Saturday, 9 May 2026

Special Update 09/05/2026 NACHO, Will The Strait Reopen This Year?

Baltic Dry Index. 2978 -56    Brent Crude 101.29

Spot Gold 4715                           Spot Silver 80.87

U S 2 Year Yield 3.90 -0.02

US Federal Debt. 39.219 trillion

US GDP 32.102 trillion

Every age has its peculiar folly: Some scheme, project, or fantasy into which it plunges, spurred on by the love of gain, the necessity of excitement, or the force of imitation.

Charles Mackay, Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds. 

In the stock casinos, the greatest bubble bubbles on and on. “War?” “What war?” “Supply chain disruption? Who cares?”

Uncle Scam running two trillion a year deficits in peacetime, so what?

More and more central banks acquiring gold bullion held outside of New York and London, meaningless. “Buy more AI stocks.”

And so goes on life in the Great Stock Bubble of 2026. “1929, never heard of it. Besides that was then, this is now and we have computers and AI now.”

What could possibly go wrong?

S&P 500 closes at another record, notches longest weekly winning streak since 2024: Live updates

Updated Fri, May 8 20264:31 PM EDT

The S&P 500 advanced 0.84% to end at 7,398.93, while the Nasdaq Composite climbed 1.71% to 26,247.08. Both indexes hit new all-time intraday highs in the session and closed at records. The Dow Jones Industrial Average inched up 12.19 points, or 0.02%, to settle at 49,609.16.

All three major averages posted weekly gains, propelled by strong earnings. Upbeat tech earnings lifted the Nasdaq to a 4.5% climb, while the S&P 500 gained 2.3%. Both posted six straight winning weeks, marking the longest win streak since 2024 for the broad market benchmark and the tech-heavy index. The Dow Industrials lagged with a week-to-date gain of 0.2%.

Sentiment was bolstered by the Bureau of Labor Statistics reporting that nonfarm payrolls rose by 115,000 last month, more than the 55,000 that economists polled by Dow Jones were expecting. The U.S. jobless rate also held steady at 4.3%, in line with expectations.

However, oil prices were marginally higher, with West Texas Intermediate crude futures rising 0.64% to $95.42 per barrel, after the U.S. and Iran exchanged fire in the Strait of Hormuz. Each side claimed the other struck first. U.S. Central Command said that military forces “intercepted unprovoked Iranian attacks and responded with self-defense strikes” as a trio of U.S. Navy destroyers transited the waterway.

In a Truth Social post Thursday night, President Donald Trump said there was “no damage done to the three Destroyers, but great damage done to the Iranian attackers.” He also reportedly said that the ceasefire is still in effect, saying the strikes against Iranian targets were “just a love tap.”

Investors have been awaiting a response from Iran on the proposal to end the conflict in the Middle East after Iranian state media reported Thursday that Tehran was reviewing messages from the U.S. that were received through Pakistani mediators but had not yet reached a conclusion. Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters Friday that the U.S. “should know something today.”

The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite had hit fresh record highs in the previous session before retreating after a senior Iranian official said that the country would not allow the U.S. to reopen the Strait of Hormuz passageway with an “unrealistic plan,” Iran’s state-owned Press TV reported. The official added that Iran would not let the U.S. leave the conflict without paying reparations for the damage it has inflicted.

But Keith Buchanan, senior portfolio manager at Globalt Investments, is skeptical that the market’s recent run can continue, especially given how much of it is being propped up by optimism surrounding artificial intelligence capital expenditures. That has spurred a rally in memory stocks, with Micron Technology and Sandisk, for example, soaring 15% and 16% on Friday alone. Micron posted a weekly gain of nearly 38%, while Sandisk advanced more than 31%.

“The market is trading valuations that don’t indicate the risk that we see that out there,” Buchanan said, citing the potential for the Middle East conflict to continue longer than expected and the increasingly adverse impacts of that on the consumer.

“It’s a tale of the AI spend and the ripple effects – and earnings as well – that’s absolutely powering an economy that is, without that spending and optimism, probably pretty lackluster,” he continued.

Stocks close in positive territory

The three major averages finished higher on Friday.

The S&P 500 rose 0.84% to 7,398.93, while the Nasdaq Composite surged 1.71% to 26,247.08. The Dow Jones Industrial Average ticked up 12.19 points, or 0.02%, to 49,609.16.

Rising energy prices will lead to demand destruction: JPMorgan

Consumers will adjust to rising energy prices by reducing demand, economists at JPMorgan said.

Oil prices fell this week as the market hoped for a U.S.-Iran deal, though Brent has since stabilized around $100 per barrel amid a series of violent confrontations in the Persian Gulf.

The supply buffers that have insultated the oil market from the war are eroding, economists at JPMorgan told clients in a Thursday note.

“We expect to see increasing signs of demand destruction as energy product consumers adjust to rising prices,” the economists said.

Stock market news for May 8, 2026

Positive Jobs Data Met by Record Consumer Fear

May 8, 2026 at 11:50 PM GMT+1

New data from the federal government Friday indicated US employers had added more jobs than expected for a second month in a row, despite ongoing threats from inflation and the collateral damage of the Iran war.

With unemployment holding at 4.3%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the figures offer Federal Reserve policymakers space to keep interest rates unchanged for the foreseeable future. Last week, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said the job market has shown “more signs of stability.”

But as is often the case of late, positive vibes of US government data didn’t match the latest sullen read of consumer sentiment by the University of Michigan. The gauge fell in recent weeks to a record low on growing concerns about the impact of inflation on personal finances and buying conditions.

