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


Wednesday, 25 February 2026

An AI Relief Rally Or Dead Cat Bounce? US Banking Risk?

Baltic Dry Index. 2129 +17     Brent Crude 71.26

Spot Gold  5221                          Spot Silver 91.91

US 2 Year Yield 3.43 unch.

US Federal Debt. 38.729 trillion US GDP 31.184 trillion.

If the natural tendencies of mankind are so bad that it is not safe to permit people to be free, how is it that the tendencies of these organizers are always good? Do not the legislators and their appointed agents also belong to the human race? Or do they believe that they themselves are made of a finer clay than the rest of mankind?

Frederic Bastiat

With President Trump’s State of the Union address well covered in mainstream media, my only comment this morning is that it sounded like a desperate party political attempt to demonise the Democrats ahead of the November mid-term elections. Only four of the nine Supremes bothered to attend.

In the stock casinos, the longest rambling State of the Union address is having little effect so far.

More private credit fears.

South Korea and Japan stocks hit fresh highs amid regional gains after Wall Street’s AI relief rally

Published Tue, Feb 24 2026 6:47 PM EST

South Korea and Japan stocks hit record highs Wednesday amid gains in the region, after a tech-driven rally on Wall Street that was fueled by easing concerns around artificial intelligence-led disruption to select industries.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 jumped over 1.4% to a fresh high, while the Topix added 0.3%.

Similarly, South Korea’s Kospi rose 1.72% to breach the 6,000 mark for the first time. Index heavyweights SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics rose 0.6% and 0.88%, respectively.

The small-cap Kosdaq added 0.16%.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 climbed 1.13%.

Hong Kong Hang Seng index rose 0.39%, while mainland’s CSI 300 added 0.49%.

Taiwan’s benchmark stock index rose 1.8% to a record high for the fifth straight session.

Bitcoin jumped about 2%, back to $65,000 levels after sliding below $63,000 briefly on Tuesday.

“The global economy appears to be on slightly firmer footing as the effects of fiscal and monetary policy continue to support activity. Financial markets, however, have struggled to establish a clear direction amid several headwinds,” BMI said in a report on Wednesday, in reference to the AI-driven whipsaws lately in addition to heightened geopolitical risks.

“We assign a 50% probability to a US-led military attack on Iran, which is contributing to an elevated risk premium in oil prices and, to some extent, US dollar strength,” BMI’s analysts said.

Investors are also assessing U.S. President Donald Trump’s State of the Union address.

“We are in negotiations with them. They want to make a deal, but we haven’t heard those secret words: we will never have a nuclear weapon. My preference is to solve this through diplomacy,” Trump said during the address.

The U.S. West Texas Intermediate ​crude futures were up 0.72% at $66.1 per barrel, while Brent Crude futures rose 0.73% to $71.29 per barrel.

Overnight in the U.S., equities rose, led by gains in Advanced Micro Devices and software stocks. Shares of AMD jumped 8.8% after Meta Platforms announced a multiyear deal with the semiconductor company.

The new partnership entails deploying up to 6 gigawatts of AMD’s graphics processing units for AI data centers. Meta will also invest in AMD through a performance-based warrant for up to 160 million shares of the chipmaker.

The move comes a week after Meta said it’s using millions of Nvidia chips in its data center buildout. Shares of the AI chip darling rose 0.7%.

The S&P 500 advanced 0.77% to close at 6,890.07, while the Nasdaq Composite rose 1.04% and settled at 22,863.68.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 370.44 points, or 0.76%, and ended at 49,174.50. The 30-stock index was supported by a nearly 2% rise in Home Depot shares after the company’s earnings beat expectations for the first time in a yearIBM shares, which tumbled in the prior trading day as a result of aforementioned AI fears, also added to the Dow’s gains.

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

New Warning on Private Credit Dangers

February 24, 2026 at 10:59 PM GMT

Activist investor Boaz Weinstein is stepping up his warnings on private credit, saying the turmoil surrounding Blue Owl Capital’s funds is exposing deeper cracks in the $1.8 trillion industry. “I think we are in the super-early innings of the wheels coming off the car,” the Saba Capital Management founder said Tuesday at a conference in Miami Beach, Florida.

The inherently opaque industry has been reeling from worries about lending standards and overspending on artificial intelligence. After Blue Owl, an alternative investment firm, restricted redemptions in one vehicle and began selling loans to raise cash for investors, Saba along with Cox Capital Partners announced cash tenders for stakes in three funds Blue Owl managed—at steep discounts to their stated value.

