Friday, 27 February 2026

More Cockroaches, Private Credit Reality.

Baltic Dry Index. 2117 -04     Brent Crude 71.02

Spot Gold  5214                         Spot Silver 90.68

US 2 Year Yield 3.42 -0.03

US Federal Debt. 38.738 trillion

US GDP 31.190 trillion.

Corruption, embezzlement, fraud, these are all characteristics which exist everywhere. It is regrettably the way human nature functions, whether we like it or not. What successful economies do is keep it to a minimum. No one has ever eliminated any of that stuff.

Alan Greenspan

It’s the last trading day of the month. Normally a day to dress up the stock casinos for the all important, professional money manager performance bonuses.

But given what’s unfolding in the private credit, shadow banking sector, that’s a very risky strategy this month-end today.

Next month portends a likely collapse of confidence in the private credit, multi hypothecated, all too often fraudulent private credit sector.

Asia markets open mixed after Wall Street pullback on Nvidia slump

Published Thu, Feb 26 2026 6:57 PM EST

Asia-Pacific markets traded mixed Friday, after U.S. stocks declined overnight as Nvidia shares tumbled despite a quarterly earnings beat.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 slid 0.6%, while the Topix traded flat. The benchmark Japanese index hit 59,000 for the first time on Thursday before paring gains slightly.

South Korea’s Kospi declined 1.1%, while the small-cap Kosdaq was down 0.35%.

Hong Kong Hang Seng index rose 0.68%, while the CSI 300 slid 0.49%.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 was flat in early trade.

Asia tech stocks slid in early trading. SK Hynix, which is a key supplier of high-bandwidth memory to Nvidia, dipped over 2%. Samsung Electronics, which has been a decades-old partner of Nvidia, was down 0.69%.

SoftBank Group, a major investors in AI companies, declined over 3%.

Overnight in the U.S., the S&P 500 pulled back after the latest results from tech titan Nvidia and software giant Salesforce failed to boost the broader market.

The broad market index fell 0.54% to end at 6,908.86, while the Nasdaq Composite declined 1.18% and closed at 22,878.38. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 17.05 points, or 0.03%, to settle at 49,499.20.

Nvidia shares fell more than 5%, even after the chip giant posted a fourth-quarter earnings and revenue beat. The stock suffered its worst day since April. Other chip stocks such as BroadcomLam ResearchWestern Digital and Applied Materials also slid.

Asia markets: Nikkei 225, Kospi, Nifty 50

More Banks See Exposure Amid Loose Underwriting Fears

February 26, 2026 at 11:10 PM GMT

While some may disagree about the threat private credit poses to markets, a new crisis reared its head on Thursday. It seems that Barclays and Atlas Partners—the structured-credit arm of Apollo Global Management—are among firms that helped arrange more than $2.7 billion of loans to a UK mortgage-finance company that’s unraveled amid allegations of financial irregularities.

Market Financial Solutions collapsed into a UK form of insolvency yesterday, with the judge overseeing the case citing accusations of fraud and double-pledging of assets. Barclays and Atlas each lent it hundreds of millions of dollars. Jefferies Financial Group and Wells Fargo are also among those with exposure.

If this fact pattern sounds familiar, it’s because it is (think cockroaches). The unraveling of MFS is reanimating fears over loose underwriting in credit markets. Last year, the bankruptcies of US auto parts supplier First Brands Group and sub-prime auto lender Tricolor Holdings shook Wall Street. JPMorgan Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon warned this week that some of his rivals are doing “dumb things” to boost returns, reminding him of the years leading up to the 2008 financial crisis. David E. Rovella

More Banks Exposed Amid Credit Fears: Evening Briefing Americas - Bloomberg

Private equity enters its ‘Darwinian’ era as experts warn some funds face extinction

Published Fri, Feb 27 2026 12:22 AM EST

Falling returns, investment exit worries, longer holding periods and tougher fundraising conditions are hobbling the private equity industry, with experts warning that only the strongest will survive.

According to a report by Bain & Co, private equity delivered low payouts to investors for a fourth consecutive year, weighed down by roughly 32,000 unsold companies worth about $3.8 trillion.

It’s taking longer to sell these businesses: about seven years on average now, compared with five to six years between 2010 and 2021, the report released Monday said, adding that exit volumes dropped by 2% last year.

“It’s a very bumpy road right now for PE firms,” said Romain Bégramian, managing partner at GP Score, which evaluates and verifies private equity firms’ value-creation capabilities. “Finally the long needed Darwinian selection is taking place.”

