Thursday, 5 March 2026

War Day Six. NATO Turns On NATO. More Tariff Inflation.

Baltic Dry Index. 2233 -09     Brent Crude 84.47

Spot Gold  5175                        Spot Silver 84.44

US 2 Year Yield 3.54 +0.03

US Federal Debt. 38.843 trillion

US GDP 31.208 trillion.

“President Trump’s frustration with the Spanish government is justified, that first of all, they have been terrible actors. They are the only NATO member not meeting their NATO requirement. That’s known as a free rider.”

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent

In the stock casinos, great volatility meets greater volatility daily.

Will the Israeli-Trump war on Iran really be good for stocks, global commerce, inflation, employment, the G-7 economies?

Or will oil led rising inflation cause western consumer to start cutting back, leading to rising unemployment?

Into this mix of global uncertainty, President Trump thinks this is just the right time to raise US tariffs from ten percent to fifteen percent 

Dinosaur Graeme sees a global commerce crash starting in 2026. Look away from the crude oil price and rising US Treasury yields now.

Dow closes more than 200 points higher, S&P 500 rises as traders look past Iran war: Live updates

Updated Wed, Mar 4 2026 4:57 PM EST

Stocks rose on Wednesday, building on the momentum seen late in the previous session, as the surge in oil prices pulled back following developments in the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran and fears about a U.S. economic growth scare faded.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 238.14 points, or 0.49%, to close at 48,739.41. The 30-stock index snapped a three-day run of losses. The S&P 500 gained 0.78% and ended at 6,869.50, while the Nasdaq Composite moved 1.29% higher and settled at 22,807.48.

Technology stocks supported the broader market, particularly those in the chips space. Micron Technology and Advanced Micro Devices each advanced more than 5%. Broadcom and Nvidia climbed more than 1% apiece.

A couple of strong economic data releases bolstered sentiment among investors Wednesday. Firstly, ADP reported that private sector companies added more jobs than anticipated in February. On top of that, the U.S. nonmanufacturing sector recorded better-than-expected growth last month with easing inflation pressures.

“The concerns of a softening labor market at least maybe turning into a deteriorating labor market [are] being kind of challenged right now,” said Ameriprise chief market strategist Anthony Saglimbene. “The U.S. economy stands on firm ground.”

The reaction to the economic data occurred alongside the rally in oil prices losing steam after Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told CNBC on Wednesday that the U.S. is going to make “a series of announcements” to support the flow of oil through the Persian Gulf. Brent crude oil futures and U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures eased on Wednesday, with the international benchmark settling flat and WTI closing up 0.13%.

Oil’s recent rally abated after President Donald Trump said Tuesday that the U.S. would provide risk insurance to all maritime trade through the Gulf in an effort to get tankers moving through the Strait of Hormuz. Tanker traffic through the Strait — the world’s most vital transit route for crude oil — came to a halt after the Iranian Revolutionary Guard commander threatened to set fire to ships attempting the route.

“If we get to a more disruptive Middle East environment, you will see larger knock-on effects across global markets and asset prices and maybe outlooks for the economy,” Saglimbene said, before adding that “it’s too soon to make those assessments.”

Meanwhile, Trump’s 15% global tariff announced late last month will be implemented this week, Bessent also said Wednesday. Still, he believes U.S. tariff rates would “within five months” return to levels prior to the Supreme Court’s decision to strike down the president’s tariff policy.

Stock market news for March 4, 2026

S&P 500 futures slide after major averages rebound, traders’ U.S.-Iran fears ease: Live updates

Updated Thu, Mar 5 2026 11:43 PM EST

S&P 500 futures slid on Wednesday night after major averages posted gains in the previous session, as investor jitters around the U.S.-Iran war eased.

Futures tied to the broad market index fell 0.15%, and Nasdaq 100 futures lost 0.18%. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures declined 140 points, or 0.28%.

Stocks rebounded in Wednesday’s regular session, buoyed by gains in technology and semiconductor giants. The Dow jumped about 238 points, or 0.5%, ending a three-day losing run. The S&P 500 closed up 0.8%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite gained 1.3%.

Nvidia shares rose more than 1%. Chipmakers BroadcomMicron TechnologyAdvanced Micro Devices and Intel also notched gains. Consumer staples, energy and materials were the only S&P 500 sectors that posted losses on the day.

“Things are changing around the edges. We have a geopolitical shock, obviously, and we’re still parsing that in terms of how it could impact the risk premium for equities,” said Bank of America Securities head of U.S. equity and quantitative strategy Savita Subramanian on CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime.”

“But beyond that, I think what we’re seeing is the tide slowly going out for some of the beneficiaries of a very low interest rate environment,” she added.

Oil prices stabilized on Wednesday after this week’s surge, with U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures settling up 0.13% and international benchmark Brent crude oil futures ending the session at the flatline.

Fears of disruption to regional oil and gas supplies subsided after President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that the U.S. is preparing to provide risk insurance and escorts to ships in the Persian Gulf in an effort to ensure traffic can move through the Strait of Hormuz. To be sure, the White House would not provide a timeline for when the strait, which is responsible for roughly 20% of the world’s oil supply, will be safe for oil tankers.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said Wednesday in a briefing with reporters that the U.S. is “winning decisively” in its conflict with Iran and that more forces are arriving to the region.

Separately, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Wednesday that Trump’s recently announced 15% global tariff will likely go into effect this week.