Others have sounded warnings as well. JPMorgan Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon yesterday drew parallels with the years leading up to the 2008 global financial crisis, when Wall Street’s scramble to make loans nearly collapsed the global financial system. —Jordan Parker Erb

New Warning on Private Credit Dangers: Evening Briefing Americas - Bloomberg

Markets

Jamie Dimon says ‘watch out’ as lofty asset prices add to economic risks: ‘My anxiety is high’

Published Mon, Feb 23 2026 8:57 PM EST Updated Tue, Feb 24 2026 8:17 AM EST

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said Monday that he was anxious over the U.S. economy, citing elevated asset prices and a competitive environment in banking that reminded him of the pre-2008 crisis years.

Even as economists tout the Trump administration’s tax and deregulatory policies as boosting economic growth this year, Dimon said during an annual investor update that his own tendencies were to consider what could go wrong when expectations are riding high.

“My own view is people are getting a little comfortable that this is real, these high asset prices and high volumes, and that we won’t have any problems,” said Dimon, who was dressed in black and wore a brace on one of his hands.

Inevitably, Dimon said, the economic cycle will turn, leading to a wave of borrower defaults that would broadly affect lenders, and often impacting industries few people expect, he said.

“There will be a cycle one day … I don’t know what confluence of events will cause that cycle. My anxiety is high over it,” Dimon said. “I’m not assuaged by the fact that asset prices are high. In fact, I think that adds to the risk.”

More

Jamie Dimon says 'watch out’ as lofty asset prices add to economic risks: ‘My anxiety is high’

Trump's draconian bank decree to expose illegal migrants sparks Wall Street panic

February 24, 2026

Donald Trump plans to force banks to collect citizenship data from customers and share it with the government, according to a report.

Banks would be required to obtain documents such as passports and green cards from new and existing clients, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The discussions have alarmed banks in recent days as Trump weighs using an executive order to force the policy through without congressional oversight, with the Dow Jones US Banks Index down 0.6 percent on Tuesday. 

The White House told the Daily Mail: 'Any reporting about potential policymaking that has not been officially announced by the White House is baseless speculation.' 

Lenders fear costly re-documentation, legal liability if accounts are wrongly restricted, and a withdrawal rush if customers believe their immigration status could be passed to federal authorities. 

Banks already collect passports and ID documents under anti-money laundering rules, but do not currently record or report citizenship status. 

Foreign nationals can legally open US bank accounts, unlike in much of Europe, where proof of legal residency or a local tax number is typically required. 

Trump is seeking new avenues to bolster his immigration crackdown after enforcement operations on the streets of Minneapolis and Chicago drew backlash. 

A White House official told the Journal that the new plan was being discussed inside the Treasury Department, but had not been approved.

The Treasury's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), which tackles money laundering and terror financing, could be used to collect the information, sources said.

Banks are already required to flag large or suspicious transactions to FinCEN. 

Trump has already used existing FinCEN powers to target alleged welfare fraud in Minnesota's Somali community.

FinCEN last month ordered banks and other financial institutions to flag overseas transactions larger than $3,000, lowered from the existing $10,000 threshold.

Banks have complained, arguing that the $10,000 limit is already too low and difficult to comply with.

Trump's draconian bank decree to expose illegal migrants sparks Wall Street panic

In other news.

China’s leverage rises before high-stakes summit as Supreme Court curbs Trump tariffs

Published Mon, Feb 23 2026 12:52 AM EST

The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to strike down President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs has strengthened China’s hand ahead of a summit with his counterpart Xi Jinping, where Beijing is expected to push for reduced U.S. support for Taiwan, analysts said.

In a ruling Friday, the court said Trump wrongfully invoked the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to implement broad tariffs.

That decision has weakened Trump’s negotiating leverage as he prepared for a trip to Beijing in April, said Wendy Cutler, senior vice president at the Asia Society Policy Institute.

“He has effectively had his wings clipped on his signature economic policy,” said Cutler, who was also a former U.S. trade representative.

Trump will visit China from March 31 to April 2, the first trip by an American president since his last visit in 2017. Xi is also expected to make a state visit to Washington later this year.

Analysts said the ruling could change the dynamics around efforts to extend a trade truce negotiated last year and complicate Trump’s push for Beijing to buy large quantities of U.S. soybeans, Boeing aircraft and energy exports.

