Monday, 11 May 2026

Trump-Xi Meeting. Food Problems “Growing.” US Inflation.

Baltic Dry Index. 2978 -56     Brent Crude 105.62

Spot Gold  4686                           Spot Silver 81.16

US 2 Year Yield 3.90 -0.02

US Federal Debt. 39.227 trillion

US GDP 32.108 trillion.

We have a system that increasingly taxes work and subsidizes nonwork.

Milton Friedman

A big week ahead. President Trump didn’t like Iran’s reply to his one page so called “peace plan” for ending his Iran war.

Tomorrow we get the latest US inflation figures for April, probably starting to be impacted by Trump’s Persian Gulf war.

Mid-week, the summit in Beijing between Presidents Xi and Trump.

On Friday, it’s Chairman Powell’s last day as Chairman of the US central bank.

South Korea’s Kospi hits fresh record as Asia markets trade mixed amid oil surge, Iran risks

Published Sun, May 10 2026 7:46 PM EDT

South Korea’s Kospi opened at a fresh record Monday, leading gains in Asia-Pacific markets amid rising oil prices and escalating tensions between the U.S. and Iran.

President Donald Trump’s rejection of Tehran’s latest proposal to end the war, however, stoked worries over an elongated Middle East conflict.

Iran submitted a new proposal to U.S. negotiators focused on ending the Middle East conflict. Iran’s semi-official Tasnim news agency said that the counteroffer called for an end to the war on all fronts and the lifting of sanctions on Tehran, citing an informed source.

However, Trump said he did not like Iran’s response and called it “TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!” in a Truth Social Post.

Meanwhile, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday that the war with Iran was “not over,” as the U.S. and Israel still aim to curb Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.

Netanyahu’s comments come ahead of Trump’s trip to China later this week, where he’s expected to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping. The war and the subsequent closure of the Strait of Hormuz by Iran have spiked global energy costs and sharply raised gas prices in the U.S.

The West Texas Intermediate futures for June was 3.94% higher at $99.18 per barrel as of 9:32 p.m. ET. Brent crude futures for July rose 3.49% to $104.83 per barrel.

South Korea’s Kospi gained 4.70% after opening to a fresh record, while the small-cap Kosdaq was 0.30% lower. Index heavyweight SK Hynix rose 10.74%, tracking U.S. chip-related equities which surged Friday.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 was in choppy trade and was marginally lower, while the Topix gained 0.19%. Nintendo shares fell 5.54%, as investors digested news that the game developer will hike Switch 2 prices while expecting a decline in console sales.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 was 0.83% lower.

China’s CSI 300 added 0.58%, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index declined 0.48%. Investors were also assessing data showing that China’s consumer and producer inflation rose more than expected in April, driven by higher commodity costs linked to the Middle East conflict.

Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 143 points, or 0.3%. S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures each also lost 0.3%.

Sunday’s moves come after the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite rallied more than 2% and 4%, respectively, last week. Both indexes recorded their sixth-straight winning weeks — a first for each since 2024.

The Dow rose 0.2% for the week, notching its fifth week of gains out of the last six.

Asia markets today: Nikkei, Kospi, Hang Seng, Sensex, CSI 300

Global week ahead: Crude diplomacy casts shadow over Trump-Xi summit

Published Sun, May 10 2026 5:07 AM EDT

China has quietly amassed the world’s largest stockpile of crude oil.

This is no mean feat for a country that is also the globe’s biggest importer of energy.

It brings a fresh dynamic to Beijing’s relations with the United States, as Premier Xi Jinping prepares to host President Donald Trump for a high-stakes state visit on May 14 and 15.

The “Teapot” Party

There is already controversy. China’s Commerce Ministry banned Chinese companies from complying with U.S. sanctions on small refineries that purchase Iranian crude. The so-called “teapot refineries” have been encouraged by Chinese authorities to import Iranian oil because they are seen as immune to foreign sanctions, according to Teneo. The research house warns that China’s non-compliance with the sanctions could prompt Washington to launch a second round of restrictions to clamp down on the Sino-Iranian trade.

