Tuesday, 2 June 2026

AI Bubbles On, Bust Coming? Peace Talks Over?

Baltic Dry Index. 3222 -02       Brent Crude 94.21

Spot Gold 4514                           Spot Silver 76.19

US 2 Year Yield 4.05 +0.07

US Federal Debt. 39.198 trillion

US GDP 32.175 trillion.

Possessing utility, commodities derive their exchangeable value from two sources: from their scarcity, and from the quantity of labour required to obtain them.

David Ricardo

All good things must come to an end and with the peace talks to end the Israeli/American war on Iran over and no sign of the Strait of Hormuz opening  President Trump flipped out

telling CNBC, “I don’t care if they’re over, honestly.”

“I really don’t care. I couldn’t care less,” Trump told CNBC’s Eamon Javers in a phone interview midday Monday, adding that he felt the drawn-out negotiations had “started to get very boring.”

Well maybe, but most of the world does care, especially the world’s poorest, to whom high priced diesel is starting to impact their ability to buy food at soaring global food prices.

Besides, with supply chain disruption forever as US policy, I suspect it won’t be long before a scramble to take profits in the stock casinos gets underway.

Getting out first always beats getting carried out last. 

Asia-Pacific stocks mostly lower as Iran war uncertainty keeps investors on edge

Published Mon, Jun 1 2026 7:42 PM EDT

Asia-Pacific markets traded mostly lower Tuesday, as investors weighed renewed uncertainty over U.S.-Iran peace negotiations, while Wall Street benchmark indexes climbed to fresh highs overnight on tech optimism.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 was 1.32% lower, while the Topix declined 1.14%. South Korea’s Kospi fell 1.92% and the small-cap Kosdaq was down 3.13%.

In Australia, the S&P/ASX 200 lost 0.71%.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index added 0.13%, while mainland China’s CSI 300 was up 0.1%.

U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday shrugged off the possibility that peace talks with Iran could fall apart, telling CNBC, “I don’t care if they’re over, honestly.”

“I really don’t care. I couldn’t care less,” Trump told CNBC’s Eamon Javers in a phone interview midday Monday, adding that he felt the drawn-out negotiations had “started to get very boring.”

Trump was responding to a question about reports earlier Monday that Iranian negotiators were considering ending discussions with Washington and moving to “completely block” the Strait of Hormuz in response to Israel’s military campaign in Lebanon targeting the Iran-backed Hezbollah group.

When asked whether Iranian officials had informed him that they would no longer continue negotiations, Trump replied, “No, they haven’t.”

S&P 500 futures slipped 0.2%, while Nasdaq 100 futures shed 0.3%. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by 122 points, or 0.2%.

Overnight on Wall Street, the S&P 500 rose even as oil prices advanced, with Nvidia leading technology higher following the launch of a new chip for PCs.

The broad market index advanced 0.26% to close at 7,599.96, while the Nasdaq Composite gained 0.42% to close at 27,086.81. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 46.42 points, or 0.09%, and ended at 51,078.88. All three indexes reached new all-time intraday highs and closed at records.

Asia-Pacific markets today: Kospi, Nikkei 225, Hang Seng Index

Stock futures slip after all three major indexes close at new records: Live updates

Updated Tue, Jun 2 2026 10:12 PM EDT

U.S. stock futures ticked lower on Monday night after all three major indexes rose to fresh records during the regular session.

S&P 500 futures slipped 0.2%, while Nasdaq 100 futures shed 0.3%. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell by 122 points, or 0.2%.

Shares of Hewlett Packard Enterprise surged 26% after the technology company issued a rosy outlook for the current quarter and raised its guidance for the full year, trouncing the Street’s estimates. HPE’s second-quarter results also marked its biggest earnings beat since 2018.

A rally in the technology sector, led by Nvidia following the launch of a new chip for PCs, propelled stocks higher on Monday. The S&P 500 gained 0.26%, while the Nasdaq Composite added 0.42%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 46.42 points, or 0.09%. All three major averages notched new intraday all-time highs and closing records.

Enthusiasm over the artificial intelligence trade has resulted in tremendous performance in the equity markets over the past few weeks. But Katie Stockton, founder of Fairlead Strategies, says that there are no indications that the equity market rally is over.

“We’ve had nine consecutive up weeks for the S&P 500, and naturally that does reflect positive momentum. Momentum is positive now, short term, intermediate term, long term, and we saw a series of flag pattern breakouts, or essentially sharp run ups followed by brief consolidation phases that are then resolved higher,” Stockton said on CNBC’s “Closing Bell” on Monday afternoon. She noted that Dell was a recent example.

