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Sunday, May 24, 2026

2026-05-24

 ***** denotes well-worth reading in full at source (even if excerpted extensively here)


Economic
Fare:


Drawing down crude inventories at a record pace, with SPR releases doing the heavy lifting to cushion the Gulf supply shock, only delays the move higher in crude oil prices. Once those buffers are depleted, oil risks being violently repriced higher.

That is why the Trump administration's race to secure a peace deal with Iran and reopen the Hormuz chokepoint has taken on new urgency in recent weeks. The longer the critical waterway remains disrupted, the greater the risk that the oil shock will escalate from a market event to a financial crisis, with higher crude prices feeding directly into inflation, consumer stress, and broader recession risk.

The message from the SPR crude data this week, the largest ever draw, is very clear: The Trump administration is buying time to get a deal done with Tehran. If Hormuz does not reopen soon, the market will eventually force demand destruction through much higher prices. ......

...... Earlier, Rapidan Energy Group analysts warned that a prolonged closure of the Hormuz chokepoint risks pushing the economy into a downturn on a scale approaching that of the 2008 Great Recession.





............ A delayed opening of the Hormuz chokepoint would increase the third-quarter oil supply deficit to 6 million barrels per day as inventories fall toward dangerously low levels, the analysts warned.

Even an early-August restart would not bring immediate relief, as inventories would continue to slide into early fall while Gulf production and shipments normalize.

JPMorgan analysts recently warned that the world is spiraling toward a catastrophic cliff-edge shortage of crude oil if the maritime chokepoint is blocked through June ............

*** Major Markets Letter #24: Yield curves in Stagflation








... This is certainly impressive, although the impact on GDP may be less than what the above figure suggests due to the associated rise in imported silicon chips — buying foreign equipment to invest locally improves the capital stock, but does not represent a rise in domestic production. (The exporting country is producing the goods.) This relates to one of the perennial online economics debates: do imports subtract from GDP? In addition to the statement “imports subtract from GDP” being mathematically correct, the cancellation of domestic spending does matter: there is a financial cost associated with buying foreign goods, and that financial cost can displace spending that would have been made on domestic production. .........



Market Fare:

MS Weekly Warm-up: Thoughts from the Road (via the Bond Beat)

................. Last Wednesday, We Published Our Mid-Year Outlook...We raised our next twelve month (mid 2027) S&P 500 price target to 8,300 driven by strong earnings—16% annualized EPS growth through our forecast horizon (2x the long-term median). Under the surface, we prefer Industrials, the hyperscalers, Financials, and Discretionary Goods.

.......... We’re took our forward 12-month (mid-2027) price target up to 8300. That’s 20.5x forward EPS of $404. Our year-end 2026 price target moved up from 7800 to 8000. The main messages here are:

This is an earnings story, not a multiple expansion one.

This outlook builds on three themes we have emphasized since last year: running the economy/earnings cycle hot, public to private rebalancing, and a broadening of earnings and performance.

The fear of AI is leading many companies to “run it lean” in an economy that is also running hot. This has only boosted the operating leverage and margins further and one reason we raised our EPS forecasts last week.

In our baseline, we have 2026 EPS of $339 (23% growth), 2027 EPS of $380 (12% growth), and 2028 EPS of $429 (13% growth). The drivers of our resilient earnings forecast are: positive operating leverage and margin expansion aided by AI adoption, stabilizing pricing power in goods oriented end markets and a capex cycle that continues to show momentum…........

Our Midyear Strategy Outlook published last week highlights the fundamental momentum in the global economy as a driver of markets, with the energy shock as a key downside risk. The disruption has lasted almost three months, but drawdowns in inventories and redirection of trade have kept macro implications muted to date. If oil prices rise significantly from current levels or the disruption continues for another quarter, the macro narrative will shift. Our Outlook frames alternative scenarios along these lines. For now, we focus on positive structural drivers — AI-driven capex, wealth-driven consumption, and a return to full employment — that should support a recovery in growth next year… ............

…The duration of the oil shock is as critical for growth, inflation, and monetary policy as the price of energy. If the conflict escalates and oil prices surge through $150 and stay above $125 for several quarters, the outlook turns recessionary. A milder adverse scenario has a persistent oil price premium that reflects widespread but non-crippling shortages, prompting central banks to lean more aggressively against inflation. Both scenarios are negative, but the differences are significant.

But we also see substantial upside risks. Especially in the US, aggregate demand has proved resilient and could easily surprise us to the upside for a prolonged period. Strong wealth effects boost US consumption and AI-driven capex appears unrelenting. Taken together, the US growth impulse could build on itself and because consumption and investment goods have a huge import component, the rest of the world would benefit. ...........




Various metrics suggest that the Canadian banks could be overvalued



.......... Startups with no revenue, no profits, and occasionally no actual product are raising millions or billions because their founders can say the words “large language model”. Public company CEOs now jam “AI” into earnings calls with the same shamelessness that “trendy” gastropubs have when being the 4th “new” place on the block to not just offer a good ole’ fashioned cheeseburger, but the breathtaking innovation of a truffle aioli smashburger.

