Individual Economists

Schedule for Week of October 19, 2025

Calculated Risk -

NOTE: I'm on vacation and returning this week. Government data might be rescheduled due to the government shutdown.

The key economic report this week is September Existing Home sales.

For manufacturing, the Kansas City Fed manufacturing survey will be released this week.

----- Monday, October 20th -----
No major economic releases scheduled.

----- Tuesday, October 21st -----
No major economic releases scheduled.

----- Wednesday, October 22nd -----
7:00 AM ET: The Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) will release the results for the mortgage purchase applications index.

During the day: The AIA/Deltek's Architecture Billings Index for September (a leading indicator for commercial real estate).

----- Thursday, October 23rd -----
8:30 AM: The initial weekly unemployment claims report will be released. 

8:30 AM ET: Chicago Fed National Activity Index for September. This is a composite index of other data.

Existing Home Sales10:00 AM: Existing Home Sales for September from the National Association of Realtors (NAR).  

The graph shows existing home sales from 1994 through the report last month.

11:00 AM: Kansas City Fed Survey of Manufacturing Activity for October.

----- Friday, October 24th -----
No major economic releases scheduled.

10 Weekend Reads

The Big Picture -

The weekend is here! Pour yourself a mug of Danish Blend coffee, grab a seat outside, and get ready for our longer-form weekend reads:

Inside the Credit Card Battle to Win America’s Richest Shoppers: The fierce fight between Amex and Chase is playing out over higher fees, extravagant events and every perk imaginable. (Bloomberg) free. 

How mega batteries are unlocking an energy revolution. These might look like shipping containers in the desert, but they are actually the key to unlocking a clean energy revolution. Across California, installations of mega batteries store power from renewable sources and distribute it when people need it most. The sun provides most of California’s electricity during the day. But it is a different story at night. Batteries provide the answer. (Financial Times) see also AI Data Centers, Desperate for Electricity, Are Building Their Own Power Plants: Bypassing the grid, at least temporarily, tech companies are creating an energy Wild West; ‘grab yourself a couple of turbines’. (Wall Street Journal)

•  YouTube Just Ate TV. It’s Only Getting Started: In two decades, the app has grown from a user-generated circus into the most powerful platform on earth. CEO Neal Mohan on his $100 billion vision for YouTube’s future and the disruption it’s left in its wake. (The Hollywood Reporter)

Hetty Green: The Witch of Wall Street: Hetty Green was the richest woman you’ve never heard of. In the late 1800s, she built a fortune worth billions today in a world designed to stop her. Women couldn’t vote, couldn’t own property, and weren’t even allowed on the stock exchange floor. (Farnam Street)

The Rules of Investing Are Being Loosened. Could It Lead to the Next 1929? A group of financiers is trying to convince the public to invest heavily in private equity and crypto — a risky gambit with some real 1920s vibes. (New York Times) see also The Lesson of 1929: Debt is the almost singular through line behind every major financial crisis. (The Atlantic)

Why Some Americans Don’t Invest in the Stock Market: While about half of Americans report owning stocks either personally or jointly with a household member, a substantial portion of the population remains without stock investments. Why don’t more people participate in the stock market?  (Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia)

Everything Is Television: A theory of culture and attention.(Derek Thompson) see also The last days of poptimism: The new stars are old-school cool (Unherd)

A Chat with A. Lange & Söhne CEO Wilhelm Schmid about Numbers, Community, and Luxury Retail: From production insights to the ever-shifting landscape of luxury retail, Schmid offers a candid glimpse into the brand’s ethos and his personal odyssey as the leader of one of horology’s most esteemed names. (Watchonista)

These 2 quick tests can tell you if you’re as fit as an 80-year-old elite athlete. Measure your strength, power and coordination with these two simple fitness checks.  (Washington Post)

Thousands Of Words About The Bearer Bonds In DIE HARD: You will learn things from this blog post! (Calm Down)

Be sure to check out our Masters in Business interview this weekend with Liz Ann Sonders, Chief Investment Strategist, Charles Schwab & Co.  Named “Best Market Strategist” by Kiplinger’s Personal Finance, she is also on Barron’s “100 Most Influential Women in Finance” every year since the list’s inception.