Stockpiles

Oil markets are no longer dealing with a flow disruption, but with a rapidly compounding stock shock, according to Kpler. The analytics group says that most Middle East cargoes loaded before the war have now been discharged, meaning the inventory drawdown will accelerate and local refining will slow.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) estimates that China added an average of 1.1 million barrels per day of crude oil to strategic reserves in 2025, with “preliminary government data indicating that China has continued to build inventories in 2026” ahead of the Iran conflict.

This means that government and commercial oil stockpiles in China averaged around 360 million barrels in December 2025, which compares to America’s strategic reserves of nearly 414 million barrels over the same period.

China’s crude buying binge has helped to prevent even higher spikes in oil prices amid the Strait of Hormuz deadlock. It has also provided a lifeline to Asian importers that have been most directly impacted by the halt in Middle East energy deliveries.

Crude Diplomacy

For China, heightened tensions with the U.S. and sanctions-related disruption mean strategic petroleum reserves are acting as a hedge against supply constraints, price volatility and currency volatility, according to the Oxford Energy Institute.

The war in Iran is expected to dominate the meeting between President Trump and Premier Xi Jinping, potentially at the cost of other agenda items like tariffs, rare earths and AI. Beijing’s quiet power play to build strategic oil reserves shifts the energy dynamic between China and the U.S., adding another layer of complexity to this critical meeting.

More to watch this week:

Monday: EU Foreign Affairs Council meeting

Tuesday: German inflation data, U.S. inflation data

Wednesday: OPEC Monthly Oil Market Report, IEA Oil Market Report

Thursday: U.K. GDP data, BRICS Foreign Ministers meeting

Friday: Credit rating reviews: Germany, Italy and Ukraine

Global week ahead: Crude diplomacy casts shadow over Trump-Xi summit

Gold falls on oil-driven inflation worries as U.S.–Iran peace talks falter

Published Sun, May 10 202611:01 PM EDT

Gold prices fell on Monday, as a lack of progress in U.S.–Iran peace negotiations pushed oil prices higher, fueling concerns that elevated inflation could keep interest rates higher for longer.

Spot gold fell 0.6% at $4,684.32 per ounce, as of 0223 GMT. U.S. gold futures for June delivery lost 0.8% at $4,692.70.

The dollar firmed, making greenback-priced bullion more expensive for holders of other currencies.

U.S. President Donald Trump on Sunday rejected Iran’s response to a U.S. proposal for peace talks, dashing hopes for an imminent end to the 10-week-old conflict that has caused widespread damage in Iran and Lebanon, paralyzed maritime traffic in the Strait of Hormuz, and driven up global energy prices.

“We’re essentially seeing an unwinding of hopes for an imminent (peace) deal, and gold is feeling the pinch from the renewed rise in crude prices,” said Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at KCM Trade.

Oil prices jumped as the Strait of Hormuz remained largely closed, keeping global energy supplies tight.

Rising crude oil prices risk pushing inflation higher, increasing the prospects of elevated interest rates. While gold is traditionally seen as a hedge against inflation, high interest rates tend to weigh on the non-yielding asset.

The ongoing war with Iran and its shock to oil prices and supplies have rocketed to the top of the list of concerns for financial stability, according to a semi-annual Federal Reserve report released on Friday.

Investors are now looking out for April’s U.S. Consumer Price Index data, due later this week, for further clues on the Fed’s monetary policy direction.

Meanwhile, China’s gold production fell in the first quarter of 2026 from a year earlier, the China Gold Association said on Saturday, as safety inspections led some smelters to suspend production for maintenance.

“In the near-to-medium term, the $4,400 to $4,800 range still looks firmly in play while we remain in this ceasefire-without-a-peace-deal stalemate,” Waterer added.

