Tuesday, 14 April 2026

Strait Economic Terrorism. Blocking Iran’s Oil.

Baltic Dry Index. 2250 +49      Brent Crude 97.80

Spot Gold  4796                           Spot Silver 77.20

US 2 Year Yield 3.78 -0.03

US Federal Debt. 39.115 trillion

US GDP 31.325 trillion.

Vice President JD Vance said something he almost certainly didn't intend during a Monday interview on Fox News, while discussing the Trump administration's new policy counter-blockading the Strait of Hormuz to try to pressure Iran into abandoning its own blockade.

"What they have done is engage in this act of economic terrorism against the entire world," said Vance. "As the President showed, two can play at that game."

In Washington, District of Crooks, it’s time to send in the clowns and bring the Trumpian madness to an end before it triggers Great Depression 2.0, but with massive unrepayable national debts, three trillion of dodgy private credit debt, and a food supply crisis about one year away due to a fertiliser shortage and sky high fertiliser and diesel prices.

For now, coordinated central banks temporarily talking/leaking/rigging stocks higher and oil futures prices lower works for a few days, but the oil spot market gives that game away. The global economy is probably just about a month away from starting to seize up.

Asia markets open mostly higher amid hopes of a U.S.-Iran deal; China exports miss estimates

Published Mon, Apr 13 2026 7:47 PM EDT

Asia-Pacific markets opened mostly higher Tuesday, amid hopes that a deal between Washington and Tehran was still possible even as the U.S. blockades Iranian shipments in the Strait of Hormuz.

A fragile U.S.-Iran ceasefire, while not officially scrapped, has been deeply frayed, with the U.S. and Iran accusing each other of violating the conditions of the truce.

The U.S. on Monday said it began blocking ships from entering or exiting Iranian ports in the Strait of Hormuz, as it seeks to raise pressure on Iran to reopen the key oil route, following the collapse of peace talks. The blockade took effect at 10 a.m. ET.

Iranian officials responded by warning that the U.S. blockade will only drive global energy prices higher.

“Enjoy the current pump figures. With the so-called ‘blockade’, Soon you’ll be nostalgic for $4–$5 gas,” Iran’s parliamentary speaker, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, said in an X post Sunday.

The West Texas Intermediate was 2.02% lower at $97.08 per barrel as of 11:47 p.m. ET. Brent crude declined 1.33% to $98.04 per barrel.

South Korea’s Kospi was the best performer among major Asia indexes, extending early gains to rise 3.41% higher. The small-cap Kosdaq advanced 2.13%.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 was 0.36% higher. Australian business confidence in March dropped, weighed by concerns over the Iran war that had led to a global oil shock, according to a survey from National Australia Bank, Reuters reported.

Mainland China’s CSI300 index rose 0.84%, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index trimmed early gains and was 0.36% higher.

China’s export growth lost momentum in March as manufacturers faced rising commodity and energy costs linked to Middle East supply disruptions, while imports posted their fastest expansion in more than four years.

Exports grew at their slowest pace in six months at 2.5% in U.S. dollar terms last month from a year earlier, Chinese customs data showed. The figure fell short of a Reuters poll forecast of 8.6% and slowed sharply from the combined 21.8% increase recorded in the first two months of the year.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose 2.34%, while the Topix gained 0.8%. India’s Nifty 50 was the main laggard and was 0.86% lower.

Futures tied to the S&P 500 were nearly flat. S&P 500 futures added 0.06%, while Dow Jones Industrial Average futures rose 10 points, or 0.02%. Nasdaq-100 futures climbed nearly 0.2%.

The S&P 500 rose on Monday as investors hoped that a deal would eventually be struck between the U.S. and Iran. The broad market index jumped 1.02% to end at 6,886.24, the highest close since before the war began.

The Nasdaq Composite gained 1.23% to 23,183.74. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 301.68 points, or 0.63%, to settle at 48,218.25.

Asia markets mostly rise amid hopes of a U.S-Iran deal, China data in focus

Oil Prices Have Higher to Go, IEA Warns

The agency says the numbers don’t yet reflect the severity of an unprecedented supply crisis.

April 14, 2026 at 12:00 AM GMT+1

Following a dramatic weekend of failed peace talks—tied to a ceasefire one of the parties says isn’t yet in place—the US raised the stakes again in the Iran war, this time with a blockade of Iranian shipping. Oil rose on Monday, with Brent and West Texas Intermediate at a little under $100.

Questions remained around confused messaging from the White House, what exactly will be blocked, whether Iran will exact a threatened toll for what it calls “piracy,” and now the possibility of a second round of talks. But one thing does seem more likely than not: as far as energy prices are concerned, the worst is yet to come.

This according to the International Energy Agency, which warned oil prices don’t yet reflect the severity of the unprecedented supply crisis. About 13 million barrels a day of oil supply have been shuttered by the war, with more than 80 energy facilities damaged, IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol said.

The Paris-based agency has already described the current supply disruption as the biggest in history, saying a recovery could take as long as two years. “Prices are already high, but they are not reflecting the severity of the problem,” Birol said. “I think soon we will see they will converge, which is an extremely sensitive issue for the global economy.”