........... Berkshire has spent decades avoiding one of the central mistakes in modern investing: confusing a compelling narrative with a compelling investment. A transformative future does not automatically justify any price.

............ There is also a lesson about temperament. Successful investing is often less about predicting the future perfectly and more about avoiding emotional decision-making when sentiment becomes extreme.





................. So, I think two things can be true here:

This market is not a “bubble” because it has real fundamental drivers underlying it.
This market is riskier in certain elements because the expectations embedded in certain sectors are very high which reduces margin for error and creates potentially higher sequence risk. ..............

There has been renewed chatter in recent weeks that we’re headed back to the 70s (again). People love this chart from Larry Summers showing the 2014 starting point compared to the 70s. As if there’s some sort of necessary temporal relationship between the two time periods because…because!


Are we going to get another big surge in inflation? We’re seeing a surge! It’s surged from 2.4% to 3.8% in just 5 months. That’s a pretty sizable jump. The problem is, it’s mostly cost push inflation driven by the war in Iran. Consumers will eat the price hike until they can’t. But here’s the thing – in order to get a 1970s style inflation you need a much larger boom in oil and commodities. And I mean MUCH larger. You see, in the 70s that second big jump in prices coincided with a 150% surge in oil prices after the first big surge. So, if we’re expecting inflation to go to 14% year over year (or anything remotely close to that) then you need a record breaking surge in oil prices and broader commodities on top of what we’ve already had. The equivalent sort of price action is a move to something well above $300 oil. But that brings in another problem – the US economy isn’t nearly as oil dependent as it was in the 1970s. So it would take a much broader and much larger commodity rally to cause this. And it would need to be supported by some sort of underlying stimulus from global governments. None of which is completely out of the realm of possibility, but I struggle to see what will cause that 



Just when investors thought it was safe to go back into the bond market, the Iran War and resulting inflationary concerns reversed the January-February decline in rates (rally in bond prices) and then some.

Expectations for Fed cuts have quickly turned into fears of Fed hikes given the inflationary backdrop, while the correlation between bonds and stocks, which had been reverting to negative territory over the past two years, has snapped back to being unhelpfully positive ............


Bubble Fare:

Rising prices are draining the liquidity from financial markets, including bonds. The AI stock bubble is ripe for bursting


***** Last call
on the most valuable company in the world

Sit. Sit down. No, here, I saved you the stool. You want one of these? Course you do. Two more of whatever this is, thanks.

Right. So you’re buying Nvidia.

Don’t. Don’t do the face. Everybody does the face. I’ve been doing this twenty years and the face never changes, it’s the same face the guy made in ‘99, the same face the guy made in ‘07, this sort of but the numbers are good face, and you know what, you’re right. The numbers are good. The numbers are spectacular. That’s the whole problem and nobody will sit still long enough to let me explain it to them. You’ll sit, though. You bought me a drink. That’s the deal now, you’re stuck.

Wednesday. You watch Wednesday? The earnings?

Course you didn’t, you were busy buying the thing. Let me tell you about Wednesday. Street wants seventy-nine, they print eighty-one and a half. Street wants a buck seventy-eight, they do a buck eighty-seven. They guide up. They hand everybody a dividend twenty-five hundred percent fatter, which, between us, between you and me and this glass, is a penny turning into a quarter on a two-hundred-dollar stock, so it’s a yield of bugger all, but the room cheered, they actually cheered, twenty-five times more of basically nothing and grown adults stood up and clapped. Revenue up tenfold in three years. Best quarter the most valuable company in the history of money has ever turned in. Flawless. Spotless. Not a hair out of place.

And the stock went down.

Yeah. Down. I had it on the screen behind the bar, I made Tony put it on, and I watched it go red and I thought, Tony, your telly’s broken. It wasn’t broken. Fourth time now. Fourth perfect quarter in a row and the thing just... sags. And everybody’s got the line ready, profit-taking, it’s priced in, and here’s the thing about that line, my friend, that line is true so many times that the one time it’s a lie you’ve already stopped checking. The guy who says priced in is right and right and right and right and then the building’s on fire behind him and he’s still saying it.

Because that’s how it goes. That’s the part you’ll learn the expensive way if you don’t let me buy you the cheap version right now. The top doesn’t ring a bell. There’s no guy with a bell. I keep waiting for the guy with the bell, twenty years, never shows. It looks like exactly this. Perfect everything, and the price just won’t go. You feed the machine the single best meal of its entire life and somehow the whole table walks out poorer. Something changed underneath. And nobody, nobody, sends the memo.

Even the bean-counters clocked it. Read the boring stuff, nobody reads the boring stuff. Every quarter lately the thing barely twitches on the day and then bleeds out over the week, every quarter a triumph, and they gave it a little name so they wouldn’t have to think about it. A trap. A nice trap, a cheerful trap. Which is bean-counter for the good news quit working and we’re all very politely not mentioning it over dinner.

