Monday, 1 June 2026

AI According To Goldie’s CEO. More Red Flags.

Baltic Dry Index. 3224 -02       Brent Crude 93.38

Spot Gold 4546                           Spot Silver 75.73

US 2 Year Yield 3.98 -0.01

US Federal Debt. 39.194 trillion

US GDP 32.172 trillion.

If A.I. does indeed destroy jobs — and at a potentially greater speed than we’ve seen — then public policy must respond, by funding large-scale reskilling or encouraging A.I. that supports workers instead of replacing them.

David M. Solomon chairman and chief executive of Goldman Sachs.

6:00 AM Update. Hot war resumes?

US-Iran war live updates: US launches 'self-defence' strikes on Iranian drone sites

01 June 2026

US-Iran war live updates: The US said it conducted "self-defense strikes" on Iranian radar and drone control sites in Iran's Goruk and Qeshm Island at the weekend in what it said was a response to "aggressive" actions from Tehran.

The US Central Command said in a post on X that Iran had shot down a US MQ-1 drone that was operating over international waters.

CENTCOM said US fighter aircraft responded by eliminating Iranian air defenses, a ground control station, and two one-way attack drones.

It added that no US military personnel were harmed.

The two countries had traded strikes last week as well with Iran targeting a U.S. air base after the U.S. military carried out what a Washington official said were strikes targeting an Iranian drone operation near the Strait of Hormuz.

US-Iran war live updates: US launches 'self-defence' strikes on Iranian drone sites

Alarming claim? Chinese-made missile may have downed US F-15E fighter jet over Iran

May 31, 2026

A US F-15E Strike Eagle that crashed in south-western Iran in April may have been brought down by a Chinese-made shoulder-fired missile, according to a new NBC News report citing sources familiar with the matter.

If confirmed, the incident would mark the first time in decades that a US fighter aircraft has been shot down by enemy fire.

The report also said China may have supplied Iran with a long-range early-warning radar system capable of detecting stealth aircraft designed to avoid conventional radar tracking.

US officials are continuing to investigate the circumstances surrounding the loss of the aircraft, which led to a high-risk rescue operation. The reported use of Chinese-made military equipment by Iran could further complicate relations between Washington and Beijing, particularly after US President Donald Trump sought China's assistance in efforts to end the conflict.

More

Alarming claim? Chinese-made missile may have downed US F-15E fighter jet over Iran

The big news this week will (hopefully) be President Trump’s much hyped, but so far undelivered, peace deal with Iran that gets the Strait of Hormuz open again.

If that doesn’t happen, the big news will be increasing distress in the global economies, especially Asia, followed by Friday’s US jobs report, and of course where crude oil prices go.

Goldie is already warning of falling oil demand. Not a good sign for the global economy.

South Korea stocks hit fresh high amid mixed regional trade despite Trump’s Iran deal caution

Published Sun, May 31 2026 7:46 PM EDT

South Korea stocks hit a fresh record high on Monday, bucking a mixed performance across Asia-Pacific markets as investors monitored lingering uncertainty around U.S.-Iran negotiations after President Donald Trump said he was in “no hurry” to strike a deal to end the conflict.

South Korea’s Kospi jumped 1.31%, while the small-cap Kosdaq was down 1.58%. Shares of Samsung Electronics rose more than 3% to hit an all-time high.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose 0.17%, while the Topix declined 0.3%. In Australia the S&P/ASX 200 lost 0.21%.

Shares of SoftBank Group rose 5% after the conglomerate on Sunday announced plans to invest 45 billion euros ($53 billion) over the next five years to build artificial intelligence infrastructure in France.

The  Hang Seng index rose 0.73% while the CSI 300 was down 0.32%.

The U.S. and Iran have still not finalized an agreement to end the conflict, Trump said in an interview with his daughter-in-law, Lara Trump, on Fox News Saturday. He added that he is pressing for a deal that would ensure Iran never acquires a nuclear weapon. 

While he said he would prefer a swift resolution, he stressed that he was not rushing negotiations and warned that military action could resume if talks collapse.

