Thursday, 28 May 2026

Trump Stuck Over A Crude Oil Barrel? PCE Day.

Baltic Dry Index. 3124 +39     Brent Crude 97.93

Spot Gold 4374                          Spot Silver 72.10

US 2 Year Yield 4.00 -0.01

US Federal Debt. 39.278 trillion

US GDP 32.159 trillion.

In reality there is no such thing as an inflation of prices, relatively to gold. There is such a thing as a depreciated paper currency.

Lysander Spooner

It is day 90 of Trump’s six day war on the global economy and there’s no sign of it ending soon or well for any of the G-7 economies.

With the Gulf of Hormuz still mostly closed and Iran’s oil now blocked from reaching the global economy by Trump’s blockade on Iran’s ports and shipping, the US and global economy are now trading into a new global stagflation.

With no end in sight, at least no win in sight for team Trump worth the increasing cost of the unnecessary optional war, only a bad ending for the global economy and most consumers now lies ahead.

With each passing day we are one day closer to an economic disaster. Keep watching closely the global inventory of diesel fuel.

When lack of supply forces high price rationing, very bad things start happening fast in farming, goods distribution, and commerce in general. My guess and it’s only a guess, is that we are less than thirty days out from a US and European diesel crisis.

Asia-Pacific markets open lower as Iran-U.S. negotiations remain in focus

Published Wed, May 27 2026 7:53 PM ED

Asia-Pacific markets opened lower Thursday as investors continue to assess mixed signals from the ongoing Iran-U.S. negotiations amid a fragile ceasefire.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that talks with Iran have made some progress and that “we’re going to give it every chance to succeed,” adding that the U.S. prefers “the negotiated diplomatic route.” That said, President Donald Trump has said that he will not permit Iran to control the key Strait of Hormuz as part of a deal.

While a Reuters report said that Tehran had committed to restoring commercial traffic through Hormuz to prewar levels within one month of an agreement with the U.S., citing Iranian state media, the White House said in a social media post that the report about a memorandum of understanding was “a complete fabrication.”

Meanwhile, U.S. forces launched fresh strikes in Iran, according to MS Now. These actions were “measured, purely defensive, and intended to maintain the ceasefire,” the official said in the statement, a U.S. official told MS NOW.

West Texas Intermediate futures for July were 1.66% higher at $90.15 per barrel as of 9:26 p.m. ET. Brent crude futures for July rose 2.03% to $96.20 per barrel.

South Korea’s Kospi was lower by 0.36%, while the small-cap Kosdaq extended early losses, falling 2.61%.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 was marginally lower, while the Topix declined 0.23%. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 was 0.79% lower.

China’s CSI 300 slipped 0.38%, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng dropped 0.69%.

S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures both rose less than 0.1%. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 49 points, or 0.1%.

During Wednesday’s regular session, the S&P 500 ticked 0.02% higher to 7,520.36, another closing record. The 30-stock Dow gained 182.60 points, or 0.36%, for a record close of 50,644.28. The Nasdaq Composite edged up 0.07% to end at 26,674.73.

Asia markets today: ASX, Kospi, Nikkei, Sensex, Hang Seng, CSI, Iran

S&P 500 futures are little changed as Wall Street awaits key April inflation reading: Live updates

Updated Thu, May 28 2026 10:13 PM EDT

S&P 500 futures were little changed on Wednesday night as traders looked ahead to the release of a key inflation reading.

Futures linked to the broad market index were marginally lower, while Nasdaq 100 futures lost about 0.2%. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 16 points.

Overnight West Texas Intermediate crude oil futures rose 2% to top $90 a barrel. The action came after Reuters reported, citing a U.S. official, that the U.S. military conducted new strikes in Iran, targeting a military site.

Shares of Snowflake soared 36% in Wednesday’s extended trading session after the cloud-based data platform provider inked a plan to spend $6 billion on Amazon Web Services over five years. The company also reported a first-quarter earnings and revenue beat.

The moves came after a decline in oil prices pushed the blue-chip Dow to a new intraday and closing record on Wednesday. The 30-stock index popped 182.60 points, or 0.36%. The S&P 500 eked out a gain of 0.02%, also notching a record close, while the Nasdaq Composite inched 0.07% higher.

Crude oil prices fell in Wednesday’s regular session after Secretary of State Marco Rubio said during a White House Cabinet meeting that talks with Iran have made some progress, adding that the administration prefers “the negotiated diplomatic route and we’re going to give it every chance to succeed.” However, President Donald Trump said that he will not allow Iran to control the key Strait of Hormuz as part of a deal.

These comments came after Iranian state television had earlier said that Tehran is committed to restoring commercial traffic through the Strait of Hormuz back to prewar levels within one month of an agreement with the U.S., Reuters reported. The White House denied the report about a memorandum of understanding as “a complete fabrication.”

