Tuesday, 17 February 2026

Hand, Foot, Yard, Rod, Fathom, Chain, Furlong, Mile.

Baltic Dry Index. 2100 +17     Brent Crude 68.26

Spot Gold  4896                        Spot Silver 73.25

US 2 Year Yield 3.40  Friday

US Federal Debt. 38.696 trillion US GDP 31.161 trillion.

Wherever law ends, tyranny begins.

John Locke

For more on hands, how we measure horses, and furlongs, how we measure horse races, scroll down to the technology section.

In our holiday affected trading week, will it be boom or bust? Will Comex crash silver?

Asia markets make cautious start, oil rises on U.S.-Iran talks

Published Mon, Feb 16 2026 8:24 PM EST

Asian financial markets were treading carefully on Tuesday in holiday-thinned trading, but oil pushed higher with U.S and Iran nuclear negotiations in Geneva due to begin later in the day.

Mainland Chinese, Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan and South Korea markets were closed on Tuesday for Lunar New Year holidays. U.S markets were shut on Monday for Presidents’ Day.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 was down 0.5% and the broader Topix slid 0.2% to 3,779.29.

In Australia, the S&P/ASX200 was trading almost 0.5% higher.

Ten-year Treasury yields slipped 1 basis point to 4.044% on Tuesday, hitting the lowest since early December. Japan’s five-year yield fell 2 basis points to 1.65%, its lowest since February 2.

In early Asian trading hours, Nasdaq futures were down 0.1% and S&P 500 futures up 0.2%.

The dollar index, a measure of the U.S. currency against major rivals, was last flat at 97.07, after a small gain of 0.2% overnight.

Japan’s weakening economy remained in focus on Tuesday, one day after much softer than expected GDP numbers.

The country on Monday reported its economy grew an annualised 0.2% in the fourth quarter, far below the 1.6% gain forecast as government spending dragged on activity. On Tuesday, The Japanese yen strengthened 0.15% against the greenback to 153.28 per dollar.

The weak figures highlight the challenges ahead for Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi and should support her push for more aggressive fiscal stimulus, economists said.

The BOJ next meets on rates in March, with traders forecasting only a slim chance for a hike. Economists polled by Reuters last month expected the central bank to wait until July before tightening policy again

“The market has likely assumed that softer GDP data in the fourth quarter will encourage PM Takaichi’s plans to offer additional fiscal support and reduce the sales tax on food,” NAB analysts wrote in a research note.

“Pricing for BoJ rate hikes nudged a little lower post the GDP data, with only 4 basis points priced for the March meeting and 16 basis points priced for April.”

Australia’s central bank said on Tuesday it had concluded inflation would stay stubbornly high if it had not hiked interest rates as it did this month, and was not yet sure if further tightening would be necessary.

Oil prices were higher ahead of U.S.-Iran talks aimed at de-escalating tensions against a backdrop of expected OPEC+ supply increases.

U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude was up 1.29%. Brent crude futures rose 1.33% overnight.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards navy held a drill in the Hormuz Strait on Monday, the semi-official Tasnim news agency reported, a day prior to renewed Iran-U.S. nuclear negotiations. The passage accounts for about 20% of global oil shipments.

“The market remains unsettled by geopolitical uncertainties, with investors cautious due to the pending US-Iran and Ukraine negotiations this week,” ANZ analysts said.

“Speculative positions have been increasing in recent weeks. If tension in the Middle East eases or meaningful progress is made on the Ukraine war, the risk premium currently built into oil prices could swiftly unwind.”

Gold was down 0.85% at $4949.5 per ounce as a higher dollar on Monday made greenback-priced bullion more expensive for holders of other currencies. Spot silver was 2% lower.

Asia markets make cautious start, oil rises on U.S.-Iran talks

Stock market doom loop is hitting everything that touches AI

Investors are growing impatient that vast spending on the technology has yet to produce a windfall in revenues.

February 16, 2026 at 9:58 AM PST | UPDATED: February 16, 2026 at 10:16 AM PST

The stock market turmoil unleashed by the artificial-intelligence industry reflects two fears that are increasingly at odds.

One is that AI is poised to disrupt entire segments of the economy so dramatically that investors are dumping the stocks of any company seen at the slightest risk of being displaced by the technology.