Hey. Hey. You still with me. Good. Drink up, I’m only getting started, and there’s three things wrong here, not one. Three. One screams, one’s in the walls, and one’s been down the cellar this whole time just... eating. Quietly. We’ll get there. ................................



A.I. Fare:




..................... The scale of today’s AI buildout has historical precedent. For instance, the railroad expansion of the mid-1800s involved more extreme infrastructure investment, with railway Capex estimated to have consumed as much as 10-20% of GDP at its peak. A more recent and appropriate comparison is the telecom buildout of the late 1990s, when Capex peaked at roughly 1.0-1.2% of US GDP. Today’s AI infrastructure spending by just the four companies has recently surpassed that telecom figure.

But unlike the debt-fueled telecom boom, today’s AI spending has thus far been funded almost entirely by the cash and cash flows of extremely profitable corporations. While the composition of funding is shifting from cash and free cash flow to debt, the companies noted above have debt-to-equity ratios well below the S&P 500 average and significantly lower than during the telecom buildout. Moreover, earnings from other highly profitable business lines will continue to provide them with substantial cash for investment.

............ While still early in the AI revolution, the economic data points to genuine economic momentum. Whether AI productivity benefits can become more broadly based across the economy is the question that Part Two of this article addresses.



AI is, as it stands, not economically viable for anybody involved other than the construction firms, NVIDIA, and the surrounding hardware companies benefitting from the irrational exuberance of a data center buildout that doesn’t appear to be happening at the speed we believed. 

Every AI startup loses millions or billions of dollars a year, and nobody appears to have worked out a way to stop hemorrhaging cash. Hyperscalers have invested over $800 billion in the last three years, with plans to add another $700 billion or so in 2026 and another $1 trillion in 2027, meaning that they need to make at least three trillion dollars in AI specific revenue just to break even, and $6 trillion or more for AI to be anything other than a wash. I went into detail about this (albeit at a lower, pre-2026/2027 capex number) in a premium piece last year.  ................


Strong opposition kicks in when data center demand surpasses 5% of a country's power supply.


Why politicians are squandering the anti-AI backlash





Charts:
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(not just) for the ESG crowd:

The floating ice shelf of world’s widest glacier – Thwaites glacier in Antarctica – is detaching, with worrying implications for global sea-level rise





The inaugural Transition Away from Fossil Fuels (TAFF) Conference took place in Colombia at the end of April. It's almost universally reckoned to have been “a measured success”.

We have to hope so given that the whole current climate governance system driven by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and underpinned by scientific advice from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has comprehensively failed the whole of humankind for the last 25 years. ........



Sci Fare:


Our inner narrator makes it all up



U.S. B.S.:

.......... Beyond all that, MTG has repeatedly shown that she will risk her own political career in order to condemn destructive war policies, whether they’re carried out by the other party or by her own. She did so by not only opposing and denouncing Trump’s financing and arming of Israel, but also the panoply of D.C. bipartisan war policies. MTG thus denounced Trump’s bombing of Yemen (after he spent 2024 criticizing Biden for bombing Yemen), his bombing of Iran last year with Israel, and Trump’s new war with Iran.

AOC, by rather stark contrast, is a partisan hack, nothing more than a glorified Nancy Pelosi Jr. She will criticize the policies of a Democratic president only in the most muted and deferential tones.

............ None of this should be remotely surprising to anyone who has paid attention to mainstream, DNC-loyal liberal politics. Caring about outcomes is very low on their list of priorities, if it appears on it at all. ...............





Travel by Canadians to the US is down almost 50% from last year’s already drastically reduced levels. Part of this is a quiet Canadian protest against US imperialist foreign policy — Trump’s arrogant assumption that Canadians wouldn’t find the idea of being a US state repulsive, his threats of annexation, his endless tariff wars against former US allies, and the US Uniparty’s financial, political, and military support for Israel’s genocides and the Empire’s brutal, illegal, endless wars, while so many Americans are suffering poverty, precarity, joblessness, and illness that the government refuses to pay a penny to relieve.

But the larger part of our reticence to travel to the US, I think, is fear. It is increasingly obvious that the collapse of the ‘rule of law’ in the US, and the declaration by government officials that they are ‘above the law’, and that their ICE and other paramilitary forces are exempt from prosecution for their terrorism and excesses, means that it is absolutely dangerous for non-citizens to venture across the border. ........

And anyone following the political events there knows that even if the Tweedledee Democrats replace the Tweedledum Republicans in the next elections, the policies and situation there aren’t going to significantly change. The US Empire has entered a death spiral, and it’s only going to get worse. .......



War Fare:

A memorandum of understanding for the MoU of the deal

That is the most consequential string of weasel words I’ve seen since “weapons of mass destruction - related programme activities”.

Largely. Negotiated. Subject to. Finalization.

That’s not a deal. That’s not even a ceasefire!

............... The neocons are already losing their minds on X. Pompeo, Levin, Graham, the whole fingerprints-up-their-asses crowd - furious. Which, for what it’s worth, is the one legible signal in all of this that something real might be happening. ...............

..