Private equity firms returned only about 14% of the money they’re managing back to investors in 2025, lowest since the 2008-09 global financial crisis

The industry has been grappling with weak exits and stubbornly low distributions to fund investors, known as limited partners, mounting pressure on fund managers to prove if they can still create value.

Fundraising has become increasingly concentrated among established brands with smaller or emerging managers struggling to secure commitments for new vehicles, even as they hold onto aging portfolio companies bought near peak valuations during the low interest rate, liquidity-fueled 2021–2022 easy-money boom, market watchers told CNBC.

“Based on the current environment, where we are seeing many funds, big or small, struggle to raise capital, there will be many managers who have raised their last fund; they just don’t know it yet,” said Kyle Walters, senior analyst at private market data provider PitchBook.

“And those in the former camp will likely wind down quietly, and that will be all you see or hear of it,” Walters added, referring to underperforming managers.

Data from Bain showed that buyout fundraising, or capital raised for funds that typically buy controlling stakes using leverage, fell 16% in 2025 from a year earlier to $395 billion, while the number of buyout funds closed — those that met the targeted fund corpus — dropped 23%, marking their fourth straight annual decline. 

The strain is not evenly distributed. Large-cap buyouts and managers tend to be more insulated, Walters said. Many run multiple strategies and manage huge pools of capital, which gives them a cushion when dealmaking or exits slow down. 

Global buyout deal value jumped 44% to $904 billion, but just 13 megadeals above $10 billion accounted for about 30% of that total, Bain report showed, with most concentrated in the U.S. Overall deal count fell 6%.

“This pressure is more impactful on middle market managers, especially emerging managers, who are trying to set themselves apart from their peers,” said Walters.

Across the board, what is clear is that the playbook of leverage and increasing valuation multiples is no longer sufficient, industry watchers said.

“The current environment is truly testing what managers can add operational value as opposed to relying on some type of financial engineering to generate returns,” he added.

Walters was referring to fund managers’ ability to drive earnings through concrete changes within portfolio companies, such as pricing discipline, working-capital improvements and management upgrades rather than relying mainly on cheap debt to chase valuation multiples.

Continuation, consolidation, extinction

Some industry leaders expect consolidation to accelerate as performance gaps widen and capital becomes more concentrated among top-tier managers.

There being more PE funds than McDonald’s outlets in the U.S. has been highlighted by experts, making a case for consolidation in an industry that seems to have expanded too fast.

Bégramian, however, points to the limits of consolidation as a neat solution. 

“Not all PE firms can be bought by BlackRock and Apollo, and they’re not in the market to buy everybody,” he said. adding that there was not infinite appetite among mega platforms to scoop up “every struggling general partner,” especially when what’s being sold is essentially fee revenue tied to portfolios that may include hard-to-exit or hard-to-value, so-called “gray” assets.

More

Private equity funds face closure and 'extinction' in Darwinian era

In other news, more resource nationalism?

Zimbabwe bans exports of all raw materials

Originally planned for 2027, the mines ministry announces an export freeze on raw minerals and lithium concentrate with immediate effect.

Published 25 Februay at 15:24 pm (GMT +1)

Zimbabwe has frozen exports of raw minerals and lithium concentrate, the mines ministry said on Wednesday, tightening control over materials key to clean‑energy technologies and defence industries.

The ban takes immediate effect, covers all raw minerals already in transit and will remain in place until further notice, the ministry said.

“Government expects cooperation of the mining industry on this measure which has been taken in the national interest,” minister of mines Polite Kambamura said in a statement.

Securing access to rare earths and other strategic minerals has become a global priority, given their role in smartphones, green energy systems, military equipment and many other goods.

This has prompted many producing nations to tighten controls and plug leaks in their supply chains.

Ensuring transparency

Zimbabwe “will be engaging the industry in the near future on new expectations and way forward”, said Kambamura.

“Government remains committed to ensuring transparency, in-country value addition and beneficiation, compliance and accountability in the exportation of Zimbabwe’s mineral resources.”

The export ban on lithium concentrates had originally been scheduled to start in January 2027, a deadline the government hoped would push mining companies to begin processing and refining the mineral locally.

The southern African nation holds the continent’s largest lithium reserves and ships much of its production to China for further processing into battery‑grade materials.

Mining is Zimbabwe’s second‑largest contributor to the country’s GDP, accounting for 14.3% of output after manufacturing, according to World Bank data.