The other is a deep skepticism that the hundreds of billions of dollars that tech giants like Amazon.com Inc., Meta Platforms Inc., Microsoft Corp. and Alphabet Inc. are pouring into AI every year will deliver big payoffs anytime soon.

The dueling anxieties have been brewing for months. But they’ve shifted to the center of the stock market over the past two weeks. The result has been a series of punishing selloffs that have hammered dozens of companies across a number of industries — from real estate services and wealth management, to insurance brokers and logistics firms — and wiped more than $1 trillion from the market values of the big tech companies investing the most in AI.

“There is a contradiction when it comes to what investors are worried about when it comes to AI,” Julia Wang, the north Asia chief investment officer at Nomura International Wealth Management, told Bloomberg Television. “Those two things can’t be true at the same time.”

The shift marks a major break from the sentiment of the last few years, when speculation that AI would set off a transformative productivity boom kept pushing stock prices higher. While big tech stocks kept rising — sending Meta surging nearly 450% from the end of 2022 until the start of this year, and Alphabet up more than 250% — the hand-wringing over whether it was a bubble about to burst did little to derail the rally.

That began to change late last month as earnings reports from some of the biggest tech companies started to spook investors, who are growing impatient that the spending has yet to produce a commensurate windfall in revenues.

Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, and Alphabet alone are expected to spend more than $600 billion on capital expenditures in 2026. That’s hoovering up free cash flows and loading the companies with depreciating assets, radically altering many of the characteristics that have helped fuel the firms’ rise over the past decade.

“This is a real no-win situation,” said Anthony Saglimbene, chief market strategist at Amerprise Advisor Services. “Investors were comfortable saying, ‘so long as it happens in the future, I’m comfortable with Microsoft or Amazon or Alphabet spending the money.’ Now they want to know more immediately when the payback will come — and we don’t have a clear picture.”

Since Microsoft and Meta kicked off the fourth-quarter earnings season on Jan. 28, Microsoft and Amazon shares have each dropped more than 16%, with Amazon mired in its longest losing streak in about 20 years.

Even Alphabet, which is widely regarded as the biggest AI winner in the group, is down 11% off a recent peak. Meta, whose strong revenue growth overshadowed higher-than-expected capital spending, has fallen 13% since an earnings-fueled rally. In total, nearly $1.5 trillion in combined market value has been wiped out from the group, pushing the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 Index into negative territory for the year.

At the same time, investors are growing increasingly worried about the businesses that will potentially be swept aside — or at least significantly upended — by the new applications that are being steadily rolled out.

That has caused a series of stock market selloffs that have flared repeatedly and hit private-credit firms, video-game makers and software companies, among others.

The latest bout began after Anthropic PBC released productivity tools for lawyers and financial researchers, hammering the stock price of companies across those industries. Insurance brokers tumbled on another program tied to OpenAI. One from a little-known startup, Altruist Corp., battered wealth-managers like Charles Schwab Corp. and Raymond James Financial Inc. Even a press release from a former karaoke company with less than $2 million in quarterly revenue sent the stocks of logistics companies tumbling.

More

Stock market doom loop is hitting everything that touches AI – Orange County Register

Finance Chiefs Push to Expand Euro’s Global Role

February 16, 2026 at 5:18 PM GMT

As the US dollar weakens amid geopolitical upheaval, Euro-area finance ministers are pushing to expand the role of the single currency. They met in Brussels today and on their agenda was promotion of the currency’s issuance and use in transactions. 

Given the global context, it’s become “existential for us to safeguard the international role of the euro as it is quite pertinent for the EU’s monetary sovereignty,” said Greek Finance Minister Kyriakos Pierrakakis, who chaired the meeting.

Over the weekend, the European Central Bank announced that it is prepared to offer euro liquidity to its peers from around the world in times of crisis -- its strongest move yet to promote the currency. 

That’s also one proposal included in a paper by the European Commission seen by us. The document calls for reinforcing euro diplomacy by reassuring partner countries about access to the currency. 

The French government has called for an assessment of the economic risks. While it backs the push to strengthen the euro’s international role, Paris wants better understanding of the costs to exporters if it drives up exchange rates against the dollar. — Jennifer Duggan

Finance Chiefs Push to Expand Euro’s Global Role - Bloomberg

In other news, Poland wants nukes.

