.90%,
while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng
index extended early gains and rose 1.41%.
China’s economy accelerated in the first
quarter, supported by robust export growth, which helped offset tepid domestic
demand, even as the growth outlook was clouded by the Iran war-fueled energy
shock threatening global demand.
Gross domestic product grew 5% in the
three months to March, data from the National Statistics Bureau showed
Thursday, accelerating from 4.5% in the prior quarter and exceeding economists’
forecast for a 4.8% growth in a Reuters poll.
S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures both
traded around the flatline. Futures
tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by 45 points, or 0.1%.
Overnight on Wall Street, the S&P 500
gained 0.80%, ending at 7,022.95. The Nasdaq Composite advanced 1.59%
to 24,016.02, while the Dow
Jones Industrial Average shed 72.27 points, or 0.15%, to close at
48,463.72.
Both the Nasdaq and the S&P 500 closed
at records, with the tech-heavy index posting an 11th-day win streak and the
broad market benchmark notching its 10th positive session out of 11.
Asia
markets rise as hopes of U.S.-Iran deal boost Wall Street benchmarks
Saudi Arabia pressures Trump to scale back war on
Iran
Mohammed bin Salman wants the US president
to lift quarantine of Iranian ports, say diplomats
Published 14 April 2026 9:47pm
GMT+01:00
Saudi Arabia is pressing the United States
to scale back its
war in the Middle East, fearing Iran could retaliate by blockading the Red
Sea and paralysing the kingdom’s economy.
Mohammed bin Salman, the Saudi crown
prince, wants Donald Trump to lift his naval quarantine of Iranian ports in the
Persian Gulf and return to negotiations, Gulf diplomats say.
The Saudi lobbying reflects concerns in
Riyadh that Tehran would retaliate against
the US blockade by instructing its Houthi allies in Yemen to
seal the Bab al-Mandeb Strait, a Red Sea chokepoint through which much
of the kingdom’s oil supplies pass.
The abrupt shift by the Arab world’s lone
Iran hawk – first reported by the Wall Street Journal and confirmed to The
Telegraph by two Gulf officials — has emerged amid growing regional anxiety
about Mr
Trump’s handling of the war.
More
Saudi Arabia pressures Trump to scale back war on Iran
Beige Book Captures Initial Toll of Iran War
April 15, 2026 | 14:38
Regional economic conditions
deteriorated somewhat and cost pressures intensified due to the Iran conflict,
according to the Fed's regional survey of business contacts. The survey, which
captured the first two weeks of the conflict, said overall activity increased
at a "slight to modest pace" in the majority of districts, a
mild downgrade from the prior report's "slight to moderate pace".
The blame was put squarely on the Middle East conflict "as a major
source of uncertainty", resulting in "many firms adopting a
wait-and-see posture" on hiring and investing. Consumer spending
increased, albeit slightly, with many Districts reporting "signs of
consumer financial strain", now aggravated by rising fuel costs.
Business expectations for the economy were marked down from "optimistic"
in the prior report to "varied amid widespread uncertainty".
Piling on, the New York Fed District reported continued modest declines in
economic activity, a counterpoint to its release today of a survey showing
improved manufacturing conditions in the region.
The one semi-bright spot in the Beige Book
is that employment was reported as "steady to up slightly", a
mild improvement from the previous report's description of stability only. This
supports recent data that suggest the slowdown in job growth may be ending.
While the report said price growth "mostly
remained moderate overall", rising energy prices were pressuring costs
for transportation, plastics, and fertilizers. Moreover, "input cost
pressures beyond energy-related increases were also widespread",
partly due to tariff-driven increases in metal prices.
All told, the stagflation-like tone of the
Beige Book will reinforce the Fed's wait-and-see posture.
Beige Book Captures Initial Toll of Iran Wa
In other news.
Donald Trump’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz is
a dangerous gamble | The Economist
Donald Trump’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz is a dangerous gamble | The Economist
Here's a look at recent events
15 April 2026
- ----The
US and Iran could resume talks "over the next two days",
President Donald Trump has said, following the failed negotiations in
Pakistan over the weekend
- The
US said no ships have passed through its blockade of Iranian ports and
coastal areas in the first 24 hours. Tracking data, verified by the BBC,
showed four Iran-linked ships crossed the Strait of Hormuz after the
blockade began
- China
has condemned the blockade, calling it "dangerous and
irresponsible". Iran said it is a "grave violation" of
its sovereignty
Prediction markets will grow to $1 trillion by
2030, Bernstein estimates
Published Tue, Apr 14 2026 2:07 PM EDT Updated
Tue, Apr 14 2026 2:12 PM EDT
Prediction market volumes are booming in
2026, on pace to more than quadruple this year alone and reach an estimated $1
trillion in the next four years, according to Bernstein.
