Saturday, 14 February 2026

Special Update 14/02/2026 Chinese New Year. US CPI Tame.

 Baltic Dry Index. 2083 -12          Brent Crude 67.75

Spot Gold 5064                              Spot Silver 77.27

U S 2 Year Yield 3.50 +0.03 

US Federal Debt. 38.684 trillion US GDP 31.152 trillion

What economic calculation requires is a monetary system whose functioning is not sabotaged by government interference.

Ludwig von Mises

With the Shanghai silver market closed for a week, can the London Billion Market Association and NY Crimex Comex resist the temptation to try to rig the silver price lower?

With US markets closed on Monday for Presidents Day, no not named for President Trump, we focus this weekend on AI and tariff disruption increasingly hitting the US economy.

AI disruption could spark a ‘shock to the system’ in credit markets, UBS analyst says

Published Fri, Feb 13 2026 12:34 PM EST Updated Fri, Feb 13 2026 1:19 PM EST

The stock market has been quick to punish software firms and other perceived losers from the artificial intelligence boom in recent weeks, but credit markets are likely to be the next place where AI disruption risk shows up, according to UBS analyst Matthew Mish.

Tens of billions of dollars in corporate loans are likely to default over the next year as companies, especially software and data services firms owned by private equity, get squeezed by the AI threat, Mish said in a Wednesday research note.

“We’re pricing in part of what we call a rapid, aggressive disruption scenario,” Mish, UBS head of credit strategy, told CNBC in an interview.

The UBS analyst said he and his colleagues have rushed to update their forecasts for this year and beyond because the latest models from Anthropic and OpenAI have sped up expectations of the arrival of AI disruption.

“The market has been slow to react because they didn’t really think it was going to happen this fast,” Mish said. “People are having to recalibrate the whole way that they look at evaluating credit for this disruption risk, because it’s not a ’27 or ’28 issue.”

Investor concerns around AI boiled over this month as the market shifted from viewing the technology as a rising tide story for technology companies to more of a winner-take-all dynamic where Anthropic, OpenAI and others threaten incumbents. Software firms were hit first and hardest, but a rolling series of sell-offs hit sectors as disparate as finance, real estate and trucking.

In his note, Mish and other UBS analysts lay out a baseline scenario in which borrowers of leveraged loans and private credit see a combined $75 billion to $120 billion in fresh defaults by the end of this year.

CNBC calculated those figures by using Mish’s estimates for increases of up to 2.5% and up to 4% in defaults for leveraged loans and private credit, respectively, by late 2026. Those are markets which he estimates to be $1.5 trillion and $2 trillion in size.

‘Credit crunch’?

But Mish also highlighted the possibility of a more sudden, painful AI transition in which defaults jump by twice the estimates for his base assumption, cutting off funding for many companies, he said. The scenario is what’s known in Wall Street jargon as a “tail risk.”

“The knock-on effect will be that you will have a credit crunch in loan markets,” he said. “You will have a broad repricing of leveraged credit, and you will have a shock to the system coming from credit.”

More

AI disruption could hit credit markets next, UBS analyst says

US business, consumers bore 90 percent of Trump tariff costs: NY Fed

by Fiona Bork - 02/13/26 10:31 AM ET

U.S. businesses and consumers bore about 90 percent of the cost of President Trump’s sweeping tariffs, according to a recent report by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

The study, published Thursday, found that the majority of costs that came from tariffs were passed onto the American public in the first 11 months of 2025, contradicting Trump’s promises that foreign companies would pay the import taxes. 

In the first eight months of the year, consumers and businesses were shouldering 94 percent of the economic burden associated with tariffs. The New York Fed noted that tariffs’ pass-through into import prices declined in the latter half of the year, meaning that foreign exporters were taking on a larger share of the tariff incidence. 

The average tariff rate throughout 2025 increased from 2.6 percent to 13 percent with few dips and spikes midway through the year, according to the report.

“U.S. firms and consumers continue to bear the bulk of the economic burden of the high tariffs imposed in 2025,” the study’s researchers wrote in a blog posted Thursday. 

The report comes as Trump’s tariff regime has received criticism from foreign adversaries and bipartisan U.S. lawmakers.

In recent weeks, Trump has threatened tariffs on Canada and a number of countries in Europe before later pulling back on the threats. On Wednesday, half a dozen House Republicans were part of the effort to block tariffs Trump promised on Canada. Trump threatened “consequences” on these GOP individuals who voted against him.

“Any Republican, in the House or the Senate, that votes against TARIFFS will seriously suffer the consequences come Election time, and that includes Primaries!” the president wrote in a Truth Social post Wednesday evening.

The New York Fed’s study corroborates the findings of other recent studies which found U.S. businesses and consumers were shouldering more than 90 percent of the economic burden of tariffs.