Poland considers building nuclear weapons

Kieran Kelly  Mon, 16 February 2026 at 9:39 am GMT

Poland should begin developing nuclear weapons to guard against Russia, the country’s president has said.

Karol Nawrocki, who was elected last year, said he was a “great supporter of Poland joining the nuclear project”, which he said could underpin the country’s security strategy.

“This path, with respect for all international regulations, is the path we should take,” he said in an interview with Polsat television on Sunday.

“We must work towards this goal so that we can begin the work. We are a country right on the border of an armed conflict. The aggressive, imperial attitude of Russia towards Poland is well known.”

European nations have debated developing their own nuclear strategy amid growing threats from Moscow and a deteriorating relationship with the United States, which is Europe’s main nuclear guarantor.

Evika Silina, Latvia’s prime minister, said at the Munich Security Conference over the weekend that “nuclear deterrence can give us new opportunities”.

Germany and France have begun talks on developing a European nuclear deterrent that could protect the continent without Washington’s help.

Friedrich Merz, the German chancellor, confirmed in an address to the conference that high-level discussions had begun. He said on Friday: “I have started the first talks with Emmanuel Macron, the French president, about European nuclear deterrence.

“This will be fully embedded in our nuclear sharing within Nato, and we will not have zones of different security levels in Europe. We’re not doing ‌this by writing Nato off.”

Donald Trump’s repeated attacks on European free speech and threats to take over Greenland have eroded transatlantic relations since the US president returned to the White House last year.

Mr Macron and Mr Merz acknowledged a deepening rift between Europe and the US. “There has been a tendency these days in this place and beyond to overlook Europe and sometimes to criticise it outright. Caricatures have been made,” the French president said at the conference.

More

Poland considers building nuclear weapons - Yahoo News UK

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.

UK consumer sentiment falls as households worry about debt; Japan and Switzerland avoid recession – business live

UK consumer sentiment continued to sink this month, as households grow more worried about debt levels.

16 February 2026

A poll of consumer confidence from data firm S&P Global has found that morale continued to drop in February, although not as quickly as in January.

The report shows:

·         Consumers signal stronger rise in debt alongside a quicker deterioration in loan availability

·         Appetite for major spending recedes to weakest in ten months

·         Sentiment regarding labour market conditions at lowest since last June

This left the S&P Global UK Consumer Sentiment Index (CSI) at 44.8 in February, up from 44.6 in January, but still below the 50-point mark that shows no change compared with the prior month.

Maryam Baluch, economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said:

“The mood among UK households matches the dismal weather seen so far this year across the country. Although the overall degree of gloom has lifted slightly since January, consumer confidence continues to run at one of the lowest levels seen over the past two years.

A period of prolonged rain and a dearth of sunshine have no doubt not helped to lift the low spirits seen among households, but there’s more going on here than just bad weather. Households are growing increasingly worried about debt in particular, especially as a rising need for credit was met with the steepest decline in availability of loans since August 2024.

Households’ appetite for major purchases was impacted by the lack of confidence and debt worries, with sentiment around big ticket expenditure slipping to the lowest in ten months. The low appetite to spend bodes ill for the broader impetus to purchase, hinting at a sustained drag on economic growth from sluggish consumer spending in the first quarter.”

UK consumer sentiment falls as households worry about debt; Japan and Switzerland avoid recession – business live

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.

Off topic but quaint and interesting. Rods, perches, chains, furlongs and acres.

Furlong

furlong is a measure of distance in imperial units and United States customary units equal to one-eighth of a mile, equivalent to any of 660 feet, 220 yards, 40 rods or perches, 10 chains, or approximately 201 metres. It is now mostly confined to use in horse racing, where in many countries[which?] it is the standard measurement of race lengths, and agriculture, where it is used to measure rural field lengths and distances.

In the United States, some states use older definitions for surveying purposes, leading to variations in the length of the furlong of two parts per million, or about 0.4 millimetres (164 inch). This variation is small enough to not have practical consequences in most applications.

Using the international definition of the yard as exactly 0.9144 metres, one furlong is 201.168 metres, and five furlongs are about 1 kilometre (1.00584 km exactly).