Geopolitical Fare:




Every society is three meals from chaos
-Vladimir Lenin
On May 4th I wrote that a year of hunger and famine is baked in for most of the world.

This was based on the effects of Six Week War and the continued blockade of the Strait of Hormuz. But, in addition, we have the strongest El Nino is a hundred and fifty years incoming ............



Other Fare:

Everybody knows about the decline in birthrates. Fewer people understand why—or just how significantly it could transform society in the next few decades.


How a generation's time preference was sabotaged

......................... There was a famous Stanford experiment called the Marshmallow Test which measured time preference in young children. A child would be left in a room with a single marshmallow on the table. They were of course free to eat the marshmallow, the experimenter would tell them, but if they didn’t, then later on they would get a second marshmallow. Children with high time preference – meaning that they strongly prefer the immediate reward to the hypothetical future reward – would cram the marshmallow into their candy-holes without a second thought. Children with low time preference – meaning that they value the future at a similar or even higher level to the present – would patiently wait, and be rewarded with a second marshmallow. These children were then followed, and it was demonstrated that the children with low time preference demonstrated better life outcomes: they maintained higher grades, were less likely to fall into debt, were less likely to develop drug addictions, were less likely to get pregnant before marriage, were less likely to get fat, and so on. All of which makes sense. The capacity to endure present pain – by studying, dieting, working out, what have you – in order to obtain a better future outcome is obviously going to be linked to better outcomes.

How would a smart kid react if the experimenter failed the marshmallow test?

For instance, say the experimenter simply lied. There was no second marshmallow; the child waited for nothing. Or, even worse, the first marshmallow was snatched away, and replaced with two marshmallows, each one half the size of the original? Or a third the size? Here are your two marshmallows, sucker, joke’s on you. What would the results be if, after this experience, the children were tested a second time? I don’t know if such an experiment has ever been conducted, but the outcome is not hard to guess. Every single one of the children, whether they’d passed the marshmallow test the first time or not, would scarf down the marshmallow the moment it was in front of them.

The capacity for low time preference may be largely innate, but whether it expresses or not is entirely a function of social trust. In order to defer gratification for a greater future reward, one must believe that there is a reasonably high chance of that reward manifesting. The less likely the future reward becomes, the more steeply a rational actor will discount the future.

........................ I’d like to believe that this is all temporary, that things can be turned around, but if you tell me this hope is nothing more than cope it is very difficult for me to argue otherwise. Maybe things will finally improve and maybe they won’t; the point is that, for the young who have only ever known civilizational rot, it is entirely rational for them to lay down and let it rot.

Generation X and the millennials both tried to do everything right, according to what the boomers told them was the path forward: save money, study hard, get a ‘job’. At every stage we got rugpulled. Most of us have nothing to show for any of that.

Zoomers looked at what happened to Gen-X and the millennials and said, quite rationally, fuck that.

.................. Zoomers have no faith that the future will be better and every reason to believe that it will be much worse, and so they have every reason to prize the small, present pleasure over some future prize that experience has taught them lives only in their broken dreams. What’s the point in saving for a house if you’ll never even be able to afford a hovel in an abandoned toxic-waste dump small town where the major local industries revolve around the fentanyl trade? You might as well just splurge on that $28 lunch, which you can enjoy now, and which you won’t be able to enjoy in a few years, when you’re making the same amount of money, but that lunch costs $48, is prepared with worse ingredients, is provided in smaller portions



Pics of the Week:

Sunday, May 17, 2026

2026-05-17

 ***** denotes well-worth reading in full at source (even if excerpted extensively here)


Economic 
Fare:


Global oil demand is set to exceed supply in the current year amid the ongoing conflict in the Middle East, reversing previous projections of a surplus, OilPrice reports citing the latest IEA data.

"With Hormuz tanker traffic still restricted, cumulative supply ​losses from Middle East Gulf producers already exceed 1 billion barrels with more than 14 million (barrels per ⁠day) of oil now shut in, an unprecedented supply shock," said the agency, which advises industrialized countries. .........



................... In other words, futures markets are not ignoring the risks associated with the Iran War. They have already embedded about a $30 geopolitical premium into current pricing. Inventories imply a price closer to $70, while markets are pricing oil near $99. That is a substantial overvaluation relative to inventory fundamentals.

This is how markets translate uncertainty into price. Oil cannot trade at theoretical values unless counterparties are willing underwrite that transaction.

.......... One may believe that current physical scarcity justifies $150 oil, but markets do not move to theoretical scarcity values automatically. Price only rises to levels at which counterparties are willing to make a trade. Like it or not, that is how the process works.

......... The main takeaway from these charts is that markets are pricing an intense near-term squeeze while still expecting some form of resolution to the Iran War and related supply disruptions within a relatively short time frame. Markets are adaptive. If comparative inventories continue falling deeper into deficit, prices will rise further—but only when counterparties are willing to make trades at higher prices based on evidence of worsening physical constraints rather than fear alone.