More

Gold falls on oil-driven inflation worries as U.S.–Iran peace talks falter

In other commodities news, worrying times. Price rationing in wheat will be partially mitigated by last year’s excellent wheat harvest, but will the high cost of fertiliser and diesel impact the rest of the world’s wheat crops?

‘The worst time for wheat’: US farmers face losses to extreme heat and drought

Temperature swings have left crops across the Plains in terrible conditions, with some farmers opting not to harvest

Fri 8 May 2026 11.00 BST

Merrill Nielsen’s wheat crop looked healthy after he planted it in the fall on his 2,500-acre farm in north-central Kansas, about 50 miles west of Salina, the plants benefiting from higher-than-normal November rainfall.

But an abnormally warm and dry winter, followed by extreme temperature variability, stressed the developing wheat. In the winter-to-spring transition, temperatures fluctuated from 70 to 80F on some days and lows in the teens or low 20s on other days.

He jokes that the wheat “wasn’t sure whether or not to have its Bermuda shorts and sunglasses on and bake in the sun … or to have its winter coat on”.

But the volatile weather destroyed his crop. This week, a crop insurance adjuster told Nielsen that, at best, his fields would yield two bushels per acre, compared with the normal upper-40s to mid-50s bushels per acre. “Crop will be terminated,” he texted a reporter, deciding not to harvest what little wheat grew.

Nielsen has farmed for about 50 years, and grows wheat, grain sorghum, soya beans and alfalfa on the farm his great-grandfather established in 1871. He says this year’s season was one of his worst in years. He’s not alone.

Farmers in the central and southern Great Plains grow much of the country’s bread-type wheat, hard red winter. It’s sown in the fall to establish roots ahead of winter so it can start growing before the summer heat sets in. Kansas is the largest US producer, with Oklahoma, Texas, Colorado and Nebraska big growers as well.

Numbers bear out Nielsen’s observations, as Kansas and Oklahoma had their second-warmest year from March 2025 to March 2026. In March, temperatures were 10 to 11F above normal, says Shel Winkley, a Texas-based meteorologist at Climate Central, a non-profit research organization. It was the third-warmest March on record for Kansas, with record warmth for Oklahoma, allowing drought conditions to set in further.

This year’s winter wheat crop condition in the Plains is one of the poorest in recent history, rivaling 2023, another drought year. The weekly crop condition report issued by an arm of the US Department of Agriculture rates the 44% of Kansas’s and 49% of Oklahoma’s wheat in very poor to poor condition, with similar ratings elsewhere.

The extreme March heat has the fingerprints of the climate crisis, Winkley says, because of the drought and prolonged heat the area was already experiencing.

“It wasn’t just a weird, wonky March. We understand there’s something bigger here,” he says. “Especially at the peak of the heat in March, we know that those temperatures would be rare or almost virtually impossible at that time of the year in the central Plains, without an influence of climate change.”

Farmers in north-central and north-west Kansas were hit hard this season, and Romulo Lollato, the wheat and forages production professor at Kansas State University, expects affected producers in this area may follow Nielsen’s decision not to harvest.

Other Kansas farmers are doing slightly better but will also see some yield loss. Ben Palen, a fifth-generation farmer in north-east Kansas, near Lawrence, farms 15,000 acres of corn, sunflowers, millet, grain sorghum and organic wheat. He may only yield 30% of his normal crop. He’s waiting on an estimate of how much he might be able to harvest this year.

Vance Ehmke, who farms 11,000 acres in Lane county, in south-west Kansas, saw 90F temperatures in early January, with freezing weather after. In late April, rainfall of less than an inch fell on his parched crops, which perked up the plants.

“That helped a whole bunch, but we’re so far behind that it’s not even funny now,” says Ehmke, who has farmed for more than 50 years.

There’s still some time for crops to benefit from moisture before harvest starts in early June, but longer-range forecasts between May and July call for below-average rainfall in Kansas and Nebraska, Winkley says.