 

AI is already having a massive impact on the economy. Specifically, investment, i.e. spending on AI-related hardware and software

Source: Carson Group

 

Sign up for our reads-only mailing list here.

~~~~

To learn how these reads are assembled each day, please see this.

The post 10 Weekend Reads appeared first on The Big Picture.

MiB: Henry Ward, Carta Chief Executive Officer

The Big Picture -

 

 

This week, I speak with Henry Ward, Chief Executive Officer at Carta, a technology company that provides capitalization table management and valuation software for startups. They discuss founding a business, the growth of private markets, and his lobby efforts for retail investors to access private markets.

The firm manages cap tables, compensation, valuations, liquidity, amidst an assortment of other data for more than 50,000 companies, 8,500 investment funds, and over 2.5 million equity holders’ $2.5 trillion in company equity; they help facilitate $13 billion in secondary sales.

His current reading is here; A transcript of our conversation is available here Tuesday.

You can stream and download our full conversation, including any podcast extras, on Apple Podcasts, SpotifyYouTube, and Bloomberg. All of our earlier podcasts on your favorite pod hosts can be found here.

Be sure to check out our Masters in Business interview this weekend with Liz Ann Sonders, Chief Investment Strategist, Charles Schwab & Co. Named “Best Market Strategist” by Kiplinger’s Personal Finance, she is also on Barron’s “100 Most Influential Women in Finance” every year since the list’s inception.

 

 

Favorite Books

 

 

The post MiB: Henry Ward, Carta Chief Executive Officer appeared first on The Big Picture.

NANO Nuclear To Begin Drilling for KRONOS Microreactor At University of Illinois

Zero Hedge -

NANO Nuclear To Begin Drilling for KRONOS Microreactor At University of Illinois

Amid a broader shift to advanced nuclear energy which we have been documenting for the past 18 months, NANO Nuclear Energy announced a major step in developing its KRONOS micro modular reactor (MMR), confirming that geotechnical drilling and site characterization with its development partner, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, will begin on October 24, 2025.

At a time when electricity bills are exploding across the country to feed ravenous AI data centers using conventional sources of electricity which are woefully insufficient to power the chatbot revolution, new technologies are coming online to power the grid at a much lower cost.

Developed to meet the demand for "resilient, modular, and clean energy solutions for artificial intelligence and data centers, industrial projects, military applications, remote communities, and other commercial applications" Nano Nuclear, KRONOS MMR is a stationary, high-temperature gas-cooled microreactor designed to deliver 15 MWe (45 MWth) of carbon-free power, for multi-decade use across multiple industries and environments. More importantly, it allows its power to feed a unique, discreet target, keeping overall generation costs low. 

More importantly, multiple KRONOS MMRs can be synergistically used to achieve any desired power level. Using meltdown-resistant TRISO fuel and passive helium cooling, the KRONOS MMR is being designed to shut down and remain in a safe state automatically without any human intervention or external power (so called “walk-away safety”) while seeking to ensure the ability to disconnect from the main grid and operate autonomously during outages or other disruptions (so called “full island-mode microgrid” capability).

Next week's launch event, hosted at The Grainger College of Engineering, marks the first physical phase of construction and is a key milestone toward securing an NRC construction permit in early 2026. 

Executives Jay Yu, Founder and Chairman, James Walker, CEO, and Dr. Florent Heidet, CTO, will join university and government leaders at the ceremony next Friday. Global engineering firm AECOM will conduct the site work to inform reactor design and regulatory submissions.

The October 24th event is set to highlight site characterization and drilling activities performed by global infrastructure leader AECOM and serve as an essential milestone ahead of NANO Nuclear’s planned submission of a construction permit application in or around Q1 2026.

James Walker said, “This event represents an important milestone for NANO Nuclear, underscoring our expanding role in the nuclear technology sector and reinforcing confidence in our capacity to deliver on ambitious initiatives.” Dr. Heidet added that the Illinois hub will “anchor the company’s reactor development and accelerate progress toward commercial deployment.”

Project lead Professor Caleb Brooks noted that site data “will support the construction permit application as it undergoes rigorous safety and environmental impact review by the NRC.”

NANO Nuclear also announced plans to establish a manufacturing and R&D facility in Illinois, investing over $12 million with support from the REV Illinois program, which includes $6.8 million in incentives and will create 50 new full-time jobs.

"I’m proud to welcome NANO Nuclear to Illinois’ growing clean energy economy," said Governor JB Pritzker. “With support from REV Illinois, this critical investment from NANO Nuclear will create new jobs for hardworking Illinoisans and promote innovative strides in clean energy solutions.”