Investors are awaiting the release of April’s personal consumption expenditure price index reading, due out at 8:30 a.m. ET on Thursday. The index, which is the Federal Reserve’s preferred gauge of inflation, is especially important now that Kevin Warsh has taken the helm as Fed chair.

Economists polled by Dow Jones expect a month-over-month increase of 0.5% and year-over-year rise of 3.8%. Excluding volatile food and energy prices, they anticipate gains of 0.3% and 3.3%, respectively.

A rally in the technology sector has been to thank for the move higher this year into new records for the stock market. But Adam Crisafulli, founder and president of Vital Knowledge, believes that investors should begin broadening their trades into the rest of the market.

“I definitely think that tech, at this point, is very, very stretched on the upside. You’ve had a bunch of bell-ringing events, whether it’s some of these IPOs that have been launching or about to launch; trillion-dollar market-cap club,” he said on CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime” on Wednesday afternoon. “So I think rotation is going to be kind of the game plan for the rest of the summer.”

Royal Bank of CanadaDollar TreeHormel FoodsBurlington Stores and Kohl’s will report earnings before Thursday’s opening bell. Traders will also watch out for other economic data releases like weekly jobless claims, April’s new home sales, personal income and preliminary durable goods orders reports.

Stock market today: Live updates

Piper Sandler says Strait of Hormuz to remain closed for months and oil to hit new highs

Published Tue, May 26 2026 3:43 PM EDT

Piper Sandler isn’t buying the talk that an Iran deal is nearing, telling clients that the Strait of Hormuz will largely stay closed and oil will hit new highs.

“We think the Strait of Hormuz remains largely closed for months yet, meaning shortages become more urgent and oil hits new highs this Summer,” according to a recent note from the investment bank’s energy and macro teams.

West Texas Intermediate Futures are down since Friday but bounced back some on Tuesday with mixed messaging on a possible Iran deal over the long weekend. The U.S. military said it conducted “self-defense strikes” in southern Iran, which included targeting Iranian missile launch sites and vessels placing mines around the Strait of Hormuz. The news came after President Donald Trump said Saturday that an agreement with Iran has been “largely negotiated”, with details to be announced shortly. Meanwhile, Iran’s foreign ministry has said navigation through the vital shipping channel “will have costs.”

Piper Sandler said it has very little confidence that the commercial traffic through the Strait would return to even 50% of its pre-crisis levels, either next week or next month.

The U.S. has been “unwilling to press the fight” because the scale of Iran’s retaliation could have broader implications for its neighbors and may further disrupt global supply chains, the note said.

The bank also argued that Iran’s leaders are unwilling to settle for any compromise because they believe they have leverage, reinforcing concerns that the Strait closure could extend for months.

Various economies in the Middle East, Asia and Europe rely heavily on shipment through the Strait, which is particularly important for oil and LNG exports from the Middle East to Asia. The narrow passage that once carried about one-fifth of the world’s seaborne oil has seen historic dips, with tracking data showing vessel traffic falling sharply to near zero since the war escalated.

WTI crude futures neared $120 a barrel during the onset of the conflict, but were last trading around $94 a barrel. If Piper Sandler’s call for a new high comes true, it would send quite a jolt to the global economy and undermine the stock market comeback that has come as oil traded off that war-time high.

Piper Sandler says Strait of Hormuz to remain closed for months and oil to hit new highs

In other news.

U.S. Natural Gas Prices Surge On Lower Output, Higher LNG Flows

By Alex Kimani - May 26, 2026, 2:30 PM CDT

U.S. natural gas prices surged on Tuesday, with a combination of declining domestic output and an improving demand outlook helping the gas market break past prior downward pressure from seasonal maintenance. Henry Hub, the primary benchmark price for the North American natural gas market, spot gas prices jumped 5.1% to trade at 3.06/MMBtu in Tuesday’s mid-day session, with gas prices now trading nearly 16% higher over the past month.

Average gas output in the U.S. Lower 48 states slipped to 109.2 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd), with energy firms dialing back production following a prolonged period of low spot prices. Daily production fell by roughly 4.0 bcfd to a 15-week low of 106.1 bcfd, primarily led by declines in Pennsylvania and Arkansas. Meanwhile, feedgas flows to liquefied natural gas (LNG) facilities have begun recovering after spring maintenance at major facilities like Freeport LNG and Golden Pass initially restricted flows to 17.0 bcfd earlier in the month. Total LNG export demand clocked in at roughly 3.0 bcfd higher year-over-year over the past 30 days, with projections that total feedgas flows will climb steadily through the summer and potentially reach up to 22 bcfd by year-end. Additionally, the early arrival of cooling degree days (CDDs) across the East and South East has boosted cooling demand at a time when the Middle East has restricted competing global LNG flows. This has added a structural risk premium to U.S. contracts as European and Asian buyers aggressively bid for American cargoes.