New York Fed study: Trump tariffs burden U.S. public

Trump tariffs leave importers with record-breaking $3.5 billion U.S. Customs bond funding shortfall

Published Thu, Feb 12 2026 11:23 AM EST Updated Fri, Feb 13 2026 1:17 PM EST

A record-breaking number of companies shipping products into the United States are coming up short on a federal government requirement to financially guarantee they can cover the import trade duties triggered by President Donald Trump’s tariff policies.

And this is leading to a record amount of money paid to the U.S. to cover the shortfalls.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection data shared with CNBC shows that what are called customs bond “insufficiencies” reached a total of 27,479 in fiscal 2025, with the combined value soaring to almost $3.6 billion. It is the highest number of bond insufficiencies and the highest total value across insufficiencies ever recorded. In fact, it doubles the 2019 level when tariffs enacted by Trump under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 also fueled bond shortfalls.

“Bonds are the primary tool used by U.S. Customs and Border Protection to safeguard the revenue of the United States and ensure compliance with applicable laws and regulations,” said a U.S. Customs and Border Protection spokesperson.

Under CBP guidelines, the agency continuously reviews bond adequacy, and a bond is flagged as being insufficient when an importer’s duty/tax liability exceeds 100% of their current bond capacity. The shortfall comes at a time of record tariff revenue for the U.S. government, with tariff collections surging in January to $30 billion and reaching a year-to-date total of $124 billion. That is up 304% from the same period in 2025.

“In totality, it makes sense that insufficiencies are more than double,” said Jennifer Diaz, attorney at Diaz Trade Law. “Many companies take it for granted that a $50,000 bond should be able to cover you for a one-year period,” she said. “But it might not. They are not utilizing set calculations, and don’t have anyone in their corner telling them that their bond obligation is higher.”

International trade experts told CNBC that with some tariffs increasing from 10%-25% or more for certain products, importers are facing customs bond amounts that now range from the minimum bond amount by regulation of $50,000 to as high as $450 million.

Importers buy customs bonds, also known as surety bonds, through specialized insurance companies known as surety companies. The bonds are issued approximately 30 days before imports arrive in the U.S. to ensure that Customs collects the requisite tariffs in the event an importer does not pay its obligation. The bonds are held for 314 days by CBP in accounts that bear no interest. During this time, duties that were paid can be reviewed and receive final government sign-off.

U.S. importers pay a premium to insure their bonds. The premium is typically 1% of the bond limit, with the price of the bonds covering 10% of the duties and taxes paid over a rolling 12-month period. If tariffs and taxes go up, the customs bond requirement goes up as well.

Surety companies have told CNBC they have seen bond increases upward of 200%. “In one unusual case, a large auto manufacturing client saw its custom bond amount increase by 550%,” Vincent Moy, international surety leader for Marsh Risk, recently told CNBC.

If the bond is insufficient, the importer can’t get the freight, and it is held by CBP until the bond meets requirements. To address the shortfall, importers need to have another bond issued and that can take at least 10 days.

In addition to the bonds, companies rely on related collateral to guarantee trade duty coverage. “If companies do not increase their collateral, the goods will be stopped at the port,” Moy said.

More

Tariff-linked Customs bond funding gap hits record $3.5 billion

Next, commodities. Mr. Bessent, if it’s to hot for you, stay out of the kitchen. Mr. Bessent though, was the Soros man in London who took the UK Treasury for a ride in September 1992.  How the mighty get humbled.

After holding a series of financial positions, he was hired by Soros Fund Management in 1991, eventually becoming the head of its London office. While serving in the role in September 1992, he was a leading member of the SFM group, which profited by $1 billion on Black Wednesday, the British pound sterling crisis.

How China’s ‘unruly’ speculators might be fueling the frenzy in gold market

Published Fri, Feb 13 2026 1:51 AM EST

Gold’s wild price swings in recent weeks are increasingly being linked to speculative trading in China by some analysts, with U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent attributing the heightened volatility to “unruly” Chinese activity.

Gold prices jumped to a record high of $5,594 per ounce on Jan. 29 only to plummet nearly 10% the next day in its sharpest drop in decades. Since then, the yellow metal has struggled to consistently stay above the 5,000 level.

While broader factors such as U.S. interest-rate expectations and geopolitical tensions continuing to drive bullion demand, some analysts believe Chinese retail and institutional investors are playing an outsized role in driving volatility. 

Bessent, who spoke on Fox News’ Sunday Morning Futures, described the move bluntly. “The gold move thing, things have gotten a little unruly in China … They are having to tighten margin requirements. So gold looks to me kind of like a classical, speculative blowoff.”

Surging activity in gold futures and exchange-traded funds, rising use of leverage despite repeated margin hikes appear be behind gold’s choppy trade, market watchers echoed.

China has been the “dominant driver” impacting prices of precious metals this time, said Nicky Shiels, head of research and metals strategy at MKS Pamp.

“That’s been driven by a mix of speculative inflows, retail and institutional, through a mix of ETFs, physical bars and futures positioning,” she told CNBC.