Wheat is a resilient crop and can improve even with modest amounts of rain, so estimating yields and crop size before final harvest is tricky. But wheat experts say with a combination of reduced planted acres and potential abandonment, US total wheat production will fall. Earlier this year, the USDA estimated that US wheat acreage will be the lowest since 1919.

US wheat seedings have trended lower in recent years because planting corn and soya beans was more lucrative, at least until recently. Now, no crops are profitable as costs outweigh current grain prices. That will factor into wheat farmers’ decisions whether to salvage some production.

More

‘The worst time for wheat’: US farmers face losses to extreme heat and drought | Farming | The Guardian

In other news, starting wars is easy, ending them not so, as President Trump found out. Nor are wars cheap, when you mess up the world’s supply chains of oil, LNG, LPG, fertiliser, aluminium, urea, sulphur, and shipping, to name just a few, (fiat dollar demand?)

Trump Is ‘Bored’ With the War He Started

He wants out, but Iran could likely keep going for months.

By Jonathan Lemire May 8, 2026, 12:28 PM ET

resident Trump really, really wants the war with Iran to end. He has declared victory many times, including about three weeks ago, when Iran briefly reopened the Strait of Hormuz. He has repeatedly extended his cease-fire deadlines instead of following through on his (sometimes-apocalyptic) threats to resume hostilities. This week, his administration abruptly abandoned an effort to escort ships through the strait in part because of a fear that it could provoke violent, escalating confrontations.

Trump is tired of the war, which has proved far more difficult and lasted far longer than he had expected. His party is warily watching rising gas prices and falling poll numbers. He doesn’t want to be bogged down in a Middle East conflict like some of his predecessors were. He doesn’t want it to upend his high-stakes summit next week in China. He is ready to move on.

But Iran, it seems, does not want the war to come to a close. Or at least not with any sort of outcome that could be acceptable to American negotiators. Trump is now in a bind. The president, five aides and outside advisers told me, is convinced that he can sell any sort of agreement as a win. But at least for now, the man who wrote The Art of the Deal can’t even get Iran to the negotiating table. Today, Washington is still waiting for Iran to respond to the latest offering, a one-page memorandum of understanding that is far more of an extension of the cease-fire than a treaty to end the conflict.

Trump is left with a vexing question: How do you end a war when your opponent won’t budge? And while Trump grasps for an exit, the hard-liners in Tehran have used the war to tighten their grip on power. Iran seems hell-bent on pulling off something it’s historically done well: humiliating an American president.

Trump never thought it would turn out like this. After the impressive military operation to snatch Nicolás Maduro from Caracas, the president set his eyes on Iran, telling confidants that it would “be another Venezuela,” a pair of outside advisers told me. They, like others, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal strategy. Trump believed that the U.S. military was unstoppable, and that he had a chance to topple Tehran’s theocracy, a prize that had eluded his predecessors. He was redrawing the world’s maps and expected a victory to come in days, a week or two at most. The initial U.S.-Israel onslaught killed Iran’s supreme leader and included waves of bombings that reportedly obliterated much of the country’s missile capabilities. But Tehran did not capitulate, and instead attacked its Persian Gulf neighbors and seized control of the Strait of Hormuz, through which 20 percent of the world’s oil passes. With a mix of mines, small attack boats, and drones, Iran effectively closed the waterway. Energy prices soared. The conflict settled into a stalemate and then a fragile cease-fire. One high-profile, official round of negotiations failed. No more are scheduled.

Outwardly Trump has expressed nothing but confidence. Sometimes, he downplays the war, calling it a “little excursion” or “detour” or “mini war.” He has proclaimed imminent victory nearly every day, a braggadocio that’s matched by Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth at his Pentagon briefings. Behind closed doors, the volume is lower, but U.S. officials do believe a naval blockade of Iran’s ports, installed last month, is working and squeezing the country’s economy. Facing collapse, two officials predicted, Iran will be forced to negotiate.