More

U.S. Natural Gas Prices Surge On Lower Output, Higher LNG Flows | OilPrice.com

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

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

As goes America, so goes the world?

Energy inflation has been more persistent than expected: Fed’s Goolsbee

Published Wed, May 27 2026 10:04 PM EDT

Energy inflation tied to the war in Iran has lasted longer than expected, creating a “stagflationary shock” for Asian economies, Chicago Federal Reserve President Austan Goolsbee said Thursday.

Speaking to CNBC’s Kaori Enjoji at the Bank of Japan-IMES Conference, Goolsbee said that initial estimates in the futures markets had expected energy prices to be “a lot lower” than current levels.

While oil prices have eased recently on signs of progress in U.S.-Iran peace talks, prices remain well above levels seen before the war.

Brent crude futures, the international benchmark, gained over 1.81% to $96 per barrel, while the West Texas Intermediate futures gained 1.71% to $90.21 per barrel.

That compares with $72 price for Brent, and $67.02 for WTI the day before the U.S. and Israel launched strikes on Iran.

Goolsbee also sounded a warning for Asian economies, saying that, because they are energy importers, “it’s more just a stagflationary shock of the old-fashioned variety.”

The Chicago Fed President, who voted against the Federal Reserve’s final rate cut in 2025, said he dissented because he wanted evidence that inflation would not be persistent.

“I don’t regret dissenting at that meeting, because the inflation has not proved as temporary as was advertised at the beginning,” he added.

Still, Goolsbee said that if inflation starts moving back toward the Fed’s 2% target, interest rates would “ultimately settle at some place well below where they are today.”

AI ‘overheating’ the economy

Asked about the possibility that artificial intelligence could boost productivity, Goolsbee said he was concerned financial markets may run ahead of the actual economic benefits from AI adoption.

“My concern is that future increases in productivity that make us rich may fuel high equity prices that they are a increase in your wealth today, to know that you’re going to be rich sometime in the future,” Goolsbee said.

“That can encourage people to spend out of this wealth in the stock market or others, and before the AI has actually increased the productivity, you can overheat the economy in the near term.”

Goolsbee said policymakers should watch for signs that stock market gains linked to AI are spilling into broader inflation pressures.

More

Energy inflation has been more persistent than expected: Fed's Goolsbee

Americans Are About to Pay Even More at the Grocery Store

Wed, May 27, 2026 at 3:30 PM GMT+1

(Bloomberg) -- As Americans confront a surge in prices at the pump, another inflation wave is headed for the grocery store.

A combination of factors including bad weather, tariffs and a dwindling cattle herd are already pushing up grocery prices at an above-average pace. In April, they rose by the most in nearly four years, and economists say the impact of the Iran war and a potential El NiƱo weather pattern will only add to pressures into 2027.

The hit to US household finances from higher grocery bills is set to intensify just ahead of the November midterm elections, amplifying affordability as a defining issue. And to a greater extent than the surge in gas prices, the slower-moving food shock will be difficult to reverse quickly because the size of autumn harvests is determined by planting decisions made in the spring.

“It’s going to be a challenging year,” said Ricky Volpe, an agribusiness professor at California Polytechnic State University who previously worked at the US Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Service. “Food is going to become less affordable, and consumers should be prepared for it.”

The latest USDA food price outlook, published Friday, projected a 3.2% advance in grocery prices this year, while Volpe said he expects inflation more on the order of 4% to 4.5%.

James Giese of Madison, Wisconsin said he lives on his own but is making adjustments with rising grocery prices like cutting back on prepared foods and meat. Giese, 62, is even trying to grow potatoes in his backyard to supplement his food budget.

“I’m very concerned,” he said. “I’m probably considered middle-income, but it’s starting to pinch.”

Outsize price increases so far in 2026 have reflected a mix of bad luck, trade policy and slower-moving pressures linked to climate change. The weather in particular has not been kind to American farmers, who have endured outbursts of record-breaking heat, historic cold, ping-pong size hail and wildfires.

The US saw its warmest-ever start to the year, with temperatures running about 6F (3C) above average through the end of April, according to the National Centers for Environmental Information. The early heat prompted some domestic crops to begin blossoming weeks ahead of schedule instead of remaining dormant throughout the winter, leaving them exposed to subsequent frosts, according to Brad Rippey, a USDA meteorologist.

Beef prices, among the most politically sensitive in the US, rose to a record in April thanks to the smallest cattle herd in 75 years, squeezed by drought and high production costs.

Tomato prices, meanwhile, surged 33% over the last two months after two winter storms brought widespread damage during the peak of the growing season in Florida — while shipments from Mexico were declining following the Trump administration’s imposition of duties on imports.