Investors are awaiting earnings results due Thursday morning from retailers KrogerBurlington and BJ’s WholesaleCostco and Marvell Technology will report results after market close.

On the economic front, weekly jobless claims are also due Thursday.

Stock market today: Live updates

Iran War Brings Strait of Hormuz Traffic to a Halt

March 4, 2026 at 11:08 PM GMT

Decades of theorizing about the consequences of war between the US and Iran tended to circle around the same fear: the world’s most famous chokepoint for fossil fuels, the Strait of Hormuz, would become a battlefield. Today that fear came true.

By the fifth day of the US-Israeli war with Iran, shipping has effectively stopped in the crucial channel. And less than a day after President Donald Trump spoke of escorting and insuring shipping through the Strait, a container vessel there was attacked and disabled. It now floats abandoned in the waterway

The death toll in the Iran War is near 1,000 people, with the dead mostly Iranians, including 165 who were killed when the US and Israel allegedly destroyed an elementary school for girls. The US said it’s investigating. Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth said on Wednesday the US and Israel are close to controlling Iranian airspace, which he said would allow them to deliver “death and destruction from the sky all day long.” Senate Republicans late today rejected a bill to stop the war.

Since the first attacks Saturday, another expected consequence of a Western conflict with Iran has come to pass: oil prices are up 12% and American consumers are witnessing record jumps in gasoline prices. If the Strait of Hormuz stays closed for much longer, the pain is expected to spread. And fastDavid E. Rovella

Iran War Brings Strait of Hormuz Traffic to a Halt: Evening Briefing Americas - Bloomberg

Middle East conflict poses fresh test to central banks as oil shock fuels inflation

Published Wed, Mar 4 2026 12:08 AM EST

A widening Middle East conflict has posed a fresh test for global central banks, as fears of an oil shock and renewed inflation risks complicate policymakers’ calculus for shoring up growth.

Crude prices soared on Monday after the U.S. and Israel launched strikes on Iran over the weekend, killing Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Hosseini Khamenei. Tehran responded with missile attacks targeting multiple Gulf countries.

Tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, the world’s most critical chokepoint for oil shipments, has effectively stalled as the threat of attacks from Iran deterred vessels from passing through the waterway.

Brent crude prices extended four days of gains, rising 1.6% to $82.76 a barrel on Wednesday, hovering near the highest level since January 2025. The U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude prices also rose for a third day to $75.48.

Higher energy prices would ultimately filter through to consumer and producer prices, particularly for economies that rely heavily on Middle East oil imports, leaving central banks scrambling to reassess their interest rate trajectory.

“The ongoing Iran conflict solidifies the case for many central banks to hold rates steady for now,” a team of economists at Nomura said in a note on Sunday.

Central banks on alert

As heightened tensions weigh on economic activity, policymakers are juggling a delicate task of balancing inflationary risk against slowing growth.

The European Central Bank is caught in what ING economists called a “genuine dilemma,” as an oil shock could push already sticky inflation higher while its growth outlook weakens under the strain of higher U.S. tariffs. They added that “to see a rate hike, the eurozone economy would have to show clear resilience.”

Europe imports nearly all of its oil and a significant share of its liquefied natural gas, raising the risk of a dual energy and trade shock, the bank said.

ECB council member Pierre Wunsch said this week officials would avoid reacting hastily to any movements in energy prices. “If it lasts longer, if the increase in energy prices is higher, then we will have to run our models and see what happens,” Wunsch said.

Former Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the conflict could hit U.S. economic growth and fuel inflationary pressures, holding the Federal Reserve back from cutting rates.

“The recent Iran situation puts the Fed even more on hold, more reluctant to cut rates than they were before this happened,” Yellen said Monday.

U.S. inflation stood at 2.4% in January, above the Fed’s 2% target. Yellen warned that President Donald Trump’s tariffs could push annual inflation to at least 3%.

More

Middle East conflict puts central banks on edge as oil shock fears mount

Higher tariffs likely this week, says US Treasury

4 March 2026

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the US was "likely" to implement a 15% global tariff this week, following conflicting statements from President Donald Trump about the rate.

The new tariff is intended to replace the sweeping global import taxes Trump imposed last year but were recently struck down by the Supreme Court.

The White House responded to that ruling by imposing a levy at 10% - despite Trump claiming on social media it would be 15%.

The contradiction sparked widespread global confusion at the time, with businesses and world leaders calling for clarity.

White House officials have previously said they were working on paperwork to align the duties with Trump's statements.

They have dismissed the significance of the court ruling, saying they can use other legal tools to restore the tariff policies, which they say will help rebalance trade, boost domestic manufacturing and pay down US debt.

To impose the 10% tariff, the White House used an untested trade authority known as Section 122, which authorises the US president declare a tariff of up to 15% without congressional approval for 150 days under certain conditions.

The White House has said it will also turn to other legal tools as it seeks to restore its tariff regime more permanently.

"It's my strong belief that the tariff rates will be back to their old rate within five months," Bessent told CNBC.

He has said he does not expect the Supreme Court ruling to affect the revenue the US takes in from tariffs going forward.

The administration is currently facing claims from firms who had previously paid the tariffs the Supreme Court struck down. Experts say the government could owe up to $130bn (£97.2bn) in refunds as a result.

A study from the Cato Institute estimated US taxpayers could be on the hook for $23m in interest for each day that refunds are delayed — adding up to some $700m a month.

Significant questions remain about what US import tax policies will look like going forward.

Last April, Trump announced "Liberation Day" tariffs on dozens of countries, with rates starting at 10% and climbing toward 50% in some cases.

