Tuesday, 26 May 2026

Trump’s War Restarts? Oil Inventory Trouble. Dunkirk 1940.

Baltic Dry Index. 2991 Friday  Brent Crude 98.13

Spot Gold  4540                          Spot Silver 77.05

US 2 Year Yield 4.13 +0.05 Friday

US Federal Debt. 39.289 trillion

US GDP 32.153 trillion.

May 26, 1940 - Evacuation of Allied troops from Dunkirk begins.

Did Trump just restart his hot war in Iran? He says no, the ceasefire is still in place, but what is the value of a US or Israeli “ceasefire” when neither respect them? 

In Trump's case, what is the point of negotiating a trade deal with him, he changes them almost daily with his breakfast cereal, just ask, the EU, China, India, UK, Canada and Mexico among others. Even deals he negotiated himself declaring them with his usual characteristic understatement,  supercalifragilisticexpialidocious!

For now, markets must await further developments. We will probably know by the end of the week, but global oil inventories, especially in jet fuel and critical diesel are now getting dangerously low.

U.S. conducts ‘self-defense strikes’ in Iran as Trump pushes for peace deal

Published Mon, May 25 2026 9:13 PM EDT

U.S. forces conducted “self defense” strikes in southern Iran early Tuesday, with U.S. Central Command saying the military action was to “protect our troops from threats posed by Iranian forces.“

CENTCOM spokesman Tim Hawkins said targets included missile launch sites and Iranian boats attempting to emplace mines

“U.S. Central Command continues to defend our forces while using restraint during the ongoing ceasefire,” Hawkins added.

The action comes as U.S. President Donald Trump said Monday stateside that the talks with Iran were “proceeding nicely.” However, he warned that “it will only be a Great Deal for all or, no Deal at all,” threatening to take things “Back to the Battlefront and shooting, but bigger and stronger than ever before.”

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who is in India, said that the Strait of Hormuz has to be open, “one way or the other,” referring to U.S. action against Iran, Reuters reported. He added that the deal with Iran could take a few days. Fox News, citing senior U.S. officials on Monday said that the Iran deal was “95% there.”

This is not the first instance of military action since a ceasefire was reached between Washington and Tehran on April 8. Later that month, U.S. marines seized the Touska, an Iranian cargo ship, and in May, both sides traded fire in the Strait of Hormuz, with each side claiming the other initiated the attack.

In a separate Truth Social post, the U.S. President said Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium will be “immediately turned over to the United States to be brought home and destroyed,” destroyed in Iran or “at another acceptable location.”

Trump also urged Arab nations to sign the Abraham Accords, which would normalize their relations with Israel. However, Pakistan roundly rejected the proposal, with a source telling Reuters that the two issues were “not interlinked and cannot be made so.”

Oil prices were mixed Tuesday morning, with U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures down about 5% at $91.87 per barrel, but international benchmark Brent was up 2.14% at $98.2.

Chen Lanhee, partner at advisory firm Brunswick, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” that a majority of the American public wants the war to be over.

“It doesn’t matter what Iran does or doesn’t have, it doesn’t matter what the contours of the deal are. They just want the war over to bring petrol or gas prices down,” Chen said.

More

U.S. conducts 'self-defense strikes' in Iran as Trump seeks peace deal

South Korea’s Kospi hits new high amid mixed trading in Asia

Published Mon, May 25 2026 7:50 PM EDT

South Korea’s Kospi hit a fresh record Tuesday as trading resumed after a public holiday, with investor sentiment supported by hopes for a breakthrough in the U.S.-Iran peace talks.

President Donald Trump said Monday negotiations with Iran were “proceeding nicely,” though he warned that the U.S. could resume attacks if the talks failed.

Oil prices were mixed after Trump’s comments. West Texas Intermediate futures for July fell 5.24% to $91.54 per barrel as of 11:45 p.m. ET. International benchmark Brent futures for July rose 1.80% to $97.87 per barrel.

Signaling the precarious nature of the Washington-Tehran engagement, the U.S. Central Command conducted “self-defense strikes” targeting Iranian missile launch sites and boats attempting to lay mines in the south of the Islamic Republic.

Meanwhile, Tehran appears to be “blinking” over the Strait of Hormuz, ex-CIA Director David Petraeus told CNBC’s Lisa Kim at the UBS Asian Investment Conference on Monday.

South Korea’s Kospi rose to a fresh high of 8,094.90 in early trade, while the small-cap Kosdaq pared gains and was 1.34% higher.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 slipped 0.32% amid some profit taking, while the Topix was flat. The Nikkei 225 breached 65,000 for the first time Monday in holiday-thinned Asia trading. The Bank of Japan’s Deputy Governor Ryozo Himino said the timing of a rate hike is still being considered, as the central bank continues to monitor developments in the Middle East, according to Reuters.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 fell 0.38%.

China’s CSI 300 slipped 0.28%, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng reversed early losses and rose 0.45% following a public holiday on Monday.

India’s Nifty 50 was marginally lower, while the BSE Sensex was down 0.35%.

S&P 500 futures gained 0.78%, and Nasdaq-100 futures advanced 1.14%. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures popped 371 points, or 0.73%.