Chinese gold-backed ETF holdings have more than doubled since the start of 2025, according to data provided by Capital Economics, while gold futures trading activity has picked up sharply in recent months. 

“This [volaitilty] is partly because of growing access to gold-linked financial products like futures contracts and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in China,” said Hamad Hussain, economist at Capital Economics. “What’s more, there are signs of increasing amounts of leverage in China’s gold market too, which can lead to significant gold price volatility.”

Volumes on the Shanghai Futures Exchange have surged, with year-to-date average approaching 540 tons per day, Ray Jia, research head APAC ex‑India and trade engagement deputy head China at World Gold Council, told CNBC. That rise builds on the record trading volume in 2025 at 457 tons a day on average.

Regulators have taken notice, with the Shanghai Gold Exchange repeatedly raising margin requirements to curb heightened volatility.

“The growing use of futures contracts and leverage to invest in gold is not typical of investors seeking a safe haven asset,” Hussain said, warning that the recent buying “implies that there may be a speculative bubble inflating.”

From safe haven to speculative trade?

The surge in participation reflects both structural anxieties and tactical positioning.

“Chinese people have limited access to the financial market. They have to invest in property, deposits etc. Gold is a good alternative when housing prices fall and deposit rate low at 1%,” said Zhaopeng Xing, senior China strategist at ANZ Research.

Currently gold accounts for about 1% of Chinese household assets, according to data from ANZ Research. Xing expects that to rise to 5% in the near future, especially amid depressed real estate prices and deposit rates hovering near historic lows. “People believe gold can play a role of insurance.”

For Beijing, the motive is also strategic amid a wider push away from the dollar, he noted.

“The government is pushing de-dollarization to protect themselves from economic coercion from the U.S., said Shaun Rein, founder and managing director at the China Market Research Group.

More

How China's 'unruly' speculators might be fueling the frenzy in gold market

In other news.

Mercedes hit by $1.2 billion in tariff costs as full-year earnings more than halve

Published Thu, Feb 12 2026 3:17 AM EST

German luxury car manufacturer Mercedes-Benz Group on Thursday reported a steep drop in full-year profit and warned of challenging times ahead, following a year marred by intense competition from Chinese rivals and global tariff costs.

The automaker posted full-year operating profit of 5.8 billion euros ($6.9 billion) in 2025, reflecting a 57% drop from a year ago. The result was significantly lower than analyst expectations of 6.6 billion euros.

Mercedes-Benz Group said its earnings were shaped by foreign exchange headwinds and competition in China, alongside a reported 1 billion euro ($1.2 billion) hit in tariff costs.

“Amid a dynamic market environment, our financial results remained within our guidance, thanks to our sharp focus on efficiency, speed, and flexibility,” Ola Källenius, chairman of the board of management at Mercedes-Benz Group, said in a statement.

The results come as European car giants face a multitude of challenges, from rising production costs and supply chain disruptions to regulatory pressures and a bumpy electric vehicle transition.

Shares of the Munich-listed company were off around 2% during morning deals, paring some of its earlier losses. The stock is down roughly 7% so far this year.

Looking ahead, Mercedes-Benz Group said it planned further cost cuts in 2026 as well as a flurry of product launches, targeting an adjusted return on sales for Mercedes-Benz Cars of 3% to 5%, down from the 5% growth it reported in 2025.

The company also said it expects revenues to come in at the prior-year level, after reporting revenues of 132.2 billion euros in 2025, while group earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) is expected to be “significantly above” the previous year’s level.

Group free cash flow of the firm’s industrial business is seen slightly below the 2025 level of 5.4 billion euros.

Autos: Mercedes hit by tariff costs as 2025 earnings more than halve

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.

Consumer prices rose 2.4% annually in January, less than expected

Published Fri, Feb 13 2026 8:32 AM EST

The cost of goods and services rose at a slower annual rate than expected in January, providing hope that the nagging U.S. inflation problem could be starting to ease.

The consumer price index for January accelerated 2.4% from the same time a year ago, down 0.3 percentage point from the prior month, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday. That pulled the inflation rate down to where it was the month after President Donald Trump in April 2025 announced aggressive tariffs on U.S. imports.

Excluding food and energy, core CPI also was up 2.5%. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had been looking for an annual rate of 2.5% for both readings.

On a monthly basis, the all-items index was up a seasonally adjusted 0.2% while core gained 0.3%. The forecast had been 0.3% for both.

Though the category accounted for much of the CPI gain, shelter costs rose just 0.2% for the month, bringing the annual increase down to 3%.

Elsewhere, food prices increased 0.2% as five of the six major grocery group categories posted gains. Energy fell 1.5% while vehicle prices also were muted, with new vehicles up just 0.1% and used cars and trucks falling 1.8%.

Stock market futures were little changed after the report while Treasury yields moved lower.