The duties kicked off a flurry of trade negotiations as countries pushed to secure lower rates in exchange for promises of investment and other changes.

The US Supreme Court's judgement struck down those "Liberation Day" tariffs, as well as some the administration had previously announced on goods from Mexico, Canada and China, citing emergency powers.

Trump responded by announcing a 10% global tariff, which he claimed on social media the next day he was increasing to 15%. However, the levy eventually came into force at the lower rate.

The move to an across-the-board tariff of 10%, with carve-outs for some kinds of goods, put shipments from all countries on an even footing.

It raised questions about the fate of the deals allies had secured after "Liberation Day", while removing the advantage that some countries such as the UK had agreed to in those deals.

More

Higher tariffs likely this week, says US Treasury - BBC News

In other news, bizarrely in a gift to Russia, China and Latin America, NATO turns on itself.

Donald Trump declares US 'ending all trade to Spain' with threat to seize NATO bases

3 February 2026

Donald Trump has threatened to cut off trade with a major European power.

Trump railed against Spain at a press conference this afternoon during a briefing to journalists at the White House. "We're going to cut off all trade with Spain. We don't want anything to do with Spain," the US president said.

Trump said the United States would cut off all trade with Spain after it refused to let the US military use its bases for missions linked to strikes on Iran. "Spain has been terrible," Trump told reporters during a meeting with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, adding that he had told Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to "cut off all dealings" with Spain.

"It started when every European nation, at my request, made 5%, which they should be doing. Everybody was enthusiastic - Germany, everybody - but Spain didn't do it."

In response, Trump said Spain revoked the US access to its NATO bases. "And that's all right, we can use their bases if we want," Trump said. "We can just fly in and use it. Nobody is going to tell us not to use it. They were unfriendly."

At the same press conference, Trump took the opportunity to share his displeasure with Britain as well, following wrangling over the use of the UK's airbase on Diego Garcia for initial US strikes against Iran.

Referring to the UK's Chagos Islands deal, he said: "That island that you read about, the lease, for whatever reason, he made a lease of the island, somebody came and took it away from him.

"And it's taken three, four days for us to work out where we can land, it would have been much more convenient landing there as opposed to flying many extra hours.

"So we are very surprised. This is not Winston Churchill that we're dealing with," he said of UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer.

Starmer had refused to let the United States use the Diego Garcia base in the Indian Ocean, and RAF Fairford in Gloucestershire, for the initial strikes on Iran. However, the US will now be allowed access to UK bases for limited strikes on Iranian missile capabilities.

"President Trump has expressed his disagreement with our decision not to get involved in the initial strikes, but it is my duty to judge what is in Britain's national interest," Starmer told MPs.

The Prime Minister has since confirmed the deployment of a Royal Navy Destroyer and anti-drone helicopters, amid news that RAF F-35 fighter jets have shot down Iranian drones over Jordan.

Starmer said that the situation changed on Sunday when Iran's attacks on targets across the Middle East became "a threat to our people, our interests and our allies."

Donald Trump declares US 'ending all trade to Spain' with threat to seize NATO bases

‘No to war’: Spain PM hits back over Trump’s threats to cut trade over military base access

Published Wed, Mar 4 2026 5:01 AM EST

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez on Wednesday doubled down on his criticism of the U.S strikes against Iran, describing the escalating Middle East conflict as a “disaster.”

His comments come after U.S. President Donald Trump pledged to cut off trade with Madrid after Spain’s government prevented two jointly operated bases in its territory from being used in the strikes.

“Spain has been terrible,” Trump said on Tuesday, during a White House news conference alongside German Chancellor Friedrich Merz. “We’re going to cut off all trade with Spain. We don’t want anything to do with Spain,” he added.

In a televised address on Wednesday morning, Sánchez said: “Very often great wars start with a chain of events spiralling out of control due to miscalculations, technical failures, and unforeseen circumstances. Therefore, we must learn from history and cannot play Russian roulette with the fate of millions,” according to a CNBC translation.

Sánchez warned of “repeating the mistakes of the past,” drawing a comparison with the invasion of Iraq in the early 2000s, and summarized the government’s position as: “No to war.”

Spain’s socialist prime minister has emerged as one of the leading critics of the U.S. and Israeli strikes against Iran among leaders of EU nations.

Trump’s latest comments follow his condemnation of Madrid’s refusal to meet the NATO defense spending target of 5% of GDP.

Spain’s Ibex 35 index traded 1.4% higher at around 10:17 a.m. London time (5:17 a.m. ET), reversing earlier losses amid U.S. trade jitters. The pan-European Stoxx 600 index, meanwhile, advanced around 1.2%.

Trump’s threat to punish Spain on trade would be challenging, given that the 27 EU nations negotiate trade agreements collectively.

“It’s naive to believe that democracy or respect among nations can spring from ruins, or to think that blind and servile obedience is a form of leadership. On the contrary, I believe this position is leadership,” Sánchez said.

“We will not be complicit in something that is bad for the world and contrary to our values ​​and interests simply out of fear of reprisals from someone,” he added.

Spain PM Sánchez brushes off Trump's threat to cut off all trade

Carney U-turns on support for Trump’s Iran strikes

4 March 2026

Mark Carney has backtracked on his support for the US military campaign against Iran.

In an initial statement on Sunday, the Canadian prime minister expressed “support” for the attacks and said they were necessary to “prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon”.