More

Americans Are About to Pay Even More at the Grocery Store

Mortgage refinance demand drops 18% as rates hit highest level since August

Published Wed, May 27 2026 7:00 AM EDT

Mortgage rates continued their climb last week, making it harder for current homeowners to save on a refinance. Potential homebuyers also pulled back a bit, causing total mortgage application volume to drop 8.5% last week compared with the previous week, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s seasonally adjusted index.

The average contract interest rate for 30-year fixed-rate mortgages with conforming loan balances, $832,750 or less, increased to 6.65% from 6.56%, with points rising to 0.65 from 0.60, including the origination fee, for loans with a 20% down payment. The 30-year fixed rate has climbed 30 basis points over the past five weeks to its highest level since August 2025.

Refinance demand took the hardest hit, with those applications down 18% for the week. They were still 19% higher than the same week one year ago. Last year at this time the 30-year fixed rate was 33 basis points higher.

“There were large declines in applications across loan types – conventional refinances were down 14 percent, along with an 18 percent decrease for FHA applications and a 34 percent decrease for VA applications. Overall, refinance applications accounted for 38 percent of applications, the lowest share since June 2025,” said Joel Kan, vice president and deputy chief economist at the MBA, in a release.

Applications for a mortgage to purchase a home fell 0.4% for the week and were just 5% higher than the same week one year ago.

“The average loan size for a purchase application reached another survey high at $473,600, as borrowers with smaller loan sizes were less active given the higher rate environment and its negative impact on their purchasing power,” Kan added.

Mortgage rates moved very slightly lower to start this week, according to a separate survey from Mortgage News Daily. Investors saw a potential de-escalation in the war with Iran, which caused bond yields to drop and mortgage rates to follow.

Mortgage refinance demand drops 18%

A new stagflation scare? Global economy hits a wall as war, oil and inflation collide again

S&P Global flash PMI surveys show Europe slipping into decline, US growth slowing and inflation pressures intensifying as the West Asia conflict disrupts global business activity.

MAY 25, 2026 / 13:38 IST

Global business growth grinds to a halt in May as the conflict in West Asia exerted a growing toll on major economies, according to Flash PMI surveys from S&P Global.

The report mentioned that Europe is faced with the most severe impact, with the economies of both the United Kingdom and the eurozone slipping into decline, while expansions in the United States and Japan shifted into lower gears.

The report noted that major economies faced stagflationary conditions, creating a significant challenge for central bank policymakers.

"Services have generally reported the worst deterioration in demand, whereas manufacturers have continued to benefit in May from stockpiling....Manufacturing input price inflation accelerated sharply among the major economies to reach a four-year high, with energy prices also pushing up service inflation," the report said.

The report highlighted that inflation updates for many of the world's largest economies will be in the spotlight in the coming week as policymakers and markets assess the likely next moves in interest rates.

After the US consumer price index showed the annual rate of inflation rising to 3.8 per cent in April, its highest since May 2023, the coming week's updated core PCE inflation measure, which is widely touted as the Fed's preferred gauge, will be eagerly awaited.

"Kevin Warsh has taken over as Chair of the US Fed's rate setting committee as inflation indicators are flashing red," the report added.

As per S&P Global, the CPI index previously rose at a 3.2 per cent annual rate in March, up 0.3 per cent from the prior month. The report observed that any large uplift would add to market speculation that rates remained on hold for the rest of the year, or that the next move could even be a hike.

"S&P Global's flash US PMI survey hinted at yet another rise in price pressure in May as the war triggered more cost growth among businesses," the report stated.

More

A new stagflation scare? Global economy hits a wall as war, oil and inflation collide again

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.

Adani Green commissions largest battery storage system outside China with 3.37 GWh capacity

Adani Green Energy has commissioned a 3.37 GWh battery energy storage system at Khavda, Gujarat, marking the world’s largest single-location BESS deployment outside China. The company plans to scale storage capacity to 50 GWh over the next five years.

May 26, 2026 18:54 IST

Adani Green Energy Ltd (AGEL), on Tuesday said it has commissioned a 3.37 Gigawatt-hour (GWh) battery energy Storage system (BESS), which it said is the world’s largest single-location battery storage deployment outside China and among the fastest executed globally.

The deployment includes the 1.37 GWh capacity commissioned in March 2026, taking AGEL’s total operational BESS capacity at Khavda, Gujarat to 3.37 GWh. The project was delivered within just 10 months of commencement of on-site construction, marking one of the fastest utility-scale battery storage deployments globally.

The commissioning marks a major milestone in strengthening grid reliability, peak-hour supply and enabling renewable energy to deliver dependable, round-the-clock power at scale. AGEL plans to add over 10 GWh of battery storage capacity in FY27 and scale this to 50 GWh over the next five years.