“These run-ups are really explosive. Unfortunately, that also means they tend to end in dramatic fashion, but we don’t have indications yet, any confirmed sell signals from our overbought oversold metrics to suggest that this is over.”

Oil prices also rose on Monday after Iranian state media reported that the country’s negotiators will stop exchanging messages with the U.S. via intermediaries. Iran’s state-affiliated news outlet, Tasnim, also said that the country will move to fully block the Strait of Hormuz. The report added that “no dialogue will take place” until Israel fully stops all attacks in both Lebanon and Gaza and fully withdraws from occupied areas in Lebanon.

In response, President Donald Trump told CNBC’s Eamon Javers in a phone interview that he “couldn’t care less” if peace negotiations with Iran are over.

In a later Truth Social post, the president said that he “had a very productive call” with  Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. In a separate post, Trump added that talks with Iran are “continuing, at a rapid pace.”

Dollar GeneralVictoria’s Secret and Signet Jewelers will report earnings before Tuesday’s opening bell. Traders will also watch out for April’s reading on JOLTS job openings.

Stock market today: Live updates

On Wall Street the Great AI Bubble soars on but see the LIR Technology section.

Wall Street bulls bet US stocks rally will defy bubble fears

Investors and strategists shrug off worries that markets could be overheating by betting on huge gains for AI-linked shares

1 June 2026

Wall Street bulls are betting that a rally in US stocks has further to run, shrugging off concerns that huge gains for shares linked to AI are a sign that markets are overheating.

The S&P 500 sailed to record closing highs 11 times in May, half of all trading days, leaving the US blue-chip index up about 11 per cent this year. Tech stocks have posted even loftier gains, with the Nasdaq up 16 per cent.

First-quarter earnings blew past Wall Street expectations, leading big banks including Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to raise their S&P targets for the year in recent weeks.

Many investors are betting that AI advances and huge investments in chips and data centres will turbocharge US growth and continue boosting companies’ bottom lines.

“We do not believe that we’re in a bubble . . . A bubble would laugh at the valuations that we’re paying right now,” said Steve Chiavarone, Federated Hermes’ deputy chief investment officer for global equities. 

“Secular bull markets historically are 20-year events,” he added. “We think we’re in the middle, and we think it’s accelerating and this market can continue to go higher.”

Companies at the centre of the AI frenzy have posted eyewatering gains.

The Philadelphia Semiconductor index, which tracks big chipmakers, has soared 81 per cent since the start of the year, leaving it on course for its best run since 1999.

Sandisk, a maker of data centre storage products, has surged 600 per cent so far in 2026, while other companies linked to AI including Micron, Dell Technologies, Intel, Seagate and Western Digital are up 200 per cent.

Nvidia, the $5tn chip behemoth most closely associated with the AI boom, has gained 13 per cent so far this year.

The rally in AI stocks has helped push measures of market valuations higher. The S&P 500 is trading at about 21 times expected earnings over the next year, above the 30-year average of 17, FactSet data shows.

More

Wall Street bulls bet US stocks rally will defy bubble fears

In other news, thinking the unthinkable.

What if the Strait of Hormuz didn’t reopen?

The longer the closure, the higher the risks to the global economy

Jun 1, 2026

When the Suez Canal closed in 1967 after war broke out between Egypt and Israel, 15 ships got trapped inside the waterway. They dropped anchor to wait for the hostilities to stop. The conflict ended quickly. Aptly, it was called the Six-Day War, but the canal remained closed for eight years.

When the ships were finally allowed to leave, in 1975, only two remained seaworthy. The rest were so rusted they became known as the Yellow Fleet.

History doesn’t repeat, but it rhymes. So what if something similar were to happen in the Strait of Hormuz? It’s a nightmare few contemplate and it’s certainly not my own base case. But nearly 90 days since the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran all but closed the oil-and-gas sea route, it’s worth considering what seems unthinkable but has happened elsewhere. Call it historical science fiction.

Perhaps it won’t come to this. Washington and Tehran are talking, via Pakistani mediators, about ending the conflict and reopening the choke point. But what if a deal was limited initially to a one-page long memorandum of understanding? Would that clear the strait fully?

Tellingly, the United Arab Emirates has accelerated plans for a second pipeline bypassing the strait, which it hopes to put into service in 2027. This is prudent worst-case scenario planning — and a strong signal that Abu Dhabi thinks the waterway could remain imperiled far longer than many others believe.