But speaking in Sydney on Wednesday, he told reporters that the strikes appeared “to be inconsistent with international law”.

Mr Carney joined a chorus of world leaders speaking out against the joint US-Israeli operation, which entered its fifth day on Wednesday.

Emmanuel Macron, the French president, said on Tuesday that while Iran bore responsibility for the war, the attacks by the US and Israel were “outside the bounds of international law”.

He was the second Western leader to question the legality of the conflict outright after Pedro Sánchez, the Spanish prime minister, criticised the “spiral of violence”.

Mr Sánchez reiterated his stance on Wednesday morning in a defiant address to the nation, telling the US president: “No to war.” The Left-wing leader said: “Our position is coherent. We are not going to go against our own values out of fear of someone’s threats.”

An independent UN inquiry has also condemned the attacks by Israel and US.

On Wednesday, the UN Independent International Fact-Finding ‌Mission on Iran said: “These attacks, which were followed by ⁠Iran’s retaliatory strikes across the region, run counter to the ‌UN Charter, which prohibits the use of ‌force against the ⁠territorial integrity or political ⁠independence of any state.”

Mr Carney’s about-turn sets Canada on a collision course with Mr Trump, who threatened Spain with an outright trade embargo as punishment for its refusal to allow the US to use its bases to bomb Iran.

The US president has also been critical of Sir Keir Starmer, who has not publicly questioned the legality of the war but said earlier this week that the UK Government did not “support regime change from the skies”.

Mr Trump said he was “not happy” with the lack of support from Britain and accused Sir Keir of tarnishing relationships by initially refusing to allow US bombers to use Diego Garcia, the joint military base on the Chagos Islands, to launch strikes on Tehran.

“This is not Winston Churchill we’re dealing with,” Mr Trump told reporters in the Oval Office, echoing criticisms he had made to The Telegraph on Sunday night. “They ruin relationships. It’s a shame.”

More

Carney U-turns on support for Trump’s Iran strikes

“And then it was unacceptable over the weekend that the Spanish were highly uncooperative regarding the U.S. bases and what we could do with our planes as we began executing on Operation Epic Fury.”

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

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

Interest rates 'could rise back above 4%' to deal with inflation shock

4 March 2026

The Bank of England could raise interest rates back above 4 per cent if soaring energy prices lead to a fresh inflation shock, according to a new report.

The National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) warned borrowing costs could be driven higher as war in the Middle East pushes up the price oil and gas.

That would be a bruising setback for millions of families pinning their hopes on cheaper mortgages.

The Bank has cut rates six times since August 2024 – bringing them down from 5.25 per cent to 3.75 per cent – and it was hoped further rate cuts would follow this spring.

But the chances of such a move have been severely dented by surging energy prices the US-Israel war with Iran spreads through the region.

According to bets on financial markets, there is now just a one-in-five chance the Bank of England will cut rates again this month, down from around four-in-five last week.

And NIESR said the next move in interest rates may in fact be up.

The group said a ‘persistent shock to energy prices may force the Bank of England to raise rates back above 4 per cent’.

NIESR economist Ed Cornforth said: ‘The conflict in the Middle East will have material implications for the economic outlook.

‘The Bank of England will have to contend with a shock to global energy prices, with the question of persistence hanging over their heads.

‘This will cause problems for Rachel Reeves as financing costs increase, putting further pressure on an already precarious fiscal outlook.’

The surge in energy prices has revived memories of runaway inflation seen after Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

That sent inflation in the UK up to 11.1 per cent - and forced the Bank of England to raise rates sharply to 5.25 per cent.

It was hoped inflation was finally coming back under control, paving the way for further rate cuts.

But the war in the Middle East has cast a major shadow over the outlook and fuelled fears of a new inflation shock.

That will put the Bank of England and its governor Andrew Bailey on high alert.

Mortgage lenders have already started ditching plans to cut the price of home loans.

Borrowing and savings specialists Moneyfacts said 'several lenders have pushed pause on planned rate cuts' – dashing the hopes of millions of families hunting for cheaper home loans.

It said the moves have come 'in response to the conflict in the Middle East and its potential economic repercussions'.

Interest rates 'could rise back above 4%' to deal with inflation shock

Eurozone inflation sees unexpected rise: Is the worst yet to come?

Tue, 3 March 2026 at 12:34 pm GMT

Eurozone inflation rose unexpectedly in February, fresh data showed on Tuesday, complicating the European Central Bank’s (ECB) disinflation narrative just as a fast-moving war in Middle East threatens to reignite a new energy shock for Europe.

Euro area annual inflation came in at 1.9% in February 2026, up from 1.7% in January, according to Eurostat’s flash estimate. Economists had expected the rate to hold steady.

On a monthly basis, consumer prices increased by 0.7% — the strongest monthly rise since March 2024.

Core inflation, which strips out energy and food, climbed to 2.4% year-on-year from 2.2%, also above expectations.

Crucially, this data was collected before the latest Middle East escalation began to disrupt energy markets.

ECB Chief Economist Philip Lane warned on Tuesday that a prolonged war could push eurozone inflation higher and weigh on growth, while stressing that the medium-term outcome will depend on the conflict’s scope and duration.

Service pressures re-emerge, core inflation ticks higher

Eurostat said services inflation is expected to run at 3.4% year on year in February, up from 3.2% in January. Food, alcohol and tobacco held steady at 2.6%, while non-energy industrial goods accelerated to 0.7% from 0.4%.