On the same day, Zimbabwe pulled out of negotiations with the United States on a new health deal intended to replace the aid programme disbanded by President Donald Trump, the US embassy in Harare said.

Zimbabwe bans exports of all raw materials

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.

Gold to take centre stage at PDAC, with some predicting prices will hit $10,000

After years in the 'wilderness,' gold bugs get sweet vindication at the annual mining event amid bullion's historic run

By Gabriel Friedman  Published Feb 26, 2026

John Ing has been bullish on bullion for more than five decades, and he’s not about to change his tune as gold rips to US$5,000 per ounce.

“I keep on telling everyone the best is yet to come,” the chief executive of investment adviser Maison Placements Canada Inc. in Toronto said. “Yeah, it looks like a bubble, but when you look at the supply and demand, my sense is we haven’t seen anything yet.”

Gold in 2025 turned in its best annual performance as an investment since 1979, rising 65 per cent to US$4,547 per ounce by year-end. But it wasn’t done yet, as it kept smashing records to briefly hit nearly US$5,600 per ounce before settling down about 10 per cent to around US$5,000.

But one thing is abundantly clear as tens of thousands of geologists and mining professionals from all over Canada and the world converge in downtown Toronto this coming week for the Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada (PDAC) conference: after years of optimism about bullion, even as its price sat in the doldrums, gold bugs have finally been vindicated as just about everyone else has now bought into their beliefs.

Ing said gold’s sudden surge will likely be a motif at this year’s PDAC, a convention he’s attended for decades, and the mood may be more celebratory than in previous years.

----The point, Ing said, is that gold bugs have suffered through some rough patches and some quiet periods, but, ultimately, everyone who invests makes money over the long term.

By his account, gold’s current bull run, though historic, would barely qualify as one if it ran out of steam now. Despite bullion’s meteoric rise since early 2024, he described it as just the “third” best gold run he’s witnessed in his career.

The first big boom took place in the 1970s, when gold rose to US$850 per ounce from around US$35. A nearly two-decade lull followed in which gold dipped back to US$250 per ounce. During the 2000s, gold heated up again, peaking at US$1,900 per ounce in 2011, followed by a long period of middling prices until more recently, when things went into overdrive.

“For a while, I and others were in the wilderness,” Ing said. “We’ve always said gold is a hedge against uncertainty, against inflation. It’s a barometer of investor uncertainty. For a while, I’ve been writing that and now others have adopted it.”

He predicts gold will run even higher in 2026, suggesting a 20 per cent rise to US$6,000 per ounce is reasonable by year-end, with a combination of rising geopolitical tensions, rising United States debt levels, central banks diversifying foreign asset reserves by purchasing gold and stock market uncertainty driving prices upward.

Gold’s price rise has also finally spilled over into the gold mining sector in particular and the mining sector in general.

In 2025, mining companies on the Toronto Stock Exchange and TSX Venture Exchange turned in their best performance in a decade, raising $16 billion in equity capital, up 60 per cent from the $10 billion raised in 2024. It also accounted for about 48 per cent of the $33 billion in total raised by all listed companies in 2025. But that’s still below the $22 billion the mining sector raised in 2009.

More

Gold bugs converge for PDAC with new credibility | Financial Post

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.

How can batteries respond to energy price volatility in Europe?

By JP Casey  February 24, 2026

Constantly fluctuating power prices in Europe present opportunities for the continent’s battery energy storage system (BESS) developers, but business cases need to be flexible to keep up with changes in the industry.

This was the sentiment expressed by panellists speaking on day one of Solar Media’s Energy Storage Summit 2026, held this week in London, who gave a number of examples of fluctuations in European power prices as an example of the kind of opportunities for the BESS sector to provide flexibility in the continent’s energy mix.

“Volatility exists where we have the transition to renewables, or we have an amount of renewable penetration that’s quite high,” said Dan Moore, head of BESS asset management at Root Power. “Those markets are the most interesting ones—they’re certainly the most volatile ones.”

“Germany is the market, in Europe, that has the most sustained merchant opportunity, driven by the depth of its intra-day market [and] the depth of its trading opportunities,” said Alexa Strobel, head of strategy and analysis at Field Energy, starting a discussion on the power price environment that spanned several individual European countries.

Strobel went on to explain that high solar generation—she said that Germany added 17GW of new solar capacity in 2025, compared to ”like 2GW of operational batteries” at present—drove spot prices to lows of -€450/MWh in May last year, and this trend is unlikely to stop as more renewable energy capacity is deployed across the continent.