U.S. stock markets were closed Monday due to the Memorial Day holiday.

Asia markets today: Sensex, Kospi, Nikkei 225, Hang Seng, Iran, Oil

Oil prices mixed as U.S. military strikes against Iran cloud Middle East peace prospects

Published Mon, May 25 2026 8:43 PM EDT

Oil prices were mixed Tuesday as U.S. military operations in southern Iran and President Donald Trump’s mixed messaging on the negotiations between Tehran and Washington kept traders on edge.

July futures for international benchmark Brent crude gained 2% to $98.26 a barrel in Asia trading, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures for July were trading 5.1% lower at $91.73 per barrel.

The U.S. military said it “conducted self-defense strikes in southern Iran today,” targeting vessels allegedly trying to deploy mines, as well as missile launch locations. The U.S. Central Command said the actions were intended “to protect our troops from threats posed by Iranian forces.”

Complicating peace talks, Trump said in a social media post Monday that he had encouraged Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Pakistan, Turkey, Egypt and Jordan to join the Abraham Accords aimed at normalizing Arab nations’ ties with Israel.

Trump also said negotiations with Iran were “proceeding nicely,” but cautioned that the U.S. could resume military action if discussions were to collapse. “It will only be a Great Deal for all or, no Deal at all,” Trump wrote.

Swiss multinational investment bank UBS said Friday the global oil market was showing mounting signs of strain as inventories continue to fall amid ongoing disruptions to shipments via the Strait of Hormuz. Observed global oil inventories dropped by a combined 246 million barrels in March and April, while cumulative production losses could exceed 1 billion barrels by the end of May, the bank said.

The sharp inventory drawdowns suggest the market remains “strongly undersupplied,” UBS said, pointing to falling on-land crude and refined product inventories even as oil stored on tankers rose due to rerouted U.S. exports to Asia.

Oil prices: traders weigh Iran diplomacy against U.S. military operations

Wall Street Week Ahead

May 24, 2026, 7:22 AM ET

Wall Street heads into a holiday-shortened week with investors focused on inflation data, a fresh wave of Federal Reserve commentary, and earnings from the technology sector.

The main macro event will be Thursday’s core PCE price index report, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge -- for now. Economists expect the core rate to come in at 3.3%, keeping pressure on policymakers as markets continue to debate the path for rates under new Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh. A heavy slate of Fed speakers throughout the week, including John Williams, Austan Goolsbee, and Neel Kashkari, could further shape expectations.

Earnings reports from Marvell Technology (MRVL), Salesforce (CRM), Costco (COST), Dell Technologies (DELL), and Snowflake (SNOW) will provide fresh insight into AI spending, enterprise demand, and the health of consumers. Dell’s earnings call will be closely watched for commentary on AI infrastructure trends following Nvidia’s (NVDA) closely followed results last week.

Investors will also monitor Meta Platforms’ (META) annual meeting for updates on AI spending and capital returns, while Nvidia and Applied Materials (AMAT) executives are due to appear at investor conferences.

Outside markets, Disney’s (DIS) "Star Wars: The Mandalorian & Grogu" is expected to dominate the Memorial Day box office, marking the franchise’s first theatrical release since 2019.

Wall Street Week Ahead | Seeking Alpha

In other news.

Oil market at ‘tank bottoms’ in Asia, and Europe isn’t far behind, warns market veteran Jeff Currie

Published Mon, May 25 2026 12:51 AM EDT

Oil markets are nearing minimum operating levels in Asia, with Europe likely next and the U.S. potentially facing shortages by July, said veteran market strategist Jeff Currie on Monday, underscoring the global energy shock due to the Iran war.

Headline global inventory figures can be misleading as much of the oil stored worldwide cannot be used immediately, said Currie, Carlyle’s chief strategy officer of energy pathways and co-chairman of Abaxx Markets.

A large portion of that oil is needed to keep pipelines and storage systems running safely, leaving only a smaller share available for the market. Asia is already close to these so-called “minimum operating levels,” Currie told CNBC on the sidelines of the UBS Wealth Conference in Singapore.

Global oil markets have been under strain since the outbreak of the Iran war earlier this year, after disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz sharply curtailed energy exports from the Middle East. 

“We’ve seen explosive prices on products. Jet fuel has come down, but diesel has now gone up above jet fuel. So, the problem here in Singapore continues. It just moved from jet to diesel,” said Currie.

Europe could begin seeing similar strains within weeks, as the current relief from U.S. oil flows may prove temporary, and as the summer driving season starts. “I would say, Asia, you’re there. Europe, give it about another month, and look for July being a problem in the U.S.,” Currie said.

“All of the inventories that are drawing out of the United States out of the U.S. SPR [Strategic Petroleum Reserve] are being exported into Europe, so the Europeans think they have no problem because they’re getting all of this oil being imported from the United States, but that can’t continue on.”

His comments come on the back of recent warnings by the International Energy Agency that the global oil market could face a critical supply squeeze during the peak summer consumption period, especially if Middle Eastern exports fail to recover and inventories continue falling.