Energy prices were still falling compared with a year earlier but less so than in January (-4.0%), hinting that the drag from energy is fading even before inflation statistics fully digest the latest geopolitical turmoil.

Notably, February’s flash estimate predates the most acute market moves triggered by the widening conflict in the Middle East — meaning the bigger concern for inflation is what comes next.

Iranian forces have retaliated with strikes targeting critical energy infrastructure across the Gulf region.

On Monday, a senior commander of the Iran Revolutionary Guard Corps announced to block shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

The strait is a critical chokepoint for roughly 20% of global crude oil and natural gas flows.

Trading in the Strait of Hormuz has been disrupted, with ships damaged or stranded and insurers pulling back war-risk cover — factors that can quickly translate into tighter gas supply and higher delivered prices for Europe.

The disruption is already feeding memories of the 2022 energy crisis when gas prices surged, industrial output faltered and consumer inflation soared into double digits.

More

Eurozone inflation sees unexpected rise: Is the worst yet to come?

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.

JinkoSolar achieves record-breaking 26.66% efficiency for TOPCon solar cell based on M10-size wafer

The Chinese manufacturer claims the new efficiency result sets a world record for industrial-scale TOPCon solar cells on M10-size wafers. The achievement was verified by an undisclosed independent third-party organisation in China.

March 3, 2026 Emiliano Bellini

Chinese solar module manufacturer JinkoSolar achieved a power conversion efficiency of 26.6% for an industrial-scale TOPCon solar cell based on an M10-size wafer.

The achievement, which represents a world record for industrial-scale solar cells, was certified by an independent, undisclosed organisation in China.

The device was developed with the support of scientists from the Ningbo Institute of Materials Technology and Engineering (NIMTE) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), in collaboration with scientists from Soochow University and Jiliang University. It was described in the paper “Dual-side electrical refinement enables efficient industrial tunnel oxide passivating contact silicon solar cells,” published in nature energy.

The team used an M10 wafer with an effective area of 313.3 cm², consistent with modern industrial-scale production standards.

On the cell’s front side, the researchers combined high-sheet-resistance boron emitters with optimized grid designs, improving surface passivation and reducing carrier transport losses. On the rear, they implemented a novel double-layer tunnel oxide/polysilicon structure to mitigate metallization-induced degradation.

This design includes a highly crystalline inner polysilicon layer and an outer barrier layer that blocks silver diffusion from the electrodes into the silicon substrate, ensuring excellent interfacial passivation, according to the research team.

Tested under standard illumination conditions, the cell achieved an efficiency of 26.6%, an open-circuit voltage of 744.6 mV and a fill factor of 85.57%. Thinning the rear polysilicon layer further increased the cell’s bifaciality to 88.3%, boosting overall energy yield.

“The device has achieved 83.8% of the theoretical efficiency limit, outperforming conventional TOPCon solar cells,” said the study’s lead author, Jichun Ye.

JinkoSolar currently also holds the world record efficiency of 27.02% for a lab-scale TOPCon solar cell, verified by China’s National Photovoltaic Industry Measurement and Testing Center (NPVM).

By 2028, JinkoSolar expects to cross the 28% threshold, it said in a recent white paper.

The company also recently announced it achieved a power conversion efficiency of 25.58% for a TOPCon panel, with the result being certified by certification body TÜV SÜD.

JinkoSolar achieves record-breaking 26.66% efficiency for TOPCon solar cell based on M10-size wafer – pv magazine Australia

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)

“Anything that slows down our ability to engage and prosecute this war in the fastest, most effective manner puts American lives at risk. The Spanish put American lives at risk.”

 U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent

Wednesday, 4 March 2026

Supply Line Chaos. US Debt Troubles Rise. The Crash Of 26?

Baltic Dry Index. 2242 +55     Brent Crude 82.92

Spot Gold  5169                         Spot Silver 84.85

US 2 Year Yield 3.51 +0.04

US Federal Debt. 38.838 trillion

US GDP 31.205 trillion.

“It’s very tempting to spend more than you earn, it’s very understandable, but it’s not a good idea.”

Warren Buffett

As the unnecessary Israeli-Trump, global wealth destruction, war on Iran drags on with no discernible end in sight, the pace of global wealth destruction is rapidly picking up speed.

Coming next, a collapse in consumer confidence, a great slowdown in the velocity of money, oil and natural gas led inflation, rising global unemployment?  The implosion of private credit?

And for what? Turning Tehran into another Gaza? Why?

Look away from the rising crude oil price and rising US interest rates now.

South Korea’s Kospi plunges 12% amid broader declines in Asia markets as Iran conflict rages

Published Tue, Mar 3 2026 6:59 PM EST

South Korea’s Kospi plunged over 12% Wednesday, before paring some losses, and extending a steep sell-off from the previous session amid an escalating war in the Middle East.

The Korea Exchange temporarily halted trading for the Kospi index on Wednesday. A circuit breaker was activated on the Kosdaq as well, which fell about 13%.

The Kospi index was last down about 8%, with heavyweights SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics fell more than 6% and over 9%, respectively.

The South Korean market had been on a tear last year, soaring more than 75%, and extending gains into the new year as well, with the Kospi hitting fresh highs on the back of semiconductor heavyweights that have seen their shares surge on strong memory chip demand.

“The decline in the KOSPI can broadly be attributable to the single-name concentration that we see in the Korean markets,” said Lorraine Tan, Asia director of equity research at Morningstar.

According to Morningstar data, memory leaders Samsung and SK Hynix constitute almost 50% of the index.