CPI inflation report January 2026:

Why Alphabet’s 100-year sterling bond is raising new fears over debt-fuelled AI arms race

Published Thu, Feb 12 2026 5:09 AM EST

Alphabet’s rare 100-year sterling bond is the latest sign of late-cycle exuberance in credit markets, strategists say, as tech hyperscalers ramp up borrowing to historic levels to fund vast data center and AI infrastructure buildouts.

The century bond — the Google-owner’s debut issuance in sterling — is part of a broader multi-tranche, multi-currency borrowing drive totaling some $20 billion. The offering spans maturities across dollars, euros and sterling, and includes a debut bond in Swiss francs.

Century bonds remain rare, and are more commonly associated with governments than corporate borrowers. Demand typically comes from large institutional investors such as pension funds and insurers seeking to match long-term liabilities.

Alphabet joins a small group of sterling-denominated century bond issuers, including the University of Oxford, the Wellcome Trust, EDF Energy and the government of Mexico.

The 100-year bond attracted almost 10 times orders for the £1 billion ($1.37 billion) sale on Tuesday, with the coupon reaching 120 basis points above 10-year gilts, according to a report from Bloomberg, which cites anonymous sources.

‘Off-the-historical scale’

Bill Blain, CEO of Wind Shift Capital, said the deal is reflective of the “off-the-historical scale” levels of debt now being raised in both public and private markets to finance AI expansion.

Alphabet said last week that its capex spend is expected to hit $185 billion this year.

“I give them full credit for taking advantage of the opportunity that existed to sell a moderately high coupon 100-year bond,” Blain told CNBC in an interview. “They clearly identified demand… that this was what U.K. insurance and pension funds wanted to cover their liabilities.”

But with credit spreads at historically tight levels, long-term data center demand uncertain, and rapid technological change set to create winners and losers in the sector, Blain said the deal offers further proof of market froth around AI.

“Firms that have spotted the opportunity and been able to fill it — they’ve spotted the opportunity because there is froth there that’s getting people excited about being involved in that,” he said.

“I think the fact that a 100-year bond comes out, you can’t get much more frothy than that. If you’re looking for a signal of a top — even if it’s a brilliantly-executed deal — it does look a bit like a signal of a top, absolutely.”

More

Google-owner Alphabet’s century bond flags new AI arms race debt fears

Technology Update.

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

Record amount of UK solar power approved after clean energy auction

Tue, 10th Feb 2026 09:17

(Alliance News) - A record amount of solar power in the UK is among more than 200 new renewables projects which have been awarded contracts to generate electricity.

The UK government has announced the results of the latest "contracts for difference" auction for clean energy technologies including onshore wind and solar farms.

Successful projects include the largest solar farm to win a contract in Britain and the largest onshore wind farm in a decade, the Department for Energy Security & Net Zero has said.

Under the contracts, renewables generators bid to receive an agreed rate for the power they produce.

If the price of electricity drops below the agreed rate, they are paid a top-up subsidy from consumer bills and if it exceeds it, the generators have to pay back the difference to consumers.

The latest auction has secured a record 4.9 gigawatts of solar power, including West Burton solar farm, a Nationally Significant Infrastructure Project and the largest solar farm to win a government renewables contract, on the site of a former coal-fired power station in Nottinghamshire.

Onshore solar schemes have been agreed at a price of GBP65.23 per megawatt hour while new onshore wind has been secured at GBP72.24 per megawatt hour.

The government said the prices were under half the GBP147 per megawatt hour that analysis shows building and operating new gas power stations would cost.

Contracts have been awarded to 1.3 gigawatts of onshore wind, including Imerys Wind Farm in Cornwall, which is the largest onshore wind project to be successful in England in a decade, after a de facto ban on the technology was lifted by the Labour government.

Taken together with last month's contracts for offshore wind, the government said it had secured a record 14.7GW of clean, homegrown power from 201 schemes, enough to power the equivalent of 16 million homes, and keeping it on track to meet its "clean power by 2030" mission to source almost all the UK's electricity from low carbon sources.

Energy Secretary Ed Miliband said: "These results show once again that clean British power is the right choice for our country, agreeing a price for new onshore wind and solar that is over 50% cheaper than the cost of building and operating new gas.

"By backing solar and onshore wind at scale, we're driving bills down for good and protecting families, businesses, and our country from the fossil fuel rollercoaster controlled by petrostates and dictators. This is how we take back control of our energy and deliver a new era of energy abundance and independence."

Chris Stark, the head of the Energy Department's "mission control" to deliver the clean power pledge, said: "Today's record results are another boost for Britain's 2030 clean power mission. They mean more homegrown power, greater energy security, at a good price for the consumer."

"With each new solar and onshore wind project we reduce Britain's reliance on gas power plants, insulating families from the next spike in global gas prices."

By Emily Beament, Press Association Environment Correspondent

Record amount of UK solar power approved after clean energy auction | Financial News

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. The genius “Red Priest” Vivaldi goes off the Venice reservation and how. Approx. 12 unusual minutes.