AGEL’s 3.37 GWh BESS can store enough clean energy to power nearly one million homes for an entire day, supporting peak electricity demand of cities like Indore, Chandigarh or the entire state of Goa. It can also power more than 12 million LED bulbs continuously for ten hours. 

Sagar Adani, Executive Director, AGEL, said, “Large-scale energy storage will play a defining role in the next phase of India’s clean energy transition. As renewable energy capacity scales rapidly, storage infrastructure becomes critical for delivering reliable, round-the-clock clean power.

Our investments in battery storage reflect a long-term commitment to building future-ready clean energy infrastructure at global scale.”

Adani Green commissions largest battery storage system outside China with 3.37 GWh capacity - Industry News | The Financial Express

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)    

Depressions and mass unemployment are not caused by the free market but by government interference in the economy.

Ludwig von Mises


Wednesday, 27 May 2026

Stocks, More Disconnect! Coming Soon “A Tokenized US Fiat Dollar.”

Baltic Dry Index. 3085 +94     Brent Crude 97.94

Spot Gold 4504                          Spot Silver 76.88

US 2 Year Yield 4.01 -0.12

US Federal Debt. 39.293 trillion

US GDP 32.156 trillion.

Republican’s are good for depressions, Democrats are good for wars.

Wall Street saying circa 1976, but perhaps it’s changed in 2026.

With global supply chain disruption everywhere, Trump’s six day war entering day 88, oil inventories, jet fuel and diesel inventories all rapidly nearing day to day supply disruption, the global stock casinos bubble on like nothing happened.

Supply disruption? Who needs supplies? War? What war? Drought in the USA and much of Europe, food price inflation? Let them eat cake!

And so the great delusional disconnect from reality goes on in the GREAT AI MANIA in the stock casinos.

Of course, manias, like debt, don’t matter until one day, out of the blue it does.

Dinosaur Graeme thinks that day may be close, possibly on or near July 4th, America’s 250th founding anniversary.

Japan, South Korea stocks hit fresh records as markets weigh Iran tensions and ceasefire talks

Published Tue, May 26 2026 7:47 PM EDT

Asia-Pacific markets rose on Wednesday, with Japan and South Korea’s benchmark indices hitting new highs as investors assessed recent U.S. military action in Iran, the fragile state of the Washington-Tehran ceasefire and optimism that a deal could still be reached.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose 1.49% to a fresh record, while the Topix added 0.57%.

South Korea’s Kospi jumped 4.84%, while the small-cap Kosdaq declined 0.68%. Shares of Samsung Electronics rose 6% after unionized workers at the company in South Korea approved a provisional wage agreement, averting a potential strike that could have disrupted global semiconductor supply chains.

In Australia, the S&P/ASX 200 was up 0.13%.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index was flat, while the mainland CSI 300 was up 0.27%.

U.S. forces carried out what the Pentagon described as “self-defense” strikes in southern Iran early Tuesday, targeting missile launch sites and Iranian vessels allegedly attempting to deploy mines, even as Washington insisted it was still observing restraint under the ongoing ceasefire framework.

The military action highlighted the fragile truce between Washington and Tehran, with both sides continuing to test limits despite negotiations that the White House has described as nearing completion.

President Donald Trump said Monday that talks with Iran to end the war were “proceeding nicely.” That said, he did warn the U.S. could go on the offensive if negotiations break down.

Overnight on Wall Street, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite rose to fresh intraday all-time highs on Tuesday, led by technology, as traders weighed the developments in the Middle East.

The broad market S&P 500 gained 0.61% and ended at 7,519.12, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq gained 1.19% to 26,656.18. Both indexes also closed at records. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 118.02 points, or 0.23%, ending at 50,461.68. U.S. stock markets were closed Monday due to the Memorial Day holiday.

Asia markets: investors weigh fragile Iran ceasefire, possible U.S.-Iran deal

Stock futures are little changed after the S&P 500 closes at another record: Live updates

Updated Wed, May 27 2026 12:04 AM EDT

U.S. stock futures were little changed early Wednesday after a tech-drive rally lifted the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite to new records.

S&P 500 futures were marginally higher, while futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 40 points, or less than 0.1%. Nasdaq 100 futures were near the flatline.

Stocks making the biggest moves in Tuesday’s extended trading session included Zscaler, which tumbled 19% after guiding for current-quarter revenue below what analysts polled by LSEG were seeking. Meanwhile, shares of Insulet fell 8% after the diabetes management company announced a voluntary medical device correction for specific lots of several of its pods.

During the day’s regular session, a rally in the technology sector drove both the broad market index and tech-heavy Nasdaq to fresh intraday and closing highs. The S&P 500 added 0.61%, while the Nasdaq popped 1.19%. On the other hand, the blue-chip Dow shed 118.02 points, or 0.23%.