As for Donald Trump’s latest effort to squeeze Iran, Nouriel Roubini, chief executive of Roubini Macro Associates, is not optimistic. “A blockade by itself is a game of chicken that I think Iran eventually wins, because they can suffer for a while,” he said at the Greenwich Economic Forum in Hong Kong Monday. “We’ll be in a worse world because we’ll still have higher oil prices, stock markets falling, bond yields higher.” David E. Rovella

Oil Prices Have Higher to Go Says IEA: Evening Briefing Americas - Bloomberg

Trump Orders Hormuz Blockade, Deepening Energy Crisis

April 13, 2026 at 12:19 PM GMT+1

----Donald Trump vowed to begin a full naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz and threatened retaliation if Iran resists, a move that risks widening the war to high seas. The US president said he does not care whether Iran returns to talks after weekend negotiations in failed. Markets reacted swiftly with oil prices surging while gold and global stocks fell amid uncertainty over the war and growing inflation risks. Watch this video for more.

Repercussions: The UK said it won’t join the blockade, setting up another point of contention between President Trump and Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Spain’s leader Pedro Sánchez, visiting Beijing, urged China to use its influence to help end the wars in Iran and Ukraine. Oil tankers in the Gulf renewed attempts to transit Hormuz by sailing close to the Iranian coast, while supertankers carrying Iranian crude, anchored off Indian ports, potentially the first such cargoes to arrive in the country in almost seven years.

The world’s leading economic policymakers are gathering in Washington for the IMF and World Bank meetings, with the war’s economic fallout high on the agenda. Even before the summit kicks off, IMF boss Kristalina Georgieva told CBS that prices will take time to ease even if a ceasefire with Iran holds. That could be painful as central banks look increasingly unlikely to take unified action to support the global economy.

More

Trump Orders Hormuz Blockade, Deepening Energy Crisis - Bloomberg

China says Strait of Hormuz blockade against global interests, urges restraint

Mon, April 13, 2026 at 12:21 PM GMT+1

BEIJING, April 13 (Reuters) - China said a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz would go against the international community's interests and urged calm and restraint by all ‌sides.

The U.S. military said it will begin a blockade nL6N40V09S of all maritime traffic ‌entering and exiting Iranian ports and coastal areas on Monday, after the failure of weekend talks in Islamabad aimed at ​ending the Iran war. Before the war, most Iranian oil exports were shipped L4N40W08K to China, the top global importer of crude.

The blockade of the Strait of Hormuz does not serve the common interests of the international community, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told Khaldoon Khalifa Al Mubarak, special envoy of ‌the UAE President for China, in ⁠Beijing on Monday, according to a ministry statement.

Wang said China understood the legitimate security concerns of the Gulf Arab states, and that the fundamental way ⁠to resolve the crisis was a comprehensive and lasting ceasefire achieved through political and diplomatic means.

"China hopes the relevant parties will abide by the temporary ceasefire arrangements, remain committed to resolving disputes through political ​and diplomatic ​means, and avoid a resumption of hostilities," foreign ​ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun said at a ‌regular press conference on Monday.

China stood ready to "play a positive and constructive role" in resolving the crisis, Guo added, calling the weekend talks in the Pakistani capital a step in a direction conducive to easing tension.

----Guo rejected reports nL6N40U00J ​that China had plans ​to supply weapons to Iran as "groundless smears and malicious associations".

Last week, Trump threatened immediate tariffs of 50%, with no exemptions, https://www.reuters.com/world/trump-announces-50-tariffs-nations-supplying-iran-with-weapons-2026-04-08/ on imports from countries supplying Iran with military ​weapons.

"China has consistently taken a prudent ‌and responsible approach to arms exports," Guo said, adding that its strict controls ​were in line with domestic laws and international obligations.

China says Strait of Hormuz blockade against global interests, urges restraint

Trump’s strait blockade risks another serious blow to the global economy

Mon, April 13, 2026 at 5:01 AM GMT+1

The failure of US-Iran peace talks leaves President Donald Trump with a set of unattractive options that are unlikely to hand him a decisive or swift victory.

But he’s doubling down with a plan to impose a blockade on the Strait of Hormuz that comes with its own risks of serious and unforeseen consequences.

The administration’s depiction of weekend talks in Islamabad, Pakistan, suggested it was hoping to win capitulation from Iran on demands including a promise not to seek nuclear weapons and the reopening of the strait.

But Iran is refusing to cede this critical leverage and doesn’t accept the US claim that it’s already lost the war. The result is a deadlock that challenges one of Trump’s core beliefs: that US military might will bend all adversaries to his will.

So Trump is now under pressure to narrow Iran’s options.

He told reporters Sunday evening that he ordered the US military to enforce a blockade on the strait from 10 a.m. ET. The idea is to strangle Iran’s oil revenues and collapse its economy. The measure is also designed to frustrate Tehran’s plan to raise revenues by charging safe passage for oil tankers in the vital waterway.

Trump’s plan could certainly be disastrous for Iran’s economy, already devastated by years of sanctions and the new war. But it also threatens to worsen the war’s economic impact on the US and global economies.

Oil prices immediately spiked again on news of the blockade, with the price of a barrel of Brent crude rising 8% to $104.