Confidence continues to languish as Americans’ anxiety about the overall cost of living is compounded by sharply higher prices at the gas pump. The strain on household budgets poses a risk to consumer spending, a primary engine for the economy.

Gasoline prices breached $4.50 a gallon on average this week for the first time since July 2022, American Automobile Association data show. They’re up more than 50% since the start of the Iran war. David E. Rovella

US Consumer Sentiment Hits Record Low: Evening Briefing America - Bloomberg

U.S. payrolls increased 115,000 in April, more than expected; unemployment at 4.3%

Published Fri, May 8 2026 8:31 AM EDT

Job creation was better than expected in April, as the plodding U.S. labor market continued to defy expectations for a more aggressive slowdown this year, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday.

Nonfarm payrolls rose by a seasonally adjusted 115,000 for the month, down from the 185,000 created in an unusually strong March, but better than the 55,000 forecast in the Dow Jones consensus estimate.

The unemployment rate held at 4.3%, further proof that the labor market has reached a point where only modest job creation is needed to keep the jobless level steady, given little growth in the labor force.

Average hourly earnings, another closely watched metric of labor market health, came in lower than expected, increasing 0.2% for the month and 3.6% on an annual basis, compared with respective estimates for 0.3% and 3.8%.

Stock market futures held onto gains following the release while Treasury yields were lower.

The report is "evidence of the underlying resilience of this economy and of this labor market, despite all of the slings and arrows of outrageous concerns about the Middle East and unemployment and inflation and the Fed," said Scott Clemons, chief investment strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman.

"One month does not a new trend establish," he added. "There's been a lot of month to month volatility in the jobs market over the past year. I'm not sure that's completely gone away. We get another two or three months of solid job gains, then I feel a little bit more comfortable."

Following recent trends, healthcare led with 37,000 new positions, though multiple other sectors also saw gains.

Transportation and warehousing added 30,000, retail grew by 22,000, and social assistance saw a gain of 17,000.

On the downside, information services lost 13,000, part of a continuing trend that has seen the category down 342,000 jobs since November 2022 as artificial intelligence has hit the sector, according to the BLS. That has equated to a loss of 11% of jobs during the period.

A broader measure that includes discouraged workers and those holding part-time jobs for economic reasons rose to 8.2%, up 0.2 percentage point. The household survey, which the bureau uses to calculate the unemployment rate, showed a decline of 226,000 workers as the participation rate declined to 61.8%, the lowest since October 2021.

The so-called real unemployment rate jumped in large part to a surge in those employed part time for economic reasons, often referred to as unemployed. The level rose by 445,000 to 4.9 million.

Revisions from prior reports were mixed: The March count rose by 7,000 while the February number moved even lower, down by 23,000 to a loss of 156,000. The initial report put the February job loss at 92,000.

"I'm looking through the report trying to find problems, and it's fairly bulletproof this month," said Dan North, senior economist for North America at Allianz. "You'd have to say that the numbers overall aren't impressive. I think that they're still pointing towards a softening job market, but certainly not a collapse."

More

Jobs report April 2026

In other news, “Curiouser and curiouser!”

From stalemate to strikes: A dizzying week of US-Iran negotiations over the strait of Hormuz

Mark Saunokonoko  Fri, 8 May 2026 at 4:39 am BST

It has been a week of dizzying, whiplash news in the Iran war.

Seven days ago, the US-Iran ceasefire was holding but negotiations seemed stalled, or inching forward at best. With the strait of Hormuz effectively choked off by Iran, and the US Navy blockading Iranian ports, there was talk of a one-page memorandum being passed between Washington and Tehran to break the stalemate.

Where are we now?

Friday, 1 May

Iran ceasefire holds as war powers deadline expires

The month begins with the US-Iran ceasefire still in place. With a war powers deadline looming, which would put pressure on Donald Trump to end the war or make the case to Congress for extending it, a Trump administration official declares that US hostilities against Iran have been “terminated”, citing the ceasefire.

Meanwhile, Iranian state media reports Tehran has handed a new peace offer to Pakistan, to pass on to Washington. Trump says he is not “satisfied” with the terms of the deal, which aren’t specified. “Right now, we have talks going on, they’re not getting there,” he says.

Adding some spice to the day, the Pentagon announces plans to pull 5,000 troops from Germany. Fuel prices across the US hit a four year high.

Saturday, 2 May

All quiet on the strait of Hormuz

Trump tells a Florida rally that the US navy acted “like pirates”, while describing a recent US operation to seize an Iranian ship. “We … land on top of it and we took over the ship. We took over the cargo, took over the oil. It’s a very profitable business,” Trump says, in remarks reported the following day. A barrel of Brent crude trades for about $110, down from more than $126 a few days earlier.

Sunday, 3 May

Project Freedom launched by Trump and the US.

With the ceasefire, agreed on 7 April, seemingly at a stalemate, Trump says the US will launch a new effort to help guide stranded ships out of the strait. Trump calls the plan Project Freedom.

Trump gives few other logistical details. Later, US Central Command provides some clarification, indicating the US role is to coordinate and guide trapped vessels, not to escort ships using US naval assets.

Trump claims his representatives are engaged in “very positive” discussions with Iran, as the US blockade of Iran’s ports continues. Ebrahim Azizi, the head of the national security commission of the Iranian parliament, responds to Project Freedom with a warning: “Any American intervention in the process of the new Strait of Hormuz maritime system will be considered a violation of the ceasefire.”

Monday, 4 May

Ominous start to Project Freedom

As the US operation begins, Hormuz crackles into life. The US military says its forces have destroyed six Iranian small boats and intercepted Iranian cruise missiles and drones, which Iran denies. After weeks of respite, the United Arab Emirates says it has again come under attack from Iranian missiles and drones, which again Iran denies.