But the real question is the timing: A number of experts have forecast that Iran can withstand pressure from the blockade for months, not weeks. A U.S. intelligence assessment delivered to policy makers this week agrees, suggesting that Iran could make it at least three or four more months. If so, and Iran continues to keep the strait closed, then prices will continue to rise in the West, including in the United States during a midterm-election year. It then becomes a matter of pain: Which side can withstand the most economic hardship?

More

Trump Is ‘Bored’ With the War He Started - The Atlantic

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

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

Iran war is crushing Asia’s farmers, threatening global food supply

Prices of fuel and fertilizer are pushing farmers to make irreversible cuts as they enter key planting seasons.

9 May 2026

SUPHAN BURI, Thailand — Saithong Jamjai has just finished harvesting the rice on the 19 hectares of farmland she owns in central Thailand and now is the time to sow again. But she won’t, she said, because of the U.S.-Israeli war against Iran.

She has gone over the math for weeks. Because of surging prices, driven by the war, of fuel, fertilizer, plastics and other necessities, planting and harvesting will cost her at least $33,000, she said. The grain that she’ll produce, she estimates, will sell in August for only $22,000.

“A confirmed loss,” Saithong, 53, concluded. She’d rather let her land bake under the yellowing husks from last season. “We’re not going to sink the resources,” she said. “Not in this situation.”

The standoff between President Donald Trump and Iran that has brought shipping to a virtual halt in the Persian Gulf has set off supply chain shocks that are upending lives thousands of miles away in Asia, raising costs for farmers at the start of key planting seasons that will sharply reduce crop yields in the second half of the year and beyond, according to government officials, economists and farming groups.

Addressing world leaders in Rome on Thursday, Dongyu Qu, the director general of the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization, said the war had created not only a geopolitical crisis but “a disruption at the core of the global agrifood system.”

Iran’s destruction of gas infrastructure in the Gulf and the dueling U.S.-Iran efforts to choke the Strait of Hormuz have prevented crucial supplies of fuel and its derivatives like urea — a potent source of nitrogen that enhances harvests — from leaving the Middle East. Because fuel infrastructure takes years to build, there is no ready replacement for these supplies.

In effect, 30 percent of the world’s urea has been “wiped out,” said Pranshi Goyal, senior analyst at the market intelligence firm CRU Group. China, a major fertilizer producer, has restricted exports to ensure its farmers have enough. Russia, another big manufacturer, is seeing demand soar, potentially boosting its economy and aiding its war in Ukraine. On what is known as the spot market, urea prices are up 40 percent since February.

On Monday, Trump said the United States would guide stranded ships through the Strait of Hormuz but then quickly reversed himself after reports that two U.S. destroyers had come under attack while transiting the strait. Even if ship traffic resumes, however, it would take at least a month or two for cargo to arrive at destinations and for markets to stabilize, Goyal said.

The longer the production plants in the Middle East stay closed, the longer they will take to restart. “This problem builds in a nonlinear fashion,” Goyal said.

So do its repercussions.

In Thailand, the PhilippinesBangladesh and Australia, which are the first since the war to enter key sowing periods, farmers are choosing to skip or reduce planting, or cut fertilizer use, which will lower yield.

As the war stretches deeper into the crop calendar, farmers from more countries will be forced to make similar choices, said Maximo Torero, chief economist for the FAO. “Right now, the impacts are more severe in Asia,” Torero said. “But clearly, this is moving east to west and south to north.”

In June, India and Brazil, two of the world’s biggest agricultural producers, will ramp up orders for urea. If, by then, vessels carrying urea are not sailing, there will be “significant yield loss” across many countries, Torero said. Commodity prices will climb, stoking inflation. The hit to economic growth, he said, will be “very close to what happened in covid-19.”

More

Iran war is crushing Asia’s farmers, threatening global food supply - The Washington Post

FAO head: Strait of Hormuz crisis will affect 2026, 2027 crops

May 8, 2026

Director-General of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) Qu Dongyu today told a group of ministers from Mediterranean countries that the global fertilizer scarcity caused by disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz will lead to lower yields and tightening food supplies in the latter half of 2026 and into 2027.