History

The name furlong derives from the Old English words furh (furrow) and lang (long).[1] Dating back at least to early Anglo-Saxon times, it originally referred to the length of the furrow in one acre of a ploughed open field (a medieval communal field which was divided into strips). The furlong (meaning furrow length) was the distance a team of oxen could plough without resting. This was standardised to be exactly 40 rods or 10 chains. The system of long furrows arose because turning a team of oxen pulling a heavy plough was difficult. This offset the drainage advantages of short furrows and meant furrows were made as long as possible. An acre is an area that is one furlong long and one chain (66 feet or 22 yards) wide. For this reason, the furlong was once also called an acre's length,[2] though in modern usage an area of one acre can be of any shape. The term furlong, or shot, was also used to describe a grouping of adjacent strips within an open field.[3]

Among the early Anglo-Saxons, the rod was the fundamental unit of land measurement. A furlong was 40 rods; an acre 4 by 40 rods, or 4 rods by 1 furlong, and thus 160 square rods; there are 10 acres in a square furlong. At the time, the Saxons used the North German foot, which was about 10 percent longer than the foot of the international 1959 agreement. When England changed to a shorter foot in the late 13th century, rods and furlongs remained unchanged, since property boundaries were already defined in rods and furlongs. The only thing that changed was the number of feet and yards in a rod or a furlong, and the number of square feet and square yards in an acre. The definition of the rod went from 15 old feet to 16+12 new feet, or from 5 old yards to 5+12 new yards. The furlong went from 600 old feet to 660 new feet, or from 200 old yards to 220 new yards. The acre went from 36,000 old square feet to 43,560 new square feet, or from 4,000 old square yards to 4,840 new square yards.[4]

The furlong was historically viewed as being equivalent to the Roman stade (stadium),[5] which in turn derived from the Greek system

In the Roman system, there were 625 feet to the stadium, eight stadia to the mile, and 1½ miles to the league. A league was considered to be the distance a man could walk in one hour, and the mile (from mille, meaning "thousand") consisted of 1,000 passus (paces, five feet, or double-step).

More

Furlong - Wikipedia

Lengths & Areas: How many yards in a furlong? Roods in an acre?

The basic unit of English length is the yard, which is often taken as the distance between Henry I's (1068-1135) nose and the tip of his outstretched arm.

English weights and measures: Lengths and areas

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)

Money is not an invention of the state. It is not the product of a legislative act. Even the sanction of political authority is not necessary for its existence. Certain commodities came to be money quite naturally, as the result of economic relationships that were independent of the power of the state.

Carl Menger

Monday, 16 February 2026

A Euro Reserve Standard? Presidents Day Meet The Chinese New Year.

Baltic Dry Index. 2083 -12     Brent Crude 67.72

Spot Gold  5006                        Spot Silver 75.50

US 2 Year Yield 3.40 -0.07

US Federal Debt. 38.692 trillion US GDP 31.158 trillion.

“Failure is part of the natural cycle of business. Companies are born, companies die, capitalism moves forward.”

Thomas Sowell

A holiday influenced stock casino trading week, but will anyone notice?

Much will likely be influenced by whether “Peace President” Trump starts a new Middle East war against Iran and the noise coming out from the great Indian AI summit in New Delhi.

Japan’s economy avoids technical recession, but fourth-quarter rebound misses expectations

Published Sun, Feb 15 2026 7:05 PM EST

Japan’s economy grew 0.1% in the fourth quarter of 2025 compared with the previous three months, narrowly avoiding a technical recession.

While it was a reversal of the 0.7% contraction in the third quarter, the gross domestic product missed expectations of a 0.4% expansion by economists polled by Reuters.

A technical recession is commonly defined as two consecutive quarters of contraction.

On an annualized basis, output rose 0.2%, compared with forecasts of 1.6%, following a 2.3% decline in the previous quarter.

Compared with a year earlier, fourth-quarter GDP expanded 0.1%, slowing from 0.6% in the third quarter. Private consumption drove the modest expansion, offsetting weakness in exports and public spending, according to data from Japan’s Cabinet Office.

Following the data release, the Nikkei 225 opened up 0.12%, but the yen weakened 0.25% to 153.06 against the dollar.

The Bank of Japan in January raised its economic growth forecast for the fiscal year ending March 2026 to 0.9% from 0.7%. It also lifted its fiscal 2026 outlook to 1% from 0.7%.