An angry Trump threatens that Iranian forces will be “blown off the face of the earth” if it attacks US vessels trying to reopen the strait. Brent crude rises to $114 a barrel.

Tuesday, 5 May

Mixed messaging, and Project Freedom paused

US defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, is joined by Gen Dan Caine, the chair of the joint chiefs of staff, at a Pentagon briefing. Hegseth says the US has successfully secured a path through the strait and that hundreds of ships were lining up to pass through. “We know the Iranians are embarrassed by this ​fact. They said they control the strait. They do not,” he says.

Caine acknowledges Iran has fired at commercial vessels and seized two container ships since the ceasefire was announced. But he says all the Iranian attacks have fallen below the threshold of restarting major combat operations.

Later, the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, tells a White House briefing the initial major US military operation against Iran has concluded. “The operation is over,” he says. “Epic Fury … We’re done with that stage of it.” Rubio says the US is now focused on Project Freedom.

Hours later, an abrupt change of plan. Trump announces Project Freedom has been paused, just one day after it began. Trump writes the plan is on ice for “a short period” to give space for peace negotiations with Iran. The volte-face, he says, comes as “Great Progress has been made toward a Complete and Final Agreement with Representatives of Iran”. After Trump’s pullback, oil dips to about $109.

Wednesday, 6 May

A one-page memorandum and peace hopes

Axios reports Washington and Tehran are close to agreeing on a one-page memorandum of understanding to end the war. It says the US expected Iran to respond to several key points in the next 48 hours. Officials in Pakistan tell the Guardian talks remain “difficult”.

Trump logs on to Truth Social. “Assuming Iran agrees to give what has been agreed to, which is perhaps a big assumption, the already legendary Epic Fury will be at an end,” he writes. “If they don’t agree, the bombing starts, and it will be, sadly, at a much higher level and intensity than it was before.”

Soon after, the US military fires on an Iranian-flagged oil tanker. Iran’s most senior negotiator, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, responds defiantly on Telegram. For the first time in weeks, Brent crude briefly drops below $100, before settling about $101.

Thursday, 7 May

Unhappy Saudis, and US and Iran trade fire in strait

A possible explanation for Trump’s sudden pause of Project Freedom emerges. NBC reports Saudi Arabia was so unhappy about the US operation that it told Washington the US would no longer be welcome to use a key airbase or fly planes through its airspace. Trump failed to win over the crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, on a phone call, reports say.

Brent crude drops to $96 amid reports out of Pakistan that the US and Iran are close to a temporary agreement to halt the war. “Both sides are now more amenable to suggestions, the distance between their proposals is reducing,” says a diplomat in Islamabad with knowledge of the negotiations.

But hours later, US and Iranian forces trade fire in the strait. The US military says it intercepted Iranian attacks on three destroyers sailing in the strait. Iran’s state media, meanwhile, says Iranian forces exchanged fire with the US on Qeshm Island. Iranian media reports loud noises in western Tehran and southern Iran.

In an interview with ABC News, Trump says the ceasefire remains “in effect”. He describes the skirmishes as “just a love tap”. In the hours after the strikes, Brent crude hovers above $101.

From stalemate to strikes: A dizzying week of US-Iran negotiations over the strait of Hormuz - Yahoo News UK

‘Not a Chance Hormuz Opens’: How Wall Street’s new NACHO trade bets on a prolonged oil shock

Published Fri, May 8 2026 1:38 AM EDT

Move over TACO trade. Traders now have a new acronym for a market increasingly skeptical that the Strait of Hormuz crisis will end anytime soon: NACHO.

The shorthand “Not A Chance Hormuz Opens” has emerged on trading desks and among market commentators to describe growing skepticism that repeated remarks by U.S. President Donald Trump about reopening the key shipping route will lead to a swift resolution.

“It’s essentially the market losing hope in the chance of a quick fix,” eToro market analyst Zavier Wong told CNBC.

“For most of this crisis, every ceasefire headline triggered a sharp selloff in oil, and traders kept pricing in a resolution that never came. NACHO is an acknowledgment that higher oil isn’t a temporary shock to trade around, it’s the current market environment.” 

As recently as Thursday, the U.S. and Iran exchanged fire in the Strait of Hormuz, with both sides accusing the other of starting the confrontation.

The renewed hostilities further imperil the two countries’ ceasefire agreement, which had already been strained by repeated accusations of violations.

Trump, in a call with an ABC News reporter later Thursday, insisted that the ceasefire remains in effect, saying the strikes are “just a love tap.”

On Wednesday, Trump said Iran would be bombed “at a much higher level” if it did not agree to a peace deal, escalating tensions even as reports suggested Washington and Tehran were nearing an agreement to end the war

The NACHO trade reflects a shift in positioning across oil, shipping, inflation hedges and rates markets as investors increasingly treat disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz as a lasting feature of the macro backdrop, rather than a temporary geopolitical shock, industry veterans said. 

More

NACHO trade: Wall Street’s new acronym bets on prolonged oil shock

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.

The natural tendency of government, once in charge of money, is to inflate and to destroy the value of the currency.

Murray Rothbard

Financial Stability Risks Mount as Artificial Intelligence Fuels Cyberattacks

Resilience, supervision, and international coordination are essential to safeguarding global financial markets as new AI tools enable attackers

May 7, 2026

Artificial intelligence is transforming how the financial system copes with vulnerabilities and reacts to incidents. Yet it is also amplifying cyber threats that can undermine financial stability when the offensive capabilities of intruders outpace defenses.

IMF analysis suggests that extreme cyber‑incident losses could trigger funding strains, raise solvency concerns, and disrupt broader markets.