“It limits Trump’s ability to deploy tariffs at will, reduces pressure on Beijing to expand soybean purchases or ease rare earth access, and gives China leverage to push for the removal of the remaining 10% tariffs linked to fentanyl,” said Dan Wang, China director of Eurasia Group.

For Beijing’s part, it could use the opportunity to press Washington to ease technology export controls, remove certain Chinese entities from U.S. sanctions lists, and cut back arms sales to Taiwan, said Xinbo Wu, director at Fudan University’s Center for American Studies.

″[The ruling] certainly helps strengthen China’s position in its negotiation with the U.S,” Wu said.

More

Supreme Court tariff ruling boosts China’s leverage before Trump-Xi summit

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.

A Warning From JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon

Feb. 24, 2026 7:30 AM ET

Aggressive competition and lower credit standards are leading some firms to take higher risks to boost profitability metrics, according to JPMorgan (JPM) CEO Jamie Dimon. Market participants should stay vigilant and prepare for potential shifts in credit quality, especially given growing risks in private credit, non-bank lenders, fintech, and the AI disruption. Should the cycle go south, it might also take some unsuspecting victims down with it, as the battle for yield intensifies across the industry.

Quote: "You feel stupid when everyone’s coining money and everyone's great... it does feel really good," he declared during the company's annual investor update. "And then when I think about all the factors taking place, I take a deep breath and say, 'Watch out!' Unfortunately, we did see this in '05, '06, and '07—almost the same thing—the rising tide was lifting all boats, and everyone was making a lot of money. I see a couple of people doing some dumb things. They are just doing dumb things to create net interest income."

"There's always a surprise in a credit cycle. The surprise has often been which industry [is hit hardest]. You didn't expect utilities and phone companies in '08, '09, and this time around, it might be software because of AI. There will be a cycle one day... I don't know what confluence of events will cause that cycle. My anxiety is high over it. I'm not assuaged by the fact that asset prices are high. In fact, I think that adds to the risk."

Track record: As the CEO of the largest bank in the U.S. and at the helm for more than two decades, Dimon definitely has insight into the latest happenings on Wall Street and the economy. His conservative risk management and approach to strong capital positioned the bank ahead of its peers in the 2008 financial crisis, and he has made bold calls like disputing the "transitory" inflation myth in the aftermath of the COVID pandemic and warning that the Fed would have to aggressively raise interest rates. Some of his other forecasts have not panned out, like the "economic hurricane" of 2022 and the "pending recession" of 2023, as well as his stance on Bitcoin that went from being dubbed a "fraud" and "pet rock" to offering crypto services to JPMorgan's (
JPM) clients.

A Warning From JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon | Seeking Alpha

UK manufacturing giant plunges into administration - works with Jaguar and Land Rover

In the latest blow to the motoring sector a UK manufacturing giant has plunged into administration.

22:49, Mon, Feb 23, 2026 Updated: 22:52, Mon, Feb 23, 2026

A UK engineering company that has worked with the likes of Nissan and Land Rover has plunged into administration. Efforts are now underway to find a buyer for JRM Advanced Engineering, an engineering and manufacturing firm in Northamptonshire.

The advanced engineering firm was placed into administration earlier this month, on February 12 2026, with details emerging on February 18. Gary Pettit of PBC Business Recovery and Insolvency has been appointed to oversee the process. The company works across the motorsport, aerospace and marine industries.

Operations are currently paused while the administrator reviews the company’s financial position and potential recovery routes. Several parties have already expressed interest in acquiring the business.

The administrator aims to secure a sale that would allow trading to restart and help protect jobs, subject to due diligence and agreement on commercial terms.

The company has focused on high-performance chassis development and innovative suspension solutions, alongside building advanced powertrains, including projects involving hydrogen fuel cell technology.

ts engineers have also contributed to the development of an all-new battery-electric sports car.

JRM Advanced Engineering delivered what it described as a “credible engineering package and layout concept” for Caterham’s Project V electric vehicle. The work included concepts for both front and rear axles, incorporating lightweight double-wishbone suspension with adjustable toe and camber settings.

More

UK manufacturing giant plunges into administration | UK | News | Express.co.uk

Private credit was hot, and now it's not. That has some parts of the financial world on edge.

February 23, 2026

Why it matters: A few trends  the AI scare trade and the retail investing boom — are colliding at once and stressing a trillion-dollar-plus piece of the economy.

State of play: Last week, everyone was talking about one private credit firm called Blue Owl Capital.