NANO Nuclear’s new 23,500-square-foot facility in the Chicagoland area will support collaboration with the University of Illinois on the KRONOS MMR system. “This new hub will play a central role in our work to construct, demonstrate, and ultimately commercialize our KRONOS MMR Energy System,” said Walker.

Dr. Heidet added, “With the strong presence of nuclear utilities and R&D institutions in Illinois, this is the ideal ecosystem for us to thrive.” Dean Rashid Bashir emphasized that the partnership “reinforces our leadership in this critical sector.”

Chairman Jay Yu said the commencement of fieldwork “is an enormous step toward the construction of our high technology readiness level and patented KRONOS MMR, advancing our progress and bringing us closer to deploying this pivotal technology.”

Tyler Durden Fri, 10/17/2025 - 16:40

Insurrection Anyone?

Zero Hedge -

Insurrection Anyone?

Authored by James Howard Kunstler,

"Friday is a perfect day to indict Schifty!"

- Svetlana Lokhova

Tomorrow, Saturday, October 18, you might have heard, is this year’s culminating “No Kings” protest demo all over land.

We’ve been to a couple of these curious spectacles since springtime here in the Hudson River Valley, in the next town over.

The crowd there was just about entirely made up of aging Boomers, joyfully re-living the halcyon days of the Vietnam protests. It was kind of like a street production of the old Broadway hit Hair, only with a cast of 75-year-olds. Let the sun shine in! But this rural, small-town corner of America is overwhelmingly geriatric. There is next to nothing for young people to do around here, so they flee at the earliest opportunity. The catch is: turns out that opportunity is rather scarce elsewhere, too.

For sure, many of these hippie elders have children, even grandchildren now, who are exactly those who are not thriving in the places they have fled to. Deep down, they don’t really know who to blame. Something has gone wrong in this country. But their placards said “Resist.” Resist what? We asked. Trump, of course. Trump, Trump, Trump, we go a’marchin’.

He’s Stealing our democracy!

Meaning: Trump is the one responsible for our country’s decades-long descent into economic failure, political animus, and social degeneracy.

You had to wonder who is paying them to yell an empty slogan that Nancy Pelosi has repeated a million times. We are going to find out.

Tomorrow’s “No Kings” action is apt to be a bit livelier in the crisp fall weather, at least in the cities where the under-employed, debt-oppressed, hormonally-driven younger gen folk gravitate into organized cadres more prone to physically acting-out their discontents — groups like Antifa. The street action lately in places like Portland, Oregon, Chicago, and Los Angeles has gotten quite a bit rowdier since last spring.

Positions have hardened, largely because the Democratic Party is going extinct. As that occurs, its tactics wax more desperate, tending more towards riots and violence. A lot of the recent violence is in service to the project of rescuing illegal immigrants from deportation. Democratic Party leaders such as LA Mayor Karen Bass say the protesters are defending “the community.”

Community is a magic word in the argot of The Resistance. Community is a giant, warm, welcoming amoeba that absorbs all comers into its gelatinous folds, conferring solidarity and safety from outside threats such as the US immigration laws. Of course, the reason that the Democrats are so desperate to rescue illegal immigrants is that millions were allowed to enter the country on-purpose by “Joe Biden” in order to provide a gigantic legion of fresh voters inclined to elect Democrats, so the party won’t go extinct. Thus, expelling them, as the professors might say, is problematic.

Flooding the land with illegal immigrants for four years was a deliberate program, then. It was melded with such devices as the motor-voter process that automatically registers to vote anyone who applies for a driver’s license. All a state had to do was declare that anyone, citizen or not, is eligible for the driver’s license. . . and, cazart. . . newly-minted voters by the millions! It was so arrantly in-your-face that you have to wonder why nobody has moved to stop it.

But they didn’t. Not even the hated Trump, at least not yet. But we have reason to hope that motor-voter and the other devices for rigging elections can be disassembled before the 2026 midterms. Surely the mail-in ballot has lost its justification — if it even had any — now that the Covid op is bygone. How can any state justify not requiring voter ID based on proof of citizenship at registration? It’s a sign of how generally psychotic — or nefariously careless —our culture had become that there should be any question about proof of citizenship.

You might have heard the good news that the Dominion Voting Machine company was sold last month to Liberty Vote, a Missouri-based company. Dominion machines had been used in twenty-eight states, including states with the sketchiest election results: Arizona, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin. Dominion was previously owned and based in Canada, a country lately captured by crypto-Marxists in thrall to European banking interests. The Dominion machines have long been accused of containing modems enabling connection to the Internet, and thus to hacking. Plus, they’d contained lines of Chinese software. The new owner promises major changes in the way that votes are tabulated.