The central bank said it expects moderate expansion as other countries return to growth. The BOJ also said it sees a virtuous cycle of rising prices and wages, supported by the government’s economic measures and accommodative financial conditions.

The data also comes as Japan works with the U.S., its second-largest trading partner, on a $550 billion investment pledge under its trade deal with Washington.

Public broadcaster NHK reported last Friday that Tokyo and Washington have yet to agree on the first projects tied to the pledge.

Japan Economy Minister Ryosei Akazawa was quoted as saying he hoped the initial projects would be finalized before Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi meets U.S. President Donald Trump.

Trump had announced the meeting with Takaichi just before the Feb. 8 Lower House election, which saw Takaichi lead the ruling Liberal Democratic Party to a landslide victory.

After her victory, Takaichi said last Monday that she would support economic growth by boosting investment through “proactive” fiscal policy, although she did not elaborate.

She had earlier pledged to suspend food taxes for two years and boost defence spending to 2% of the country’s GDP.
more

Japan's economy avoids technical recession, but fourth-quarter rebound misses expectations

Global week ahead: Markets brace for more AI noise and ‘scare trading’

Published Sun, Feb 15 2026 3:36 AM EST

AI disruption jitters have ripped through global stock markets over the last couple of weeks, with sectors across the spectrum ending up in the crosshairs of investors looking to bet on which industry could be upended by the inevitable wave of agentic AI.

There will almost certainly be more of these moments this week, as some of the biggest names in AI take to the stage at an event in India.

Looking back at last week’s volatility could gives some clues for the trading week ahead, as the impact of a series of announcements from US-based AI giants played out from sector to sector, but also across the Atlantic.

In Europe, software companies suffered, including Dassault Systemes which saw its share post the biggest ever one-day drop, and RELX, a British analytics group which recorded its worst session decline since 1988.

Wealth managers also came under pressure, with names like St James’s PlaceAberdeen Group and Quilter all nursing deep losses.

In a recent note, UBS analysts said they believe that the AI-driven sell off reflects a “growing disruption is accelerating well beyond software,” warning that markets have only partially priced in the credit implications. The Swiss bank expects this risk to increase throughout 2026 and into 2027 in the U.S. and to a lesser extent in Europe.

On the other side of the debate, Dan Ives of Wedbush told Squawk Box Europe that the “software Armageddon is overblown,” saying that stalwarts like Salesforce and ServiceNow will be core participants of the AI revolution, rather than cannibalized by it.

This will all come sharply into focus this week as India prepares to host one of the year’s most significant AI summits. When the organizers called the event in New Delhi the “AI Impact Summit”, they may not have known how literally the markets would be taking that at this very moment in time.

The event has attracted thousands of attendees and the line-up does not disappoint. Headliners include Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei, Microsoft’s Brad Smith, Mistral AI co-Founder Arthur Mensch and Meta’s Chief AI Officer Alexandr Wang. CNBC’s Arjun Kharpal, who will be covering the event, says to “expect a number of big deals, partnerships and customer announcements from tech companies in the India market. Think cloud deals, AI infrastructure and collaborations between government and tech firms. Tech giants are attracted to the large, tech-forward customer base that India presents as well as the huge pool of engineering talent. So expect Prime Minister Modi to roll out the red carpet to Big Tech and all the executives will be more than happy to walk down it.”

Global week ahead: Markets brace for more AI noise and 'scare trading'

Wall Street Week Ahead

Feb. 15, 2026 6:56 AM ET

The economic calendar is lighter this week, with markets closed on Monday for Presidents' Day (officially Washington's Birthday still and observed as such by the NYSE).

The majority of the important economic data is concentrated in the latter half of the holiday-shortened week, with the FOMC’s minutes of the last meeting and initial jobless claims out Thursday. Preliminary Q4 GDP numbers, along with December spending and income numbers, are due on Friday.

On the earnings front, Walmart (WMT), Alibaba (BABA) and Palo Alto Networks (PANW) are among the big names.

And the Chinese New Year holiday during the week could impact the consumer sector.

Earnings spotlight: Tuesday, February 17: Palo Alto Networks, Medtronic (MDT). See the full earnings calendar.

Earnings spotlight: Wednesday, February 18: DoorDash (DASH), Occidental (OXY). See the full earnings calendar.

Earnings spotlight: Thursday, February 19: Walmart. See the full earnings calendar.