“I’d like to say I’m in a hurry because gasoline prices are going to come tumbling down, but if you’re going to be in a hurry, you’re not going to make a good deal,” Trump said. “And slowly but surely we’re getting, I think, what we want, and if we don’t get what we want we’re going to end it a different way.”

Last Friday on Wall Street, U.S. equities closed at record highs while crude prices slipped, helping the major averages score a winning month, boosted by technology.

The Nasdaq Composite settled up 0.2% at 26,972.62, while the S&P 500 climbed 0.22% to 7,580.06. The Dow Jones Industrial Average finished up 363.49 points, or 0.72%, at 51,032.46. All three indexes hit fresh all-time intraday highs earlier as well.

Asia markets: Nikkei 225, Kospi, Hang Seng Index

Wall Street Week Ahead | Seeking Alpha

May 31, 2026, 8:21 AM ET

The main economic event arrives Friday with the May nonfarm payrolls report. Economists expect the U.S. economy added 93K jobs during the month, while the unemployment rate is forecast to hold steady at 4.3%. Investors will also monitor manufacturing and services activity data, JOLTS job openings, and the Federal Reserve's Beige Book for fresh clues on economic momentum.

Broadcom (AVGO), CrowdStrike (CRWD), Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE), Palo Alto Networks (PANW), and Docusign (DOCU) headline the earnings calendar, with Broadcom's results likely to provide another important read on AI infrastructure spending.

The AI theme extends beyond earnings. Nvidia (NVDA), Qualcomm (QCOM), Intel (INTC), Arm Holdings (ARM), and other industry leaders will take center stage at Computex Taipei, while Microsoft (MSFT) hosts its annual Build developer conference. Both events are expected to feature major announcements around AI, datacenters, software, and robotics.

In the IPO market, Honeywell-backed quantum computing company Quantinuum (QNT) is expected to debut at a valuation of roughly $12.7B, making it one of the largest technology offerings of the year.

Meanwhile, FedEx (FDX) will complete the spinoff of FedEx Freight, creating a new standalone S&P 500 (SP500) company and marking one of the year's most significant corporate restructurings.

Wall Street Week Ahead | Seeking Alpha

These are the forces Jamie Dimon says are the 'biggest thing' on his mind these days

May 30, 2029

Key Takeaways

  • In an appearance Friday, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon cited geopolitics as the "biggest thing" on his mind as he contemplates the forces that will shape the world in the coming years.
  • Dimon characterized the state of markets as "exuberant," but stopped short of saying that we were in a bubble.

Jamie Dimon, CEO of the world’s biggest bank, has plenty to worry about. But the Wall Street veteran says he isn’t losing sleep over rising inflation, a frothy stock market or cracks in private markets

“Geopolitics, and how this all plays out over the next few years… that’s the biggest thing,” said Dimon in an interview Friday with CNBC’s Morgan Brennan at the Reagan Economic Forum in Simi Valley, Calif. 

Dimon, 70, recently celebrated two decades running JPMorgan Chase. On Friday he echoed comments he made a year ago at the inaugural Reagan forum, where he said that the global tectonic plates were shifting and the outcome was uncertain. On Friday, he listed the wars in Ukraine and Iran, massive global deficits, the remilitarization of the world and the restructuring of global trade as forces that would shape the future.

Those issues, he said, dwarf the shorter-term concerns most Americans worry about given their implications to the United States’ role as the most important economy in the world and the dollar’s role as the leading global currency. If the U.S. loses economic and military power, he said, the days of dominance for the greenback could be short-lived. 

And he cautioned that American political dysfunction would be more likely to lead to a loss of those powers than any actions by countries like China.

“If we are not the preeminent military and the preeminent economy in 40 years, we will not be the reserve currency,” he said.

Dimon, asked whether he thought stocks had risen too far, too fast, with the leading U.S. indexes continuing to chase record highs thanks to fast-climbing AI and semiconductor stocks, did not say the market was in a bubble. He did, however, acknowledge investor enthusiasm, admitting that hyped-up markets do present risk.  