----Building a BESS business case

Pino argued that deploying batteries in a manner in which they can be easily added to or expanded will be vital, as the rate of technological innovation in the BESS space continues to move quickly.

“We are building a 2-hour system, [and are] already prepared when it comes to foundations and electrical works to make an update to 4-hours quite easily,” he said. “You need to be quite careful on this saturation point; it already happened in the UK, that within the life cycle of a battery, the business case will change three, four, five or even ten times! You need to be prepared for that.”

The alignment of renewable energy generation capacity and battery capacity could happen sooner than expected in some countries, too. While Stober argued that many markets will see saturation happen “much slower” than in the UK, Koen Broess of Energy Storage NL (ESNL) said the mere announcement of longer-duration projects in some countries means their storage industries are entering a new phase of maturity.

“Saturation will happen, and probably sooner than most will expect,” he said. “The first 1GW 4-hour duration projects are being announced in Germany; if you build a project of this size, the solution of ancillary services will happen, for sure. Just make your business case not only dependent on ancillary services.”

Broess went on to suggest that developers could build batteries of different sizes, in order to participate in different parts of the market, and strengthen the business case of individual projects.

“If you build out 1- or 2-hour systems, you build them for ancillary systems,” he said. “If you build 4+ hour projects, you build them for trading and day-ahead market [involvement].”

More upcoming energy storage summits.

How can batteries respond to energy price volatility in Europe? - Energy-Storage.News

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)

Another weekend and the start of a new trading month on Monday.  The start of Comex March silver deliveries too. Hopefully, an orderly, normal delivery process with most of the longs rolling forward to the May futures contract. Hopefully no new US war in the Middle East. Hopefully an end to the Washington-London War Party proxy war on Russa in Ukraine. Have a great weekend everyone.

“I would say with the amount of debt the U.S. has, US$10,000 an ounce, that’s where the gold price belongs.”

Harvey Organ, a retired pharmacist in Toronto, [who] has spent more than two decades dutifully blogging and reporting on gold trading activity on the Commodity Exchange Inc. (Comex),

Thursday, 26 February 2026

Private Credit Warnings. Resource Nationalism. Home Prices.

Baltic Dry Index. 2121 -08     Brent Crude 71.26

Spot Gold  5210                         Spot Silver 89.81

US 2 Year Yield 3.45 +0.02

US Federal Debt. 38.734 trillion 

US GDP 31.187 trillion.

For more than two thousand years gold's natural qualities made it man's universal medium of exchange. In contrast to political money, gold is honest money that survived the ages and will live on long after the political fiats of today have gone the way of all paper.

Hans F. Sennholz

The good news, Nvidia rescued the stock casinos. The bad news, a private credit default is looming.

The worrying news, the BIS, the central banker’s central bank, is sounding the alarm over falling house prices.

What to do as month-end approaches and Comex silver first notice day arrives tomorrow.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 crosses 59,000 first the first time as central bank board picks fuel ‘Takaichi trade’

Published Wed, Feb 25 2026 6:49 PM EST

Japan’s Nikkei 225 hit another record Thursday fueled by “Takaichi trade,” while the broader Asia-Pacific markets mostly climbed after tech stocks powered a Wall Street rally overnight.

The Nikkei 225 rose 1.1%, to an all-time high of 59,199.31, extending its winning streak of record highs to a third straight session. The broader Topix added 1.45%, also scaling a new peak.

On Wednesday, the Japanese government tapped Ayano Sato of Aoyama Gakuin University and Toichiro Asada of Chuo University as central bank board members, both dovish in their policy stance which aligns with Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s approach as well.

The two will succeed outgoing central bank board members Asahi Noguchi and Junko Nakagawa, whose terms expire at the end of March and in June, respectively.

Japanese equities have scaled multiple record highs recently, buoyed by the so-called “Takaichi trade,” as investors bet that the prime minister’s growth-oriented policies — viewed as an extension of Abenomics — will lift stocks while pressuring the yen through looser monetary policy and increased fiscal spending.

South Korea’s Kospi rose 1.65%, while the small-cap Kosdaq advanced 0.57%.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 gained 0.8%, also hitting a record high in early trade.

Hong Kong Hang Seng index fell 0.62%, while the CSI 300 lost 0.2%.