“We believe that the drop in share prices is partly driven by profit taking after a strong runup amidst a risk-off environment but also implies growing concern that the AI datacenter adoption pace might slow due to its significantly higher energy costs than regular data centers,” Tan said.

Additionally, South Korea’s stock market is particularly sensitive to swings in oil prices, meaning geopolitical shocks in the Middle East tend to trigger short-term volatility, said Daniel Yoo, global market strategist at Yuanta Securities.

As a major oil importer, Korea’s manufacturing-heavy economy is vulnerable to rising energy costs, which can pressure industrial and export-oriented sectors when crude prices spike.

Yoo said the recent drop in the Kospi should be viewed as a correction after a strong rally rather than a fundamental shift in the market’s outlook, adding that stability was likely to return once oil prices settle.

South Korea’s net oil imports are 2.7% of its gross domestic product, with Nomura flagging it among the most vulnerable to current account pressures.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 lost 3.88%, while the Topix declined 3.96%.

Investors in the region will also be watching an annual parliamentary meeting by China’s policymakers that kicks off later in the day.

The gathering, dubbed the “Two Sessions,” consists of a consultative congress that will start later in the day, and a National People’s Congress due to open Thursday. Chinese Premier Li Qiang is set to announce a series of economic targets at the NPC, which had largely been decided at a December meeting

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 fell over 2%. Hong Kong Hang Seng index lost over 2.74%, while the mainland CSI 300 was down 1.61%.

China’s factory activity faltered in February as manufacturers paused production and cargo shipments to celebrate an extended holiday, an official survey showed on Wednesday.

The official manufacturing purchasing managers index fell to 49 in February, according to the National Bureau of Statistics, missing economists’ forecast for 49.1.

Oil prices extended gains with U.S. crude futures up 0.5% at $74.93, while Brent rose 0.95% to $82.17 per barrel amid a widening conflict, with Iran attempting to close the Strait of Hormuz.

A senior commander from Iran’s Revolutionary Guard said on Monday that the critical artery had been shut and warned that any vessel attempting to transit the waterway would be targeted, according to Iranian media.

U.S. President Donald Trump said Tuesday afternoon that the U.S. Navy will escort tankers through the Strait of Hormuz, if necessary.

“No matter what, the United States will ensure the FREE FLOW of ENERGY to the WORLD,” he said in a Truth Social post. “The United States’ ECONOMIC and MILITARY MIGHT is the GREATEST ON EARTH — More actions to come.”

Prices of precious metals rose. Spot gold advanced 1.64% to $5,170 per ounce, while spot silver jumped almost 3% to $84.49 per ounce.

Overnight in the U.S., socks [stocks?] had another wild session as concerns around a prolonged U.S.-Iran conflict rattled markets.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 403.51 points, or 0.83%, and ended at 48,501.27. The S&P 500 slipped 0.94% to close at 6,816.63, while the Nasdaq Composite shed 1.02% to settle at 22,516.69. At their lows of the day, the S&P 500 lost 2.5%, and the Nasdaq was down about 2.7%. The 30-stock Dow was down more than 1,200 points, or around 2.6%, at its nadir.

Asia markets: Hang Seng Index, Kospi, Nikkei 225

Stock futures fall as traders monitor latest developments in U.S.-Iran war: Live updates

Updated Wed, Mar 4 2026 12:09 AM EST

Stock futures fell Tuesday night after a volatile session for U.S. equities.

Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average declined 0.33%. S&P 500 futures lost 0.34%, while Nasdaq 100 futures dropped 0.45%.

Major stock averages closed the previous session in the red, albeit far off of their lows of the day. The S&P 500 slipped about 0.34%, while the Dow lost roughly 403 points, or 0.8%. At one point, the Dow Industrials fell more than 1,200 points. The Nasdaq Composite closed down 1%.

Each of the S&P 500′s 11 sectors closed lower. Materials was the worst-performing sector, dropping 2.7%, followed by industrials, down nearly 2%. Investors throughout the session weighed concerns about how rising oil prices could potentially affect the U.S. economy and future monetary policy decisions.

President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that the U.S. would provide risk insurance to all maritime trade through the Persian Gulf, in an effort to get tankers moving through the Strait of Hormuz. Tanker traffic through the Strait — the world’s most vital transit route for crude oil — came to a halt after the Iranian Revolutionary Guard commander threatened to set fire to ships attempting the route.

Brent crude oil futures settled up 4.71%, while West Texas Intermediate crude futures advanced 4.68%. Both ended Tuesday’s trading off their session highs.

“Amid all the noise we might be seeing some opportunities start to emerge in markets for longer term investors, in our view, especially if we start to see energy prices stabilize and potentially moderate in days and weeks ahead,” said James McCann, senior economist at Edward Jones, in a note.  

Heading into Wednesday, traders will be watching the ADP private payrolls report. The Dow Jones consensus calls for 48,000 jobs added in February, up from 22,000 in January.

On the earnings front, traders will look for quarterly results from Abercrombie & FitchBroadcom and Okta

Stock market today: Live updates

Oil supertanker rates hit all-time high as insurers drop war risk protection in the Middle East

Published Tue, Mar 3 2026 5:20 AM EST

Oil supertanker costs in the Middle East climbed to their highest level on record as conflict between the U.S. and Iran disrupts shipping through the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz.

Major marine war risk providers have started to scrap cover for vessels operating in the Persian Gulf as the fallout from a sudden security shock hobbles key shipping routes in the region.