This reaction will test Trump’s resolve, since Americans are already frustrated by high prices for food and housing and are now paying more than $4 a gallon on average for gasoline. Rising oil prices helped spike the inflation rate up to 3.3% in March from 2.4% in February and are having a negative impact throughout the economy.

More

Trump’s strait blockade risks another serious blow to the global economy

In other news.

Ex-CIA Director: ‘I think the 25th Amendment was written with’ Trump ‘in mind’

Tara Suter Mon, April 13, 2026 at 2:32 AM GMT+1

Former CIA Director John Brennan said Saturday that he believed the 25th Amendment “was written with” President Trump “in mind,” comments that come after multiple Democrats pushed for Trump’s ouster following his intense threats toward Iran.

“I think the 25th Amendment was written with Donald Trumps in mind, because allowing someone like this to continue to be the commander-in-chief and to control the tremendous capabilities of the U.S. military, including our nuclear weapons capability, which he seemed to allude to when he said he’s going to just eliminate a entire civilization,” Brennan told MS NOW’s Ali Velshi on his show.

“Again, we really are in very, very troubling times,” he added.

Over 70 Democrats in Congress have pushed for President Trump’s removal due to his intense threats against Iran. The president’s announcement of a two-week ceasefire with Iran on Tuesday, which was shortly after he issued a warning that a “whole civilization” was set for destruction, caused backlash from many Democrats, who accused the president of threatening genocide.

Between last weekend and Tuesday, the president took to his social media platform to issue threats such as saying “all Hell will reign down on” Iran and pushing Tehran to “open the F‑‑‑in’ Strait, you crazy bastards,” referring to the Strait of Hormuz, a key waterway for the oil industry that has been effectively closed since the beginning of the U.S. conflict against Iran.

On Sunday, Trump announced that the U.S. military would start blockading ships looking to enter the Strait of Hormuz in the wake of weekend peace talks not resulting in a deal.

“Effective immediately, the United States Navy, the Finest in the World, will begin the process of BLOCKADING any and all Ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz,” Trump said on Truth Social.

The U.S. military confirmed they will be blockading Iranian ports starting at 10 a.m. EDT on Monday.

Ex-CIA Director: ‘I think the 25th Amendment was written with’ Trump ‘in mind’

Simply stated, there is no doubt that Saddam Hussein now has weapons of mass destruction. There is no doubt he is amassing them to use against our friends, against our allies, and against us.

V. P. Dick Cheney

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

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

The ‘affordability economy’ has created a housing market nobody predicted: Prices collapsing in the Sun Belt, soaring in the Rust Belt

Shawn Tully  Sat, April 11, 2026 at 9:00 AM GMT+1

U.S. housing is experiencing a historic “reversion to the mean.” In other words, the formerly sizzling metros have gone cold, and the unsexy plodders are back in vogue. That point comes through vividly in the new market snapshot just released by the highly influential American Enterprise Institute Housing Center. The AEI data, compiled by co-directors Ed Pinto and Tobias Peter, shows that housing prices nationwide edged up a puny 1.1% in the twelve months ended in February, the slowest rate of appreciation since the AEI started collecting numbers at the start of 2012. (The think tank started reporting the year-over-year changes in 2013.) It gets worse: The AEI is projecting that for the first three weeks of April, the trend will go negative, and by the end of this year, single family houses on average will be fetching 1% less than at the start of 2026, with drops of 2.0% to come in both 2027 and 2028. Obviously, those numbers are trailing the current course of the CPI, so the the lesser dollars you’d get selling your house in 2028 would take a second hit from today’s high inflation.

Those startling stats mark a stunning reversal from the post-pandemic boom. From 2013 to early 2020, home price appreciation (HPA) consistently registered at between 5% and 7%. Then, the Fed supplied the rocket fuel by slashing interest rates, sending mortgage costs plummeting from around 4.6% in late 2018 to 2.6% at the start of 2021. Prices took a moonshot as buyers could pay much more for the house and still comfortably make the monthly payment due to the bargain home loans. By early 2022, HPA was roaring at an annual tempo of roughly 18%, triple the pre-pandemic number.

The bounty flowed mostly to the Sun Belt and a suite of glamorous western cities, notably Denver, Seattle, Portland and Boise. Florida, Texas and California led the way. According to the AEI figures, from Q4 of 2019 to Q2 of 2022 when the upswing peaked, Las Vegas average prices went from $308,000 to $448,000 (+45%), Miami from $350,000 to $450,000 (+50%), Phoenix from $293,000 to $470,000 (+60%), Dallas $264,000 to $432,000 (+64%), and Austin from $297,000 to $593,000 (+100%). By comparison, the Rust Belt, and the Midwest overall, lagged behind, after already trailing at a far slower pace in the pre-pandemic days. In that fabulous span for the sprinters of the south and west, Minneapolis, Cleveland, Louisville, St. Louis and Kansas City each gained only between 25% and 33%.

From Cape Coral to Kansas City, America’s housing market is undergoing a historic reversion to the mean—and the data couldn’t be more striking.