The industry consensus on the reopening is less apocalyptic. Asking my contacts in the commodity and financial world, most seem to think Hormuz will reopen next month, at worst in July. Why? Mostly because the consequences of the opposite happening — much higher energy prices and serious economic damage — are too painful to consider.

In the 1980s, American economist Herbert Stein made a famous observation: “If something cannot go on forever, it will stop.” Today, Wall Street is leaning on a slightly tweaked version of Stein’s Law: “The Strait of Hormuz cannot be closed forever because it will cause too much economic damage. Therefore, it will reopen.”

The problem is the closure is yet to do enough economic harm to either side to force a compromise. For U.S. President Donald Trump, the war has been relatively cheap so far, at least in terms of what he cares about most: financial markets.

The S&P500 index is hovering close to an all-time high, up nearly 10% since the war began. Gasoline prices have risen but they’re below their 2022 record peak. And the American economy is galloping, with the estimate for second-quarter growth currently above 4%.

Equally, Iran hasn’t yet suffered the economic meltdown that would force its hard-line leaders to drop their negotiating red lines. Unemployment is rising, food inflation is rampant and the currency is in free fall. Unable to export because of the U.S. Navy blockade, the regime has started curtailing oil output. But the Islamic Republic has demonstrated many times before its huge capacity to absorb pain, more so when the threat is existential.

With both sides dug in, the best hope is for any kind of deal to emerge, however imperfect. If not, we’re back to waiting until the economic toll becomes unbearable. 

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What if the Strait of Hormuz didn’t reopen? - The Japan Times

Oil exports through the Strait of Hormuz might not return to levels seen before the Iran war

Published Sat, May 30 2026 9:00 AM EDT

The oil market might face a new reality after the Iran war in which exports through the Strait of Hormuz do not return to the levels once considered normal, as shipowners now have to weigh the risk that fighting could abruptly break out in the volatile Persian Gulf.

And Western commercial ships will likely hesitate to sail through Hormuz if it remains under Iran’s de facto control, especially if they have to coordinate with the Revolutionary Guard, putting them at risk of violating U.S. sanctions.

It is a scenario with consequences that are difficult to foresee given the vital role that Hormuz plays in global energy markets. Freedom of navigation through the strait was never seriously challenged until Iran basically closed the sea lane in response to the war launched by the U.S. and Israel on Feb. 28.

Iran’s blockade of Hormuz has triggered the largest oil supply disruption in history, putting pressure on the U.S. to make a deal as the threat to the global economy grows by the day. Tehran appears intent to use this leverage to consolidate control over the strait in a settlement that ends the war.

Middle East leaders believe that Iran has already taken control of Hormuz, said Amos Hochstein, who served as a senior energy and national security advisor to former President Joe Biden.

“No matter what happens, the Iranians will control the Strait of Hormuz for the foreseeable future,” Hochstein told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Thursday. “It doesn’t even matter what the deal says. Everybody in the region believes that.”

Oil tanker traffic through Hormuz before the war might represent the high point for transits for the foreseeable future, said Helima Croft, head of global commodity strategy at RBC Capital Markets.

“Any end to the conflict that leaves Iran exercising operational control and influence over the Strait will result in appreciably lower flows through the waterway in our view,” Croft told clients in a Thursday note.

Traffic under this scenario might return to 60% to 70% of prewar volumes with China-affiliated ships moving freely while passage for Western vessels require bilateral agreements with Iran, said Richard Meade, editor-in-chief of Lloyd’s List, in a briefing on May 21.

“This doesn’t trigger a recession in the way that some of the doomsday scenarios that we’ve talked about before might suggest, but it does not allow the prewar rebound,” Meade said. Lloyd’s List is one of the oldest shipping industry trade journals in the world.

“It produces something more insidious,” Meade continued. “A permanently bifurcated strait where access is a function of political alignment, not freedom of navigation.”

More

Oil exports through Hormuz might not return to levels before Iran war

Iran attacks damage 20 US military sites since start of war, satellite images show

1 June 2026

Iran has damaged 20 US military sites since the start of the war, satellite images and videos analysed by BBC Verify show, suggesting the attacks are more extensive than publicly acknowledged.

Iran has targeted key facilities across eight countries in the Middle East since the end of February, causing millions of dollars of damage to state-of the-art air defence systems, refuelling aircraft and radars.

Tehran has targeted both US bases and shared military facilities in retaliation to the US-Israeli strikes across Iran and Lebanon over the past three months. The Pentagon says it has hit more than 13,000 targets in Iran since the start of Operation Epic Fury.