More

Oil market at 'tank bottoms' in Asia, Europe isn't far behind: Jeff Currie

America’s Emergency Oil Reserve Is Shrinking Fast

May 25, 2026 at 05:00 AM EDT

America’s oil stockpiles are shrinking rapidly, with U.S. crude inventories posting consecutive weekly declines, exports surging and the country drawing down from its emergency supplies to offset the impact of the war with Iran on global energy markets.

According to recently released figures from the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), total crude inventories fell by 17.8 million barrels for the week ending May 15. The record drop follows several weeks of similarly steep declines that have brought total stocks (including those in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve) to their lowest level in almost a year.

As analysts told Newsweek, the declines are eroding a critical safety buffer designed to protect the U.S.—and the prices consumers pay at the bump—during major supply shocks, and will offer the country less flexibility to respond if conditions deteriorate further.

Since the beginning of the war on February 28, the closure of the Hormuz Strait—through which around one-fifth of the world’s oil previously passed—has pushed global oil prices to multi-year highs and led to what the director of the International Energy Agency (IEA) has called the “largest energy crisis in history.”

And in the U.S., drivers are facing significantly higher costs, with gas prices having risen around 50 percent to an average over $4.50 per gallon, and other downstream products like jet fuel facing comparable spikes. And experts believe the drawdown of U.S. inventories could put further upward pressure on prices going into the summer season.

Where Is America’s Oil Going?

America’s oil inventories increased gradually during the first year of President Donald Trump’s second term, in line with the inaugural pledge to “fill our strategic reserves up again right to the top.”

However, according to the EIA’s latest Petroleum Status report, consecutive weekly drops have pulled stockpiles back down to June 2025 levels.

At 445 million barrels, excluding those in its Strategic Petroleum Reserve, the agency said that U.S. crude oil inventories are around 2 percent below the five-year average for this time of the year. Distillate inventories—including petroleum products such as diesel fuel and heating oil—have dropped even further below their typical levels.

More

America’s emergency oil reserve is shrinking fast - Newsweek

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

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

Macroeconomics, even with all of our computers and with all of our information - is not an exact science and is incapable of being an exact science.

Paul Samuelson

Food staple prices set to remain more expensive in long term – report

Tue, 26 May 2026 at 12:01 am BST

Household food staples like bread and pasta are set to remain more expensive in the long term as a result of the Middle East crisis and El Nino weather pattern, a report suggests.

Food price rises leading on from “major shocks” tend to come down only slowly and partially afterwards, leaving households facing a higher grocery bill long after the original crisis has eased, according to analysis from the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit (ECIU).

On average, shelf prices fall just 1% of the original rise after six months, 5% after a year and 7% after two years, the think tank found.

The report, based on more than 30 years of UK data, suggests that this “rocket and feathers” effect, where food prices “shoot up like rockets but drift down like feathers”, helps explain why food prices remain far above pre-pandemic levels even after some of the shocks that drove them have eased.

ECIU food and farming analyst Chris Jaccarini said: “Shoppers feeling that prices are on a never-ending escalator upwards is borne out by the data.

“War and extreme weather are increasingly pushing up the cost of the weekly shop with the latest conflict in the Middle East driving up the price of oil, gas and fertiliser used to grow, ship and process food.

“In England, we’ve had three of the worst harvests on record in the past five years and next year is shaping up to be the hottest globally.

----Henry Dimbleby, former lead of the government’s National Food Strategy, said: “Food inflation has been brutal – and it will keep biting unless we tackle the underlying causes.

“That’s because our food system is tightly tied to energy, fertiliser and transport costs – and we’ve built too little resilience into supply chains and production.

----A previous report by the think tank suggests that UK food prices are on track to be 50% higher by November compared to levels at the start of the cost-of-living crisis in mid-2021.

The “grim milestone” would mean that the price growth seen in the nearly 20 years prior to the crisis would be achieved in just over five years, almost quadrupling the pace of food inflation.

The ECIU said warmer El Nino temperatures tended to particularly affect cocoa, food oils, rice and sugar, with wider risks for other products linked to the tropics such as bananas, tea, coffee, chocolate and soy-fed meat.

More

Food staple prices set to remain more expensive in long term – report - Yahoo News UK

The world is heading toward a financial crisis – the state of US politics has left us ill-prepared

Eduardo Porter  Mon 25 May 2026 11.00 BST

Trump’s second term has revealed that Washington’s policy response to such a crisis will be misguided and full of chaos

Mon 25 May 2026 11.00 BST

A bona fide financial crisis has not broken out since the US housing meltdown of 2007. Even the Covid pandemic and subsequent upsurge in inflation didn’t lead to financial upheaval. The jitters produced by the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in 2023 were soon forgotten.

Given this stability, it might take some effort to convince financial markets that another big one is around the corner. But it is. Financial markets and their regulating governments may believe they have acquired immunity, but the world is careening toward a moment of financial upheaval that could well dwarf the damage caused by the last one.

What’s most scary about this approaching moment is not the specific nature of the crisis, but the incompetence with which it will be handled.

Current US politics practically guarantee that Washington’s policy response will be misguided, steered by Donald Trump’s incontinent appetites and animosities. In a world where mistrust has strangled space for collective action, damages are likely to be compounded by similarly blinkered responses around the globe. As Maurice Obstfeld, former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund noted: “The political fundamentals are really bad.”