The AEI report features tables displaying the five metros that have registered the highest HPA from February of 2025 to February of 2026, and the cities that have fared worst. You could almost cut and paste the “best” performers from February of 2022 into the current “worst” column, and vice versa. Topping the laggards: Cape Coral, Fla. at a 9.6% drop, followed by North Port, Fla., Memphis, Tucson, and Palm Bay, Fla., all between -3.8% to -6.1%. The biggest winner was Kansas City at +8.6%; Pittsburgh (+5.8%) and Cleveland (+5.9%) also made the top five.

All told, 28 out of America’s 53 largest metros saw price decreases through February, including all in Florida, California and Texas. The entire Rust Belt as a bloc made the plus column as Louisville rose 3.4%, Grand Rapids 5.1% and Milwaukee 5.6%. Stalwarts such as Chicago and Philadelphia (each +4%) that never got pricey to begin with are now reaping the benefits of being shunned in the pre-pandemic world.

The report notes that a big increase in supply is pummeling the south and west. Forty-three of the 53 cities are carrying over seven months of supply, meaning at the current rate of sales, it would take that many months for everything listed to find a buyer. That ‘for sale’ level is considered the lowest tier for a buyers’ market, meaning that eight in ten metros, shoppers have gained the edge. Among the most swamped: Miami at almost a year’s inventory, and Austin, Tampa and Houston all approaching eight months.

More

The ‘affordability economy’ has created a housing market nobody predicted: Prices collapsing in the Sun Belt, soaring in the Rust Belt

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.

Backup power is the LEAST interesting thing your home battery can do

Apr 12 2026 - 11:56 am PT

Almost everyone positions home solar panel systems with home batteries as backup grid power insurance – and while that can be vitally important in a whole host of “what if” scenarios, keeping the lights on is the LEAST interesting thing your home battery can do.

Home backup battery. It’s written right there on the tin, after all – but while keeping the lights onthe water running, and the insulin between 36 and 46° F can be critically important, more and more home solar + battery customers are looking at their systems as a tool to help them understand how they use and consume energy.

And that little bit of understanding can lead to some big savings.

A hedge against rising energy costs

When we talk about the cost of electricity, we often think of it in terms of price per kWh (example: $0.20/kWh). As more and more people move towards time-of-use rates, however, they’re starting to see huge swings in pricing, with the same kWh costing $0.50 one day, and close to zero – or even dipping into the negative – on another.

In that scenario, a home battery becomes less about planning for when the power goes out, and more about planning for when the power gets expensive.

A home battery turns your electricity buy into a Costco run, allowing you to stock on on electrons when the utility is practically giving them away, storing them in your garage freezer battery, and using them when the utility decides to price them higher. The end result isn’t just lower utility bills, it’s increased predictability in your monthly budget, and more control over an expense that most people consider out of their control.

In practice, someone with a 20 kWh home battery system in Illinois’ ComEd territory (where I live), electricity that typically costs about $0.10/kWh has spiked to more than $2/kWh during extreme weather events, with a theoretical ceiling of $3.70/kWh. That means the 20 kWh sitting in you battery that’s worth about $2 on a normal day can be worth as much as or as much as $40, $50, or even $70 when prices surge.

Your own private gas station

When matched up with a home solar panel system that generates electricity and an EV that runs on electric fuel, a home battery system starts to look a lot like your own private fuel supply, allowing you to top off your tank with cheap gas electrons you made yourself.

“This is Energy Dominance,” writes GM Energy’s Jim Reilly, describing his own home’s high-end energy setup. “I own the refinery and the delivery system. While the world reacts to the price at the pump, my costs are a flat line.”

More

Backup power is the LEAST interesting home battery application

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org) 

We also have to work, though, sort of the dark side, if you will. We've got to spend time in the shadows in the intelligence world. A lot of what needs to be done here will have to be done quietly, without any discussion, using sources and methods that are available to our intelligence agencies... That's the world these folks operate in, and so it's going to be vital for us to use any means at our disposal, basically, to achieve our objective.

Dick Cheney

Monday, 13 April 2026

Iran Blockaded! Crude Oil Soars, Stocks Fall . Economic Madness. Updated

Baltic Dry Index. 2201 +40    Brent Crude 102.16

Spot Gold  4734                           Spot Silver 74.36

US 2 Year Yield 3.81 +0.03

US Federal Debt. 39.111 trillion

US GDP 31.322 trillion.

The first panacea for a mismanaged nation is inflation of the currency; the second is war. Both bring a temporary prosperity; both bring a permanent ruin. But both are the refuge of political and economic opportunists.

Ernest Hemingway

7:30 AM Update.

Hmm. Now Iran and the US Navy blockade the Strait of Hormuz to open it???

Oil tankers steer clear of Hormuz ahead of US blockade

By Florence Tan April 13, 20262:07 AM GMT+1

SINGAPORE, April 13 (Reuters) - Oil tankers are steering clear of the ​Strait of Hormuz ahead of a U.S. blockade later on Monday following failed peace talks ‌between the U.S. and Iran over the weekend, shipping data showed.

President Donald Trump said on Sunday the U.S. Navy would start blockading the Strait of Hormuz, raising the stakes after marathon talks with Iran failed to reach a deal to end the war, ​jeopardising a fragile two-week ceasefire.

U.S. Central Command said U.S. forces would begin implementing the blockade of ​all maritime traffic entering and exiting Iranian ports at 10 a.m. ET (1400 GMT) on ⁠Monday.