The director general spoke at the ministerial meeting of the MED9++ Countries on “Supporting Food Security and Access to Fertilizers” co-chaired by FAO, Italy and Croatia.”We meet at a moment of profound strain,” the director-general said. “This is not only a geopolitical crisis, but also a disruption at the core of the global agrifood system.


“Agriculture operates within a crop calendar that cannot be postponed,” he said. “Fertilizers must be applied at specific moments in the crop cycle. If they do not arrive on time, yields are reduced, regardless of what happens later.”

More

 FAO head: Strait of Hormuz crisis will affect 2026, 2027 crops | TSLN.com

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.

‘A share in the delight’: the people investing in the UK’s first community-owned solar battery

Oxfordshire’s Ray Valley Solar already generates clean energy for 7,000 homes, and is now crowdfunding storage to marry daylight with evening demand

Fri 8 May 2026 10.00 BST

Tucked away among hedgerows on a large field between a motorway and the River Ray, one of the UK’s largest community-owned solar parks is hard to spot from the surrounding country lanes.

But the nearly 36,000 solar panels installed on the site are literally a shining example of what can be achieved when a renewable energy project is co-owned by local people.

Ray Valley Solar, south of Bicester in Oxfordshire, generates enough clean electricity to power about 7,000 homes for a year, and uses its profits to provide grants to community initiatives that help reduce carbon emissions and make homes, schools and businesses across Oxfordshire more energy efficient.

Now, plans to install battery storage at the site with investment from members of the public – the first community-owned battery at a renewable energy project in the UK – will, it is hoped, give the project a big boost.

On very sunny days, Ray Valley Solar – which uses efficient double-sided solar panels that can capture sunlight that bounces back from the ground at the rear of the panels – produces more clean electricity than the local grid can take, resulting in some energy being wasted.

Storage is a critical challenge for the young technology around renewable energy. But plans to install a battery here mean the project will capture surplus solar power during the day and store it until it can be released during the peaks of demand in the evening, when the grid is more carbon intensive and electricity more expensive.

“This will allow the community solar park to generate more power and therefore to earn more money, which is reinvested into local sustainability and emission-cutting projects,” said Barbara Hammond, the chief executive of the Low Carbon Hub, one of the biggest community energy organisations in the country, which set up the solar park in 2022.

With capacity to store 12 megawatt hours of electricity every day, the battery is expected to save enough electricity to power an additional 300 homes a year. By selling the electricity for a higher price during the evening peak, Low Carbon Hub estimates it can increase its community benefit contribution to £1m over the battery’s 15-year lifetime.

Batteries, however, are still extremely expensive, although the race is on globally to find cheaper ways to produce them. In order to finance the installation of this particular lithium-ion battery, planned for October, the Low Carbon Hub is seeking to raise between £500,000 and £1.3m. People and organisations can buy shares between £100 and £100,000 in the hub’s Community Energy Fund via the investing platform Ethex until late June, with investors forecast to receive up to 5% return on their investment.

The hub, which has more than 2,000 shareholders in its fund so far, has successfully raised large amounts of money to fund community energy projects before, including £3m to establish Ray Valley Solar.

More

‘A share in the delight’: the people investing in the UK’s first community-owned solar battery | Solar power | The Guardian

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org) 

The abandonment of the gold standard made it possible for the welfare statists to use the banking system as a means to an unlimited expansion of credit. In the absence of the gold standard, there is no way to protect savings from confiscation through inflation. There is no safe store of value. Deficit spending is simply a scheme for the hidden confiscation of wealth. Gold stands in the way of this insidious process. It stands as a protector of property rights. If one grasps this, one has no difficulty in understanding the statists' antagonism toward the gold standard.

Alan Greenspan

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. 

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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.

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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.