We’ll never know exactly when and how a crisis will hit. But one can envisage plausible pathways. Perhaps a financial bubble pops: stocks buoyed up by the current euphoria over the prospects of artificial intelligence could be downgraded sharply in light of disappointing returns, sending the stock market tumbling, shrinking consumer spending and damaging balance sheets of companies that have piled into the AI dream, as well as their financiers.

The largest risk, at this moment, revolves around the federal government’s accumulation of debt, now in excess of 120% of the nation’s gross domestic product, a near unprecedented level. It is likely to keep on growing at a fast clip given massive built in budget deficits for the next decade.

More

The world is heading toward a financial crisis – the state of US politics has left us ill-prepared | Business | The Guardian

Charting the global economy: Factory activity sags on inflation

24 May 2026

The global economy is showing signs of wearing down with inflation pressures persisting during the third month of a war-induced energy crunch. Factory activity as measured by S&P Global either slowed or even contracted across the board on all indexes released Thursday, apart from the UK and US.

Meanwhile, inflation concerns have driven long-term yields for Group of Seven sovereign bonds to a two-decade high this week.

Here are some of the charts that appeared on Bloomberg this week on the latest developments in the global economy, markets and geopolitics:

World

131288340

Surveys of purchasing managers from Australia to the Europe pointed to an intensifying ordeal for manufacturing and services companies in May. As with April, the worst impact was seen in the euro zone, with plummeting gauges in France delivering the biggest surprise. Manufacturing there and in the region’s biggest economy, Germany, has now just succumbed to a phase of shrinking activity.

131288342

One inflation spike in the 2020s might be an accident, the world’s biggest bond markets seem to have decided, but two looks like an alarming new trend. The Iran war is inflicting another wave of price hikes on a global economy that’s barely recovered from the last one. As all the economic damage mounts, it’s starting to rattle the safest haven in world finance: the $50 trillion-plus market for Group of Seven sovereign bonds, where long-term yields hit a two-decade high this week.

131288353

In addition to Iceland, Indonesia’s central bank delivered a larger-than-expected hike in interest rates, while Mauritius also tightened policy. Egypt, Nigeria, Ghana, Jamaica and Paraguay kept rates unchanged.

131288366

A benchmark Asia rice price rose to the highest in more than a year, as worries loom over harvests across the region. The US Department of Agriculture forecast global rice production in the 2026-27 season to decline for the first time in 11 years.

Asia

131288384

Japan’s banks are grappling with a problem that was unthinkable a few years ago. Loans are growing faster than deposits. The country is seeing an explosion of borrowing as businesses boost capital investment and buyout deals get bigger.

131288387

Three of Asia’s most vulnerable economies are showing rising strains as their central banks come under pressure to tighten policy even as the economic hit from the Iran-war oil shock deepens. Indonesia, the Philippines and India are already grappling with capital outflows and free-falling currencies as Middle East tensions hurt consumers and companies alike. Now, global bond ructions are piling on further pressure.

131288394

China’s growth slowed across the board in April with investment resuming declines, calling into question the government’s reluctance to add stimulus to the economy as a global energy crisis hits factories and consumers across the world. Official data on Monday painted a picture of an economy where booming exports no longer offset deteriorating consumption at home.

Europe

131288417

UK inflation fell to its lowest rate in more than a year, prompting traders to bet on fewer Bank of England interest-rate hikes even though economists expect price pressures to return. The consumer prices index rose 2.8% in the year to April, down from 3.3% the previous month, reflecting more favorable annual comparisons and government support with bills.

131288423

Switzerland’s economy grew faster than anticipated in the first quarter, weathering a spike in energy prices and a strengthening franc that each took effect at the outbreak of the Iran war. Gross domestic product adjusted for large sport events rose 0.5% from the previous three months, according to a preliminary estimate.

US

131288427

Consumer sentiment fell in May to a record low and long-term inflation expectations worsened notably due to the Iran war.

131288435

Housing starts declined in April as construction of single-family homes dropped by the most in nearly a year, suggesting builders are growing cautious amid higher mortgage rates.

More

Charting the global economy: Factory activity sags on inflation

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.

EasyJet diverts London flight after passenger alerts crew to power bank in luggage

Michael Howie Sat, 23 May 2026 at 7:05 pm BST

A London-bound easyJet flight was diverted to Rome after concerns were raised about a power bank charging in a passengers bag.

The landing was made as a “precaution” after a passenger alerted crew members to the device that was in someone's luggage.

Flight EZY2618 took off from Hurghada in Egypt on Tuesday evening and was due to land at Luton Airport in the early hours of Wednesday.

But the flight was diverted to Rome Fiumicino and rescheduled to operate the following morning.

A spokesperson told Sky News: “The captain took the decision to divert as a precaution in line with safety regulations.

“The aircraft landed safely and passengers disembarked routinely and we provided hotel accommodation and meals where available.

“As some customers remained in the airport, they were provided with refreshments.

“The safety of its passengers and crew is easyJet's highest priority and easyJet operates its fleet of aircraft in strict compliance with all manufacturers' guidelines.

“We would like to apologise to all passengers for any inconvenience caused by the diversion and subsequent delay.”