It would be "enforced impartially against vessels of all nations entering or departing Iranian ports and coastal areas, ​including all Iranian ports on the Arabian Gulf and Gulf of Oman," it said in a statement on X.

U.S. ​forces would not impede freedom of navigation for vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz to and from non-Iranian ports, and additional information would be provided to commercial mariners through a formal notice prior to the start of the blockade, it said.

Iran's ​Revolutionary Guards said on Sunday that any military vessels attempting to approach the Strait of Hormuz would ​be considered a violation of the ceasefire and be dealt with harshly and decisively.

Pakistan-flagged tankers Shalamar and Khairpur entered the ‌Gulf on ⁠Sunday, data from LSEG and Kpler showed.

The Aframax tanker Shalamar is heading to the United Arab Emirates on Monday to load Das crude while the Panamax-sized Khairpur is heading to Kuwait to load refined products, the data showed.

Pakistan National Shipping, which manages Shalamar, did not immediately respond to a request for comment outside of ​office hours.

Liberia-flagged very large crude ​carrier (VLCC) Mombasa B, which ⁠also transited the strait earlier on Sunday, is ballasting in the Gulf, the data showed.

Malta-flagged VLCC Agios Fanourios I, which tried to pass through the strait on ​Sunday to enter the Gulf to load Iraqi Basra crude for Vietnam, has ​since turned ⁠back and is now anchored near the Gulf of Oman, the data showed. The tanker plans to head to Iraq.

Eastern Mediterranean Maritime, which manages the Agios Fanourios I, and CMB.TECH NV, the manager for the Mombasa B, did ⁠not respond ​to requests for comment outside office hours.

Despite the stalemate, three supertankers ​fully laden with oil passed through the Strait of Hormuz on Saturday, shipping data showed. They appeared to be the first vessels to ​exit the Gulf since the ceasefire deal was struck last week.

Oil tankers steer clear of Hormuz ahead of US blockade | Reuters

Little need for my two cents today. President Trump seems determined to collapse the global economy and with it the Great Nixonian Error of Fiat Money.

Asia markets trade lower as oil surges after U.S. moves to blockade Iran ports

Published Sun, Apr 12 2026 7:52 PM EDT

Asia-Pacific markets traded lower Monday, as investors weigh a U.S. naval blockade on Iran’s ports after talks between Washington and Tehran failed to produce an agreement to end the conflict in the Middle East.

The breakdown of negotiations over the weekend in Islamabad reignited worries that the U.S.-Iran war will last longer than feared, leading to higher oil prices that will continue to strain economies worldwide.

Crude oil prices surged on Sunday after the talks ended without an agreement and the U.S. moved toward a blockade of Iranian port traffic. The West Texas Intermediate jumped 8.54% to $104.82 per barrel as of 11:45 p.m. ET. Brent crude gained 7.27% to $102.51 per barrel.

U.S. President Donald Trump has reportedly weighed resuming airstrikes on Iran, according to the Wall Street Journal. Trump last week agreed to a two-week ceasefire on Tuesday in exchange for Tehran allowing ships to pass through the strait. He had previously threatened to bomb every bridge and power plant in Iran.

India’s Nifty 50 was the worst-performing major Asian index, declining nearly 2%.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 fell 1.09%, while the Topix declined 0.67%. South Korea’s Kospi declined 1.26%, while the small-cap Kosdaq rose 0.26% in choppy trade. In Australia, the S&P/ASX 200 was 0.53% lower.

Mainland China’s CSI300 index inched 0.12% lower, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index extended early losses and was 1.22% lower.

Overnight on Wall Street, Dow Jones Industrial Average futures dropped by 517 points, or 1.1%. S&P 500 futures lost 1.1% and Nasdaq 100 futures shed 1.2%.

Asia-Pacific markets today Nikkei 225, Kospi, Hang Seng Index

Oil prices surge above $100 as U.S. Navy to blockade Iran’s ports after peace talks fail

Published Sun, Apr 12 2026 6:04 PM EDT Updated Sun, Apr 12 2026 6:22 PM EDT

Crude oil prices surged on Sunday, as the U.S. Navy prepares to impose a blockade on Iran’s ports after peace talks failed over the weekend.

U.S. crude oil futures for May delivery jumped nearly 8% to $104.20 per barrel by 6:13 p.m. ET. International benchmark Brent for June delivery advanced 7% to $101.86.

U.S. Central Command said Sunday the military will blockade all maritime traffic entering and exiting Iranian ports on Monday at 10 a.m. ET. It added that the U.S. will not impede vessels transiting to and from non-Iranian ports.

“The blockade will be enforced impartially against vessels of all nations entering or departing Iranian ports and coastal areas, including all Iranian ports on the Arabian Gulf and Gulf of Oman,” CENTCOM said in a statement.

President Donald Trump had threatened earlier Sunday to blockade the Strait of Hormuz after the U.S. and Iran failed to reach an agreement to end the war during negotiations in Pakistan.

“Effective immediately, the United States Navy, the Finest in the World, will begin the process of BLOCKADING any and all Ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz,” Trump said in a social media post.