The Bank of Korea left its base rate unchanged at 2.5%, in line with Reuters’ expectations.

Asian tech stocks rallied as stronger-than-expected results from Nvidia eased concerns that momentum in artificial intelligence sector was cooling.

Shares of South Korean chipmaking giants Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix jumped in early trade.

SK Hynix, which is a key supplier of high-bandwidth memory used in AI applications to Nvidia, rose over 2%. Samsung Electronics, which has been a decades-old partner of Nvidia, was up about 5%.

Other South Korean tech stocks also rose, with components manufacturer LG Innotek surging almost 14%, while Seoul Semiconductor soared 13%.

In Japan, the TOPIX Information & Communication index climbed 2.6%, building on previous day’s 0.58% gain. 

Overnight in the U.S., equities rose, supported by Nvidia and Oracle, as stocks built on the gains from the prior trading day.

The S&P 500 added 0.81% to close at 6,946.13, and the Nasdaq Composite advanced 1.26% to 23,152.08. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 307.65 points, or 0.63%, to settle at 49,482.15.

Nvidia posted fiscal fourth-quarter results that topped Wall Street expectations, fueled by a 75% surge in revenue from its core data center segment. Shares gained as much as 2% in extended trading following the release.

The company reported adjusted earnings per share of $1.62, beating the $1.53 forecast from analysts surveyed by LSEG. Revenue totaled $68.13 billion, above estimates of $66.21 billion.

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

Asia tech stocks rally as Nvidia earnings soothe AI slowdown fears

Published Wed, Feb 25 2026 9:03 PM EST

Asian tech stocks rallied in early trading on Thursday as stronger-than-expected results from Nvidia eased concerns that momentum in artificial intelligence sector was cooling.

Shares of South Korean chipmaking giants Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix jumped in early trade.

SK Hynix, which is a key supplier of high-bandwidth memory used in AI applications to Nvidia, rose over 2%. Samsung Electronics, which has been a decades-old partner of Nvidia, was up about 5%.

“This is a positive read through for many of the Asia supply chain players including SK Hynix, Samsung, and many others given the explosion of data center demand,” said Dan Ives,  senior equity research analyst at Wedbush Securities.

Other South Korean tech stocks also rose, with components manufacturer LG Innotek surging almost 14%, while Seoul Semiconductor soared 13%.

In Japan, the TOPIX Information & Communication index climbed 2.6%, building on previous day’s 0.58% gain. 

Software firm Trend Micro jumped 5.95%, while Sony Group rose over 3.86%. SoftBank Group added 5%. 

Andrew Jackson, head of Japanese equity strategy at ORTUS Advisors, said that flows will continue to favor AI-linked names, suggesting potential upside for Japanese gallium nitride and silicon carbide plays such as Fuji Electric, as investors position for sustained data-center buildouts. The company’s shares were up 1.7%.

Nvidia reported that revenue for its fiscal fourth quarter climbed 73% to $68.13 billion from a year earlier, beating analysts’ estimates for $66.21 billion. The company now gets over 91% of sales from its data center unit, which houses its market-leading artificial intelligence chips.

Dan Niles, portfolio manager at Niles Investment Management, said the current setup still favors semiconductor infrastructure names over software, noting Nvidia remains “really the king of the infrastructure for all of this.

Japanese chip firms Advantest and Renesas, however, were 2.35% and 1.75% lower, respectively.

Asia tech stocks rally as Nvidia earnings soothe AI slowdown fears

Wall Street Turns Its Fearful Gaze to Private Credit

February 25, 2026 at 10:52 PM GMT

Last week was all about how advances in artificial intelligence appear to be methodically undercutting the future of a growing number of industries, companies, products and jobs. This week it seems Wall Street’s fearful gaze has turned to the potential calamities AI might wreak upon private credit.
Yesterday, Saba Capital’s Boaz Weinstein sounded the alarm about private credit. Now it’s UBS Group. A few weeks ago, analysts at the bank laid out a worst-case scenario for defaults in the private credit sector. Their outlook just became more grim.

UBS strategists said private credit could see default rates surge as high as 15%—two percentage points more than the firm forecast less than a month ago—if AI triggers an “aggressive” disruption among corporate borrowers.

Direct lenders that took a lead role in financing software companies in recent years now look dangerously exposed to AI’s impact, stirring comparisons to the 2008 financial crisis. “What is new: a clearer catalyst,” the UBS strategists said. “Rapid, severe AI disruption.”