There’s NO sign underlying inflation is picking up despite yesterday’s “hot” CPI

…I should clarify upfront that I’m an inflation “dove.” It feels to me like we’re on the cusp of a major automation wave in white-collar jobs that are heavily administrative and repetitive. There’ll be lots of people chasing far fewer jobs in coming years, which will put downward pressure on wages. I just can’t see how - with that as a backdrop - underlying inflation has room to pick up, even with everything that’s going on now…


Morgan Stanley Insight: Global Economics Mid-Year Outlook: A Fluid Outlook (via The Bond Beat)

Coming into this year, we were constructive on growth and remain so, but with increased caution amid the energy supply shock. Energy volatility generates a wide range of outcomes, particularly on the inflation front. The AI boom remains a critical driver of demand, but its effects on productivity are a wild card. We rely on scenarios to illustrate potential paths for the global economy depending on oil and AI outcomes.
  • Global growth is fundamentally supported by continued US momentum in AI-driven capex and high-end consumer spending, which over time should allow for a broadening in macro drivers. China is more insulated than Europe, although in each case the energy shock will damp but not derail the expansion.
  • The duration of the energy disruption is consequential – our base case assumes crude back to $90/bbl at the end of the year and further declines in 2027. A more-protracted oil price dislocation would exacerbate growth and inflation risks, and a permanent risk premium for oil would stall the return to target inflation globally. An “escalation” scenario – where oil prices surge through $150/bbl – would mean physical shortages, supply chain disruption, and recessionary outcomes. .......
............ Energy and commodity markets, policy choices, and the speed of AI adoption all combine to define growth through 2027. In the baseline, the energy shock slows the global economy modestly through mid-2026 before growth stabilizes and recovers into 2027. We see growth near potential across most major economies. AI-driven capex and fiscal spending on energy security and defense provide a firm floor to prolong late-cycle growth. But we are assuming that the conflict in Iran is resolved in the next month, limiting the effects to one quarter, and that volatility from energy prices subsides over the balance of the year…



Synopsis:
  • The Iran war has driven up inflation but has had no meaningful impact on U.S. growth so far because (1) it comes with a lag and (2) there are temporary offsets from tax refunds, military spending, some pull-forward in demand, and a stock market wealth effect. Our models show that recession risk remains low and growth is decent. 
  • Had we not had the war, we likely would have seen global growth exceed our initial estimate from late last year, coming in closer to 3.4-3.5% (vs. our estimate of 3.1% now). This helps explain the resilience of the global economy now despite the spike in oil prices. 
  • With 85% of S&P 500 companies reporting, the beat rate of 84.8% is on pace to be the third highest on record, after Q1 and Q2 2021. Every sector’s beat rate is above 70%, so while the earnings growth is driven disproportionately by earnings and AI, companies are navigating the current economic backdrop well.
  • ...
  • Since the March 30 low, leadership has been very much Growth over Value. The 28% gain for Technology over the past 30 market days is 9th best on record. Prior cases have seen Technology continue to outperform for several months before eventually losing some momentum. 
  • Semiconductors have been clear leader within the sector, but Hardware has outperformed as well. Software is still down about 20% over the last six months and has underperformed by roughly 40% over that time. ... 
  • Near-term, Tech is extremely overbought and the weight in the S&P 500 made a record high last week at 37%.  However, earnings have been strong and forward estimates have risen so the sector is not back to extremes from a valuation perspective.
  •  ....... We remain on bubble watch but it is too early to bail.



Market Fare:

A rally fueled by improving expectations lacks broad support

The indexes are hitting new highs. The S&P 500 is up 6 weeks in a row and finished last week just shy of 7400. The NASDAQ composite, which is also up 6 weeks in a row, pushed 4.5% further into record territory last week.

Beneath the surface, however, the picture is not as rosy. The index is hitting record levels and yet only slightly more than half of the constituents in the index are even above the long-term moving average - for the median stock in the index, a new 52-week high would require a rally of more than 15%. The percentage of stocks above their 200-day average is falling and by the end of last week it dropped below 55%. ..........



The commodity supercycle thesis is everywhere right now. Bank of America’s Michael Hartnett, one of the most widely read strategists on Wall Street, recently declared “commodities the biggest trade of the next five years,” anchoring the call on deglobalization, chronic capital underinvestment, and a world drifting away from dollar dominance. As is often the case, the narrative is extremely compelling. However, it’s also internally contradictory in ways that most investors aren’t stopping to examine.


DB: Asset Allocation - Q1 2026 Global Earnings: Tech Drives Robust Growth (via The Bond Beat)




Biggest groups have gained $5.4tn in value since conflict began — but semiconductor sector accounts for most of the gains





A.I. Fare:



US tech giants including Alphabet and Amazon are tapping foreign debt market at an unprecedented rate


This isn’t a joke, and it’s becoming a big problem

......... There’s a specific kind of brain rot spreading through executive suites and VC circles right now. It looks like productivity. It sounds like innovation. It burns through tokens at a rate that would make your CFO cry. And it produces almost nothing of measurable value.


AI writing is impossible to avoid, is making everything sound the same, and is driving us crazy.