“The market is exuberant,” Dimon said. “We’ve seen this before, and of course exuberance can go on for a long time and it’s not always bad.”

These are the forces Jamie Dimon says are the 'biggest thing' on his mind these days

Oil jumps 2% as Israel expands Lebanon offensive, rattling ceasefire hopes

Published Sun, May 31 2026 8:57 PM EDT

Oil prices rose Monday after Israel ordered troops to push deeper into Lebanon, renewing concerns that clashes with the Iran-backed Hezbollah group could threaten a fragile ceasefire between Washington and Tehran.

Brent crude futures, the international benchmark, gained 2.43% to $93.33 a barrel. West Texas Intermediate futures added 2.76% to $89.77 per barrel.

The escalation in hostilities, which followed the U.S.-brokered Israeli-Lebanon talks in Washington on Friday, dimmed hopes that Washington and Tehran were nearing an extension of their ceasefire arrangement. 

“Together with Defense Minister Yisrael Katz, I instructed the IDF to expand the maneuver in Lebanon,” Benjamin Netanyahu said Sunday. The order came despite a ceasefire declared in April. 

Goldman Sachs said risks to its fourth-quarter 2026 Brent and WTI forecasts of $90 and $83 per barrel remain “two-sided,” with the bank warning that while persistent Middle East supply disruptions could push prices higher, weakening demand could create meaningful downside risks.

Goldman estimated that weak April oil retail sales data from China and Western Europe together implied around 2 million barrels per day of downside risk to its already subdued demand forecasts.

Oil jumps 2% as Israel expands Lebanon offensive, rattling ceasefire hopes

In answer to an AI question, “why are our armed forces paid in fiat money rather than real money”. AI replied, banksterism.

No Roman soldier was paid in fiat money until Rome’s finances collapsed. Draw your own conclusions.

How to die or get maimed and paid with nothing!

Fiat Currency: The Invisible Engine Behind Prolonged Wars

Aug 12, 2024

Throughout history, long-term wars have necessitated extensive financial resources. The mechanisms by which these resources are obtained and utilized are pivotal in understanding the nature and duration of these conflicts.

Analyzing the American Civil War and the War in Afghanistan reveals a critical insight: fiat currency has played a fundamental role in funding these prolonged wars, facilitated by institutions like the Federal Reserve.

The American Civil War: A Prelude to Modern Financing

The American Civil War (1861–1865) stands as a significant example of how fiat currency can be used to fund extensive military campaigns. During this conflict, both the Union and the Confederacy faced immense financial challenges. Initially, the Union government relied on traditional methods such as taxation and borrowing. However, the escalating costs of war soon surpassed these revenues.

To address this, the Union government introduced “greenbacks,” a form of fiat currency not backed by gold or silver. This move effectively allowed the government to print money at will, funding the war effort without immediate fiscal restraint. “By the end of the war, the Union had issued approximately $450 million in greenbacks, leading to significant inflation.”

Similarly, the Confederacy issued “greybacks,” its own form of fiat currency. The Confederacy faced even more severe inflation due to less effective economic management and blockade-induced scarcity. “The total amount of Confederate notes outstanding rose to more than $1.5 billion by the end of 1864, exacerbating inflation and economic instability.”

In the post-war period, the National Banking Acts of 1863 and 1864 further centralized financial power by prohibiting states and private companies from minting their own coins or printing their own dollars. This legislation laid the groundwork for a more unified and controlled national currency system, essential for future large-scale government financing needs, including war.

The Federal Reserve and Modern Warfare

Fast forward to the 20th and 21st centuries, the creation of the Federal Reserve in 1913 marked a significant evolution in the financial system. The Federal Reserve, as a central bank, gained the authority to issue fiat currency, manage interest rates, and regulate the money supply. This institution became instrumental in facilitating government spending, especially during times of war.

The War in Afghanistan (2001–2021) serves as a modern illustration of this dynamic. In the wake of the September 11 attacks, the U.S. government embarked on an extensive military campaign. The Federal Reserve played a crucial role by ensuring that the government had access to virtually unlimited funds. Through mechanisms such as quantitative easing and maintaining low interest rates, the Federal Reserve enabled the continuous issuance of fiat dollars to finance military operations.