Earnings spotlight: Friday, February 20: Alibaba. 
See the full earnings calendar.

Wall Street Week Ahead | Seeking Alpha

India Seeks Role in Shaping AI Future With Summit of Tech Chiefs

February 16, 2026 at 2:07 AM GMT

India kicks off one of the world’s largest artificial intelligence summits Monday, with Prime Minister Narendra Modi seeking to clear a path for India in a heated race to develop frontier models.

World leaders, tech moguls, AI founders and investors are expected to arrive in New Delhi for the India AI Impact Summit, potentially the largest gathering of AI luminaries to date. Sundar Pichai of Alphabet Inc., Sam Altman of OpenAI Inc., Dario Amodei of Anthropic PBC and Meta Platforms Inc.’s Alexandr Wang are on the guest list, alongside researchers including Yann LeCun and Arthur Mensch.

During the summit’s final two days — Feb. 19 and 20 — French President Emmanuel Macron will deliver the keynote, followed by Modi’s remarks.

For Modi, the summit offers a chance to showcase India’s vast tech-savvy population and engineering talent as forces that could tilt the next phase of the global AI race in its favor. The country has digital infrastructure powered by data from over a billion citizens, identifiable through Aadhaar, a biometric ID system. It has a proven track record of scaling technology quickly despite late starts — missing the personal computer boom but becoming a software services powerhouse and leaping from limited landlines to nearly a billion smartphones in under two decades.

“By overlaying AI over existing digital identity, payment rails as well as health care, education and governance stacks, India is attempting to compress decades of development into years,” said Abhishek Singh, additional secretary at the Ministry of Electronics and IT. “And what gets built for India won’t stay only in India.”

The country is already exporting its digital identity and payments blueprint. MOSIP, an open-source platform inspired by Aadhaar’s architecture, is now helping countries including the Philippines, Morocco and Uganda build national ID systems. Some countries are creating digital payment platforms atop the same scaffolding.

In AI competitiveness, India ranks third globally, trailing the US and China, according to Stanford University’s Institute for Human-Centered AI.

Global tech firms are taking notice. OpenAI and Anthropic are setting up operations in India, courting enterprise customers, developers and government agencies. Google and Meta are expanding data centers to serve one of the fastest-growing markets for models such as ChatGPT, Gemini and Claude. Nvidia Corp., squeezed by US export curbs on high-end chips in China, sees India as a counterweight, though its chief pulled out of the summit at the last hour citing “unforeseen circumstances.”

More

India Seeks Role in Shaping AI Future With Summit of Tech Chiefs - Bloomberg

Don’t look now but is the ECB preparing for the end of the fiat currency dollar reserve standard?

With a Trump politicised Fed coming up and official US federal debt at 38.7 trillion dollars and rising at about 2 trillion dollars a year, why wouldn’t the ECB and others be making contingency plans for the end of the dollar reserve standard. Get gold.

ECB makes euro backstop global to bolster currency’s role

Published Sat, Feb 14 2026 11:45 AM EST

The European Central Bank unveiled plans on Saturday to widen ⁠access to its euro liquidity backstop, making it globally available and permanent in a bid to bolster the international role of ​the single currency.

Access to ​such repo lines, a crucial ​source of funding during times of market stress, has been limited to just a handful of mostly Eastern European countries but ECB President Christine Lagarde has long seen the facility as a tool to ⁠boost the euro’s ‌global reach.

“The ECB needs to be prepared for ⁠a more volatile environment,” Lagarde said at the Munich Security Conference, the first time an ECB chief spoke at the event.

“We must avoid a situation where that stress triggers fire sales of euro-denominated securities in global funding markets, which could hamper ‌the transmission of our monetary policy,” she said in announcing the new facility.

The facility, to be available from the third quarter of 2026, will be open to all ​central banks around the world, provided they are not excluded for reputational reasons, such as money laundering, terrorist financing or international sanctions, the ECB said.

“This facility also reinforces the role of the euro,” Lagarde said. “The availability of a lender of last resort for central banks ⁠worldwide boosts confidence to invest, borrow and trade in euros, knowing that access will be there during market disruptions.”

Used ‌when banks are unable to obtain funding on the market, the ‌repo line allows lenders to borrow euros from the ECB against high-quality collateral, to be repaid at maturity along with interest.