The financial system relies on shared digital infrastructure that’s highly interconnected, including software, cloud services, and networks for payments and other data. Advanced AI models can dramatically reduce the time and cost needed to identify and exploit vulnerabilities, raising the likelihood of simultaneously discovering and targeting weaknesses in widely used systems. As a result, cyber risk is increasingly about correlated failures that could disrupt financial intermediation, payments, and confidence at the systemic level.

Anthropic’s recent controlled release of its Claude Mythos Preview, an advanced AI model with exceptional cyber capabilities, underscored how quickly risks are increasing. Mythos could find and exploit vulnerabilities in every major operating system and web browser—even when used by non-experts. This foreshadows how fast‑moving, AI‑driven cyber risks could destabilize the financial system if not managed carefully, and why authorities must focus on building resilience through supervision and coordination—rather than treating these developments as purely technical or operational issues.

On the other hand, OpenAI’s specialized, restricted cyber version of GPT‑5.5 assumes vulnerabilities and attacks will grow, and emphasizes equipping defenders more quickly and at scale, under appropriate governance and trusted access models.

Advances change risk equation

Models such as Mythos illustrate the nature of the challenge because they amplify existing cyberattack techniques by operating at machine speed. Attackers have the advantage over defenders because discovering and exploiting vulnerabilities can occur faster than patching and remediation. In a financial system built on common software and shared service providers, this can create simultaneous vulnerabilities across many institutions.

For now, some mitigating factors remain. Advanced AI cyber capabilities are not yet widely available, and closed, industry‑specific financial software is harder to target than open‑source infrastructure. But these buffers are likely to erode quickly as model training expands, capabilities diffuse, and leaks occur. Temporary containment is unlikely to substitute for durable defenses.

Financial stability implications

The new AI‑enabled cyber tools focus the discussion on financial stability:

  • Risks are systemic. Attacks become more dangerous when discovery and exploitation scale rapidly, with implications for financial stability.
  • Risks cut across sectors. The financial sector shares digital foundations with energy, telecommunications, and public services. That means AI‑assisted attacks can propagate across sectors that rely on the same infrastructure.
  • AI may further concentrate risk and failures with one vulnerability rippling across many institutions. Reliance on a small number of software platforms, cloud providers, or AI models increases the impact of any single exploited weakness.

These features elevate cyber risk to a potential macro‑financial shock. Confidence effects, payment disruptions, liquidity strains, and fire‑sale dynamics could follow if multiple institutions are affected simultaneously. For financial authorities, the question is whether the system is prepared to absorb cyber incidents without destabilizing core financial functions.

More

Financial Stability Risks Mount as Artificial Intelligence Fuels Cyberattacks

Technology Update.

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

This weekend, something different.

The dubious story of a student who won $100,000 betting on the weather

Fri, 8 May 2026 at 5:00 am UTC

Online platforms such as Polymarket allow gamblers to bet against one another on practically anything, including weather wagers such as the “highest temperature in London tomorrow”. According to an online urban legend, a Chinese student successfully gamed this system to make a pile of money.

The student supposedly used Metar, meteorological aerodrome reports. These are used in the aviation industry and are updated hourly, unlike most other publicly available weather forecasts which only update every few hours. The student is said to have used an AI-based system running on two PCs in his dorm room to download Metar data, scan weather-betting sites and identify mismatches between the two where he could get good odds. He made a series of successful bets and soon amassed more than $100,000 (£73,500).

But the story is dubious because betting on weather is such a niche area, and it is unlikely the student would find enough takers. The lack of identifying details is also the hallmark of urban legend. The story seems more likely to be an interesting idea of what someone could do in theory, rather than something someone has actually done.

The technology is certainly available though. Even students now have access to enough processing power and online data to carry out real-time global weather surveys, whether for their legitimate studies or for personal financial motives.

The dubious story of a student who won $100,000 betting on the weather - Yahoo News UK

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 Italian great. Approx. 13 minutes.

Giuseppe Tartini (1692-1770) - Concertino con Flauto solo

Giuseppe Tartini (1692-1770) - Concertino con Flauto solo

Next, when things really go wrong in Manhattan.  Approx. 12 minutes.

Billionaires' Skyscraper CRACKS OPEN - 432 Park Avenue NIGHTMARE Came True

Billionaires' Skyscraper CRACKS OPEN - 432 Park Avenue NIGHTMARE Came True

Finally,  Stealth explained.  Approx. 11 minutes.

How Planes Learned to Hide

How Planes Learned to Hide

In reading The History of Nations, we find that, like individuals, they have their whims and their peculiarities, their seasons of excitement and recklessness, when they care not what they do. We find that whole communities suddenly fix their minds upon one object and go mad in its pursuit; that millions of people become simultaneously impressed with one delusion, and run after it, till their attention is caught by some new folly more captivating than the first.

Charles Mackay, Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds. 

 

 


Friday, 8 May 2026

The Iran Ceasefire Gets Hot. The Wars Economic Pain Spreading.

Baltic Dry Index. 3034 +43    Brent Crude 101.85

Spot Gold  4723                           Spot Silver 80.15

US 2 Year Yield 3.92 +0.05

US Federal Debt. 39.214 trillion

US GDP 32.098 trillion.

People who count their chickens before they are hatched act very wisely because chickens run about so absurdly that it's impossible to count them accurately.

Oscar Wilde 

Today, when is a ceasefire not a ceasefire?

Does anyone care in the GIANT AI bubble?

Iran fires at three US warships in Strait of Hormuz as ceasefire on brink of collapse

7 May 2026

Iran has fired missiles at three warships in the Strait of Hormuz, with the fragile ceasefire with the US on the brink of collapse.