Volumes have already surged in the first
few months of this year, the investment bank wrote in a report Tuesday, with
Kalshi and Polymarket, the two largest platforms, seeing about $60 billion in
market volume year-to-date — more than the $51 billion in total prediction
market volume in all of 2025.
Growth rates for the platforms rival the
artificial intelligence boom, according to Bank of America. Analyst Julie
Hoover in a note last week called Kalshi one of the “fastest growing non-AI
companies” in the U.S. Weekly trading volume on Kalshi — which controls more
than 90% of the U.S. prediction market — has surged to more than $3 billion
today from about $100 million a year ago, she wrote.
While prediction market volumes initially
jumped in 2024 around the U.S. presidential election, they eventually surpassed
those levels in 2025 as sports,
cryptocurrency and macroeconomic contracts became popular.
$1 trillion by 2030
Bernstein analyst Gautam Chhugani now
estimates that total market volumes in 2026 will reach $240 billion, a 370%
increase compared to last year. At a compound annual growth rate of roughly 80%
between 2025 and 2030, Chhugani sees prediction market trading volume of $1
trillion a year by the start of the next decade.
Chhugani expects increased regulatory
clarity at the federal level will boost the potential market, and that
blockchain tokenization and integration with cryptocurrencies is enabling more
liquidity. The makeup of traded contracts is also likely to change, he said.
“We expect [the] institutional market to
develop around economics, business and political contracts, as investors seek
more direct and discrete exposure to events,” he wrote. While sports contracts
make up more than 60% of trading volume today, he sees that being cut in half
by 2030. “We also expect hedging demand from corporates, [and] insurance firms
exposed to specific event risks.”
While Kalshi and Polymarket dominate the
space, new names are building a presence. Robinhood, DraftKings and Underdog
are all starting or have already launched their own prediction market
verticals, Bank of America’s Hoover said.
Public proxies
Robinhood and Coinbase Global are the key public
market proxies for the private prediction market companies, Chhugani said.
Robinhood’s prediction markets hub is now a year old, generating $350 million
in annual recurring revenue, and accounting for some 30% of Kalshi total
volume. The market is the digital finance platform’s fastest-growing business,
and could encourage Robinhood to develop its own exchange, the analyst
said.
While Chhugani’s long-range estimates
assume the resolution of long-term regulatory risk, in the near-term state and
federal regulators and the prediction markets themselves are engaged in a
pitched battle. “Legal action is now pending in 14 states, plus another 4
congressional bills [are] also pending amid concerns around insider trading,”
Hoover wrote.
Some states have begun legal action
against prediction markets, citing their authority to regulate sports betting,
while the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission is fighting states, claiming it has the only authority to
regulate prediction markets.
Still, Chhugani has faith that this won’t
derail the multi-year outlook.
“Despite ongoing state-level legal
challenges, we expect platforms like Kalshi, Polymarket, and public proxies
(HOOD, COIN) to benefit from increasing regulatory clarity and growing
alignment with federal regulators (SEC, CFTC) — a key driver of market legitimacy
and mainstream adoption,” he wrote.
Disclosure: CNBC and Kalshi have a
commercial relationship that includes a CNBC minority investment.
Prediction markets
will grow to $1 trillion by 2030, Bernstein says
Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession
Watch.
Given
our Magic Money Tree central banksters and our spendthrift politicians.
US
Treasury's Bessent says China has been unreliable partner by hoarding oil
during war
By
Andrea Shalal Wed, April 15, 2026 at 12:32 AM GMT+1
WASHINGTON,
April 14 (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Tuesday
China had been an unreliable global partner during the Middle East war by
hoarding oil supplies and limiting exports of some goods, mirroring its
actions with medical goods during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Bessent
told reporters he had spoken with Chinese officials about the issue. He
declined to answer a question about whether the dispute would derail U.S.
President Donald Trump's plan to visit Beijing in mid-May, but said Trump and
Chinese President Xi Jinping had a very good working relationship.
"I
think the message for the visit is stability. We've had great stability in the
relationship since last summer; that emanates from the top down," he said.
"I think that communication is the key."