(not just) for the ESG crowd:

Daegan Miller on the Often Misunderstood Work of Roy Scranton

............................. It’s useful to think about the difference between the words “world,” “planet,” “Earth,” and “globe,” and Scranton, drawing on the work of historian Dipesh Chakrabarty, writes, “we might say somewhat reductively that…the globe is political, the planet scientific, the Earth phenomenological, and the world ontological.” Or to put it another way, the nation states, treaties, and climate summits make up the globe, while climate modeling and evolution and the periodic table of elements and carbon cycle are what define the planet. The Earth is the ground we feel under our feet, the wind we hear in the trees, the sun we feel on our faces. And the world: that’s a capacious Old English word that means “the state or realm of human existence on earth.” Each of these is deeply entangled with the others—a change to one ripples its way through each—but the point remains that the end of the world means the end of the realm of human existence, and for those of us living today the realm of our existence is a fossil-fueled, capital crazy, trigger-happy world of exploitation, extraction, and extravagance for the few at the cost of immiseration for the vast majority of life. ........



Sci Fare:

Consciousness is not separate from the physical world — our “soul” is of the same nature as our body and any other phenomenon of the world.

A fierce debate is raging around the slippery notion of consciousness. It retraces a trotted pattern of cultural resistance: We humans are often scared by anything that may disturb our image of ourselves. 

Famously, Darwin’s realization that we have common ancestors with all living organisms on our planet met ferocious resistance. Many felt confounded or degraded by the idea of sharing a family tree with donkeys. The cultural history of modernity is dotted by similar ideological rearguard battles, wherein old worldviews fight in retreat against novel knowledge to save some concept held dear. Amid the current cultural backlash against progressive ideas, today’s debate on consciousness reflects our human fears of belonging to the same family as inanimate matter and losing our dear, transcendent souls. .....................





U.S. B.S.:

Usonia: More than 250 Years in the Making



War Fare:

from an evil neocon M-F'er
Washington can’t reverse or control the consequences of losing this war.

......... Iran remains in control of the Strait of Hormuz. The common assumption that, one way or another, the strait will reopen when the crisis ends is unfounded. Iran has no interest in returning to the status quo ante. People talk of a split between hard-liners and moderates in Tehran, but even moderates must understand that Iran cannot afford to let the strait go, no matter how good a deal it thought it could get. For one thing, how reliable is any deal ..?



Geopolitical Fare:






Other Fare:

The transition from small hunter-gatherer societies into complex civilizations gave rise to the first Axial Age. Today, the planetary polycrisis of climate chaos, mass migration, increasing warfare and transformative AI represents a rupture of comparable magnitude.





Vid Fare:



Sunday, May 10, 2026

2026-05-10

 ***** denotes well-worth reading in full at source (even if excerpted extensively here)


Economic 
Fare:




Market Fare:


......... As Bloomberg notes, first-quarter earnings strength hasn’t been limited to megacap tech. It’s showing up across sectors. Small caps are on a tear, bank profits are booming and firms keep plowing past macroeconomic obstacles. The breadth of earnings revisions has even accelerated since the start of earnings season. The EPS surprise for the median S&P 500 stock in Q1 is 6%, the strongest in four years



............... A key question for traders is whether the recent episode will mirror what happened at the peak of the Fed’s rate hikes in late 2023 and again after the market meltdown caused by Trump’s tariffs in the middle of last year.

In both cases, the 30-year yield only briefly held over 5%, delivering big gains to investors who bought at those peaks. A similar dynamic could play out again if a US-Iran deal means the oil shock fades or if the economy stalls, reviving bets on Fed rate cuts. ..........

 
Roberts: Market Correction Risk: Why Summer 2026 Looks Risky

The S&P 500 hit a fresh record high last week. The median stock in the index is sitting 13% below its 52-week peak. That divergence is not a footnote or a curiosity. It’s the loudest warning the market has flashed since the dot-com era, and it’s arriving at the worst possible moment on the calendar. Market correction risk is climbing, and this summer it’s stacked on top of three other forces that almost never converge at the same time.



........... S&P 500 earnings growth is projected to accelerate sharply from 13.4% in Q4 to 24.6% in Q1 – a four-year high and a level rarely seen outside of post-shock recoveries. Excluding special factors, this represents arguably the strongest earnings growth in two decades.

The AI boom is a clear contributor, but strength is widespread, with double-digit growth seen in average and median companies, and all 11 sectors posting positive growth for the first time in four years. This strong performance has in many places been driven by higher prices amid supply constraints, surging demand within the AI value chain, and other disruptions. ..........



.... What started (and continues) as a parabolic move in semiconductors is now pulling up stocks that are more directly affected by energy disruptions. Health markers for this rally are poor, but you would expect that when it is so concentrated.

What we’re seeing now is just the acceleration of the “infinite demand at any price” theme that has dominated since 2020.

I could post any number of bear fuel charts whether it is based on breadth, volume, number of stocks hitting 52-week lows etc. There’s no point as the narrative is unlikely to be broken now.

The rally has gone on for long enough now that even impaired markets are starting to get dragged along.