Iran's top military command has accused the US of a "violation of the ceasefire" and alleges it targeted an Iranian oil tanker moving towards the Strait of Hormuz.

A spokesperson for Iran's Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters said another vessel entering the strait opposite the Emirati port of Fujairah was targeted, according to a statement published on Telegram by Iran's IRIB state broadcaster.

The spokesperson said "aerial attacks" were also carried out along the coasts of Bandar Khamir, Sirik and Qeshm Island. They added that Iran's armed fores "immediately responded" by attacking US military vessels, inflicting "significant damage".

It came after the US military carried out strikes on Iran's Qeshm Port and the city of Bandar Abbas, a move described by US President Donald Trump as a "love tap".

US CENTCOM said: "US Forces intercepted unprovoked Iranian attacks and responded with self-defense strikes as U.S. Navy guided-missile destroyers transited the Strait of Hormuz to the Gulf of Oman, May 7.

"Iranian forces launched multiple missiles, drones and small boats as USS Truxtun (DDG 103), USS Rafael Peralta (DDG 115), and USS Mason (DDG 87) transited the international sea passage. No U.S. assets were struck.

More

Iran fires at three US warships in Strait of Hormuz as ceasefire on brink of collapse

Iran War Shockwaves Spread Across US Economy

May 7, 2026 at 11:39 PM GMT+1

The economic shockwaves of the Iran war have spread beyond the average American consumer cursing under their breath at the pump. Now the businesses that would have pocketed that additional dollar or more being spent on each gallon of gas are sounding the alarm.

US gas prices, at around $4.56 a gallon on average, are at their highest levels since July 2022, according to data from the American Automobile Association. In a country where affordability was already the watchword when the US and Israel attacked Iran, it was only a matter of time before the pain spread.

Executives across retail, restaurants and packaged goods are increasingly worried about US shoppers with tighter budgets. Meanwhile, economists warn the disruptions from the war could lead to higher prices for a wider range of goods—including food.

“They’re literally running out of money at the end of the month,” Kraft Heinz Chief Executive Officer Steve Cahillane said. “We’re seeing negative cash flows in the lower-income brackets where they’re dipping into savings.” David E. Rovella

War’s Economic Damage to US Spreads: Evening Briefing Americas - Bloomberg

Chinese-owned oil tanker hit near Hormuz as US pauses ship-protection plan, report says

Thu, May 7, 2026 at 4:05 PM GMT+1

LONDON/ATHENS, May 7 (Reuters) - A Chinese-owned oil products tanker was attacked near the Strait of Hormuz on Monday, Chinese media outlet Caixin reported, as President Donald ‌Trump launched a U.S. plan that day to help stranded vessels but suspended ‌it a day later.

This was the first time a Chinese oil tanker has been attacked, a person with knowledge ​of the matter told Caixin on Thursday.

Traffic through the vital strait, through which 20% of the world's oil and gas supplies pass, has been at a virtual standstill since the Iran conflict began on February 28.

The unnamed vessel's deck caught fire and the ship was marked "CHINA OWNER & CREW," ‌according to Caixin.

It was not clear ⁠if any of the vessel's crew were injured.

More

Chinese-owned oil tanker hit near Hormuz as US pauses ship-protection plan, report says

Next, did a very unlikely MBS just clip Caesar Nero’s wings and take away his violin?

Trump reverses Hormuz plan after Saudi Arabia suspends U.S. access to bases, airspace: NBC

2026-05-07 14:54:45

WASHINGTON, May 7 (Xinhua) -- U.S. President Donald Trump abruptly reversed his plan to escort ships through the Strait of Hormuz after Saudi Arabia blocked U.S. use of its bases and airspace for the operation, NBC News reported Wednesday, citing two U.S. officials.

Trump's announcement of "Project Freedom" on social media reportedly angered Saudi leadership, the report said.

A call with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud failed to resolve the issue, forcing Trump to pause the plan to restore U.S. military access to the critical airspace. 

Trump reverses Hormuz plan after Saudi Arabia suspends U.S. access to bases, airspace: NBC-Xinhua

U.S. intelligence says Iran can outlast Trump’s Hormuz blockade for months

May 7, 2026

A confidential CIA analysis delivered to administration policymakers this week concludes that Iran can survive the U.S. naval blockade for at least three to four months before facing more severe economic hardship, four people familiar with the document said, a finding that appears to raise new questions about President Donald Trump’s optimism on ending the war.

The analysis by the U.S. intelligence community, whose secret assessments on Iran have often been more sober than the administration’s public statements, also found that Tehran retains significant ballistic missile capabilities despite weeks of intense U.S. and Israeli bombardment, three of the people familiar with it said.

Iran retains about 75 percent of its prewar inventories of mobile launchers and about 70 percent of its prewar stockpiles of missiles, a U.S. official said. The official said there is evidence that the regime has been able to recover and reopen almost all of its underground storage facilities, repair some damaged missiles and even assemble some new missiles that were nearly complete when the war began.

Trump painted a rosier picture in Oval Office remarks on Wednesday, saying of Iran: “Their missiles are mostly decimated, they have probably 18, 19 percent, but not a lot by comparison to what they had.”

Three current and one former U.S. official confirmed the outlines of the intelligence analysis, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive matter.

More

U.S. intelligence says Iran can outlast Trump’s Hormuz blockade for months – DNYUZ

Asia-Pacific markets fall as renewed U.S.-Iran clashes keep investors on edge

May 7 2026 7:47 PM EDT

Asia-Pacific markets traded lower Friday, as concerns grew over renewed hostilities between Iran and the U.S. amid a fragile ceasefire.