EasyJet diverts London flight after passenger alerts crew to power bank in luggage - Yahoo News UK

Solid-state battery power banks are here – and they could change everything about safety

25 May 2026

Power banks are an indispensable tool for many people, whether you're using the portable battery to inflate your tires or charge your phone after a lengthy session of playing "Pokémon Go." The problem is that most modern power banks run on lithium-ion technology, which can burst into flames if not managed properly — just look at the recent Veektomx VT103 recall. The good news here is that companies such as SolidSafe and Kuxia have started rolling out solid-state battery power banks.

Unlike traditional rechargeable batteries, which rely on liquid and gel electrolytes to transfer electrons between electrodes, solid-state batteries utilize a solid matrix consisting of composite compounds, hence their name. These materials can include ceramics, sulfides and polymers that are significantly less flammable than traditional lithium-ion electrolyte gels. Plus, they are less likely to swell, which means solid-state batteries last longer, are less likely to fail, and, most importantly, they should be a much safer form of battery for public use.

The upsides don't end with just safety concerns. Solid-state batteries charge faster than lithium-ion alternatives, and since solid-state power banks have a higher capacity density than normal batteries, manufacturers can deliver longer charging from smaller devices.

More

Solid-state battery power banks are here – and they could change everything about safety

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org) 

There is something in people; you might even call it a little bit of a gambling instinct… I tell people investing should be dull. It shouldn't be exciting. Investing should be more like watching paint dry or watching grass grow. If you want excitement, take $800 and go to Las Vegas.

Paul Samuelson


Sunday, 24 May 2026

Spaced Out On SpaceX. Star Struck In NASDAQ.

Baltic Dry Index. 2991 +27     Brent Crude 103.54

Spot Gold  4509                           Spot Silver 76.20

US 2 Year Yield 4.13 +05

US Federal Debt. 39.281 trillion

US GDP 32.147 trillion.

To the moon, Alice!

Elon Musk Jackie Gleason.

Special Update Sunday 24 May 2026 6:00 AM.

With both the UK and USA on holiday and partying today, today a look at the SpaceX IPO by Professor Boyle. “Extend [ing] the light of consciousness to the stars”.  Approx. 32 minutes, and 8 minutes..

SpaceX IPO: Nice Try Though

SpaceX IPO: Nice Try Though - YouTube

What Exactly Happened On SpaceX's Twelfth Starship Flight Test?

What Exactly Happened On SpaceX's Twelfth Starship Flight Test?

Normal LIR service lands Tuesday morning.

To help celebrate the double bank holiday, a little gem from Vivaldi. Approx. 6 minutes.

A.   Vivaldi: RV 781 / Concerto for 2 trumpets (oboes), violin, strings & bc in D major / Modo Antiquo

A. Vivaldi: RV 781 / Concerto for 2 trumpets (oboes), violin, strings & bc in D major / Modo Antiquo - YouTube

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

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

Inflation hits Memorial Day weekend

Ground beef prices have climbed to a record $6.90 per pound ahead of Memorial Day, adding another layer of financial pressure for American families

May 22, 2026

Gas prices aren’t the only item inflicting financial strain on Americans ahead of Memorial Day. For families firing up the grill, that ground beef will have a higher price tag attached to it.

The national average for a pound of ground beef stands at a record high of $6.90, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Lower cattle supply coupled with robust demand caused prices to skyrocket over the past five years. Since President Donald Trump took office in January 2025, ground beef prices have climbed by 24%. 

That creates a political challenge as beef remains central to the American diet.The Trump administration has struggled to tame price increases in beef, a staple of the American diet. The U.S. government is encouraging Americans to become more like carnivores: Beef is now on top of the food pyramid following an overhaul of federal dietary guidelines at the Department of Health and Human Services. Even Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has said he eats beef “twice a day.”

The U.S. appetite for beef is enormous. Americans devoured $45 billion worth of beef last year, per research from Beef Research, an industry marketing group. The figure also helps explain why rising beef prices carry political weight.

Trump himself has acknowledged the challenges. In November, he said beef prices were “a little high” in a Fox News interview. The White House won’t find price relief in the meat market anytime soon. The Department of Agriculture recently projected beef prices will increase 6.3% in 2026, a figure outpacing its 20-year historical growth rates.

The Trump administration has taken steps to address what some economists are labeling “beeflation.” It announced a deal with Beijing to reopen the Chinese market to U.S. beef exports, which administration officials argue will encourage ranchers to grow their cattle herds — now at historic lows — to meet new demand.

“The Trump administration is committed to reducing beef and other grocery costs for hardworking Americans,” a White House official said in a statement. “The Administration’s astonishing success in reducing egg prices by cleaning up the Biden administration’s failures is proof that President Trump has a track record of success in delivering.”

The USDA indeed projected that Americans will catch a break as egg prices continue dropping this year. That’s largely due to a less intense avian influenza combined with increased egg production.

Possible tariff relief and restaurants altering their menus

Earlier this month, the White House eyed tariff relief on beef imports as another lever for lower prices. The Wall Street Journal reported that Trump was on the verge of signing an executive order to import more beef into the U.S. at lower tariff rates. 

The administration had already given a green light for a modest increase in Argentine beef imports in February. Yet Republicans and cattle ranch groups balked at the latest proposal.