Tuesday’s gains were driven by shares of Micron Technology, which surged 19% to top $1 trillion in market capitalization for the first time. Investors were also encouraged by messages from President Donald Trump indicating that talks with Iran to end the war were “proceeding nicely.” While the U.S. conducted “self defense” strikes in southern Iran early Tuesday, Central Command spokesman Tim Hawkins said that the U.S. used “restraint during the ongoing ceasefire” between the two nations.

Hopes of easing tensions, alongside a strong earnings season, have propelled stocks to numerous new record highs this year. But Drew Pettit, U.S. equity strategist at Citi, doesn’t see much more room for stocks to run from here.

“You got yields higher, like 4.50% on the [U.S. 10-year Treasury] , and you have inflation expectations higher in a curve that’s actually gotten flatter throughout the year. All of that doesn’t set you up for a higher sustainable multiple at this point,” he said on CNBC’s “Power Lunch” on Tuesday afternoon.

Pettit’s 7,700 year-end target for the S&P 500 implies a modest increase of just 2% for the index.

Bank of MontrealBath & Body WorksCapriDick’s Sporting GoodsManchester United and Abercrombie & Fitch will report earnings before Wednesday’s opening bell.

Stock market today: Live updates

ECB ‘will do what is necessary’ to tame inflation, Bank of France governor tells CNBC

Published Tue, May 26 2026 9:53 AM EDT

The European Central Bank “will do what is necessary” to keep inflation on target, one of its top policymakers has told CNBC.

Speaking to CNBC’s Lisa Kim in Singapore on Tuesday, Bank of France Governor Francois Villeroy de Galhau sought to reassure sovereign debt markets that central bankers in Europe were committed to minimizing the impact of the Iran war.

Spiking oil prices, a result of the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, have fueled concerns that an energy crisis could lead to a resurgence of inflation in various markets.

Villeroy de Galhau, who is a member of the ECB’s Governing Council, added that European policymakers “will do what is necessary as an independent central bank to bring inflation back to target.”

“If I speak on behalf of the ECB, this means do what is necessary to bring inflation back to 2% in the medium term. Markets can be assured of that,” he told CNBC.

Eurozone inflation had dipped below the ECB’s target to 1.9% before the war in the Middle East began with joint U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran on Feb. 28. Inflation in the eurozone jumped to 3% in April, up from 2.6% in March.

Europe is particularly vulnerable to energy shocks as a major net energy importer. Prices of gasoline, diesel and jet fuel have surged in recent months, prompting government intervention in some countries and warnings of flight cancellations over the summer.

Villeroy de Galhau told CNBC that there was a fear of inflation permeating financial markets, which was particularly visible in government bonds.  

“The effect of the Middle East conflict is clear,” Villeroy de Galhau told CNBC. “In the short run, there are significant upward pressure first round effects due to energy prices, but it’s our responsibility, I would even say our commitment to prevent second round effects.”

More

ECB inflation outlook: Villeroy says bank ready to act

In other news.

Australian businesses under pressure as fuel shortages bite

Source: Xinhua| 2026-05-26 12:11:45

CANBERRA, May 26 (Xinhua) -- Australia's businesses are facing pressure from rising fuel costs and supply disruptions, with 72 percent reporting negative impacts, official data showed on Tuesday.

The data from the survey of business conditions and sentiments highlights the economic impacts of the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a key oil transit route, on Australian businesses, said Tom Lay, head of business statistics at the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

"Businesses across all industries were impacted by rising fuel costs from global volatility and ongoing supply chain disruptions," Lay said, adding one in six businesses reported supply chain interruptions, particularly in transport, logistics, agriculture and small businesses.

About 36 percent said revenue had dropped over the past four weeks, while 27 percent expect further declines in the coming month, said an ABS statement.

Half of businesses reported rising operating expenses, driven mainly by higher fuel, freight and delivery costs, the statement said.

About 60 percent of firms adjusted operations due to fuel costs or supply in May, it said, adding that nearly half absorbed costs, while others raised prices, delayed production, or added fuel surcharges.

About 28 percent of businesses made changes to their workforce, including cutting non-essential travel and reducing staff, the statistics showed.

Australian businesses under pressure as fuel shortages bite-Xinhua

China switched on the world’s largest offshore wind turbine and researchers are now watching for measurable local atmospheric effects, because at this scale the rotor is big enough to change turbulence and mixing, not just generate electricity

Published On: May 25, 2026 at 12:30 PM

China has switched on a 20-megawatt offshore wind turbine that’s being described as the largest of its kind, a headline-grabbing leap for renewable power and a clear signal that “bigger” is still the industry’s favorite direction of travel. But the more interesting twist is what came next.

Early reporting says researchers noticed unexpected shifts in the local microclimate around the installation, including changes in air currents and how temperatures are distributed nearby.