Antonio Lucio VİVALDİ: Concerto Grosso à 10 Stromenti İn D Major RV.562

Antonio Lucio VİVALDİ: Concerto Grosso à 10 Stromenti İn D Major RV.562

Next, more fun with numbers. Approx. 11 minutes.

A Number Sequence with Everything - Numberphile

A Number Sequence with Everything - Numberphile

Finally, some of Ireland’ many castles. Approx. 30 minutes.

24 Beautiful Castles in Ireland 🇮🇪 | The Most Amazing Places in Ireland | Ireland Travel Video

24 Beautiful Castles in Ireland 🇮🇪 | The Most Amazing Places in Ireland | Ireland Travel Video

Capitalism gave the world what it needed, a higher standard of living for a steadily increasing number of people.

Ludwig von Mises

Friday, 13 February 2026

CPI Day. The Golden Age Of America. You Never Had It So Good.

Baltic Dry Index. 2095 +137    Brent Crude 67.37

Spot Gold  4991                        Spot Silver 76.48

US 2 Year Yield 3.47 -0.05

US Federal Debt. 38.680 trillion US GDP 31.149 trillion.

“Just in: GREAT JOBS NUMBERS, FAR GREATER THAN EXPECTED! The United States of America should be paying MUCH LESS on its Borrowings (BONDS!). We are again the strongest Country in the World, and should therefore be paying the LOWEST INTEREST RATE, by far. This would be an INTEREST COST SAVINGS OF AT LEAST ONE TRILLION DOLLARS PER YEAR - BALANCED BUDGET, PLUS. WOW! The Golden Age of America is upon us!!!” 

President Donald Trump, in a Truth Social post.

As President Trump boasts of the great US job numbers that came out on Wednesday, (he obviously missed the massive downward revisions,) I see a US economy heading into a great AI Trump Slump.

If we manage to avoid a new Iran war this weekend and next week, a great AI disruption lies directly ahead.

Dow slides 600 points, S&P 500 falls for a third day as AI disruption fears rattle markets: Live updates

Updated Fri, Feb 13 2026 7:32 PM EST

Stocks dropped on Thursday as investors began to worry about the negative side of the artificial intelligence buildout, which threatens to disrupt the business models of whole industries and raise unemployment.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 669.42 points, or 1.34%, to end at 49,451.98. The index was led lower by Cisco Systems, which slid 12% after the maker of networking hardware such as switches and routers issued disappointing guidance for the current quarter. The S&P 500 dropped 1.57% and closed at 6,832.76, while the Nasdaq Composite lost 2.03% and settled at 22,597.15.

Certain pockets of the stock market have been hit this year on the release of AI tools that could replicate their businesses — or at least eat away at their profit margins.

Financial stocks such as Morgan Stanley came under pressure on fears that AI would disrupt wealth management businesses, while shares of trucking and logistics companies such as C.H. Robinson plummeted 14% on fears that AI would streamline freight operations, thereby weighing on certain revenue lines.

AI disruption fears even spread to the real estate sector, hurting stocks like CBRE and SL Green Realty, on the notion higher unemployment will hit demand for office space.

Software stocks — a group that has been plagued by disruption worries in recent weeks — extended their year-to-date losses during the trading day. Palantir Technologies shares pulled back almost 5%, putting its retreat this year at more than 27%. Shares of Autodesk dropped nearly 4%, and the stock’s year-to-date slide is now about 24%. The iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (IGV) fell nearly 3%. The fund now stands about 31% below its recent high after first entering a bear market last month.

“AI, which was the one thing that was driving these stocks to parabolic heights and to multiples that were getting extreme — not overwhelmingly extreme — now is the one thing that’s holding them back,” said Jay Woods, chief market strategist at Freedom Capital Markets.

----Traders now brace for a key inflation report Friday. Economists polled by Dow Jones are expecting January CPI to show a 0.3% increase for both headline and core, which excludes food and energy prices.

“CPI is a little bit less important now that we got the good jobs number, because it already allows the Fed to kind of pause for a substantial amount of time,” said Ross Mayfield, investment strategist at Baird. “If CPI came in hot, you’d have a couple of months of data to kind of get a sense of the trend before the Fed actually has to make a hard call.”

On the flip side, if the data were to come in light, the strategist anticipates that Friday could be a risk-on kind of day, though “it would have to be a pretty, pretty brutal number to the upside to really impact equity markets and fed fund futures,” he added.

Stock market news for Feb.12, 2026

Stock futures are little changed as traders await big consumer inflation report: Live updates

Updated Fri, Feb 13 2026 7:31 PM EST

Stock futures were roughly flat Thursday night after a downbeat day for the U.S. stock market. Traders also looked ahead to a key consumer inflation report due Friday morning.

S&P 500 futures advanced 0.02%, while Nasdaq 100 futures gained 0.04%. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average were little changed.