Wall Street Turns Its Fearful Gaze to Private Credit: Evening Briefing Americas - Bloomberg

Private Credit Fears Deepen With UBS Warning of 15% Defaults

This content was published on February 25, 2026 - 13:10

(Bloomberg) — A few weeks ago, analysts at UBS Group AG laid out a worst-case scenario for defaults in the private credit sector. Their outlook just became more grim.

Strategists including Matthew Mish say private credit could see default rates surge as high as 15%, two percentage points more than the firm forecast less than a month ago, if artificial intelligence triggers an “aggressive” disruption among corporate borrowers.

“What is new: a clearer catalyst — rapid, severe AI disruption,” according to the UBS strategists Tuesday.

Direct lenders that took a lead role in financing software companies in recent years now look dangerously exposed to AI’s impact, stirring comparisons to the 2008 financial crisis. Some estimates suggest that the firms have 40% of all sponsor-backed loans tied up in the software industry.

Warnings about the $1.8 trillion industry have been building in recent days, triggered by Blue Owl Capital Inc.’s decision to permanently shut the gates on one of its funds and to sell assets. The move sparked a $2.4 billion drop in its market value, and dragged down the shares of other private credit players including Ares Management Corp., Blackstone Inc. and Apollo Global Management Inc.

The UBS report published Tuesday noted that private credit defaults are currently between 3% and 5% and that signs of strain such as interest paid-in-kind (PIK) are nearing post-pandemic highs.

Speaking at the iConnections Global Alts conference in Miami Beach, activist investor Boaz Weinstein — whose Saba Capital is seeking to snap up stakes in three Blue Owl Capital funds at a steep discount to their stated value — warned of the “wheels coming off” in private credit.

More

Private Credit Fears Deepen With UBS Warning of 15% Defaults - SWI swissinfo.ch

In other news, resource nationalism arrives.

Governments are rushing to hoard critical minerals as the ‘resource nationalism’ era arrives

Published Tue, Feb 24 2026 6:00 PM EST

A new race to secure critical minerals is unfolding across the global economy.

From Washington’s proposed $12 billion Project Vault stockpile to expanding buffers in Asia and the European Union, governments are moving to secure access to metals increasingly viewed as essential to national security and industrial policy.

“In metals and minerals is where the newest wave of stockpiling is most visible,” said Patrick Schröder, senior research fellow at Chatham House. Governments are seeking to reduce exposure to concentrated supply chains and export controls, he said.

In the U.S., officials recently outlined a roughly $12 billion strategic mineral reserve dubbed Project Vault. The initiative aims to bolster supply-chain resilience for American industry by building stockpiles of rare earths and other essential metals for electrification, defense and advanced manufacturing.

Project Vault complements other initiatives such as the “Forum on Resource Geostrategic Engagement (FORGE),” a partnership to coordinate critical mineral policy pricing and projects, as well as Pax Silica, which centers on safeguarding the AI-related supply chain.

Australia in January announced plans to formalize a state-backed stockpiling strategy through an $800 million strategic critical minerals reserve, prioritizing antimony, gallium and rare earth elements.

The European Union is also advancing plans to build a joint reserve of critical raw materials under its RESourceEU strategy. Italy, France and Germany are expected to lead the effort, Reuters reported earlier this month, citing sources familiar with the matter.

As recently as last weekend, India and Brazil agreed to deepen cooperation on critical minerals and rare earths, as New Delhi seeks to diversify supply sources and reduce reliance on China. The pact is aimed at strengthening bilateral trade and building more resilient supply chains for materials critical to clean energy, technology and defense industries.

South Korea earlier this year rolled out a comprehensive critical minerals strategy backed by about $172 million in state support. Under this strategy, the government plans to expand stockpile volumes and infrastructure.

“We certainly see a shift to a more resource nationalist mindset amongst many countries,” said Schröder. “At this point, it’s a slippery slope and strategic stockpiling could become hoarding when measures become coercive, lack transparency and become weaponized.”

‘Resource nationalism’ in the works?

The strategic pivot marks what several analysts describe as a structural shift in commodity policy.

“Metal supply chains are fragile,” said Ewa Manthey at ING, pointing to years of underinvestment, long timelines for permits, and geographic concentration. In earlier cycles, high prices typically spurred faster mine supply and reduced the need for strategic inventories, she said.

“Today, even with high prices, new supply is slow and uncertain, so inventories themselves are becoming part of the supply strategy,” Manthey added, characterizing the move to harbor clearly “nationalist elements.”