Can one machine really “touch” the weather around it? In a limited, local sense, yes, and that matters because offshore wind is moving from niche to mega-infrastructure.

As turbines scale up, the clean-energy benefits people see on an electric bill can arrive alongside new questions coastal planners and environmental scientists have to measure instead of guess.

A record breaker built for rough seas

The turbine highlighted in the briefing is located in waters near China’s Hainan province in the South China Sea, with reports describing a structure about 242 meters tall and blades around 128 meters long.

It’s also built to tolerate extreme conditions, including gusts up to 80 meters per second (roughly 178 miles per hour), which is the kind of number you associate with typhoon resilience, not everyday operations.

Industry reporting identifies the unit as Mingyang Smart Energy’s MySE18.X-20 MW, with flexible ratings up to 20 MW and rotor diameters reported in the 260 to 292-meter range.

That same reporting says that at an average wind speed of 8.5 m/s, annual generation could reach around 80 million kWh, with an emissions-offset estimate of 72,500 tons of CO2 and an electricity-equivalence claim of about 96,000 households.

Why a wind turbine can nudge local weather

A wind turbine works by pulling energy out of moving air, and that energy extraction creates turbulence and a downwind “wake.”

Offshore, that wake can persist longer than on land because the ocean surface is smoother, and a U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (BOEM) white paper summarizes research showing offshore wakes measured from zero to 43 miles, with modeling up to 62 miles when multiple turbines interact.

That does not mean offshore wind farms “heat the planet,” and BOEM stresses that wind-farm microclimate effects are better described as localized redistribution of temperature and humidity, not a net increase in heat or water vapor.

More

China switched on the world’s largest offshore wind turbine and researchers are now watching for measurable local atmospheric effects, because at this scale the rotor is big enough to change turbulence and mixing, not just generate electricity

The demand for money is regulated entirely by its value, and its value by its quantity.

David Ricardo

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

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

More funny money is coming as Uncle Scam gets ever more desperate to prop up the 39+ trillion of US official debt, heading to about 50 trillion of debt in about 2035.

The goal is to tokenize the U.S. dollar for 24/7 settlements so that it continues to hold its dominance in global trade.

Just wait until AI hackers get to the tokenized US fiat dollar, or even start to issue their own “tokenized US fiat dollars” probably starting next year.

China, Japan, UAE, India sell billions in US Treasuries

May 25, 2026

As per latest data from the Treasury International Capital (TIC) System, several countries sold billions of dollars worth of U.S. Treasuries in March 2026.

Japan and China led the exit, selling $47.7 billion and $41 billion worth of U.S. Treasuries in March.

Luxembourg (13.7 billion), Taiwan ($12.7 billion), Saudi Arabia ($10.8 billion), India ($7.6 billion), Canada ($6.9 billion) and the United Arab Emirates ($5.8 billion) were also among the major sellers.

However, some countries added to their U.S. Treasury holdings in March, such as the United Kingdom ($29.6 billion), the Cayman Islands ($16.4 billion), and Germany ($3.7 billion).

Overall, the U.S. Treasuries saw a sell-off of $138.4 billion in March 2026.

The development comes amidst the declining value of the U.S. dollar over the last few years.

The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY), which measures the value of the dollar against a basket of six major foreign currencies: Euro, yen, pound, Canadian dollar, Swedish krona, and Swiss franc, was as high as 113 points in October 2022.

But the index has continued to tank in the later years and stood at 99 points at the time of writing.

GENIUS Act aims to cement dollar's dominance

The U.S. government is well-aware of the challenge to the U.S. dollar's global dominance and is taking innovative steps to contain the damage.

One of these steps is the landmark legislation called the GENIUS Act that is aimed at global adoption of U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoins.

A stablecoin is a type of cryptocurrency designed to maintain a fixed value by pegging it to a real-world asset, most commonly the U.S. dollar. Unlike volatile assets like Bitcoin, 1 stablecoin holds the same value as that of $1.

It's no secret that the dollar still commands the global trade, whether it's commodities like oil or cross-border settlements like SWIFT. Even countries wanting to de-dollarize global trade are forced to settle their trades in the dollar because other alternatives are weaker and less liquid.

But while SWIFT settlements take a longer time and only work on weekdays, stablecoins make cross-border settlements faster and don't even sleep on weekends and public holidays.

In July 2025, President Donald Trump signed the GENIUS Act into law to regulate U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoins. The legislation mandates strict stablecoin reserve, transparency, and oversight requirements within a federal framework.

The goal is to tokenize the U.S. dollar for 24/7 settlements so that it continues to hold its dominance in global trade.

As per DeFiLlama, the total stablecoin market capitalization has surged from $260 billion in mid-July 2025—when Trump signed the legislation into law—to $322 billion at the time of writing.

In fact, popular stablecoin companies like Tether and Circle have become major holders of U.S. Treasuries.