Mojtaba Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader, has sought to highlight his military's success in striking US facilities. In a statement on Tuesday he claimed the Middle East was no longer a "safe place" for American bases.

While the White House has repeatedly claimed that Iran's military has been almost wiped out, analysts said that the damage seen at US facilities suggests that Tehran's counter-attacks have been more precise and extensive than American officials have previously acknowledged.

A US defence official declined to comment on BBC Verify's findings, citing "operational security reasons".

The US has sought to limit satellite analysis of the conflict by requesting Planet, a major provider, to impose an "indefinite" restriction on new images of Iran and most of the Middle East. The company justified the move, saying that it wanted to ensure its images were not used "by adversarial actors to target allied and Nato-partner personnel and civilians".

BBC Verify has used satellite imagery from other international providers combined with older images from Planet to track the damage caused by Iranian attacks. The facilities are in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Qatar, Kuwait, Iraq, Jordan, Bahrain and Oman. The actual figure could be higher, with some analysts placing the number of bases hit as high as 28.

Among the valuable hardware damaged were three state-of-the-art anti-ballistic missile batteries systems at the Al Ruwais and Al Sader airbases in the UAE and Muwaffaq Salti Airbase in Jordan.

The US is only known to operate eight of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) batteries, which are deployed at bases around the globe and cost around $1bn (£766m) to manufacture. Each battery needs a crew of about 100 troops to operate it while the interceptors it fires cost around $12.7m per round.

More

Iran attacks damage 20 US military sites since start of war, satellite images show - BBC News

Global Inflation/Stagflation/Recession Watch.

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

Trump is facing a new inflation warning from the bond market, adding to his midterm challenges

Updated 5:47 PM GMT+1, June 1, 2026

WASHINGTON (AP) — The world is getting more uptight about lending money to President Donald Trump’s government — causing interest rates to climb in ways that are worsening affordability pressureshampering economic growth and creating a new risk for Republicans in November’s midterm elections.

The energy price spike triggered by the Iran war has seeped into the price of bonds that help fund the U.S. government. Interest rates on a 10-year U.S. Treasury note are topping 4.44%, up from 3.95% before the war started at the end of February. Average mortgage rates have climbed to their highest levels in nine months, while auto sales are slumping.

The challenge is global in scale, as interest rates have risen for multiple countries as the world has been adjusting to the prospect of higher inflation, mounting questions about the sustainability of government debt and a dramatic surge in investment in artificial intelligence.

Trump has tried to assure Americans that he has a plan to trim the roughly $1.8 trillion annual budget deficit. In the past, he has pointed to revenue from tariffs, payments from foreigners for his “Gold Card” visa, spending cuts made by the Department of Government Efficiency, and faster economic growth. Last week, he said the fraud task force led by Vice President JD Vance would be the key to unlocking massive savings.

Economists say this is probably unrealistic

Economists say Trump’s strategies to meaningfully curb the deficit are unlikely to deliver the promised results.

The cost of servicing the national debt has tripled since 2021 to more than $1 trillion annually, said Jessica Riedl, a budget and tax fellow at the Brookings Institution.

“President Trump signed a tax cut bill that will likely add $5 trillion to 10-year deficits — and tariffs are offsetting only a small fraction of those costs,” she said. “Budget deficits are still projected to soar past $4 trillion annually within a decade under current policies.”

Deficits are expected to grow over the next decade as the costs of Social Security and Medicare outstrip tax revenues.

The 10-year U.S. Treasury rate climbed as high as 4.67% in the middle of May and has since eased as negotiations over the Iran ceasefire continued — just as rates initially climbed in 2025 because of Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs and then began to decline once Trump backed off the most extreme increases.

When Kent Smetters, faculty director of the Penn Wharton Budget Model, broke down the math tied to rising 30-year Treasury yields, he estimated that 60% of the increase had come from the expectation that America will continue its outsized borrowing and the other 40% was tied to the inflation driven by the Iran war and Trump’s tariffs.

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Why the bond market’s message on US debt matters for midterms | AP News

China’s factory activity beats forecasts in May, private survey shows, despite softer official data

Published Sun, May 31 2026 9:59 PM EDT

BEIJING — China’s manufacturing activity expanded faster than expected in May, according to a private survey released Monday, although growth slowed from the previous month and contrasted with softer official data pointing to weaker momentum in the sector.

The RatingDog China General Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index, compiled by S&P Global, came in at 51.8, a touch above the 51.6 expected in a Reuters poll.