.................... Calling the rise in AI-related stock prices a bubble is just wrong. P/Es are very reasonable. As many have said, if there is a bubble it’s in E rather that P.

I would argue calling the even the “E” part as a bubble is contentious. If you subscribe to the “infinite demand at any price” for AI, then it’s all absolutely reasonable.

You don’t need that much to happen to justify everything we’re seeing.
  1. All new compute capacity has to approach 100% utilisation. If it does, then hyperscaler margins will be realised and all of the hardware (chips, memory, power delivery etc) would be a great investment. Great margins for all. Ignore the accounting argument about capitalisation of costs. The cashflow will certainly arrive.
  2. The LLM companies can continue to attract capital to run at a loss, are able to push pricing to break even, or can engineer a jump in efficiency.
It’s just another version of the “infinite demand at any price” coupled with the endless supply of capital. Demand for inference will stay high enough that both capacity will be filled and pricing will eventually be able to adjust.

This is why calling it a bubble might not be appropriate. There very well could be incredible demand as the technology progresses.

This is still a panic rally though. There really isn’t much that’s healthy about this price action. SOX is up 50% this month with no pullbacks. Everyone wants to buy on a pullback. This means it won’t happen. ................



Bubble Fare:


The rebound from the March lows, fueled in part by hopes of easing tensions between the US and Iran and a surge in corporate earnings, has lifted investor sentiment toward what a quantitative model from Bloomberg Intelligence strategists suggests is “manic” territory. The model tracks six components, and three of them have driven it toward that level: high-yield corporate bond spreads, low volatility, and pairwise correlations.

That doesn’t necessarily mean a crash is coming: The backdrop has typically coincided with further gains, albeit at a more modest rate. ...............



.......... The exuberance of the spectacular now is also evident in the steep valuation of the Nasdaq 100

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.................... This forces an almost heretical conclusion I’ve been toying with for a year or two: maybe what we consider “expensive” is anchored to a market regime that no longer exists. Maybe 20x earnings is not expensive anymore because 20 years of future earnings are guaranteed in a way they weren’t 50 years ago. Maybe for dominant, cash-generating businesses, 20x is the new bargain bin. Maybe historical comparisons to decades that lacked passive flows, algorithmic trading, derivatives-fueled volatility, trillion-dollar buybacks, and perpetual monetary intervention are becoming less useful by the year.

........ This doesn’t mean crashes disappear. Something will absolutely break eventually, and probably the moves lower will be sharper and faster, before they aren’t, because that’s what leveraged systems do. But each break seems to justify larger interventions, which creates even bigger distortions, which produce even larger asset bubbles, which eventually require even more intervention. It’s a magnificent ouroboros of financial engineering and moral hazard.

And that’s the truly infuriating part for people like me. I want old valuation frameworks to still work cleanly. I want patient fundamental analysis to feel like an advantage rather than a history hobby. I want “cheap” and “expensive” to retain actual meaning. But markets increasingly feel like they’re operating under a new regime where liquidity overwhelms nearly everything else over long enough time horizons.

“This time it’s different” remains a dangerous phrase because human beings are still perfectly capable of creating idiotic bubbles. But pretending this market functions like the one our grandparents invested in may be its own form of delusion.

If the Fed has effectively made permanent distortion the foundation of modern markets—and if it cannot stop until something truly catastrophic breaks—then maybe we need to admit the obvious: the market is no longer broken. It’s functioning exactly as designed: rigged.



A.I. Fare:


........... Alphabet said last week that it’s planning capital expenditures of as much as $190 billion this year as it invests heavily in data centers critical to its AI goals.



Back in January, just days before the latest private crash swept across markets, we reminded readers that one of the biggest abusers of private credit SPVs was none other than Meta which as of 2025 was "already neck deep in off-balance sheet debt."



The AI “hyperscalers” reported bumper earnings for the first quarter, with both sales and profits beating expectations. But if you look more closely at the P&L, some of them had a lot of help from an interesting line item.

Most of the attention has naturally fastened on to another slew of engorged capex forecasts from Alphabet, Amazon, Microsoft, Meta and Oracle. .............

Accounting nerds and other clever readers will probably have guessed from the pattern what constitutes “other income” in this case: the ebb and (mostly) flow in the valuations of their sizeable private investments in companies like OpenAI and Anthropic. .............

This is another sign of just how comically codependent the AI tech industry has become.

Not only have private investments and increasingly engorged funding rounds become a meaningful driver of the hyperscalers’ aggregate earnings, but the money the hyperscalers have pumped into the likes of Anthropic and OpenAI has allowed the AI companies to sign huge computing deals with Alphabet’s Google Cloud, Microsoft’s Azure and Amazon Web Services.

In fact, The Information has crunched the numbers, and OpenAI and Anthropic now make up about half of the entire cloud computing order books at Oracle, Alphabet, Amazon and Microsoft.



.................. Right. So let me take a step back from all the negativity I’m spouting and grant Sam some positive news. Just anything positive in this AI field.

Don’t say I didn’t try!

There IS a profitable AI company. One that matters, anyway.