This capacity to print money allowed the U.S. government to bypass the immediate need for higher taxes or significant borrowing from external sources. Instead, the war was financed through the creation of new money, contributing to an ever-increasing national debt. The ability to sustain long-term military engagements without facing immediate fiscal constraints underscores the power of fiat currency in modern warfare.

More, much more.

Fiat Currency: The Invisible Engine Behind Prolonged Wars | by Joshua D. Glawson | Medium

In other news, the AI future according to Goldman Sachs CEO. “Well, he would say that, wouldn’t he?” comes to mind.

I’m the C.E.O. of Goldman Sachs. The A.I. Job Apocalypse Is Overblown.

May 22, 2026

By David M. Solomon

Mr. Solomon is the chairman and chief executive of Goldman Sachs.

In conversations with hundreds of business leaders over the past few months, I’ve seen a sharp divide in their views of artificial intelligence. One camp sees a “job apocalypse” and mass unemployment ahead; the other sees a great leap forward for society.

Put me in the second camp — with a few caveats. Will A.I. disrupt the labor market? Absolutely. This transition, like other significant moments in our history, will entail new challenges, especially as A.I. separates labor from productivity in magnitudes we haven’t seen before. But the United States has a long track record of creating new jobs in response to disruption, from the electrification of the 1900s to the digital revolution of the 1990s; I don’t see any reason to think this dynamic will stop now.

There’s no question A.I. will reshape our everyday lives. Goldman Sachs’s economists estimate that, over the next decade, A.I. may automate 25 percent of current work hours. While it’s difficult to see how people in hands-on professions like food preparation, construction or services will be affected, people in white-collar jobs, among them accountants, bankers and lawyers, will likely see many of their tasks automated. According to one Stanford study, in the occupations most susceptible to greater automation, such as software engineering or customer service, entry-level employment has already declined by 16 percent relative to the least-exposed roles.

But when you look at jobs or sectors less relevant to automation, the picture changes. Our economists estimate that the growing demand for data centers has created more than 200,000 construction jobs since 2022. While A.I. eliminates jobs in some sectors, it may lead to job growth in others. Goldman Sachs may need fewer people in regulatory reporting or client onboarding, freeing us up to hire more bankers, traders and asset managers who are interacting with clients constantly.

Of course, we can’t dismiss the human cost of such disruption. The Industrial Revolution raised living standards only after society endured the hardships of grueling labor in mills and mines and the fetid slums that came with rapid urbanization. In recent decades, manufacturing employment has declined significantly owing to automation and global outsourcing. This caused enormous hardship for many families and communities across America such as Gary, Ind., and Greenville, S.C.

But for all those challenges, I keep bumping up against this reality: Standards of living for a vast majority of Americans are significantly higher than they used to be. When I was born in 1962, the average American adult didn’t have air-conditioning, but as air-conditioner prices dropped, nearly all of us got cool. In the 1950s, only a few large corporations, like IBM, had computers; now some 90 percent of American adults walk around with a supercomputer in their hand. In 1900, global life expectancy at birth was 32 years old; today, it’s over 70.

Perhaps more to the point, job growth has outpaced population growth. Since 1962, civilian employment in the United States has increased by roughly 145 percent, while the civilian population age 16 and older has risen by about 128 percent. In that time, we’ve seen new sectors emerge as others have grown or faded. While manufacturing employment declined from 15.5 million to 12.5 million over this period, led by almost two million jobs lost in textile and apparel making, the health care industry now employs more than 18 million workers. The U.S. economy is still the most innovative, dynamic and entrepreneurial in the world.

----It’s true that even the most reliable historical patterns can be broken, but there are three reasons I expect the U.S. economy to remain as resilient and dynamic as ever.

First, if our estimate proves correct, A.I. won’t eliminate 25 percent of jobs. What’s more likely is that people will find more productive ways to spend their time. When I was a first-year banking analyst, something as simple as making a graph of a stock’s performance took six hours of looking up prices in back issues of The Wall Street Journal on microfiche. Today, a first-year analyst can do it in seconds, and we have employed more people than ever in recent years. With more sophisticated tools, the complexity of our work naturally expands. Do any of us feel like we have less to do these days despite the convenience of Excel, email or Zoom?