In after-hours trading, semiconductor giant Applied Materials jumped 13% on the back of strong earnings results and encouraging outlook. Airbnb shares rose about 4% as investors cheered the rental company’s upbeat guidancePinterest slipped 17% on fourth-quarter results that missed expectations, as well as a weak forecast.

Major U.S. averages dropped on Thursday as fears around artificial intelligence disruption spread across the market, most notably into real estatetrucking and software sectors. The S&P 500 dropped nearly 1.6%, while the Nasdaq Composite lost about 2%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed almost 670 points, or 1.3%.

Each of the “Magnificent Seven” tech giants closed in the red. A 12% slide in Cisco Systems, driven by the company’s disappointing guidance, weighed on the broader market. Apple lost 5% during the regular session, notching its worst single-day loss since April 2025.

“In terms of an AI bubble, the reality is there’s some steam coming out of certain names as the market tries to determine winners and losers and is becoming more discriminate,” Brian Levitt, global market strategist at Invesco, said Thursday on CNBC’s “Closing Bell.”

“But the Dow Jones Industrial Average is close to 50,000. The S&P 500 is close to 6,900... There is, obviously, some carnage underneath, but in general, this is not an AI bubble. The markets are holding up very nicely,” he continued.

A new market catalyst awaits on Friday with the release of January’s consumer price index report. The inflation gauge is expected to show a 2.5% advance from a year earlier, according to economists polled by Dow Jones. On a month-over-month basis, economists call for a 0.3% increase.

The three major averages are on pace for weekly losses, with the S&P 500 and Dow off more than 1% through Thursday’s close. The Nasdaq is on track for a 1.9% decline in the period.

Stock market today: Live updates

Gold bounces back from near one-week low; U.S. inflation data in focus

Published Fri, Feb 13 2026 12:01 AM EST

Gold rebounded on Friday, recovering from a nearly one-week low in the previous session, as investors awaited key U.S. inflation figures for guidance on interest rate direction following robust jobs data that reduced expectations of rate cuts.

Spot gold was up 1.3% at $4,982.59 per ounce, as of 0311 GMT, and has gained 0.4% so far this week. U.S. gold futures for April delivery climbed 1.1% to $5,001.80 per ounce.

“The (precious) market will eventually continue to trend higher over time, but certainly with volatilities as heightened as they are and these big round levels offering, you know, sort of indicators of where positioning might be, big breaks certainly accelerate these moves,” Capital.com senior market analyst Kyle Rodda said.

Gold dropped about 3% to a near one-week low on Thursday, breaking below the $5,000-an-ounce key support as selling pressure intensified after an equities rout.

“Precious metals came down with equities last night. They didn’t really have much of a macro catalyst. Obviously, the overnight sell-offs was largely due to fresh fears about AI disruption,” Rodda added.

Asian shares retreated from record highs on Friday as worries about shrinking margins in the tech sector hit the likes of Apple.

The yellow metal also come under pressure after data released on Wednesday showed the U.S. job market began 2026 on firmer footing than expected, reinforcing the view that policymakers may keep rates elevated for longer.

Investors now await inflation data, due later in the day, for more cues on the Fed’s monetary policy path, with two 25-basis-point cuts currently priced in this year, with the first expected in June. Non-yielding bullion tends to do well in low-interest-rate environments.

Spot silver climbed 2.5% to $77.02 per ounce, rebounding from an 11% drop on Thursday, though it remained on track for a weekly loss of 1.2%.

Spot platinum added 1.7% to $2,034.41 per ounce, while palladium rose 2.2% to $1,653.0. Both metals were set to notch weekly losses.

Gold bounces back from near one-week low; U.S. inflation data in focus

AI Freakout Claims New Victim as Logistics Stocks Fall

February 12, 2026 at 10:55 PM GMT

Next up for the AI freakout are logistics stocks, which had the embarrassing distinction of being knocked about by a former karaoke company. They sank Thursday as investors rushed to dump shares amid ever-growing fears that artificial intelligence is going to take down more and more industries.

The Russell 3000 Trucking Index dropped 7.8%, with CH Robinson Worldwide at one point plunging by a record 24%, and Landstar System falling 18%. The index is on track for its worst day since President Donald Trump launched his global trade war last April. Drug distribution stocks were also caught up in the selloff, with McKesson and Cardinal Health both sliding more than 4%.

The rout was sparked by an update from tiny AI logistics firm Algorhythm Holdings, which previously traded as the Singing Machine Co.. It announced that its SemiCab platform in live customer deployments was helping its customers’ internal operations to scale freight volumes by 300% to 400% without a corresponding increase in operational headcount. Shares of the company soared 12%.