It’s Nvidia.

Last quarterly report: $68.1 billion in revenue. Full year revenue: $215.9 billion, up 65%. Net income $120 billion. GAAP gross margin above 70% on the data centre business. A 56% net profit margin. That is a real business, justifying some fraction of its market cap.

Notice though what makes Nvidia profitable.

It isn’t that AI works.

It’s that everyone else THINKS AI works.

Nvidia sells the picks and shovels to a gold rush where most of the gold seekers are losing money.

Anthropic burns cash on Nvidia chips. OpenAI burns cash on Nvidia chips. CoreWeave borrows money to buy Nvidia chips. Meta, Microsoft, Google, Oracle and Amazon between them spend hundreds of billions a year on Nvidia chips. Then Nvidia turns around and invests in those same companies.

So yes, Nvidia is profitable, but its profitability is the mirror image of everyone else’s losses.

And if the cash flow into the pile slows, Nvidia’s revenue will slow.

There is no second customer base. There is no diversified buyer pool. There are the hyperscalers, and there are the hyperscalers’ funded startups, and that’s basically it. ................



.......... someone on X asked ChatGPT Pro to update the circular financing chart from Bloomberg that I include above. The output ChatGPT produced is below.


If you have time on your hands, you can try spot the errors of omission and commission, starting with the omission both of yesterday’s deal Xai-Anthropic deal and the Broadcom-OpenAI deal, and also has some very obsolete valuations. Even so, what’s there (mostly true?) is still pretty wild.



Charts:
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(not just) for the ESG crowd:

UN report predicts crippling heat waves, polluted air, species extinctions, economic crises
Why investing in Earth now can lead to a trillion-dollar benefit for all

The Global Environment Outlook, Seventh Edition: A Future We Choose, the product of 287 multi-disciplinary scientists from 82 countries, is the most comprehensive scientific assessment of the global environment ever carried out. The report calls on all actors to acknowledge the urgency of the global environmental crises, build on progress made in recent decades, and collaborate in the co-design and implementation of integrated policies, strategies and actions to deliver a better future for all.






U.S. B.S.:

Trump is not his own master when it comes to policy—he is merely the front man for implementing a strategy using unsavory means; a strategy aimed at maintaining hegemony that will ultimately target China and Russia—and will likely fail, because the US has made massive miscalculations.



War Fare:


.......... This applies to American elites. They think America is as powerful as it was back during the Gulf War: able to crush opponents. It leads to constant incorrect decisions. The first major one was believing that sanctions would destroy the Russian economy and lead to victory for Ukraine.

The second major error was the second Iranian war. They thought they could easily beat Iran and overthrow its government. Instead all their local bases were smashed, they Strait of Hormuz was closed by the Iranians, their carrier groups forced back, and their one attempted ground action in Iran, to seize Iran’s enriched uranium reserve, was a bloody fiasco.

Since then they’ve tried to escort out ships and retreated. They’ve put on a blockade of the blockade, and Iran hasn’t buckled and Trump in particular keeps spouting on about how Iran is essentially already defeated and eager for a deal even as Iran has repeatedly refused negotiations.

The world economy is shuddering, the price of oil and its distillates are soaring, American farmers can’t afford enough fertilizer and Russia and China turn out to be two of the nations most able to weather the storm. 

Woops. ..............



..................... A vast US military buildup in West Asia immediately began, while supposed peace talks with Tehran were ongoing. The negotiations were of course a con, intended to lull the Resistance into a false sense of security before the next phase of Israel’s intended palace coup commenced. On February 28th, Zionist-American airstrikes rained down on Tehran. Israel and the US felt certain Iran’s leadership had been eliminated or scattered, and the Islamic Republic’s command and control system “severely beaten.” But then, catastrophe started to erupt. ............



It turns out that Trump’s plan to help ships go thru the Strait was ended when both Saudi Arabia and Kuwait refused to let the US use their airspace or US bases in their countries to launch attacks.

The reason is obvious—Iran has repeatedly said that if the war restarts they will hit the Gulf States much harder than before, going after oil infrastructure in particular.

America has proved it can’t protect its Gulf allies. It’s low on interceptors, and what they have goes to Israel. Even with interceptors attacks get thru.

Bases have gone from defending countries to being liabilities. Being American allies drew the Gulf states into a war that devastated them. The Sauds and Kuwaitis have nothing to gain from letting the US launch attacks from their territory. The lesson was painful, but it has been learned. ..........



......................... The next year is going to be ugly. Even if the war ended today, which can only happen if the US declares victory and lets Iran, in fact, win, it’d be ugly. But if the closure of the Strait continues, multiple countries will have famines and almost everyone is going to have significantly increased food prices, which means a lot of poor people will go hungry and some will die. It’s great Congress has cut food stamps every few years for the past 30 odd years.

If the war does go kinetic again, Iran will destroy vast amounts of oil infrastructure, and the crisis will go on for years.

The only sane response is to end the war, but that would mean de-facto acknowledging Iran is a great power and the US is no longer a global hegemonic power. ......