More

Opinion | A.I. Is a Job Creator - The New York Times

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

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

To contract new debts is not the way to pay old ones.

George Washington

Japanese bond yields are the highest in 40 years. The budget and a ‘red flag’ from PM Takaichi have markets nervous

Published Sun, May 31 2026 7:13 PM EDT

Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi is compiling a supplementary budget to help households with the cost of living, but it’s also created skepticism about whether she can stick to her promises about debt issuance.

The budget was largely in line with market expectations, at about 3 trillion yen ($19 billion), but comes as Japan still struggles with higher energy prices, rising subsidy costs, and a weak yen.

The budget also marks a reversal from her earlier position that extra spending was not needed. She also said the total bond issuance for the calendar year of 2026 would remain unchanged from the original budget plan, according to Bloomberg.

Takaichi has sought to dispel worries in the bond market, saying that the extra spending would be financed by issuing deficit-covering bonds. But the 10-year Japanese sovereign bond yield rose to 2.809% on May 20, its highest since 1996, after reports that the government may issue fresh debt to fund the extra budget.

“Bond markets are a lot of things, but they’re not stupid,” said Jesper Koll, expert director at Tokyo based financial services firm Monex Group. “You cannot increase spending without increasing debt.”

Takaichi’s use of the calendar-year time frame has gotten the attention of Japan watchers.

“Nobody in Japan has ever made policy on the basis of the calendar year,” Koll said, noting that historically the country’s fiscal calendar ends March 31. “If there ever is a red flag, that is a red flag.”

In addition to the 10-year’s move to four-decade highs, the 30-year yield has moved above 4%, reflecting heightened concern over not only the fiscal risks but also inflation pressures.

“Recent developments — including continued uncertainty in the Middle East, elevated commodity prices, and rising fuel subsidy outlays — have contributed to bond market concerns about Japan’s fiscal position this year,” Louis Chua, equity research analyst for Asia at Julius Baer, said.

Investors might have had more confidence, Koll said, if the government had openly announced a 10 trillion yen budget funded by 10 trillion yen of bonds, rather than a smaller package paired with assurances of no additional issuance.

“The first one, actually, people believe,” Koll said. “The second one, nobody believes.”

More

Japan PM Takaichi's budget remarks send `red flag' to bond markets

Surging Treasury yields expose a brutal truth: America has no margin for error on its $39 trillion debt

May 30, 2026, 3:00 AM ET

In the days before the Memorial Day weekend, rates on 30 year Treasury bonds hit their highest level in 19 years at 5.2%, and the benchmark 10-year reached 4.7%, the top reading since mid-2007. If those kinds of yields take hold, the scenario for federal interest expense posited in the CBO’s “Budget and Economic Outlook: 2026 to 2036,” released in February, descends from dire to near-disastrous. Takeaway: America’s track to fiscal safety has lost all margin for error, and nothing demonstrates that better than the long-term impact of loftier than expected rates. America’s got so little room to maneuver that even yields that modestly exceed the CBO’s “baseline,” as the numbers compound in the years ahead, deliver a huge extra blow by crowding out big chunks of revenue that would otherwise go towards funding such essentials as Defense, Social Security and Medicare.

The CBO forecasts that yields on the 30 and 10-year Treasuries will respectively average about 4.65% and 4.15% through FY 2036. That’s roughly 55 basis points lower than the multi-year summit briefly notched in late May. Doesn’t sound like much of a difference, right? And if the interest expense on our gigantic and ballooning national debt of $39 trillion weren’t already running at nearly $1 trillion a year, bigger than Medicare spending and equaling two-thirds of Social Security outlays, the half-point upward shift would likely prove manageable.