“We can’t import our way out of this problem,” USCA President Justin Tupper said in a statement.  “We will continue in our conversations with the Administration on this matter and working for U.S. producers and the American consumers who depend on them.”

The White House was forced to shelve the planned order for now. The Iran War continues rippling through the food supply chain as higher diesel fuel prices add to the cost of transporting beef and many other food products to grocery shelves..

Eating out is also a more expensive habit to maintain, and beef inflation is rewiring short-term plans for fast-food chains and beyond. For example, McDonald’s plans to expand their menu to include more chicken to account for both customers and franchisees getting squeezed by price hikes.

“Certainly right now in the environment that we're in, I think chicken is benefiting relatively to its better cost position relative to beef,” McDonald’s CEO Chris Kempczinski said in a recent Q1 2026 earnings call. Other restaurant chains like Texas Roadhouse simply raised menu prices at the start of the year’s second quarter. 

More

Beef prices hit record highs in Memorial Day weekend squeeze

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.

With the SpaceX coverage by Professor Boyle above, there’s no technology update today.

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org) 

Some cause happiness wherever they go; others, whenever they go.

Oscar Wilde


Saturday, 23 May 2026

Special Update 23/05/2026 UK-US Markets Take Monday Off. Warsh Day One.

Baltic Dry Index. 2991 +27    Brent Crude 103.54

Spot Gold 4509                           Spot Silver 76.20

U S 2 Year Yield 4.13 +0.05

US Federal Debt. 39.277 trillion

US GDP 32.144 trillion

It is no coincidence that the century of total war coincided with the century of central banking.

Ron Paul

Iran war, deal, or no deal this weekend? The Wall Street stock casinos went all-in on a deal on Friday.

Sworn in on Friday, new Fed Chairman Warsh is about put his version of fiat money policy into effect from here. Trump’s rate cutting patsy or a Volker mark two? By the end of the year Wall Street and President Trump will know.

By Monday, we will also know if the stock casinos bet right on an US-Iran deal this weekend. Also on Monday in the LIR update, that SpaceX IPO. To the moon, Alice (in Wonderland?)

Dow adds nearly 300 points Friday for new record close; S&P 500 notches eighth winning week: Live updates

Updated Fri, May 22 2026 4:25 PM EDT

Stocks rose Friday as Treasury yields eased, resulting in a winning week for Wall Street despite heightened volatility.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 294.04 points, or 0.58%, to end at 50,579.70. The 30-stock index hit an intraday all-time high and posted another record close. The S&P 500 rose 0.37% to settle at 7,473.47. The Nasdaq Composite climbed 0.19%, ending at 26,343.97.

Although all three indexes closed in the green on Friday, they finished off their highs reached earlier in the session.

“It’s the everything market,” Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at Interactive Brokers, told CNBC. “The market [is] telling you today they’re much more concerned that they’re going to miss some sort of peace in the Middle East than they are about the risks of going home long over the weekend.”

It remains unclear whether the U.S. and Iran are inching toward a deal to end their war. On Friday, a Qatari team flew into Tehran in coordination with the U.S. to help secure an agreement to end the conflict, Reuters reported, citing a source familiar with the matter.

Oil settled modestly higher Friday, but was off the peaks reached earlier in the week, as traders hoped a resolution to the Iran war could be reached soon. International Brent crude futures added 0.9% to close at $103.54 per barrel, while West Texas Intermediate crude inched up about 0.3% to settle at $96.60.

The benchmark 10-year Treasury note yield shed nearly 3 basis points to around 4.56% as of Friday afternoon. The 30-year bond yield also lost more than 4 basis points to trade around 5.06%.

Bond market volatility had weighed on stocks earlier in the week. The 30-year hit its highest level since 2007 before easing, while the 10-year touched its highest level in over a year, as traders feared a prolonged U.S.-Iran war would keep oil prices elevated and putting upward pressure on inflation.

Separately, Qualcomm shares ripped almost 12% on Friday, posting a third straight winning session. The stock gained 18.2% on the week.

The S&P 500 advanced 0.9% over the week, marking its eighth straight winning week and its longest weekly win streak since late 2023. The Dow rose 2.1% and posted its third positive week in four. The Nasdaq added 0.5% and notched its seventh weekly advance in the past eight weeks.

Stock market news for May 22, 2026

US Retailers Warn Iran War Inflation Will Spread

May 22, 2026 at 11:16 PM GMT+1

Americans have been struggling for months with high gas prices and persistent inflation, sending consumer sentiment to a record low. Now retailers like Walmart and Lowes are getting louder about their warnings that spiking fuel costs driven by the US-Israel war with Iran will soon be reflected in the prices of products on their shelves.

When that happens, it’s only going to make US affordability problems that much worse. “We are concerned that the consumers have less ability to spend” even now, said Joe Feldman, an analyst at Telsey Advisory Group. Looking ahead, “the lower-income consumer is going to become even more challenged.”

At Walmart, Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey said the company has seen some habits change: consumers bought fewer gallons per visit at Walmart pumps in the first quarter, with the average number falling below 10 for the first time since 2022. “That’s an indication of stress,” he said.