Unlike previous lines, which had to be extended from time to time, the new facility will provide ⁠standing access for up to 50 billion euros.

With investors reassessing the dollar’s status due to ⁠the unpredictable nature of U.S. President Donald Trump’s economic policy, Lagarde has argued this ⁠was the time for the euro to gain market share, but this required a revamped financial and economic architecture.

The U.S. Federal Reserve maintains a similar tool, ​called the FIMA Repo Facility, which essentially protects the ‌Treasury market since stress might otherwise force lenders to sell government bonds below market value.

“These changes aim to make the facility more flexible, broader in terms of its geographical reach and more relevant for global holders of euro securities,” the ECB said in a statement.

Such guaranteed access to euros could naturally increase demand for ​euro-denominated assets and encourage banks outside the 21-nation ‌euro zone to buy assets from the bloc.

ECB makes euro backstop global to bolster currency's role

In other news, more Trump slump?

Buyers Are Ghosting the Market: The Metros Where They’re Backing Out of Deals

Joy Dumandan  Fri, February 13, 2026 at 11:00 AM GMT 

The winter blues are hitting the housing landscape and buyers are ghosting the market by snapping up a home from the wealth of active inventory, then backing out after it's gone under contract.

And while the share of home sales falling out of contract this year looks much like last year, ending December at 7.1%, unchanged from a year earlier, according to Realtor.com® data scientist Sabrina Speianu, there are five markets that are being hit the hardest.

The largest percentage of buyers backing out of homes under contract are in Atlanta (10.3%), Las Vegas (10.1%), San Antonio, TX (9.6%), Riverside, CA (9.3%), and Phoenix (9.2%), according to Realtor.com data.

This comes as sales of existing homes nosedived 8.4% in January—the slowest sales pace in more than two years, even as mortgage rates touched a three-year low of 6.09%.

The last time there was a dramatic surge with deals falling through was in March 2020, when the housing market was hit by the effects of the pandemic.

"In past periods when mortgage rates were rising—including 2018, 2022, and 2023—a higher share of homes returned to the market than we’re seeing today," says Speianu.

"Overall, contract cancellations appear to be more closely tied to sudden increases in borrowing costs than to periods when rates remain elevated but stable," explains Speianu.

There could be a number of reasons why buyers are breaking contracts, including finding another home that's cheaper or locking in a lower mortgage rate.

Canceled contracts

The Atlanta metro has a median list price of $400,000 and more than 23,000 active listings as of January, and this area leads the country with the number of contracts falling through at 10.3%.

Bruce Ailion, a real estate professional and attorney with Re/Max Town & Country, tells Realtor.com he believes the significant inventory growth in the Atlanta region has contributed to buyers backing out.

Ailion explains the standard Realtor promulgated purchase and sale agreement has a due diligence/inspection period.

"That allows for termination for any reason or no reason. When a buyer sees a better opportunity in the due diligence period they can move on," says Ailion.

"With buyers having more options and many sellers reducing their price, a higher number of buyers are terminating an agreement when they find a more attractive purchase during their due diligence."

Realtor.com senior economist Jake Krimmel agrees, noting "as inventory grows and the pace of sales slows that means the buyers in those markets have more homes to choose from and fewer other buyers to compete with.

"Given those more favorable market conditions, it's no surprise that some buyers are pulling out of deals in those metros in particular."

Overall, inventory increased modestly in all four major U.S. regions in January compared with the prior year, according to the Realtor.com January Monthly Housing Market Trends report.

More

Buyers Are Ghosting the Market: The Metros Where They’re Backing Out of Deals

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.

Safe-haven currencies might not be so safe after a volatile year. Here’s how the market is rethinking the Swiss franc, dollar and yen

Published Thu, Feb 12 2026 6:08 PM EST Updated Fri, Feb 13 2026 10:28 AM EST

Ask an investor to name safe-haven currencies, and most will say the U.S. dollar, the Swiss franc, and the Japanese yen.

Investors historically expected them to hold their value during geopolitical or economic turbulence.

But more recently, these currencies have experienced volatility themselves. The dollar and yen saw sharp declines over 2025 and into 2026. The franc has strengthened, but this is challenging for a country with unusually low inflation and a reliance on exports.