But a recent report from the non-partisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget quantifies the deep damage even a continuation at the recent peaks would inflict. By 2036, interest expense would jump from absorbing 14% of all revenues to devouring 30%, five points more than under the CBO’s forecast. At $2.5 trillion, 2.5x today’s number, the carrying costs would become the second largest budget category, beating Medicare by one-third. Interest cost per household would soar from $7,900 last year to $17,000 a decade hence.

Much of today’s extreme vulnerability to even slightly higher rates arises from the need to both refinance existing debt, and shoulder trillions more in newly-issued bonds to cover deficits, at much higher cost. All told, the federal government will need to borrow almost $10 trillion in the next 12 months, equivalent to one-third our total debt. That amount consists of around $7.5 trillion to repay the Treasuries coming due, and $2 trillion for plugging the shortfall between revenues and spending. A major reason the U.S. accumulated so much debt in the first place was the lure of ultra-bargain yields orchestrated by the Fed’s easy money policy during and following the COVID crisis. In 2021 through early 2022, Treasury Bills, instruments that mature within a year, offered around a minuscule 0.2%. Today, that cost’s 18 times fatter at 3.7%.

More

Surging Treasury yields show America has no margin for error on its $31 trillion debt | Fortune

France slides towards recession as GDP goes backwards

30 May 2026

France could be heading for a recession after revised official figures showed the economy shrank by 0.1 per cent in the first quarter.    

A fall in exports and a decline in household consumption were behind the contraction, as the country – like other nations – grapples with global shocks including the Iran war and US tariffs. 

The conflict has pushed up oil prices and dampened tourism while the tariffs have hit trade.

Figures released yesterday also showed inflation rose to 2.8 per cent last month, the highest rate in more than two years.

Charlotte de Montpellier, senior economist at ING Bank, said: 'Incoming data increasingly points to an economy sliding towards recession.

All in all, the economy not only started the year on a weaker footing than expected, but has also deteriorated further in recent weeks.'

France slides towards recession as GDP goes backwards

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.

CATL Opens World's Largest Energy Storage Testing Facility As Battery Industry Scales Up

Sat, May 30, 2026 at 12:00 AM GMT+1 

The rapid growth of renewable energy has created unprecedented demand for large-scale battery storage systems. Around the world, utilities and governments are investing heavily in energy storage to stabilize power grids and support the transition away from fossil fuels.

As battery installations become larger and more complex, reliability has emerged as a major concern. Industry data suggests that a significant number of energy storage projects experience performance issues or delays before entering service, highlighting the need for more comprehensive testing and validation.

China's CATL, already the world's largest battery manufacturer, believes it has a solution. The company has officially opened what it describes as the world's largest and most comprehensive energy storage testing facility, designed to evaluate battery systems under real-world conditions before they are deployed.

The new institute represents a major investment in the future of grid-scale energy storage and underscores the growing importance of battery technology beyond electric vehicles.

CATL's new Energy Storage Validation Research Institute (ESVL) is located in Xiamen, China, and covers approximately 10 hectares.

The company invested around 3 billion yuan, or roughly $441 million, to build the facility. Unlike many testing centers that focus on individual battery cells or components, ESVL has been designed to validate entire energy storage systems at the station level.

CATL says the facility will operate as an open platform that can be used by energy storage companies, certification organizations, utilities, insurers, and regulators from around the world.

The goal is to provide independent and traceable performance data that can improve confidence in large-scale battery installations.

Industry Challenges Continue To Grow

According to CATL, the energy storage sector faces several significant hurdles as deployment accelerates.

The company cited industry data showing that nearly one in five large-scale energy storage stations fails to meet expected performance targets. In addition, almost half of all projects reportedly experience grid-connection delays of more than two months.

These challenges become increasingly important as battery storage moves from supporting individual facilities to becoming critical infrastructure for national power grids. CATL believes more rigorous testing before deployment can help reduce those risks and improve long-term system reliability.

Five Specialized Laboratories Under One Roof

The Xiamen facility includes five dedicated laboratories designed to test different aspects of energy storage performance.

More

CATL Opens World's Largest Energy Storage Testing Facility As Battery Industry Scales Up

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)    

Blessed are the young for they shall inherit the national debt.

Herbert Hoover