Trump is considering limited strikes on Iran to break the stalemate in peace talks, officials and people familiar with the matter told The Wall Street Journal.

The president said Sunday he ordered the Navy to find and interdict any ship in international waters that has paid Iran a toll to transit the strait. The narrow sea route is a vital artery that connects Middle East oil producers to global energy markets.

Tanker traffic through the strait has plunged due to the threat of Iranian attacks, triggering the largest oil supply disruption in history. About 20% of global oil supplies passed through the waterway before the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran on Feb. 28.

It is unclear whether Trump will now resume airstrikes on Iran. The president agreed to a two-week ceasefire on Tuesday in exchange for Tehran allowing ships to pass through the strait. He had previously threatened to bomb every bridge and power plant in Iran.

Tehran has made safe passage during the ceasefire contingent on its approval. Ali Akbar Velayati, a senior advisor to Iran’s Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, said Sunday that the “key to the Strait of Hormuz” remains in the Islamic Republic’s hands, according state news agency Press TV.

Three supertankers made the journey on Saturday, according to data from LSEG. Each vessel can carry up two million barrels of oil. But traffic is well below pre-war levels when more than 100 vessels made the trip daily.

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Oil surges above $100 as U.S. to blockade Iran ports after talks fail

CNBC Daily Open: Trump goes from opening the Strait of Hormuz to blockading it

Published Sun, Apr 12 2026 9:31 PM EDT

Hello, this is Anniek Bao writing to you from Singapore. Welcome to another edition of CNBC’s Daily Open.

President Donald Trump has ordered the U.S. Navy to blockade all vessels heading in and out of the Strait of Hormuz, in a counterintuitive move that followed another round of talks aimed at, among other things, the reopening of the waterway critical for energy supplies.

As the clock ticks down to the deadline for the blockade to kick off, investors are on tenterhooks with little visibility on how it will be implemented, and how long and deep an oil shock needs to be priced in.

What you need to know today

A round of 21-hour marathon U.S.-Iran peace talks hosted by Pakistan over the weekend ended in a stalemate, with U.S. President JD Vance flying home without a deal.

The U.S. and Iran failed to reach an agreement on thorny issues, with Vance highlighting that Iran’s unwillingness to drop its pursuit of nuclear weapons was the key issue that stalled the talks.

Following the collapse of negotiations, President Donald Trump on Sunday said the U.S. will launch a naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. In an interview with Fox News, Trump said the effort will be a “complete blockade” and “all or none,” meaning no ship will be allowed to pass until Iran relents.

Trump’s announcement sent oil prices surging more than 8%. Asian markets fell in early Monday trade. Meanwhile, U.S. futures tumbled overnight, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average futures losing 517 points, or 1.1%. S&P 500 futures dropped 1% and Nasdaq 100 futures declined 1.2%.

In a sign that the economic fallout from the war has been felt at home, American consumer confidence in April plunged to a record low, according to a University of Michigan survey.

Over in Europe, Hungary’s veteran nationalist leader Viktor Orban conceded defeat after a landslide election victory by the upstart opposition Tisza party, in a major setback for his allies in Russia and Washington.

CNBC Daily Open: Trump goes from opening the Strait of Hormuz to blockading it

Trump's naval blockade of Strait of Hormuz - what it means for the world

12 April 2026

Donald Trump warned that the US Navy would start a blockade of the all-important Strait of Hormuz after peace talks with Iran fell apart, marking a new low in the Middle East war.

The US President in a fiery message online said the Navy would stop any vessel that has paid Iran a huge toll to leave or entre the waterway. This comes after Tehran effectively closed off the Strait of Hormuz, which sees one fifth of the world's oil supply pass through it on a regular day, after the US and Israel started bombing Iran on February 28.

Washington and Tehran agreed on a fragile two-week ceasefire earlier this week but the pause in fighting broke down as Israel continued to attack Iran-aligned Hezbollah, in Lebanon. The Trump blockade of the Strait could help plunge to global economy into further chaos.

Vice President JD Vance flew to Islamabad, Pakistan, for peace talks with Iran but said negotiators from Iran "have chosen not to accept our terms" and added that he will "go back to the United States, having not come to an agreement".

Iran hit back and said the US "ultimately failed to gain the trust of the Iranian delegation" during peace talks. Trump quickly followed with his raging rant and threat to vessels attempting to cross the crucial waterway between Iran and Oman.

In a dramatic Truth Social post, the Commander-in-Chief said the talks fell apart to a disagreement on Iran owning nuclear weapons and wrote: "I have instructed our navy to seek and interdict every vessel in international waters that has paid a toll to Iran. No one who pays and illegal toll will have safe passage on the high seas. We will also begin destroying mines the Iranians laid in the Straits. Any Iranian who fires at us, or at peaceful vessels, will be BLOWN TO HELL!"

The global economy has already been rocked by the chaos in the Strait of Hormuz, with oil prices soaring from around $70 a barrel before the conflict started to shooting up to around $120 at its worst during the conflict.

The ceasefire announcement and hope shipping could start to continue normally saw the price of a barrel fall to $92 after the fragile deal was announced. The previous rising price of oil indirectly led to a hike in prices at the pumps. The RAC revealed that a tank of petrol is now £13.86 more expensive than it was at the beginning of the Middle East conflict at £86.92.