The benchmark freight rate for Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCCs) — used to ship 2 million barrels of oil from the Middle East to China — hit an all-time high of $423,736 per day on Monday, data from LSEG showed. That marked an increase of more than 94% from Friday’s close.

Alongside a significant jump in oil and gas prices, the stratospheric rise in the cost of hauling crude oil follows the U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran over the weekend. The expanding conflict has resulted in the effective halt of shipping traffic through the Strait of Hormuz — one of the world’s most important oil choke points, located in the gulf between Oman and Iran.

An Iranian Revolutionary Guards senior official said Monday that the Strait of Hormuz had been closed and warned any vessel attempting to pass through the waterway would be attacked, state media reported. The claim has since been disputed by the U.S. military’s Central Command, CENTCOM, Fox News reported.

“Charterers in the VLCC segment stepped back from the market and avoided securing vessels as multiple incidents have led to increased threat levels around the strait of Hormuz, despite the waterway not being officially closed,” Sheel Bhattacharjee, head of freight pricing in Europe at Argus Media, told CNBC by email.

Oil producers in the Middle East have not yet announced a halt to any production or loading yet, and ports in the UAE, Oman and Kuwait remain operational, Bhattacharjee said, citing market sources.

“But most shipowners were avoiding transits through the strait of Hormuz after insurers cancelled the war risk coverage for vessels in certain areas of the region,” Bhattacharjee said.

It is estimated that roughly one-third of seaborne crude oil trade moves through the strategically important waterway, alongside 19% of global liquefied natural gas (LNG) flows and 14% of global refined products trade, according to Argus Media.

‘A double whammy’

Leading maritime insurers have canceled war risk cover for vessels operating in the Middle East over recent days, amid reports of attacks on multiple ships traversing through the Strait of Hormuz.

Alongside the New York-based American Club, marine insurers including Norway’s Gard and Skuld, Britain’s NorthStandard and the London P&I Club said they were scrapping war risk cover for ships in the region.

Adrian Beciri, CEO of DUCAT Maritime, a Cyprus-based logistics firm specializing in dry bulk, said the knock-on effects of the sprawling Middle East conflict were being felt across the globe.

More

Iran: Oil supertanker rates soar as insurers drop war risk protection

In other news, the oil pipelines out of the Gulf. A very little relief.

Around 20 per cent of the world’s oil supply passes through the Strait of Hormuz. On average, more than 20 million barrels of crude oil, condensate and fuel moved through the strait every day last year, news agency Reuters reported. 

Qatar, one of the world’s largest LNG exporters, sends almost all of its gas through this route. 

Iraq- Turkey. (300,000 bpd.)

Kirkuk–Ceyhan Oil Pipeline

Kirkuk–Ceyhan Oil Pipeline - Wikipedia

Saudi Arabia east-west pipeline. (5 mbpd.)

East–West Crude Oil Pipeline

East–West Crude Oil Pipeline - Wikipedia

UAE-Oman. (1.5 mbpd.)

Habshan–Fujairah oil pipeline

Habshan–Fujairah oil pipeline - Wikipedia

Of the three, only the Saudi east west pipeline really offers some relief.

“We must not let our rulers load us with perpetual debt.”

Thomas Jefferson

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

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

“I could end the deficit in 5 minutes. You just pass a law that says that anytime there is a deficit of more than 3% of GDP all sitting members of congress are ineligible for re-election.”

Warren Buffett

Interest on the $38.8 trillion national debt has tripled since 2020, and it already costs taxpayers more than defense and Medicaid

March 2, 2026, 4:45 PM ET

The United States is now paying nearly $970 billion a year just to service the interest on its $38.8 trillion national debt—a figure that has nearly tripled since 2020 and already exceeds what the federal government spends on national defense or Medicaid, according to a February analysis by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB).

For many Americans, the number barely registers. But budget experts warn it represents one of the most consequential—and least discussed—fiscal emergencies in the country’s history.​

The rapid climb didn’t happen overnight. Interest costs have surged owing to a one-two punch: The federal debt load has ballooned by trillions, while interest rates climbed sharply from near-zero post-pandemic lows. As a share of the economy, interest costs have doubled from 1.6% of GDP in 2021 to a record 3.2% in 2025. Today, the government already spends more on debt interest than on Medicaid or the entire national defense budget, programs Americans viscerally feel and politically fight over. Yet the interest line item draws comparatively little outrage.

The $2 trillion threshold

The numbers ahead are even more staggering. According to the Congressional Budget Office’s latest baseline, net interest costs are projected to more than double again, from $970 billion in fiscal year 2025 to $2.1 trillion by 2036.

Between now and 2036, debt held by the public is expected to grow by 86%, adding roughly $26 trillion, while the average interest rate on that debt will tick up another half a percentage point. Together, they will drive interest costs up by 121%.​​

By 2036, interest payments will consume one-quarter of all federal revenue, up from roughly one-fifth today and just one-tenth back in 2021. Put another way: For every four dollars the U.S. collects in taxes, one will go entirely toward paying creditors—not roads, not veterans, not schools.​

When Medicare gets passed

Right now, interest spending sits roughly neck and neck with Medicare, one of the most popular and politically untouchable programs in the federal budget. The CBO projects that by 2029, net interest costs will officially surpass Medicare, making it the second-largest government program, trailing only Social Security. That milestone is less than four years away.​

The trajectory doesn’t stop there. By 2047, CBO projects interest costs will exceed even Social Security spending, ascending to become the single largest line item in the entire federal budget—larger than retirement income, larger than health care for seniors, larger than the military.​

A crowding-out crisis

The consequences extend beyond accounting. As interest costs swell, they crowd out virtually every other national priority. The CRFB projects that rising interest costs will account for 28% of all nominal spending growth over the next decade and 120% of all spending growth as a share of GDP, meaning other programs will effectively shrink in relative terms just to make room.​

The national debt currently stands at approximately $38.77 trillion as of February, growing at roughly $6.43 billion per day. At that pace, the U.S. is projected to hit $39 trillion by approximately April.