"I
think the message for the visit is stability. We've had great stability in the
relationship since last summer; that emanates from the top down," he said.
"I think that communication is the key."
But
Bessent took China to task for its actions during the U.S.-Israeli war with
Iran, which has sent oil prices up by as much as 50% and triggered supply chain
disruptions.
"China
has been an unreliable global partner three times in the past five years; once
during COVID, when they hoarded healthcare products, second on rare
earth," Bessent said, referring to Beijing's threat last year to curb rare
earth exports.
Now
it was stockpiling more oil instead of helping to ease the global demand
shortage caused by Iran's closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which carries 20% of
the world's oil, he said.
China
already had a strategic petroleum reserve that was roughly the same size as
that of the entire reserve held by the 32-member International Energy Agency,
but it was continuing to purchase oil. "They continued buying, and
they've been hoarding, and they have cut off exports of many products,"
Bessent said.
Liu
Pengyu, a spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington, said the
shortages facing the global energy market were rooted in "the tense
situation in the Middle East" and called for an immediate end to military
operations there.
More
US Treasury's
Bessent says China has been unreliable partner by hoarding oil during war
Global recession is inevitable if Strait of Hormuz stays shut, says
Citadel’s Ken Griffin
Published Tue, Apr 14 2026 10:36 AM EDT Updated Tue, Apr 14 2026 12:04
PM EDT
Citadel CEO Ken Griffin said Tuesday that the
global economy is headed toward a recession if the Strait of Hormuz stays shut
for much longer.
“Let’s assume [the strait is] shut down for the
next six to 12 months — the world’s going to end up in a recession,” Griffin
said on stage at the Semafor World Economy conference in Washington, D.C.
“There’s no way to avoid that.”
As a result, the world is going to see a massive
shift toward alternative fuel sources, including wind, solar and nuclear, he
added. To be sure, the hedge fund leader thinks the consequences of the war
would have been worse if the U.S. delayed any strikes until Iran’s military
capabilities had grown.
Stocks have managed to rebound back to where they
were before the U.S. first attacked Iran in February, but the optimistic
sentiment among investors is contingent on the duration of the war in the
Middle East. Many expect risks of an escalation in tensions between the two
countries are not at all priced into the market.
Global economies especially in Asia remain
vulnerable to spikes in oil prices, which remain elevated at around $100 a
barrel. That’s off their highs during the conflict, but remain far above where
they were before the war, at just below $70 a barrel.
Citadel's Ken Griffin: Global
recession inevitable if Strait of Hormuz stays shut
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.
Woman
forced to leap from balcony to avoid terrifying e-scooter battery fire
The
London Fire Brigade said the woman was left trapped in a bedroom with 'smoke
travelling in' after the bike battery caught alight at a flat complex in
Lewisham, south-east London
11:41, 14 Apr 2026
A woman who was forced to vault a balcony to escape
a suspected e-scooter battery fire was rushed to hospital with a "serious injury" after she plunged three storeys.
The London Fire
Brigade (LFB) has issued an e-bike and e-scooter
safety warning after a lithium battery ignited at a flat on Reculver Road in
Lewisham, southeast London, following a "catastrophic failure" on
April 12. The bike was believed to have been charging for 12 hours when it
caught alight, damaging part of a hallway and coughing out smoke.
The LFB said one woman was left trapped in a bedroom
with smoke travelling in, forcing her to jump down from a third-floor balcony
and onto the street below in a desperate bid to escape the house fire.
The service said she was
assisted by firefighters before being taken to a local hospital by attending
paramedics from the London Ambulance Service (LAS) after being injured. She was
treated for smoke inhalation and "serious" injuries sustained from
her fall. A second occupant, a man, was led to safety by firefighters.
It is believed the fire was
caused by "the catastrophic failure of an e-bike battery that was being
charged in the flat’s hallway", and had been on charge for up to 12 hours.
Woman forced to leap from balcony to avoid terrifying e-scooter battery
fire - The Mirror
Approx.
5 minutes.
Massive
BYD Fire: How Many EVs Burned?
Massive BYD Fire: How Many EVs Burned? - YouTube
Next, the
world global debt clock. Nations debts to GDP compared.
World Debt Clocks
(usdebtclock.org)
A strong nation, like a strong person, can afford to be gentle, firm, thoughtful, and restrained. It can afford to extend a helping hand to others. It's a weak nation, like a weak person, that must behave with bluster and boasting and rashness and other signs of insecurity.
Jimmy Carter