Investors had seen transportation as part of the “AI resistant” trade, particularly as volatility in technology names caused a push to diversify portfolios. However, Thursday’s selloff has proven that even the “old economy” isn’t immune to the AI concerns that have been wreaking havoc on the market. David E. Rovella

The AI Freakout Claims Another Victim: Evening Briefing Americas - Bloomberg

Microsoft AI CEO Warns Most White Collar Jobs Fully Automated "Within Next 12-18 Months"; Anthropic Fears Potential For 'Heinous Crimes'

Friday, Feb 13, 2026 - 12:15 AM

The man leading Microsoft’s AI sprawling efforts is sounding the alarm over imminent mass labor disruptions, warning that the overwhelming majority of white-collar professional work could vanish to automation far sooner than most business and policy leaders are willing to admit - something we've been concerned about since early 2023.

In an interview with the Financial Times, Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman forecasted that within the next two years a vast swath of desk-bound tasks will be swallowed by AI.

“I think we’re going to have a human-level performance on most, if not all, professional tasks - so white collar where you’re sitting down at a computer, either being a lawyer, accountant, or project manager, or marketing person - most of the tasks will be fully automated by an AI within the next 12 to 18 months,” Suleyman said when asked about the time table for Artificial general intelligence, commonly known as AGI.

The specter of mass job displacement now haunts governments around the world, even as the true body count remains murky amid broader economic headwinds.

A recent Challenger report showed that AI was blamed for 7,624 job cuts in January, 7% of the month’s total, and linked to 54,836 announced layoffs across 2025. Since tracking started in 2023, AI has been cited in 79,449 planned cuts, roughly 3% of the overall tally.

"It’s difficult to say how big an impact AI is having on layoffs specifically. We know leaders are talking about AI, many companies want to implement it in operations, and the market appears to be rewarding companies that mention it," said Challenger.

A stark illustration is unfolding at Bay Area startup Mercor, which has quietly hired tens of thousands of white-collar contractors, often highly credentialed specialists in medicine, law, finance, engineering, writing, and the arts, to train the very AI systems destined to replace them. Paid $45 to $250 per hour for weeks or months of reviewing and refining model outputs for giants like OpenAI and Anthropic, these workers are, in effect, being paid to hand over the keys to their own obsolescence, the Wall Street Journal reports.

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Microsoft AI CEO Warns Most White Collar Jobs Fully Automated "Within Next 12-18 Months"; Anthropic Fears Potential For 'Heinous Crimes' | ZeroHedge

In other news, China. Tariffs? What tariffs?

A year into Trump tariffs, Chinese factories and ports are buzzing with activity

Published Wed, Feb 11 2026 10:38 PM EST

A year after U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs spooked exporters and customers, Chinese factories and ports are buzzing with activity ahead of the Lunar New Year — even pushing freight rates higher.

Chinese factory activity typically surges at the start of the year with manufacturers racing to fulfil orders and ship out goods before the country enters an extended holiday for the Chinese New Year. This year’s pre-holiday rush appears as strong as ever despite Trump tariffs.

Renaud Anjoran, founder and CEO of Agilian Technology, a Guangdong-based electronics manufacturer, said his factory was operating at nearly full capacity after a year of stop-start tariff threats: “We are very busy.”

“It’s back to the situation where it’s like tariffs don’t exist. American customers are not thinking of [buying from] other places,” Anjoran said, adding that some clients had to pay additional costs to have goods made and shipped out before the holiday.

His plant in the city of Dongguan ships more than half its products to the U.S., maintaining exports at levels seen before Trump’s imposition of tariffs last year.

“Factories saw orders, production and earnings jump ahead of the Chinese New Year holidays,” according to China Beige Book that tracks economic data from the world’s second largest economy.

The research firm estimates that in January, industrial output jumped compared to a year ago, with both domestic and export orders “accelerating sharply on-year and on-month.” The official reading on output for January and February will be out in March.

Major ports in China handled 40% more containers during the week ended Feb. 1 from a year earlier, according to a team of transport and logistics analysts at HSBC Bank. That marks the fastest year-on-year growth in more than 12 months and well above the average weekly growth of about 10% in 2025.

Take the ports in Ningbo, one of China’s most critical maritime hubs: Terminals operated “beyond capacity, with individual vessels overbooked by more than 20%, and container gate-in has been suspended,” said Jay Guo, dean at Ningbo China Institute for Supply Chain Innovation.

Rising transportation costs

Severe traffic congestion has pushed trucking rates up by 80%, Guo said, noting that many factories and freight forwarders will halt operations from Friday and resume next Thursday.

“CNY-focused advisories for shippers in Europe, North America, and Asia report a clear pre-holiday pull-forward of bookings from China,” said Wolfgang Lehmacher, a global supply chain and logistics expert.

That said, the spike was also in part thanks to the low-base effects from the timing of the Lunar New Year, which is in mid-February this year, versus late January in 2025.

The surge in activity, driven by pre-holiday front-loading, has pushed up freight prices. The Shanghai Containerized Freight Index, a key benchmark for container freight rates from Shanghai to major global destinations, was floating in the range of 1,400 to 1,656, in early January compared with the average level over the past 15 years of 1,337 to 1,568, according to HSBC’s freight monitor report released Monday.