Mohamed El-Erian, an adviser to insurer Allianz and an ex-president of Queens’ College, University of Cambridge, told The Guardian how the uncertainty caused by the continued war and blockades could hit the UK.

He said: "Absent a swift resumption of negotiations, the immediate reaction of financial markets when they open for the trading week will be to push oil prices higher and borrowing costs higher." El-Erian added: "For the UK, all this translates into another hit to the cost of living and less flexibility for both fiscal and monetary policy responses."

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Trump's naval blockade of Strait of Hormuz - what it means for the world

A Panicked Race for Barrels Grips the Global Oil Market

Updated on  April 12, 2026 at 8:41 AM UTC

While investors focused on the fragile Iranian ceasefire last week, a desperate scramble for cargoes has been playing out in the oil market, as traders and refiners scour the globe for immediately available supplies.

In the North Sea, the world’s most important physical crude market, traders submitted 40 bids for cargoes last week, only four of which were met by offers. Cargoes for delivery in the coming weeks changed hands at unprecedented prices above $140 a barrel. Elsewhere, refiners have been hunting increasingly further afield for supplies, leading to a series of unusual trades and surging premiums for any oil that’s ready to ship right now.

Traders said the panicky moves across the world’s key physical oil markets demonstrated the scale of the shortfall in crude that’s due to be felt as the loss of supplies from the Middle East leaves a growing gap.

Skyrocketing prices are signaling that some European refiners will likely need to follow those in Asia and cut back production, they said — a move that might help to balance the market for crude oil but would deepen the shortfalls in vital products like diesel and jet fuel.

“There is simply a shortage of crude,” said Neil Crosby, head of research at Sparta Commodities AS. “Physical Brent is a mess and has now risen too far. At this rate even European refiners will have to lower utilization, perhaps as early as next month.”

The frenzy in the physical oil trade stands in contrast to the futures market, where oil for delivery in June dropped 13% last week to close at about $95 a barrel, amid optimism over the ceasefire.

There were some early signs of increased activity in the Strait of Hormuz on the weekend, with two Chinese supertankers and one from Greece moving through the waterway, but traffic still remains well below prewar levels. It takes weeks for crude from the Gulf to reach refineries in Asia and Europe.

In addition, peace talks between the US and Iran this weekend failed to reach an agreement, raising doubts over efforts to end the war and resume energy shipments.

“The final cargoes that transited the Strait of Hormuz before the conflict are now arriving at their destinations. This is where the paper traded markets are meeting physical reality, and the 40-day gap in global energy flows is truly exposed,” Sultan al Jaber, chief executive office of Abu Dhabi National Oil Co., said in a Linkedin post on Thursday.

That gap can be seen in the premium refiners are willing to pay to secure cargoes of crude that are available in the near term. Traders at some Asian refineries, speaking on condition of anonymity, said they were no longer focused on price, and were simply seeking to secure barrels of crude wherever they could to ensure energy security.

Dated Brent – the most important benchmark in the physical oil market used to price millions of barrels a day – hit a record $144 a barrel before the ceasefire, surpassing its 2008 highs even as futures remain far below their record levels.

By Friday it had dropped to $126 a barrel, still more than $30 above June delivery Brent futures, while traders including Trafigura Group and Gunvor Group were bidding more than $22 a barrel above Dated Brent for cargoes of oil in the North Sea for delivery in late April and early May. Supplies from Nigeria for loading next month have been offered as high as $25 per barrel above the benchmark, compared with less than $3 before the Iran war began.

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A Panicked Race for Barrels Grips the Global Oil Market - Bloomberg

In other news.

Powell, Bessent discussed Anthropic’s Mythos AI cyber threat with major U.S. banks

Published Fri, Apr 10 2026 8:38 AM EDT Updated Fri, Apr 10 2026 12:28 PM EDT

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent met with major U.S. bank CEOs this week to discuss the possible cyber risks raised by Anthropic’s Mythos model, CNBC confirmed Friday.

The bank heads were already in Washington, D.C., for a Financial Services Forum board meeting when a special gathering was called on Tuesday to discuss Mythos, according to people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be named in order to share information about a confidential matter.

The CEOs had a dinner early in the week when they were called to meet at the Treasury Department, one of the people said. JPMorgan’Jamie Dimon was the only major banking CEO who could not attend the meeting, they added.

Bank of America’s Brian Moynihan, Citigroup’s Jane Fraser, Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon, Morgan Stanley’s Ted Pick and Wells Fargo CEO Charlie Scharf were all in attendance, Bloomberg reported, citing people familiar with the meeting.

Bloomberg and the Financial Times were the first to report the meeting with bank executives.

The Federal Reserve declined to comment to CNBC. The Treasury Department did not respond to a request for comment.

The surprise meeting between the bank chiefs and the two most powerful federal monetary regulators was a signal that the advanced capabilities of AI are a top concern in the Trump administration and could threaten the foundation of the U.S. financial system.

Earlier this week, Anthropic rolled out the new artificial intelligence model, Claude Mythos Preview, in a limited capacity due to concerns that hackers could exploit its capabilities.