CRFB and other fiscal watchdogs argue that a credible deficit reduction plan remains the only viable off-ramp—one that would put debt on a sustainable path, ease pressure on interest rates, and prevent the interest bill from ultimately devouring the budget entirely. So far, Washington has not produced one.​

For this story, Fortune journalists used generative AI as a research tool. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing.

Interest on the $38.8 trillion national debt has tripled since 2020, topping defense and Medicaid | Fortune

Another shadow bank hit by sell-off as AI fears spread

3 March 2026

The world’s biggest “shadow bank” fund has been hit by a record sell-off amid fears about the impact of AI on companies backed by private loans.

Blackstone’s private credit fund, known as Bcred, saw investors pull $3.8bn (£2.9bn) in the last quarter – equivalent to 7.9pc of its total shares.

The fund typically limits withdrawals to 5pc per quarter, meaning that Blackstone – a “shadow bank” that acts like a lender but is unregulated – has been forced to change its rules to meet the requests. Bcred is the world’s largest private credit fund with $82bn of assets under management.

The move highlights investors’ heightened fears about the impact of AI on the tech companies the fund has lent to.

Software companies have been heavily backed by private credit funds in recent years, but the rise of Anthropic’s Claude and ChatGPT has raised questions about their future.

That poses questions for private credit lenders, who must ensure the companies they lend to are viable enough to repay the loans.

Shareholders in a fund focused on technology managed by Blue Owl, another major player in private credit, redeemed shares worth about 15pc of its net assets in its most recent quarter.

Another fund managed by Blue Owl opted to halt quarterly redemptions and started selling assets to return capital to investors.

Blackstone said it would meet requests by increasing its redemption limit to 7pc of the fund’s total shares. To make up the rest, the private equity firm, alongside employees, will offset the remaining 0.9pc.

Lloyd Blankfein, who led Goldman Sachs through the 2008 financial crash, said this week that he saw parallels between the boom in private credit and the global financial crisis.

“I wonder where there’s hidden secret leverage,” he said.

More

Another shadow bank hit by sell-off as AI fears spread

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.

Scientists just turned light into a remote control for crystals

Scientists at NYU have developed a method to control crystal formation using light.

Date: March 2, 2026

Source: New York University

Summary:

NYU researchers have found a way to use light to control how microscopic particles assemble into crystals, effectively turning illumination into a tool for shaping matter. By adding light-sensitive molecules to a liquid filled with tiny particles, they can adjust how strongly the particles attract or repel one another simply by changing the light’s intensity or pattern. This allows them to trigger crystals to form, dissolve, or even be reshaped in real time.

Scientists at NYU have developed a way to use light to guide how microscopic particles arrange themselves into crystals. The work, reported in the Cell Press journal Chem, describes a straightforward and reversible technique for building crystals that could support the creation of a new class of responsive, adaptable materials.

Crystals appear everywhere in nature and technology, from snowflakes and diamonds to the silicon inside electronic devices. At their core, crystals consist of particles organized in precise, repeating patterns. To better understand how these structures emerge, researchers often study colloidal particles, which are tiny spheres suspended in liquid that naturally assemble into ordered arrangements known as colloidal crystals. These particles also serve as key components in advanced materials used in optical and photonic applications such as sensors and lasers.

Although crystals are common and highly useful, controlling exactly how and when they form has remained a major obstacle.

"The challenge in the field has been control: crystals usually form where and when they want, and once conditions are set, you have limited ability to adjust the process in real time," said study author Stefano Sacanna, professor of chemistry at NYU.

Using Photoacids to Control Particle Interactions

In their Chem study, the team identified a surprisingly simple method for directing crystal formation: shining light on the system.

The researchers introduced light sensitive molecules known as photoacids into a liquid containing colloidal particles. When exposed to light, these photoacids briefly become more acidic. That change affects how they interact with the surfaces of the particles, altering the particles' electric charge. By modifying the charge, the scientists can control whether the particles pull together and stick or push apart and separate.

"Essentially, we used light as a remote control to program how matter organizes itself at the microscale," said Sacanna.

---- Toward Light Programmable Materials

This advance points toward materials whose internal structure, and therefore their properties, can be tuned using light. For example, photonic materials could have their color or optical response written, erased, and rewritten on demand. Light programmable colloidal crystals may eventually enable reconfigurable optical coatings, adaptive sensors, and next generation display and data storage technologies, where patterns and functions are defined dynamically by illumination rather than fixed during manufacturing.

"Our approach brings us closer to dynamic, programmable colloidal materials that can be reconfigured on demand," said study author Glen Hocky, associate professor of chemistry and a faculty member at the Simons Center for Computational Physical Chemistry at NYU. "This system also allows us to test a number of predictions on how self-assembly should behave when interactions between particles or molecules are changing across space or time."

Scientists just turned light into a remote control for crystals | ScienceDaily

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)

“Creditors have better memories than debtors.”

 Benjamin Franklin