The U.S. and Iran traded fire in the Strait of Hormuz, with each side claiming the other initiated the attack.

Despite the escalation, President Donald Trump insisted that the ceasefire remains in effect, saying the strikes are “just a love tap” during a call with an ABC News reporter later Thursday.

Trump later claimed in a subsequent Truth Social post that the U.S. “completely destroyed” the Iranians involved in the exchange, which he said included small boats and drones that “dropped ever so beautifully down to the Ocean, very much like a butterfly dropping to its grave!”

He reiterated that Iran will face further attacks if they do not agree to a nuclear deal.

“Just like we knocked them out again today, we’ll knock them out a lot harder, and a lot more violently, in the future, if they don’t get their Deal signed, FAST!” Trump wrote.

Oil futures pared early gains. The West Texas Intermediate futures for June was 0.81% higher at $95.85 per barrel as of 11:45 p.m. ET. Brent crude futures for July gained 1.07% at $101.13 per barrel.

South Korea’s Kospi slipped 0.93% while the small-cap Kosdaq was 0.35% higher. Japan’s Nikkei 225 slipped 0.68% amid some profit-taking after hitting a record high on Thursday.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 extended early losses, declining 1.74%.

Mainland China’s CSI300 index was trading 0.90% lower, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index dropped 1.19%.

India’s Nifty50 declined 0.50%.

S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures were down less than 0.1%. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 12 points, or less than 0.1%.

During Thursday’s regular session, the broad market S&P 500 fell 0.38% to close at 7,337.11, dragged lower by losses in Amazon as well as semiconductor stocks such as Broadcom and Micron Technology. The Nasdaq Composite slid 0.13% and ended at 25,806.20. The tech-heavy index had also scored a fresh all-time high during the session. The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 313.62 points, or 0.63%, settling at 49,596.97.

Asia-Pacific today: Nikkei 225, Hang Seng, Kospi, Sensex, CSI 300

Iran focus at Trump-Xi summit may delay progress on tariffs, rare earths

Published Thu, May 7 2026 8:56 PM EDT

BEIJING — The Iran war is likely to take center stage in the summit between U.S. President Donald Trump and China’s Xi Jinping, leaving less scope to resolve issues like tariffs and rare earth supplies.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has already said that Iran will be a topic in the meetings, which are due to take place May 14 and 15. And earlier this week, China hosted Iran’s foreign minister for the first time since the war began in late February -- raising hopes for a peace deal, sending oil prices lower and fueling stock-market gains.

The U.S. government declined China’s invitation to organize industry-specific meetings between senior Chinese leaders and U.S. CEOs, thinking it could make American businesses appear too close to Beijing, according to a U.S. executive with direct knowledge of the arrangements. As of Tuesday, the White House had yet to formally invite executives to join Trump on the trip, and a proposed list of two dozen leaders could be halved, the person added.

Boeing and Citigroup CEOs are among those set to accompany Trump, two separate sources said. The U.S. aircraft giant is expected to seal its first large order from China in nearly a decade around the summit.

Xi has hosted a dozen national leaders this year, from the U.K. to South Korea — who often bring large business delegations. Still, corporations may not object to the decreased focus if it resolves a large geopolitical overhang for them.

An end to the Iran war would be a “great relief to global business,” said Hai Zhao, a director of international political studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a state-affiliated think tank. It would “be remembered as very much the success” for the Trump-Xi summit.

However, the U.S. and Iran have traded fire in the Strait of Hormuz again, each blaming the other for initiating the attack. Just a few days earlier, a Chinese-owned oil tanker was also struck, according to Chinese media outlet Caixin. CNBC was unable to independently confirm the report.

If a smaller group of executives joins Trump’s visit to China, it would contrast with the president’s trip to Saudi Arabia last May, when more than 30 U.S. executives accompanied him. When Trump visited China during his first term in 2017, the last sitting U.S. president to do so, nearly 30 CEOs accompanied him – signing 37 major deals worth more than $250 billion.

But the expected images of Trump and Xi together may still send a signal within China that it’s more acceptable again to engage with U.S. businesses, said Michael Hart, president of the Beijing-based American Chamber of Commerce of China.

“Since U.S. military actions earlier this year, Chinese officials have been more hesitant to engage with the American business community,” he said.

China welcomes U.S. business expansion and hopes the companies can keep advancing bilateral economic relations, the foreign ministry told CNBC. China’s commerce ministry didn’t respond to a request for comment.

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Iran focus at Trump-Xi summit may delay progress on tariffs, rare earths

Finally, be prepared for food inflation next year.

Why the odds keep rising for the strongest El Niño in a century

El Niño patterns are correlated with food shortages, water impacts and even civil conflict in tropical countries.

May 6, 2026 at 9:27 a.m. EDT

Chances are rising that an El Niño expected to form soon could become one of the most powerful such events on record, according to new data released this week.

The latest outlook from the European Center for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) shows water temperatures in a key region of the central equatorial Pacific Ocean potentially reaching 3 degrees Celsius (5.4 degrees Fahrenheit) above average late in the year. That could approach or even surpass the current records set in 1877 and 2015 and exceed the threshold for a super El Niño.

“Confidence is clearly shifting higher on potentially the biggest El Niño event since the 1870s,” wrote Paul Roundy, a professor of atmospheric science at the State University of New York at Albany. Records for El Niño began around 1850.

It’s the third consecutive month that multiple models have predicted that a potentially record-breaking El Niño could drive global temperatures to new highs and shift patterns of droughts, floods, heat, humidity and sea ice across the planet. The coming conditions could have significant consequences for agriculture, health and the economy across the planet.