Don’t be surprised if tomorrow’s “No Kings” demo descends into violence, arson, and looting. The Democratic Party needs this happen so it can provoke the president to invoke the Insurrection Act, so they can label him “Hitler” again. It is another absolutely in-your-face move. Mr. Trump has discussed the possibility of having to invoke the act. Such a dynamic course of events will backfire badly on the desperate Democrats. More than half the country has had enough of Woke Marxist roguery. They will probably be glad to see extraordinary measures used to stop it, and to override the rogue judiciary that lets it loose on the nation.

It can’t be hard at all to discover who has been paying for this Resistance uprising that includes the “No Kings” demos. It is relatively easy to track the money trails from one bank to another, or many banks to many others, and to see which NGOs are sending all the dough. . . and then who among the operational units are receiving it. It is all going to be shut down. People will be charged and indicted, perhaps even mayors and governors. The charges will be serious. Stand by to see how all this unspools tomorrow.

*  *  *

Coming in two weeks: JHK’s new novel, a comedy set during the week of the JFK assassination, November, 1963. JD Salinger makes his debut as a major character in American fiction. You can pre-order here !

Tyler Durden Fri, 10/17/2025 - 16:20

Dear Mr. President, Americans Don't Care Who Owns Donetsk, So Why Risk WW3 By Sending Tomahawks?

Zero Hedge -

Dear Mr. President, Americans Don't Care Who Owns Donetsk, So Why Risk WW3 By Sending Tomahawks?

Poll after poll has shown that the overwhelming majority of Americans reject direct US military involvement in Ukraine - such as sending troops or other actions which could constitute the start of direct conflict with nuclear-armed Russia.

The reality also remains that most Americans can't find Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk and Zaporizhzhia on a map. Does the American public really want to constantly poke the Russian bear over places they can barely pronounce? Do they really care who owns the Donbass? "Where!?..." - your average Joe sixpack is likely asking.

Getty Images

Why then, Mr. Trump, are you actually contemplating giving Zelensky, who you once dubbed the 'greatest salesman on Earth', America's own vital long-range Tomahawk missiles?

Why are you indulging yet a fourth in-person meeting with Zelensky (and specifically his third trip to the Oval Office) since you took office in January? Where is the pressure on Zelensky to cede territory and rapidly end this bloody and tragic war? Where are the loud assurances of no more NATO expansion to Russia's border?

Why can't the Ukrainian government, which has already received billions in US taxpayer funds, so much as admit that it has lost Crimea forever? Even this smallest of admissions and concessions would be a big something offered on the path to peace. And yet Kiev remains vocally against ever ceding Crimea, despite the obviously impossibility of ever getting it back (and absolutely everyone knows this).

Instead of any semblance of the ability to make compromise, even though it's obvious to pretty much all that Ukraine's military has been steadily losing a 'war of attrition', Zelensky is busy meeting with Raytheon executives before walking into the White House on Friday morning. 

This is all part of the pressure and pitch to persuade Trump to give Ukraine the sought after long-range missiles capable of reaching all main population centers in Russia.

"We discussed Raytheon's production capabilities, possible ways of our co-operation to strengthen air defence and increase Ukraine's long-range capabilities, and the prospects for Ukrainian-American production," Zelensky posted on Telegram early Friday.

Even mainstream, generally anti-Kremlin outlets like the BBC understand that this would open up a new phase in the war, where powerful American weapons are directly raining down on Russian cities:

We've been reporting that the possibility of the US sending Tomahawk missiles to Ukraine is causing "extreme concern" in the Kremlin. That's because these missiles could drastically increase Ukraine's range capabilities.

As the map below shows, Tomahawks can strike objects up to 1,600km (995 miles) away - putting dozens of Russian military bases, air defense sites and command centers in the range of fire.

There's also been much reporting saying that American contractors and personnel would have to themselves man the systems or oversee them, which is yet more 'boots on the ground' mission creep which Trump had earlier vowed to resist.

Again, will Washington risk WW3... all in the name of 'leverage' against Putin... while bowing down to yet another Zelensky demand - this time in the form of missiles that can reach 1,000 miles inside Russia? If roles were reversed, and a foreign entity were on our doorstep launching long-range missiles into the United States, we would without doubt immediately go to war and be put on nuclear alert.