Higher fuel costs haven’t yet pushed up prices of most goods in the US, according to the Trump administration. Affluent Americans have been propping up overall consumer spending, a primary engine for the economy; retail sales rose for a third-straight month in April, according to the US Department of Commerce.

But inflation concerns are still hitting consumer sentiment. The University of Michigan’s final May sentiment index decreased 5 points to 44.8 from April, according to the survey released Friday. That’s the latest in a series of record lows and weaker than all projections in a Bloomberg survey of economists.

David E. Rovella

Chains Warn of War Inflation’s Spread: Evening Briefing Americas - Bloomberg

Oil prices post weekly loss as U.S. and Iran signal progress toward a deal

Published Thu, May 21 2026 8:31 PM EDT Updated Fri, May 22 2026 3:04 PM EDT

Oil prices are on pace to post a loss this week as the U.S. and Iran signal progress in talks to end the war.

But the warring sides remain at loggerheads over Tehran’s enriched uranium stockpile and tolls on the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz.

International benchmark Brent crude futures added 96 cents to close at $103.54 per barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate futures advanced 25 cents to settle at $96.60.

Brent fell more than 5% this week while U.S. crude oil lost more than 8%. Prices have tumbled after President Donald Trump said Monday that he called off imminent strikes on Iran to allow for more negotiations.

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Thursday said there were “good signs” that an agreement to end the conflict is in sight, but warned any such deal would be “unfeasible” if Iran pursues measures to permanently control shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

“Markets are still searching for signs of progress in a potential deal between the US and Iran. While there are signs of optimism, uncertainty reigns,” strategists at ING said in a research note published Friday.

“This is not the first time a deal seemed close, only for negotiations to break down. So, there’s a large segment of the market that will be more sceptical about the positive signals we are seeing,” they added.

Worries over oil supplies continue to linger with the International Energy Agency warning that as travel demand grows during the summer season, oil markets could enter a “red zone” soon as global stocks deplete.

The most important solution to the energy shock caused by the Iran war would be the Strait of Hormuz’s full and unconditional reopening, IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol said, adding that developing Asian and African countries will feel the “biggest pain of this crisis.”

Typically, roughly 20% of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas passes through the Strait of Hormuz, but shipping traffic has virtually halted since U.S. and Israeli-led strikes against Iran started on Feb. 28.

“Energy executives warned that full normalization of Middle East oil supply may not occur until 2027 due to the scale of disruptions caused by the conflict,” according to a recent note by MUFG.

Oil prices post weekly loss as U.S. and Iran signal deal progress

In other news.

Slight improvement in consumer confidence amid ‘clear challenges ahead’

Fri, 22 May 2026 at 12:01 am BST

A fall in inflation led to a slight improvement in consumer confidence this month amid warnings of “clear challenges ahead”.

GfK’s long-running Consumer Confidence Index rose by two points in May, but is still four points lower than this time last year at minus 23.

Despite confidence in the general economy over the coming year rising five points, it remains five points lower than last May at minus 38, while confidence in personal finances over the next 12 months is up two points to minus two, four points down on a year ago.

The major purchase index, an indicator of confidence in buying big ticket items, dropped two points to minus 20, four points lower than May last year and its lowest level since last January.

Key income groups recorded “more worrying” major purchase scores, with confidence among those earning between £14,500 and £24,999 posting a 19-point drop to minus 33.

Similarly, there was a steep fall within the average household income group earning between £35,000 and £49,999, with a 10-point drop to minus 27.

Neil Bellamy, consumer insights director at GfK, said: “Consumers appear to be in a more generous mood in May, with a two-point increase in the headline score and improving perceptions of both personal finances and the wider economy.

“Clearly, for specific groups of consumers, the impact of cost-of-living pressures are acute.

“Moreover, our savings measure – down by the unusually high amount of 10 points – suggests people are diverting funds from savings accounts to pay for day-to-day expenses.

“Inflation may have fallen in April, but with price pressures expected to rise again and continued uncertainty around interest rates, it’s unlikely May marks the beginning of a sustained improvement.”

Slight improvement in consumer confidence amid ‘clear challenges ahead’ - Yahoo News UK

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

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

Japan core inflation softens to over four year low, weakening case for BOJ rate hike

Published Thu, May 21 2026 7:38 PM EDT

Japan’s core inflation eased more than expected in April to its lowest level since March 2022, potentially weakening the case for an early rate hike by the Bank of Japan.

Core inflation — which strips out prices of fresh food — came in at 1.4%, lower than the 1.7% expected by economists polled by Reuters and below the 1.8% reading in March.

Headline inflation was at 1.4%, down from March’s 1.5% and the fourth straight month below the central bank’s 2% target.

The so-called “core-core” inflation rate, which is watched by the Bank of Japan and strips out food and energy prices, fell to 1.9% from 2.4%.

Energy prices fell 3.9% in April compared with a 5.7% decline in March, amid the Iran war.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 opened up 0.96% following the data release, leading major Asian indexes, while the yen weakened marginally to 159.03 against the dollar.

The inflation figure was “a little bit of a surprise, but not too much of a concern,” said Andrew McCagg, customer portfolio manager at Nomura Asset Management on CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia.”

He explained that headline inflation was expected to dip below 2% due to government fuel subsidies, but the lower-than-expected figure was also due to government subsidies for school tuition.