The odds for a powerful El Niño were boosted by a rare triplet cyclone pattern in the Pacific last month, which caused a record-breaking burst of wind that created a freight train of warm water beneath the ocean surface that’s reached 7 degrees Celsius (12.6 degrees Fahrenheit) above average. That’s a major anomaly in the ocean, which typically takes a long time to warm up and cool down.

“El Niño patterns are correlated with food shortages, water impacts and even civil conflict in tropical countries,” said climate scientist Katharine Hayhoe. “So these natural patterns of variability, as short-lived as they are, still have a profound impact on human society and human well-being.”

El Niño is gradually beginning to affect weather patterns, with NOAA data suggesting the phenomenon may fully form by July.

These are some of the weather impacts predicted to unfold through November that are at least partly connected to the developing El Niño:

  • Tropical storm and monsoon activity: Reduced hurricane activity in the Atlantic Ocean and possible drought in the Caribbean islands. Increased hurricane and typhoon risk in the Pacific Ocean, including Hawaii, Guam and parts of eastern Asia. Reduced rainfall from the monsoon in central and northern India as well as elevated odds for extreme heat, which could cause droughts that impact agricultural production.
  • Droughts and floods: Increased chances for developing droughts in portions of Central Africa, Australia, New Zealand, Indonesia, the Philippines, some South Pacific islands, Central America and stretches of northern South America, including northern Brazil, particularly later in the year. Elevated risks for heavy rain that could cause flooding in parts of Peru and Ecuador, southern Brazil, parts of northern and eastern Africa, the Middle East, the equatorial Pacific as well as the southern United States, especially later in the year.

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Why the coming El Niño could be one of the strongest on record - The Washington Post

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

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

Anyone who lives within their means suffers from a lack of imagination.

Washington D.C.  Oscar Wilde

Shipping giant boss warns Iran war will have bigger impact in coming months as customers face price hikes

Published Thu, May 7 2026 4:36 AM EDT

The U.S.-Iran war had created a “new wake-up call” for global trade, Maersk CEO Vincent Clerc told CNBC on Thursday, warning that the impact could worsen in the coming months.

Speaking to CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” after Maersk posted its first-quarter earnings, Clerc said the group is facing intense cost pressures that would have to be passed on to customers.

“We are highly energy intensive industry, and that has created a whole new set of circumstances that we now have to deal with,” he said. “That will have an important impact on the second and third quarter,”

Oil costs surged as the war in the Middle East intensified, with ongoing uncertainty around the closure of the Strait of Hormuz keeping prices elevated. The spike in oil prices has also fueled concerns that inflation will be pushed higher in many economies.

On Thursday, global benchmark Brent crude futures were down by 2.2% to $93.01 a barrel, amid hopes that Washington and Tehran were close to agreeing on a peace deal.

“What this this energy shock is going to mean is about $500 million of extra costs per month for as long as the oil remains around in the in the $100 per barrel neighborhood, that is significant,” Clerc told CNBC. “And there is so much we can do on reducing costs, but there is a lot we need to do on passing on these costs to customers, because it’s such a massive cost increase that we can’t shoulder it.”

He added that the conflict was raising questions about how long the shipping industry — and consumption — could remain resilient.

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Maersk CEO warns Iran war will have bigger impact in coming months

Norway’s central bank raises interest rates to curb inflation; European stocks dip

Published Thu, May 7 2026 2:09 AM EDT

European stocks dipped on Thursday as investors await the outcome of reports that Washington and Tehran are nearing an agreement to end the war.

The pan-European Stoxx 600 index was 0.3% lower shortly after midday in London, reversing earlier gains. The U.K.’s FTSE 100 fell 0.65%, while France’s Cac 40 and Germany’s Dax fell 0.2% and 0.25%, respectively.

Norway’s central bank raised interest rates by 25 basis points to 4.25% on Wednesday, the first major central bank to do so since the war in Iran re-ignited fears of inflation across the globe.

“Inflation is too high and has run above target for several years”, said Norges governor Ida Wolden Bache in a statement.

“The monetary policy outlook does not appear to have changed materially since March, but the war in the Middle East is still causing substantial uncertainty about the economic outlook.”

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Norway's central bank raises interest rates; European stocks dip

Iran war could see 5.8% inflation and cost Treasury up to £8bn a year

The IPPR urged the Government to act to mitigate the risk of the US and Israel’s war with Iran causing long-term damage to the UK economy and public finances.

7 May 2026, 00:01

The Iran war could cost the Treasury up to £8 billion a year through higher debt interest payments and lower tax revenues, according to a report.

Inflation could peak as high as 5.8% if the conflict in the Middle East ends up in a prolonged stalemate, new modelling by the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) indicates.

This figure, measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI), is well above the Bank of England’s 2% target.

As over a quarter of UK debt is index-linked, increased inflation directly results in higher debt servicing costs.

Meanwhile, the think tank warned that real GDP growth could fall as low as 0.3%.

The IPPR urged the Government to act to mitigate the risk of the US and Israel’s war with Iran causing long-term damage to the UK economy and public finances.

The report’s recommendations include introducing a temporary energy price cap at £2,000 to limit inflation, while maintaining incentives to reduce consumption.

The IPPR also suggested implementing a temporary 10p fuel duty cut to offset rising oil prices.

The think tank argued that these should be paired with measures to reduce energy demand, including lowering speed limits.

Finally, the IPPR urged the Government for “targeted, progressive” taxes, such as a strengthened windfall tax on energy profits.

This package of measures would cost up to £5 billion per year, depending on the severity of the shock, the report said.