Tether claimed to hold U.S. Treasury bills worth $122.32 billion as of Dec. 31, 2025, and Circle claimed to hold $20.9 billion in U.S. Treasury securities as of March 11, 2026, as per attestation reports.

China, Japan, UAE, India sell billions in US Treasuries

China industrial profits jump 24.7% in April, fastest gain in over two years despite headwinds

Published Tue, May 26 2026 9:51 PM EDT

BEIJING — China’s industrial profits surged by 24.7% in April from a year earlier, according to official data released Wednesday, despite broader signs of slowing economic momentum.

The increase marked the fastest growth since November 2023, according to financial data provider Wind Information, and accelerated from a 15.8% rise in March.

For the first four months of the year, industrial profits rose 18.2%, up from 15.5% growth in the first quarter. Computing and electronics equipment manufacturing, the largest sector by profit amount, saw earnings more than double from a year ago, although the pace slowed slightly in April from March on a year-to-date basis.

Among the ten largest sectors by profit, the oil and gas extraction industry posted an 8.1% rise in profits in the first four months of the year, reversing a 1.4% decline in the first quarter.

Higher crude prices helped lift profits in the petroleum processing industry to 40.42 billion yuan ($5.96 billion) in the January-April period, nearly double the 22.94 billion yuan recorded as of March.

Profits for automobile manufacturers fell 16.8% in the same period from a year earlier, improving from a 17.7% decline in the first quarter.

Beijing’s efforts to address excessive competition in the automobile and other sectors are starting to bear fruit, EU Chamber of Commerce of China President Jens Eskelund told reporters on Tuesday, citing a survey of members earlier in the year. But he cautioned it would take another year or two to confirm the trend.

A fivefold increase in profits in the mining and related sectors also boosted overall industrial profit growth, while iron smelting and rolling swung to a profit for the year as of April, compared with a loss in the first quarter.

However, profit declines in furniture manufacturing steepened to 54.4% for the first four months of the year, worse than the 44.9% recorded as of March.

“China’s industrial profit growth accelerated sharply in April, driven primarily by rising producer prices amid the global energy shock,” Hao Zhou, head of research and chief economist at Guotai Junan International.

“However, the improvement in profitability appears uneven and potentially fragile. Profit gains are concentrated in upstream and high-tech sectors, while many other industries continue to struggle,” he said in a note.

China reported slower economic growth in April, with a 4.1% increase in industrial output and a 0.2% rise in retail sales from a year ago. Fixed asset investment fell for the first four months of the year as the real estate drag steepened.

Exports remained strong, climbing 14.1% in April from a year ago in U.S. dollar terms. Imports surged by 25.3%, data released earlier in May showed.

The producer price index in April jumped 2.8% from a year ago, the most since July 2022.

China industrial profits jump 24.7% in April, fastest gain in over two years despite headwinds

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.

Well, if he says so, and have I got a bridge in Brooklyn to sell him.

Donald Trump says the US is developing medicine 'to bring people back to life'

The US President claims that the drug has been tested and shown promising results

22:57, Mon, May 25, 2026 Updated: 23:15, Mon, May 25, 2026

Donald Trump has claimed that the US are working on discovering a medicine that can bring people back to life.

The president made the shocking statement in a press conference from the Oval Office.

Trump stated that the drug has been tested and is showing positive results.

He said, "Without waiting many, many years, we know the drug works because we've taken people who were dead. We had a person given the last rights, gone.

"The kids are crying and everything, and given them this drug and the person became better.

"It works. You know, and some don't work, but you learn really fast. It's called the ultimate test."

However, the US president spared ant details, giving no clinical data or the specific name of the substance.

He linked the successes to the Right to Try Act, a policy that allows terminally ill patients to access experimental treatments.

The legislation was passed during his first administration.

Medical professionals and critics have unsurprisingly responded to the claims with significant scepticism.

It has been argued that this story has been exaggerated from severely ill patients, rather than clinically dead patients with professionals stating the drug simply does not exist.

There was also backlash from the medical world after the conference due to the promotion of 'fake drugs'.

The announcement comes as the US administration is making a shift in public health funding, moving to cut programs for FDA-approved life-saving treatments like Narcan.

Medical experts also highlighted that federal support for proven death-preventing tools (such as fentanyl test strips) is being prohibited.

Outside of the medical world, Trump's claims received further criticism with his statements being compared to a movie plot.

Many shocked listeners understandably thought the unnamed drug in question must be fake.

Donald Trump says the US is developing medicine 'to bring people back to life' | US | News | Express.co.uk

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org) 

Oh, the grand old Duke of Trump,
He had ten thousand men;
He marched them up to the top of the hill,
And he marched them down again.

When they were up, they were up,
And when they were down, they were down,
And when they were only halfway up,
They were neither up nor down.

With apologies.