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A year into Trump tariffs, Chinese factories and ports are buzzing with activity

Along with the sunshine came some rain. Annual revisions to the jobs count benchmarked against Census data showed that for the April 2024-March 2025 period, payrolls growth was 898,000 lower than initially stated. Moreover, November’s previous estimate fell by 15,000 and December was off 2,000. For the final six months of 2025, the economy lost a net 1,000 jobs.

Here are the five key takeaways from the January jobs report

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

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

UK economy ekes out 0.1% growth in the fourth quarter

Published Thu, Feb 12 2026 2:05 AM EST

The U.K. economy grew a meager 0.1% in the fourth quarter, according to preliminary figures from the Office for National Statistics on Thursday.

Economists polled by Reuters expected the economy to have grown 0.2% over the October-December period, following 0.1% growth in the third quarter.

Month-on-month, the economy expanded 0.1% in December, down from a 0.2% expansion, revised down from 0.3%, the previous month. Pound sterling was flat against the dollar following the data, at $1.3624.

The ONS’ Director of Economic Statistics Liz McKeown said the latest data showed a mixed economic picture.

“The often-dominant services sector showed no growth, with the main driver instead coming from manufacturing. Construction, meanwhile, registered its worst performance in more than four years,” she said on X Thursday.

The U.K. economy is estimated to have grown 1.3% in 2025, the ONS noted, following growth of 1.1% in 2024.

The growth figures come after the Bank of England voted narrowly at its early February meeting to keep interest rates on hold, at 3.75%, given persistent inflationary pressures.

Those pressures are expected to ease in the coming months, however, and economists predict that the central bank could next cut rates in April to stimulate the lackluster British economy.

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UK Q4 GDP 2025

Technology Update.

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

Off topic but interesting.

China has planted so many trees around the Taklamakan Desert that it's turned this 'biological void' into a carbon sink

11 February 2026

Mass tree planting in China is turning one of the world's largest and driest deserts into a carbon sink, meaning it absorbs more carbon from the atmosphere than it emits, new research reveals.

The Taklamakan Desert (also spelled Taklimakan or Takla Makan) is slightly larger than Montana, stretching across about 130,000 square miles (337,000 square kilometers). It is encircled by high mountains, which block moist air from reaching the desert for most of the year, creating extremely arid conditions that are too harsh for most plants.

However, over the past few decades, China has sowed a forest around the Taklamakan's edges, and a new study suggests this approach is beginning to bear fruit.

"We found, for the first time, that human-led intervention can effectively enhance carbon sequestration in even the most extreme arid landscapes, demonstrating the potential to transform a desert into a carbon sink and halt desertification," study co-author Yuk Yung, a professor of planetary science at Caltech and a senior research scientist in NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, told Live Science in an email.

Over 95% of the Taklamakan Desert is covered in shifting sand, meaning it has long been considered a "biological void," according to the study. The desert has been growing since the 1950s, when China underwent massive urbanization and farmland expansion. This conversion of natural land created the conditions for more sandstorms, which, in general, blow away soil and deposit sand instead, causing land degradation and desertification.

In 1978, China implemented the Three-North Shelterbelt Program, a huge ecological engineering project intended to slow desertification. Also called the "Great Green Wall," the project aimed to plant billions of trees around the margins of the Taklamakan and Gobi deserts by 2050. More than 66 billion trees have been planted in northern China to date, but experts debate whether the Great Green Wall has significantly reduced the frequency of sandstorms.

China finished encircling the Taklamakan Desert with vegetation in 2024, and researchers say the effort has stabilized sand dunes and grown forest cover in the country from 10% of its area in 1949 to more than 25% today.

Now, scientists have found that sprawling vegetation in the Taklamakan Desert's periphery is absorbing more carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere than the desert is releasing, meaning the Taklamakan may be transforming into a stable carbon sink.

The researchers analyzed ground observations of different vegetation-cover types, as well as satellite data showing precipitation, vegetation cover, photosynthesis and CO2 fluxes in the Taklamakan Desert over the past 25 years. They also used the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Carbon Tracker, which models CO2 sources and sinks globally, to bolster their findings.

The results, published Jan. 19 in the journal PNAS, show a long-term trend of expanding vegetation and rising CO2 uptake along the desert's edges that coincides both in time and space with the Great Green Wall.

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China has planted so many trees around the Taklamakan Desert that it's turned this 'biological void' into a carbon sink

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)

Another weekend and the last weekend before Peace President Trump attacks Iran? Have a great weekend everyone.

“The strong payrolls print in January may be somewhat exaggerated: construction payrolls jumped, sensitive to warmer January weather; healthcare payrolls were well above trend; and retail stabilized. The underlying pace for private payrolls is probably closer to 50k per month after accounting for the temporary strength in those areas, close to the recent pace.” 

Michael Gapen, Morgan Stanley chief economist.