Why risk all of this... again, for the question of who owns tiny Ukrainian oblasts halfway across the globe which most Americans could in reality care less about?

There's still hope that rational minds will prevail at the White House, based at least on some of Trump's sarcasm on display last night...

Below, a ZeroHedge reader and top commenter submitted this astute observation on the likely true state of things vis-a-vis Washington and Europe in the context of the Ukraine crisis.

* * *

The “Democracy vs. Autocracy” myth died in Ukraine’s trenches. What replaced it is far darker: the engineered deconstruction of Europe itself. Cheap Russian energy was severed (via Nord Stream sabotage), not to help Ukraine win — but to break Europe’s economic spine. Weapons stockpiles were drained into a black hole, and now the continent is left dependent on overpriced U.S. arms, powerless to forge its own peace.

NATO’s eastern expansion was never about defense — it was about destabilizing Russia and locking Europe into vassal status. Now, as Ukraine bleeds dry, the Empire smiles: the real target was never Moscow, but Brussels, Berlin, and Paris. This isn’t a blunder. It’s a controlled demolition.

Tyler Durden Fri, 10/17/2025 - 16:01

The Bizarre Bankruptcy At The Heart Of This Week's Regional Bank Meltdown

Zero Hedge -

The Bizarre Bankruptcy At The Heart Of This Week's Regional Bank Meltdown

As we highlighted in our regional bank meltdown summary post, there was a common theme between the two banks that got hammered yesterday, ZION and WAL: a single bankrupt counterparty that led to bad debt impairments at both banks. Now, thanks to Bloomberg, we can identify who that counterparty was. 

According to BBG, the bad loans reported by Zions Bancorp and Western Alliance Bancorp can be traced back to the bankruptcy of one commercial real estate investment firm in Southern California earlier this year. In the lawsuit filed on Wednesday - which also spooked investors and sent the stock plunging - Zions listed 16 addresses of properties pledged as collateral to more than $60 million loaned to an investor group. And when the Newport Beach, California-based real estate firm MOM CA Investco LLC filed for bankruptcy in February, six of those properties were listed as investments. 

So what happened with the loans?

Well, as Bloomberg reports, back in 2016 and 2017, when bankers at Zions subsidiary California Bank & Trust underwrote the loans they made sure the usual cushion to protect the lender was in the contract: Zions should be first in line for repayment should the borrower default and liquidate its assets, according to this week’s complaint, filed in LA County Superior Court against defendants including Gerald Marcil, Andrew Stupin and Deba Shyam.

But two things went wrong simultaneously. First, MOM CA Investco filed for bankruptcy protection, leading to a planned sale of some its properties. Second, it turned out that, for those buildings that served as collateral for the loans Zions issued, other firms actually were ahead in line of the Salt Lake City-based bank to be paid should the real estate be liquidated.

A similar situation hit Western Alliance. The Phoenix-based bank sued an investor group including Marcil and Stupin, claimed they manipulated loan structures in a way that wrongly stopped the lender from receiving debt repayments before anyone else. 

Western Alliance said the investor group still owes it more than $98.6 million. Those loans were meant to be secured by real estate in Stupin and Marcil’s investment funds, but the properties were already in foreclosure, which wasn’t disclosed to the bank, according to a complaint filed in August in Los Angeles.

In response, Marcil and Stupin's lawyer said in a statement that "my clients vehemently deny all the allegations of wrongdoing... These claims are unfounded and misrepresent the facts. We are confident that once all the evidence is presented, our clients will be fully vindicated.”

Digging deeper we find that behind the bankruptcy of MOM CA Investco is a group of Southern California commercial real estate investors who were friends before they became foes in court. The firm’s portfolio included a hotel in the exclusive enclave of Laguna Beach and an apartment complex worth $65 million in the town of Redlands, according to the February bankruptcy filing. 

The MOM CA Chapter 11 was dismissed in August. In the weeks leading up to the dismissal, the federal judge overseeing the case warned the property investors that the inability to get a deal wasn’t in their interest. And throwing the case out of bankruptcy, said US Bankruptcy Judge Brendan Shannon said, wasn’t the best option.

That’s because, once the case was over, creditors would be free to file actions in state court to try seize various properties and sell them at fire-sale prices. After several court hearings in which the two main players in the real estate empire remained at odds, Shannon dismissed the Chapter 11.

Mohammad Honarkar and Mahender Makhijani founded MOM CA Investco in 2021 as a joint venture. At the time, Honarkar also ran a business selling mobile phones, while Makhijani acquired and managed distressed real estate for investors through an entity called Continuum Analytics. Among the largest investors in Continuum were Marcil and Stupin, and its legal owner is Shyam.