·         Facing high demand from investors in one of its funds to get their money back, Blue Owl sold off assets. The firm also changed the way redemptions at the fund operate, setting off alarm bells.

How it works: Asset managers like Blue Owl, as well as better-known firms like Blackstone and KKR, take in money from investors to create funds which typically lend to mid-market businesses, like smaller nonpublic companies that don't issue high-grade bonds.

·         That investor money gets locked up for a while. Historically, that was OK because investors were often deep-pocketed institutional types, insurance companies or pension funds not apt to need to cash out very often.

Friction point: The dynamic started shifting about five years ago when retail stock investing started booming, and everyone seemingly had a Robinhood account and a stock strategy.

·         Private capital managers wanted in. They started marketing to individual investors in a big way and started talking about the democratization of investments.

The big picture: It's a concerning moment. Nonbank lending started growing in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, picking up a business the banks were retreating from, and ballooning out from there.

·         Private credit hasn't been tested since then by any kind of prolonged economic slowdown.

Where it stands: Now, like so many other corners of the economy, private credit is under AI stress. Firms including Blue Owl lent to software and IT businesses.

·         Those tech companies are seeing their valuations plummet on fears that AI could put them out of business.

Threat level: The thing with private credit is that it's…private, "like banks without bank regulations," writes Mark Malek, chief investment officer at Muriel Siebert.

·         But you can't just take your money and go, as you can with banks.

Zoom in: Previously, Blue Owl offered quarterly redemptions of up to 5% of the value of the fund, increasingly a problem since investors wanted more.

·         Moving forward, the firm said it would make regular payouts, but on its schedule. The company's head of credit put it this way: "We're not halting redemptions, we're just changing the form."

·         Investors still found this alarming.

Reality check: Because funds limit redemption requests, the risk of something akin to a bank run is minimal.

·         "The danger emerges when expectations and structure collide," Malek says. "If an investor treats a semi-liquid private credit fund like a money market account, disappointment is almost guaranteed."

Axios Markets

Technology Update.

With events happening fast in the development of solar power and graphene, among other things, I’ve added this section Updates as they get reported.

Solid state battery achieves five-minute charging time

By Matt De Prez 24 February 2026

Donut Lab has verified its new solid state battery can achieve a 0% - 80% charge in five minutes.

Having presented the battery pack at CES, in January, the company has commissioned an independent test of its capability.

The tests, conducted by Technology Research Centre VTT, evaluate the battery’s charging speed and thermal behaviour during charging. It simulates a worst-case scenario, in which the battery cell lacks active temperature controls and its temperature can rise freely at extremely high charging rates.

Recharging rates are indicated using C-rates, where 1C means that the battery is charged from empty to full in one hour. 5C equals 12 minutes and 11C is 5-6 minutes.

Traditional lithium-ion batteries typically charge at 1C to 3C with active cooling. 

Under the specified testing conditions, the cell was successfully charged at 5C for over nine minutes. At this charging power, the battery cell reached an 80% state of charge in about 9.5 minutes and a full 100% state of charge in just over 12 minutes. When discharged after charging, 100% of the charged capacity was available from the cell.

The battery cell was then recharged rapidly at the extreme speed of 11C. Charging from 0 to 80% was achieved in 4.5 minutes and a full 100% state of charge in just over seven minutes. When discharged after a full charge, 98.4 to 99.6% of the battery capacity was available for use.

“Unlike other solid state batteries requiring high compressive pressures and undergoing volume changes of up to 15-20% during recharging cycles, the Donut Battery does not require special compression or more extensive cooling. This greatly simplifies the structure of battery packs and enables solutions that are cost-efficient, powerful, and better than traditional lithium-ion batteries in terms of energy and power density”, said Donut Lab CTO Ville Piippo.

Compared to traditional lithium-ion batteries, solid state batteries are significantly safer and more capable in terms of performance. As such, solid state battery technology has been predicted to become the next big leap forward in electric mobility. The Donut battery facilitates longer range, lighter structures, and additional flexibility in the design of vehicles and other products. It does not contain any flammable liquids and is not susceptible to thermal runaway in extreme conditions.

Solid state battery achieves five-minute charging time | electric and hybrid vehicles

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)

They would be the shepherds over us, their sheep. Certainly such an arrangement presupposes that they are naturally superior to the rest of us. And certainly we are fully justified in demanding from the legislators and organizers proof of this natural superiority.

Frederic Bastiat