The reading was down from April’s 52.2, indicating a slower pace of improvement in manufacturing conditions. The 50 mark separates expansion from contraction.

“While the rate of growth eased, it remained among the highest observed over the past five years,” said Yao Yu, founder of credit research firm RatingDog.

New export business saw a slight decline in May, the RatingDog PMI report said, while employment also “contracted marginally.”

Seasonally adjusted input prices fell in May from the prior month for the first time in half a year, although costs remained elevated due to higher prices for raw materials and energy, as well as supply chain disruptions, the report said.

The private survey of Chinese manufacturers noted optimism for growth over the next 12 months, based partly on “new product launches, technological breakthroughs and improved production capacity.”

Because it samples a smaller group of export-oriented manufacturers, the RatingDog survey often differs from the official manufacturing PMI, which covers a broader segment of China’s manufacturing sector.

China’s official manufacturing PMI for May fell to 50 in May from 50.3 in April, in line with expectations and its lowest since a 49 print in February, according to data released Sunday.

Overall, the official PMI suggests “subdued manufacturing sector growth, increased services activity, and continued decline in the construction industry,” Goldman Sachs analysts said in a report Sunday.

The mixed manufacturing signals come as China’s broader economy continues to show uneven momentum.

While China’s retail sales growth hit a 40-month low in April, official figures showed overall domestic tourism and spending picked up during an extended May 1 holiday. Chinese hotel group H World said the 10 most popular destinations by occupancy rate were in smaller cities. Rates tend to be lower in those regions than major cities.

China’s factory activity beats forecasts in May, private survey shows, despite softer official data

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.

Warning, I have no way of verifying this YouTube presentation, but if even halfway accurate, it sounds like a dot con style crash is coming.  Approx. 9 minutes. “And the walls came tumbling down” comes to mind.

Why Tech CEOs Are Quietly Cancelling Their AI Plans

Why Tech CEOs Are Quietly Cancelling Their AI Plans

See yesterday’s AI article from Goldie’s CEO, in the “In other news” section.

The stock market just did something eerily similar to the dot-com bubble top in 2000

Published Mon, Jun 1 2026 7:45 AM EDT

The S&P 500 closed at a record on the last trading day of May, but only a handful of stocks — focused mostly in the AI area — hit their own all-time highs.

This strange occurrence echoes what happened at the top of dot-com bubble 26 years ago.

On Friday, just 20 of the index members hit a record. Of those 20, just seven were not directly related to artificial intelligence.

Michael Hartnett at Bank of America pointed out in a note to end last week that it was just 20 stocks that hit new highs at the very top of the internet bubble in March 2000.

While the widely followed strategist said the “speculative price action” is likely not over yet, this occurrence is the latest sign that it is nearing. Hartnett believes central banks and rising interest rates will ultimately spell the end, giving clients a “post-bubble” road map.

The May stock boom was driven largely by semiconductors, specifically memory chip makers like Micron TechnologyAdvanced Micro Devices, SK Hynix and Samsung, which are all valued at or near a trillion dollars. AMD soared 46% on the month, Micron jumped 88%, Samsung 44% and SK Hynix 81%.

The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite jumped 25% in April and May, its best two-month stretch in more than two decades.

Narrow bull

A growing number of strategists and investors are concerned that if this bull market doesn’t start to broaden out, it will ultimately be its undoing.

Advance-decline lines, which show the number of stocks rising compared with the number falling, have exhibited a similar trend, surging at the end of March and then falling back in a bearish sign since the middle of April.

“Internals have lagged since the initial April surge,” Ari Wald wrote in a May 23 technical analysis for Oppenheimer.

Only about 55% of S&P 500 constituents were trading above their 200-day moving average as of May 20, according to BCA Research.

More

The stock market just did something eerily similar to the dot-com bubble top in 2000

Florida AG sues OpenAI and CEO Sam Altman over AI safety concerns and alleged harm to users

June 1, 2026

Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier announced a lawsuit in West Palm Beach against OpenAI and its CEO, Sam Altman, over the design and safety of its AI products.

Florida is the first state to sue the company, with the lawsuit alleging that OpenAI knowingly ignored warnings that harm users and deceives parents.

The attorney general referenced the shooting at Florida State University last year and the murders of two University of South Florida students in April, stating that in both cases, the suspects used ChatGPT before the crimes.

Florida AG sues OpenAI and CEO Sam Altman over AI safety concerns and alleged harm to users

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

World Debt Clocks (usdebtclock.org)    

There is no art which government sooner learns of another than that of draining money from the pockets of the people.

Adam Smith

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