But the partnership soon went south, with Honarkar accusing his partners, who controlled the company, of fraud. At one point during their dispute, Makhijani used armed guards to take over some of the properties, and hired mobile billboards to drive around Laguna Beach displaying pictures of Honarkar and accusing him and two city employees of corruption, according to court filings.

It gets even more bizarre: the investors sued by Zions and Western Alliance, Marcil, Stupin and Shyam, have additional ties to a variety of investment vehicles linked to Makhijani, court filings show. The three were among the founding investors of Nano Banc, for which Makhijani is one of the largest referral sources.

Nano Banc had loaned the founders more than $100 million, according to a March arbitration filing. And Zions found that for one property it had a first lien on, a building in Laguna Beach, the deeds were assigned to Nano Banc.

And the piece de resistance: another asset, an apartment complex in Bellflower, had a deed assigned to the other bank suing the investors: Western Alliance.

In short: unprecedented chaos... but it wasn't just a busted bankruptcy and potential fraud on behalf of a shady investor group. It was also a bizarre absolute priority rule waterfall shitshow, in which nobody knew whose claims were subordinated or priority, and the result was a free-for-call collateral grab which was not quite rehypothecation, but was very close, and the result is that the secured lenders - Zions and Western Alliance - have now ended up chasing the assets pledged to their loans in court as the assets are, as the South Park cartoon puts it so well, gone... all gone.

The good news is that we now know what happened in this particular case. The question now is why did the banks not figure all of this ahead of time, and more importantly, how many more such instances of a manged absolute priority rule are there?

*  *  * New Products at ZeroHedge Store:

Camping gravity filter kit // ZeroHedge Rectangle Patch // Carcinogen-Free Tallow Sunscreen

Tyler Durden Fri, 10/17/2025 - 15:40

Trump Refiles $15 Billion Defamation Lawsuit Against New York Times After Court Dismissal

Zero Hedge -

Trump Refiles $15 Billion Defamation Lawsuit Against New York Times After Court Dismissal

Authored by Aldgra Fredly via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

President Donald Trump on Oct. 16 refiled his $15 billion defamation lawsuit against The New York Times, book publisher Penguin Random House, and three NY Times reporters after a judge’s earlier rejection of the case.

The New York Times Building in New York City on Feb. 5, 2024. Samira Bouaou/The Epoch Times

In a 40-page amended complaint, Trump accused the defendants of defamation over two articles and a book published last year ahead of the presidential election, alleging they contained statements intended to “wrongly defame and disparage” his professional reputation.

The lawsuit named NY Times reporters Susanne Craig and Russ Buettner, as well as NY Times chief White House correspondent Peter Baker, among the defendants.

According to the filing, among the alleged defamatory statements are claims that Trump received more than $400 million from his father through “fraudulent tax evasion schemes.” The complaint also cited The New York Times’s coverage of his role in the TV series “The Apprentice” and its statements about his compliance with federal tax laws.

“Defendants individually and collectively published numerous false, malicious, and defamatory statements while realizing that these statements were false, or, at a minimum, with reckless disregard for the truth,” the lawsuit reads.

Trump is seeking $15 billion in compensatory damages—consistent with his original suit filed on Sept. 15—and an unspecified amount of punitive damages, which will be determined upon trial.

The Epoch Times reached out to The New York Times and Penguin Random House for comment, but did not receive a response by publication time.

U.S. District Judge Steven Merryday previously tossed the original complaint due to its length, saying that it “stands unmistakably and inexcusably athwart the requirements of Rule 8” of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The judge then gave Trump 28 days to amend the lawsuit.

The first complaint amounted to 85 pages.

A spokesperson for The New York Times previously told The Epoch Times that Trump’s lawsuit was meritless and called it an attempt by the president to “stifle and discourage independent reporting.”

In a Truth Social post announcing the initial filing on Sept. 15, Trump said The New York Times was “a virtual mouthpiece for the radical left Democrat Party,” citing its endorsement of then-Democratic presidential candidate and Vice President Kamala Harris during the 2024 presidential election.

The New York Times has been allowed to freely lie, smear, and defame me for far too long, and that stops, NOW,” the president said in his post.

Trump also filed a lawsuit against Paramount over CBS’s “60 Minutes” interview with Harris, alleging that CBS edited the interview to benefit Harris in the election. Paramount paid $16 million to settle the lawsuit. Trump said in July that he anticipated another $20 million from Paramount’s “new owners,” which he said would come in the form of “advertising, PSAs [public service announcements], or similar programming.”