More

Iran war could see 5.8% inflation and cost Treasury up to £8bn a year | LBC

Fed's Musalem: Risks have shifted towards higher inflation

May 6, 2026

WASHINGTON, May 6 (Reuters) - St. Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem said Wednesday the risks to monetary policy have shifted towards higher inflation, possibly requiring interest rates to stay on hold for some time amid a seemingly stable job market. 

"Inflation is running meaningfully above our target," Musalem said in comments to the Mississippi Bankers Association. "We have risks both on the employment side and on the inflation side. In my understanding risks have been shifting towards more risks on the inflation side."

The situation is at the point, Musalem said, where the Fed's policy rate of interest may have to stay on hold until it is clear inflation is returning to the central bank's 2% target, but that there also were "plausible scenarios" under which the Fed could cut rates, and also under which the Fed would have to hike them.

"There's a lot of uncertainty right now, and it's important to see how things settle," said Musalem, noting that inflation pressures were moving beyond the impact of tariffs and high oil prices due to the U.S.-backed war with Iran. 

Oil prices have been volatile, spiking and falling amid news reports about progress - or lack of it - in ending the dispute. The global benchmark price dropped fast overnight on news of a possible settlement but then rose back above $100 a barrel. U.S. gasoline prices have risen from around $3 to $4.50 a gallon. A New York Fed measure of global supply chain pressure, meanwhile, jumped to the highest since July of 2022 when manufacturing chains were still snarled from the pandemic and the world faced a systemic surge in prices.

"This is also underlying inflation that we need to worry about," Musalem said, with business executives telling him that higher prices for aluminum, helium, diesel fuel and other industrial inputs "will all be disruptive...There's a confidence effect" that may suppress hiring even as it risks higher price increases.

The net result for the Fed may be an extended pause in any change to a policy rate that has been kept on hold since December in the 3.5% to 3.75% range, stalling what had been anticipated continued rate cuts and complicating incoming Fed chair Kevin Warsh's ability to deliver the rate cuts President Donald Trump has said he expects.

Investors don't anticipate rate cuts at least until the second half of 2027.

Musalem is not currently a voter on rate policy, but his comments demonstrate what Fed Chair Jerome Powell said is movement at the "center" of the Fed towards the possibility that rate hikes might be needed to combat inflation risks.

The Personal Consumption Expenditures price index, used by the Fed to set its 2% inflation target, rose to 3.5% in March from 2.8% the month before, while underlying "core" inflation that excludes among other things the recent swings in energy prices, rose to 3.2% from 3% in February.

New consumer price data to be released next week for April is expected to show further acceleration.

Jobs data for April scheduled for release this Friday, meanwhile, is expected to show a steady unemployment rate of 4.3% according to the median forecast of economists polled by Reuters, consistent with what Musalem said is current stability in the job market.

The Fed is charged by Congress with maintaining maximum employment consistent with stable prices. 

"The labor market seems like it has stabilized," Musalem said. "We're committed to bringing inflation back down towards 2% and that is the best thing that we can do for healthy growth."

Fed's Musalem: Risks have shifted towards higher 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.

High speed trains spin wind turbines in first UK trial

6 May 2026

For centuries, the gusts of air produced as Britain's trains rush around the country have been wasted – until now.

In a UK first, rail company LNER have installed three experimental wind turbines alongside the track, to harness the turbulent airflow blasted out by passing high-speed trains and turn it into electricity.

The turbines, named "Windiana Jones", "Sir Spins-a-lot", and "AC Breezy", have been installed alongside the East Coast Main Line at Hitachi Rail’s Craigentinny depot in Edinburgh by LNER and clean energy infrastructure firm Treeva.

The six‑foot‑tall devices, made from "upcycled materials", are the first turbines to be operated next to a UK main line. They require no grid connection, and their design allows for easy deployment on hitherto unused railway land close to the tracks.

According to LNER, the trial could pave the way for a roll out of such technology "across Britain's rail network".

At this stage the clean energy the turbines produce will be harnessed, measured, and used to power a range of devices, enabling a better understanding of the potential power-generation opportunities available to rail operators.

"A single turbine can generate enough energy to power a third of a small station's lighting needs, four CCTV cameras, or run two passenger information screens," LNER said. "Five turbines have the capacity to reduce emissions of more than 12,000 kilograms of CO2 each year – the equivalent of planting 500 trees."

The project is the product of the Future Labs rail industry innovation scheme, which pairs rail operators with tech start‑ups to tackle industry challenges. Treeva, a graduate of the programme and winner of its People’s Choice Award, has been working with LNER to adapt its technology for rail environments.

“Our goal is to transform the way transport infrastructure is powered,” said Treeva co‑founder and chief executive Anjali Devadasan. “By capturing energy created by passing trains, we can turn unused land into a meaningful source of clean power and enable sustainable systems that pay for themselves within months.”

LNER’s Mark Haymer called the trial “a really exciting" step, which could make rail travel "even greener".

"Developing new ideas and solutions in any industry is always a challenge, but thanks to a strong partnership between Treeva, Hitachi, Network Rail, and LNER, we’ve delivered a successful and safe installation at Craigentinny. We’re looking forward to seeing how the turbines perform over the next six months," he said.

In 2019, a separate scheme was unveiled in which a solar array at Aldershot provided some of the power required for passing trains. The project, called "Riding Sunbeams", has been a success, prompting major interest in using further solar power on train lines, with Network Rail announcing last year that they were seeking suppliers.

High speed trains spin wind turbines in first UK trial

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org) 

Another weekend and a peace weekend, hopefully. But will Israel go along with President Trump’s peace attempt or try to sabotage it? Have a great weekend everyone.

If you cannot prove a man wrong, don't panic. You can always call him names.

President Trump Oscar Wilde