Banking giant JPMorgan Chase was among the initial launch partners for the cybersecurity initiative, known as Project Glasswing. Other partners include AppleGoogleMicrosoft and Nvidia

Ahead of the release, the company briefed senior U.S. government officials on the model and its “offensive and defensive cyber applications.”

An Anthropic official told CNBC that it’s been in “ongoing discussions” with the U.S. government, including the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency and the Center for AI Standards and Innovation, about Claude Mythos Preview’s cyber capabilities.

“The dangers of getting this wrong are obvious, but if we get it right, there is a real opportunity to create a fundamentally more secure internet and world than we had before the advent of AI-powered cyber capabilities,” CEO Dario Amodei wrote in a post on X, accompanying Glasswing’s rollout.

The Trump administration’s engagement about the Mythos model comes as Anthropic challenges the Department of Defense over its recent labeling of the AI lab as a supply chain risk to national security.

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Powell, Bessent met with U.S. Bank CEOs over Anthropic's Mythos threat

New Anthropic AI tool unlocks capabilities no one has found before, says cyber expert John Carlin

Fri, Apr 10 2026 1:41 PM EDT

Video Approx. 5 minutes.

New Anthropic AI tool unlocks capabilities no one has found before, says cyber expert John Carlin

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

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

Here's what smart people are saying about what the failed US-Iran peace talks and Trump's blockade mean for markets

Sun, April 12, 2026 at 6:54 PM GMT+1

The US and Iran remained at a standstill after 21 hours of peace talks between the two delegations failed to reach an agreement, Vice President JD Vance announced at a press conference in Islamabad early on Sunday.

In response, President Donald Trump said the US would enforce a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. About 20% of the world's liquefied natural gas and oil supply passes through that waterway, which sits off Iran's coast. The ongoing military conflict, which began in February, has effectively halted traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, sending gas and jet fuel prices skyrocketing.

---- Here's what people in business are saying about the failed negotiations.

Patrick De Haan

Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy, wrote on X that the lack of a peace deal likely means oil prices will continue to rise as the Strait remains under Iran's control.

"With the US not coming to agreement or terms with Iran, it is likely that the Strait will remain under their control and that oil prices and thus gasoline, diesel and jet fuel prices keep rising due to the likely continued closure of the Strait," he wrote, later adding, "Not looking good for fuel prices globally."

Marko Kolanovic

Marko Kolanovic, former JPMorgan chief market strategist, wrote in an X post: "The peace deal that I identified as unrealistic (i.e. fake when announced) caused Oil to drop ~15%, broad stock to rally ~5%, tech momentum stocks ~25%. Now exposed as such - Oil and stocks should retrace that move (+75mb of Oil was lost in time wasted). Crash is quite possible."

In a reply on X to a post that questioned JD Vance's assertion that the talks failed over Iran's nuclear ambitions, Kolanovic said: "Exactly, hence likely no taco as they are already selling to public why it failed. It's his famous 'nuclear west in supermarket' and how he justifies war to himself. I'm sure Iran would have agreed with favorable hormuz/sanctions outcome."

Kyle Rodda

Kyle Rodda, analyst at Capital.com, told Bloomberg: "The key question for Monday is whether markets interpret this as a temporary breakdown in negotiations or a structural collapse of the ceasefire framework. That distinction will determine whether the risk-off move fades quickly or extends further."

Charu Chanana

Charu Chanana, chief investment strategist at Saxo Markets, was quoted by Bloomberg as saying: "The talks ending without a deal is a setback. For markets, this means the relief trade is likely to fade. Oil may see fresh gains, risk sentiment takes a hit again, and Hormuz is likely to remain a live choke-point risk even if it is not fully shut."

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Here's what smart people are saying about what the failed US-Iran peace talks and Trump's blockade mean for markets

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.

Solid-state nuclear battery claims 100-year power for ultra-low energy devices

NRD introduces a solid-state nuclear battery designed to power sensors and devices for over 100 years.

Apr 10, 2026 05:10 PM EST

A U.S.-based nuclear materials firm has unveiled a solid-state battery it claims can deliver continuous power for more than a century without maintenance.

The device targets ultra-low power electronics operating in remote or hard-to-service environments.

NRD LLC said its NBV series uses a betavoltaic design powered by Nickel-63 to generate electricity through radioactive decay.

The system is sealed in a solid-state architecture and is designed for applications where replacing or recharging batteries is not practical.

Betavoltaic devices convert energy released during beta decay into electrical current.

Unlike conventional batteries, they rely on a continuous decay process, allowing them to operate for extended periods, though at extremely low power levels.

According to the company, the NBV series is designed to support electronics that require steady, long-term energy supply, particularly in environments where access is limited or maintenance is costly.

Power from radioactive decay

NRD claims the battery can deliver power outputs ranging from 5 nanowatts to 500 nanowatts.

The device operates within a voltage range of 1.0 V to 20.0 V and a nominal current between 7.5 nA and 33 nA, all within a compact 20 mm by 20 mm by 12 mm form factor.

These specifications place the device firmly in the ultra-low-power category, making it suitable for sensors, data logging systems, and monitoring equipment that require continuous but minimal energy input.

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Nickel-63 nuclear battery claims 100-year ultra-low power life

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