----Historically, stockpiles were largely emergency buffers against temporary disruptions or price spikes, said industry watchers. Today’s initiatives are more explicitly driven by a need to buffer against geopolitical factors, Schröder said, reflecting a broader shift in how resource security is framed as industrial strategy and national security, rather than just crisis management.

“This commodities stock building cycle is different from past episodes,” Anushree Ganeriwala, global analyst at the Economist Intelligence Unit, said.

“Previous commodity cycles were largely driven by traditional supply-demand imbalances or weather shocks. What is different now is that policy and geopolitical risks are shaping market outcomes directly.”

Goldman Sachs in February characterized the recent surge in commodity demand for gold and industrial metals as “insurance-type demand.”

“We are still in the early stages of it,” Scott-Gray said. “Governments now treat supply chains as national security infrastructure, not purely commercial flows.”

Governments are rushing to hoard metals in 'resource nationalism' era

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.

2,000 jobs axed as Aussie tech billionaire's company announces 'AI transformation'

25 February 2026

WiseTech Global is set to sack almost one third of its workforce as its chief executive claims the 'era of manually writing code as the core act of engineering is over'.

WiseTech CEO Zubin Appoo revealed on Wednesday an 'AI transformation program' would result in about 2,000 jobs getting the axe this year.

Mr Appoo said it would be a 'phased headcount reduction, initially in product and development and customer service, by up to 50 per cent'.

He claimed the AI program would make the company more efficient. 

'We recognise this will be difficult for our people. We're communicating these planned changes to our team following announcement to the market in line with our disclosure obligations,' he said. 

'This decision was not taken lightly, but it is necessary to ensure we remain disciplined, nimble, competitive and future ready.'

The redundancies are believed to be scheduled for this financial year and into next. 

----The logistics software developer, worth around $14.45 billion, employs around 7,000 people.

It comes as the Commonwealth Bank also announced this week their plan to lay off 300 Australian, despite recording a $5 billion profit just weeks ago.

The Finance Sector Union said the decision will affect teams across retail, business and institutional banking, and human resources, with the majority of roles impacted in technology.

'A recent survey of CBA workers found job security is a major concern for 72 per cent of staff,' the Finance Sector Union said in a statement.

More

2,000 jobs axed as Aussie tech billionaire's company announces 'AI transformation'

Jamie Dimon says AI is already reshaping JPMorgan Chase’s workforce as bank plans ‘huge redeployment’

Published Tue, Feb 24 2026 3:00 PM EST Updated Tue, Feb 24 2026 4:33 PM EST

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said the bank is taking steps to address the impact of artificial intelligence on its workers, and part of what he said should be a broader societal response to the potentially disruptive nature of AI.

Dimon described at an investor meeting late Monday his bank’s internal plans to shift employees into new roles as automation accelerates.

“We already have huge redeployment plans for [our] own people,” Dimon said. “In fact, we spoke about it today, and we have to up that a little bit so we can take people who are displaced — and we have displaced people from AI — and we offer them other jobs.”

JPMorgan, the world’s biggest bank by market cap, has the industry’s largest annual tech budget at nearly $20 billion. Its executives have outlined an ambitious agenda to become “fundamentally rewired” for the AI era.

Even at this early stage, the bank’s workforce provides a snapshot of what happens when corporations employ AI technology, including models from OpenAI and Anthropic, which are both used by JPMorgan’s AI portal.

The bank’s head count was roughly unchanged at 318,512 over the past year, but there were changes below the surface: Operations and support staff fell by 4% and 2%, respectively, as the firm added 4% to roles that involve catering to clients and generating revenue.

It did that by using technology to boost the number of accounts that each operations employee can handle (up 6%), reducing the per-unit cost to deal with fraud (down 11%) and making their software engineers 10% more efficient, according to the bank’s presentation.  

JPMorgan has doubled the use cases for generative AI this year, focusing on customer service and the firm’s technology workers, Chief Financial Officer Jeremy Barnum said at the investor meeting.

A JPMorgan spokeswoman declined to elaborate on Dimon’s comments about plans for redeployment.

Disruption risk

When an analyst on Monday asked if Dimon was concerned about the risk of widespread unemployment because of AI — one of several fears circulating as every AI model update seemed to wallop the shares of public companies in recent weeks — Dimon had this response: “We are going to deploy AI as best we can to do a better job for our customers.”

The CEO has previously likened the potential impact of AI to that of electricity or the printing press.