Declining dollar

U.S. President Donald Trump reordered global trade with tariffs in 2025, sparking a “sell America” trade: a sell-off of U.S. assets, including the dollar, the world’s reserve currency.

The suddenness with which other tariffs have been imposed and withdrawn kept the pressure up.

In a December note, Swiss private bank Julius Baer stated that “erratic trade policies” were just one cause of the dollar’s woes, adding that Trump’s “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” put the U.S. on “an unsustainable debt trajectory.”

Trump’s pressure on U.S. Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell also undermined investors’ confidence in the dollar, the note said.

The dollar index, which tracks the greenback against a basket of peers, tumbled 1.3% on Jan. 29 after Trump said the dollar is “doing great,” its sharpest drop in a day since Trump first announced tariffs in April. It took the greenback to its lowest level in almost four years.

The index plunged 9.37% in 2025, and it has fallen further in 2026.

In a Wednesday note, George Saravelos, head of FX research at Deutsche Bank, said the dollar’s safe-haven status was “myth.”

He challenged the notion that the dollar “rallies during risk-aversion,” adding: “A simple chart of the dollar-equity relationship shows this not to be true. The average USD-equity correlation has historically been closer to zero, and over the last year the dollar has once again de-correlated from the S&P.”

Cole Smead, CEO and portfolio manager at Smead Capital Management, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” at the end of January that he sees further weakness ahead for the dollar.

“We’re in a dollar bear market longer term,” he said. “If you go back and look at these ‘American manias’ [in markets], if you go back and look at the telecom bubble and tech bubble the late 1990s, the dollar peaked in 2002 and within six years, you saw the dollar go to a low it hadn’t seen for [a] very, very long time.”

The U.S. dollar index nosedived by around 41% between 2002 and its 2008 low.

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Are safe haven Swiss Franc, yen and dollar looking not so safe?

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.

New calcium-ion battery design delivers high performance without lithium

A bold new calcium battery design could challenge lithium and energize the future of clean power.

Date:  February 13, 2026

Source:  Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

Summary:  Scientists at HKUST have unveiled a major leap forward in calcium-ion battery technology, potentially opening the door to safer, more sustainable energy storage for everything from renewable power grids to electric vehicles. By designing a novel quasi-solid-state electrolyte made from redox-active covalent organic frameworks, the team solved long-standing issues that have held calcium batteries back—namely poor ion transport and limited stability.

Scientists at The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) have reported a major advance in calcium-ion battery (CIB) research that could reshape how energy is stored and used in daily life. By incorporating quasi-solid-state electrolytes (QSSEs), the team developed a new type of CIB designed to improve both performance and sustainability. The technology could support applications ranging from renewable energy storage systems to electric vehicles. The work appears in Advanced Science under the title "High-Performance Quasi-Solid-State Calcium-Ion Batteries from Redox-Active Covalent Organic Framework Electrolytes."

As countries expand renewable energy production, the need for dependable and efficient battery storage continues to grow. Lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) currently dominate the market, but concerns remain about limited lithium resources and the practical limits of their energy density. These constraints have intensified the search for alternative battery chemistries that can meet long-term global energy demands.

Calcium-ion batteries are attracting attention because calcium is abundant and offers an electrochemical window comparable to that of LIBs. However, technical barriers have slowed progress. In particular, calcium ions can be difficult to move efficiently within a battery, and maintaining stable performance over repeated charge and discharge cycles has proven challenging. These issues have kept CIBs from competing directly with established lithium-based systems.

Quasi-Solid-State Electrolytes Improve Ion Transport

To address these problems, a team led by Prof. Yoonseob KIM, Associate Professor in the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering at HKUST, engineered redox covalent organic frameworks to function as QSSEs. These carbonyl-rich materials achieved strong ionic conductivity (0.46 mS cm-1) and Ca2+ transport capability (>0.53) at room temperature.

Through both laboratory experiments and computer simulations, the researchers discovered that Ca2+ ions move quickly along aligned carbonyl groups inside the structured pores of the covalent organic frameworks. This organized internal pathway helps explain the improved ion mobility and overall battery performance.

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New calcium-ion battery design delivers high performance without lithium | ScienceDaily

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)

“Demand and supply are the opposite extremes of the beam, whence depend the scales of dearness and cheapness; the price is the point of equilibrium, where the momentum of the one ceases, and that of the other begins.”

Jean-Baptiste Say