The Iran war, he added, would push inflation back up in the coming months.

“Unlike in other markets, when we talk about inflationary concerns in Japan, it’s still more of a concern that we fall back into deflation rather than inflation getting out of hand,” McCagg added.

The Bank of Japan sharply raised its core inflation outlook to 2.8% from 1.9% at its April meeting, citing higher crude oil prices linked to the conflict in the Middle East and businesses passing on higher costs to consumers.

The data also follows reports that Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi signaled she was open to a supplementary budget to address rising energy costs.

According to Japanese public broadcaster NHK, opposition lawmakers had proposed a 3 trillion yen ($18.8 billion) package, including an extension of petrol subsidies and relief for electricity bills.

Japan is currently struggling with a weak yen, having reportedly spent 10 trillion yen on intervening in the yen at the end of April and the start of May. A weak currency has increased import costs and eroded consumers’ purchasing power.

Still, a BOJ rate hike may be on the horizon, as the country’s economy seems to be holding up, posting a better-than-expected 2.1% annualized expansion in the first quarter of 2026.

The growth was partly powered by strong exports, which could give the BOJ confidence to hike rates, according to DBS analysts in a Thursday note.

Japan core inflation softens to over four year low, weakening case for BOJ rate hike

Technology Update.

With events happening fast in the development of solar power and graphene, I’ve added this section.

14-story tall bobbing cylinder could generate electricity from strong ocean waves

May 19, 2026

It isn't easy harnessing the power of waves in the sea to generate electricity, but a Spanish engineering firm is giving it the ol' college try with a giant floating buoy.

Out on the Biscay Marine Energy Platform (BiMEP) off the coast of Bizkaia in Northern Spain, Bilbao-based IDOM is testing a low power wave energy converter (WEC) that's been in the works for several years now.

It's called MARMOK-A-5, and it's basically a point absorber Oscillating Water Column (OWC). It resembles a buoy with a cylindrical column of water inside, and the entire thing stands an enormous 140 ft (42 m) tall, with about 20 ft (5 m) sticking out above the surface. It's 20 ft (5 m) in diameter, and is currently anchored to the sea bed nearly 300 ft (90 m) deep.

Previous versions of this concept have been deployed over the past few years since 2016 to survive entire winters. The latest iteration features intelligent control systems, controllable blades, and onboard batteries, and is meant to demonstrate its electricity generation performance in real sea conditions.

Waves around the MARMOK-A-5 cause the water in this inner column to move relative to the buoy. This movement compresses and expands an air chamber at the top of the buoy, like a piston. The resulting reciprocating airflow spins a turbine, generating electricity that's transmitted to a grid on the shore via a subsea cable.

This version can only produce a maximum of about 30 KW of electricity, which would be enough to supply about 15-20 average US homes at its peak. Here it is at a previous deployment last year:

"Achieving a safe installation and grid connection at BiMEP is a key step towards bringing wave energy closer to commercial reality,” said IDOM project manager Borja de Miguel. This is part of EuropeWave, an EU-wide R&D program committing some €20 million (US$23 million) toward developing wave energy technologies.

Now that the MARMOK-A-5 has been successfully installed and connected to the grid as of this week, the next task is kicking it into full operational service. Data gathered from this trial will also help inform subsequent stages of fine-tuning the tech before it can be commercialized and rolled out widely.

This is far from the only WEC out on the high seas, of course. In 2024, we saw the massive 826-ton OE-25 off the coast of Oahu in Hawaii from Ocean Energy. That same year, the University of Western Australia began testing a novel WEC design in King George Sound. And back in February of this year, Denmark's Wavepiston signed an MoU to launch a 50-MW WEC installation to serve Barbados.

There's plenty of wave energy in the ocean, but creating scalable systems that can use this energy to generate electricity has proven difficult. Building them to withstand the elements out on the water, maintaining them, running them cost-effectively, and minimizing their impact on marine ecosystems all pose major challenges. Here's hoping this giant buoy gets it right.

Huge Spanish buoy harnesses sea wave energy for power

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)

Exponent Calculator

Enter values into any two of the input fields to solve for the third.

Exponent Calculator

This weekend’ s music diversion. Another long-forgotten maestro. Approx.15 minutes.

Christian Friedrich Witt (1665-1717) - Sonates a piu stromenti (c.1695)

Christian Friedrich Witt (1665-1717) - Sonates a piu stromenti (c.1695) - YouTube

Next, military satellites demystified. Approx. 14 minutes.

Every Type of Military Satellite Explained

Every Type of Military Satellite Explained

Finally, refugees reclaiming the desert. Approx. 15 minutes.  

How Millions of Refugees Dug Water-Retention Pits to Turn 100,000 Hectares of Desert into Farmland

How Millions of Refugees Dug Water-Retention Pits to Turn 100,000 Hectares of Desert into Farmland - YouTube

The most sinister of all taxes is the inflation tax and it is the most regressive. It hits the poor and the middle class. When you destroy a currency by creating money out of thin air to pay the bills, the value of the dollar goes down, and people get hit with a higher cost of living. It's the middle class that's being wiped out. It is most evil of all taxes.

Ron Paul