Beyond the “huge redeployment plans” for his bank, Dimon expressed concern that the rapid adoption of AI could put entire professions out of work.

As a thought experiment, what if autonomous trucks were introduced overnight, he asked.

“Would you do it if you put 2 million people on the street?” Dimon asked. “That next job is $25,000 a year, stocking shelves.”

Businesses and governments need to begin planning for this risk now, with ideas including assistance and training for displaced workers, he said.

“Society’s got to think through what it wants to do if this becomes that kind of problem,” Dimon said. “Now is the time to start thinking about it.”

JPM CEO Jamie Dimon says AI is reshaping workforce, bank plans 'huge redeployment’

Canada's housing market suffers largest price decline among major economies, says BIS

House prices, adjusted for inflation, fell 5% in the third quarter from a year earlier

Published Feb 24, 2026

Canada’s residential housing market has experienced the largest decline in housing prices among similar advanced economies, according to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS).

House prices in Canada, adjusted for inflation, fell five per cent in the third quarter from a year earlier, said a new report from BIS, which is the bank for 63 global central banks.

China also experienced a five per cent decline, while prices in Finland fell four per cent. Other countries that experienced residential price declines include New Zealand, Israel, Romania, Austria and Hong Kong.

Overall, inflation-adjusted prices were “stable” in advanced economies (AEs), BIS said, adding that a few major economies drove “the global decline in real house prices in aggregate terms. In fact, most AEs and emerging market economies recorded price growth,” it said in a release.

Looking past the quarterly data, home prices in Canada plummeted 18 per cent in nominal or actual money terms from the first quarter of 2022 to the third quarter of 2025, outpacing a 17.8 per cent decline in China during the same period, BIS data showed. South Korea had the third-largest decline at 6.8 per cent, followed by a 6.2 per cent decline in Germany and a six per cent decline in Sweden.

Home prices in the United States and the United Kingdom rose 12.3 per cent and 8.9 per cent respectively.

More

Canada's housing market suffers largest price decline | Financial Post

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.

Advanced Battery Power 2026: International Experts Meet in Münster to Shape the Future of Battery Technologies

The international conference Advanced Battery Power 2026, taking place from April 14 to 16, 2026, will once again bring together leading experts from academia, industry, and applied research to discuss current developments and future directions in advanced battery technologies. 80 presentations, 250 posters, and 40 exhibitors are planned.

February 24, 2026

As one of Europe’s established specialist conferences in the field of electrochemical energy storage, Advanced Battery Power focuses on the entire battery value chain, ranging from materials research and cell chemistry to battery system design, production processes, applications, and recycling concepts. The conference is held entirely in English and is aimed at a highly specialized professional audience. The conference will be chaired by Prof. Martin Winter from the University of Münster and Prof. Dirk Uwe Sauer from RWTH Aachen University, both of whom are renowned battery experts. Professional.

The three-day program features international keynote speakers, peer-reviewed scientific and technical presentations, and poster sessions highlighting cutting-edge research and industrial innovation. Core topics include, among others, next-generation battery materials, lithium-ion and post-lithium technologies, solid-state batteries, cell and module design, performance and lifetime optimization, safety, sustainability, and circular economy approaches.

The conference will start on April 14, 2026, at 1:00 p.m. and conclude on April 16, 2026, at 3:00 p.m. To complement the on-site event, technical online seminars will be offered on April 13, 2026, providing in-depth insights into selected focus topics.

Running in parallel on April 15–16, 2026, the Vehicle-to-Grid Conference will address the interaction between battery systems, electric mobility, and energy infrastructure. In addition, the accompanying exhibition “Kraftwerk Batterie” offers companies, research institutes, and start-ups a platform to present new technologies, products, and services, fostering direct exchange between developers, manufacturers, and users.

A key networking highlight is the conference evening on April 15, 2026, held at the Jovel Music Hall in Münster, including the presentation of the Best Poster Awards.

Advanced Battery Power 2026 is targeted at battery researchers, engineers, system developers, production specialists, and decision-makers from industry and research institutions who are actively shaping the future of energy storage technologies. Further details on the program, speakers, and registration are available at www.battery-power.eu.

Advanced Battery Power 2026: International Experts Meet in Münster to Shape the Future of Battery Technologies – pv magazine International

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)

I see a great future for gold and silver coins as the currency people may increasingly turn to when paper currencies begin to disintegrate.

Murray Rothbard