Tyler Durden Fri, 10/17/2025 - 15:20

Visualizing The Compute, Cash, & Contracts That Power OpenAI

Zero Hedge -

Visualizing The Compute, Cash, & Contracts That Power OpenAI

In order to train and deploy cutting-edge AI models like ChatGPT, OpenAI relies on a sprawling infrastructure network involving multiple billion-dollar entities, intricate contracts, and vast capital commitments. A new visualization from Made Visual Daily maps this infrastructure pipeline using three flows—computecash, and contracts—highlighting the increasingly circular nature of AI development funding.

The map, via VisualCapitalist.com, synthesizes data from public financial reports, media disclosures, and filings in an attempt to show who builds what, who pays whom, and where potential risk may be accumulating in the system.

The biggest nodes in the diagram are familiar names: Nvidia ($4.6 trillion), Microsoft ($3.8 trillion), TSMC ($1.5 trillion), and Oracle ($0.8 trillion).

OpenAI itself, valued at around $500B in its most recent secondary sale, anchors the middle of the chart. Microsoft, in particular, plays a dual role—both providing compute (via Azure) and injecting capital and GPU credits back into OpenAI.

The GPU Supply Chain: Scarcity, Dominance, and Dependency

The engine behind OpenAI—and much of today’s generative AI—is the Nvidia GPU.

But these chips don’t come out of thin air. The GPU supply chain is global and fragile:

  • Design: Nvidia designs the chips in-house.

  • Fabrication: TSMC (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company) fabricates the chips at its advanced 5nm and 4nm nodes.

  • Assembly: The chips are then packaged and tested by firms like Quanta and Foxconn.

  • Deployment: Server makers such as Supermicro integrate them into AI-optimized racks and clusters.

  • Delivery: These clusters are shipped to cloud providers like Microsoft Azure and CoreWeave.

Any disruption along this chain—whether geopolitical, economic, or logistical—can send shockwaves through the entire AI sector. That’s why the U.S. has placed tight export controls on AI chips, and why countries like China are scrambling to develop domestic alternatives.

Demand for H100s has grown so intense that cloud firms and startups alike are reserving capacity months or even years in advance. In rare cases, some even use GPUs as collateral to secure financing, reinforcing their role as a new strategic commodity.

Closed-Loop Capital and the AI Bubble Risk

What makes the modern AI ecosystem remarkable isn’t just the number of players involved—it’s how deeply interwoven their financial and operational relationships have become.

Microsoft, for instance, has invested over $13 billion in OpenAI, while also serving as its primary cloud and compute partner through Azure. Much of OpenAI’s model training runs on clusters powered by Nvidia GPUs, procured via Microsoft’s cloud infrastructure.

At the same time, Microsoft is the primary customer of CoreWeave, a rapidly growing cloud provider that also buys large volumes of Nvidia hardware—often financed through credit arrangements with private investors and funds.

This creates an interdependent web of capital, compute, and contracts, where the same dollars and chips circulate between a handful of firms dominating AI’s supply chain. Analysts have noted that such tight coupling could magnify shocks if demand or funding conditions change abruptly.

To dig deeper into the relationship between OpenAI and its backers, explore our related post: OpenAI vs Big Tech.

Tyler Durden Fri, 10/17/2025 - 15:00

Zelensky Desperately Pitches Drones For Tomahawks At White House

Zero Hedge -

Zelensky Desperately Pitches Drones For Tomahawks At White House

Update(1542ET): In a somewhat lengthy Q&A with the press, Presidents Trump and Zelensky fielded a variety of questions before starting a closed-door meeting at the White House, with each leader's full delegations present.

All eyes have been on the potential decision to transfer Tomahawks to Ukraine, but President Trump at every turn dodged the question, and did not offer anything clear on Tomahawks one way or the other. But he did say at one point when asked about concerns over the Pentagon's own dwindling missile stockpiles that "I have to make sure we're stocked up as a country."

That opened up an interesting moment where Zelensky offered "thousands" of Ukrainian drones in exchange for receiving Tomahawks, though Trump appeared cool toward the idea, and noted that the United States already possesses excellent and cutting-edge drone production. The moment unfolded below:

*  *  *

Astaxanthin // Peak Focus // Mushroom 10x

Just ahead of Ukraine's Zelensky arriving at the White House to meet with President Trump, Russia announced Friday morning that its forces had seized three more villages in Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk and Kharkiv regions.

Russian troops captured Pishchane and Tykhe in Kharkiv and Pryvillia in Dnipropetrovsk, the Kremlin said. The development in the Kharkiv region is going be met with particular alarm among Kiev's backers in the West, given that the Ukrainian's military's 2022 counteroffensive had actually retaken much of Kharkiv.

Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

But the Russian military is clearly pushing forward again, and is eyeing the capture of Kupiansk next, which is a crucial logistics hub in the region.

Russia's military command has at the same time tallied its forces have captured eight Ukrainian settlements in total over the course of the past week.

A statement in TASS says "In the Kharkov direction, Battlegroup North units liberated the settlement of Tikhoye in the Kharkov Region through decisive operations... Battlegroup West units liberated the settlements of Borovskaya Andreyevka and Peschanoye in the Kharkov Region in decisive operations...battlegroup Center units liberated the settlements of Moskovskoye, Balagan and Novopavlovka in the Donetsk People’s Republic through active and decisive operations."

The Defense Ministry continued listing out: "Over the past week, Battlegroup East units liberated the settlements of Alekseyevka and Privolye in the Dnepropetrovsk Region," it said.

Without doubt, Moscow has timed its "announcement" touting the capture of all these locations to correspond with Zelensky's visit to Washington, also coming after Thursday's Trump-Putin phone call.

The only 'leverage' that Ukraine might have is related to its stepped-up long-range drone offensive which has wreaked havoc on Russian oil.

Depot after depot has been hit over the past weeks and months, including also vital oil shipping terminals on the Crimean coast. If Ukraine received long-range missiles from the West and the United States, it will certainly train them on such vital targets.

Tyler Durden Fri, 10/17/2025 - 14:42

Bubble Trouble: The Contrarian's Curse...And Opportunity

Zero Hedge -

Bubble Trouble: The Contrarian's Curse...And Opportunity

Authored by Riccardo Cumerlato via BondVigilantes.com,

"Once upon a time, a learned man watched his friends grow rich by investing in a company that promised to revolutionise trade. Attracted by the prospect of easy riches, he joined the party, but was cautious at first, investing only small amounts. He even sold his shares for a tidy profit when he felt their price could no longer be rationally justified.

But, as the mania grew and the share prices kept increasing, he couldn’t resist… he bought back in, this time with more money, more conviction, and more confidence.

The bubble popped. He lost a fortune. The man was so shaken that he declared he could ‘calculate the motions of the heavenly bodies, but not the madness of people."

This story of Sir Isaac Newton and the South Sea Bubble of 1720 offers a cautionary tale about speculative excess, even among the most brilliant minds.

But why is it so difficult, even for one of the smartest people ever to have lived, to resist the lure of financial bubbles?

Human nature fuels the hype

During periods market exuberance, it’s not just valuations that defy gravity, so does reason. As Keynes famously put it, ‘It is better for reputation to fail conventionally than to succeed unconventionally’. In other words, it’s easier to join the crowd and be wrong together than to stand alone and be right too early.

For example, during the dot-com boom, financial news channels gave extensive coverage to IPOs, reflecting the excitement of the time.. Analysts who dared to question valuations were labelled ‘out of touch’.

Fund managers and analysts are human too –  reading the same headlines, hearing the same chatter, and many will feel the same level of Fear Of Missing Out (FOMO). When everyone else is riding the rocket ship, sitting on the launchpad with a sceptical look and a clipboard isn’t just lonely, it can be career-threatening.

The bubble becomes a social phenomenon, not just a financial one.

Betting against a bubble is structurally hard

Even if a fund manager has the courage to go against the grain, the tools to do so are hardly user-friendly. Going long is simple: buy, hold, and enjoy the ride. Going short? That’s a different beast.

Shorting equities means borrowing stock, posting margin, and paying dividends to the lender. If the stock keeps rising, margin calls pile up. In fixed income, shorting often involves paying the bond’s coupon out of pocket; negative carry at its finest. All the while, the bubble may continue expanding while others enjoy a windfall .

As Keynes (again) warned, ‘markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent’. And irrational markets tend to be very, very solvent.

Short sellers during the meme stock episode faced significant challenges, highlighting the risks of contrarian positioning in volatile markets. Hedge funds betting against GameStop found themselves squeezed by retail traders armed with Reddit threads and stimulus cheques. The stock soared, losses mounted, and some funds were forced to close positions at eye-watering losses. It was a masterclass in how expensive it can be to be right too early, and a reminder that the market doesn’t always reward rationality.

Contrarians need saintly patience (and patient saints)

To survive a bubble, a contrarian needs not just conviction, but also investors who are aligned with a long-term philosophy and understand the nature of contrarian strategies. Take Warren Buffett in the late 1990s. While dot-com darlings soared, Buffett stuck to his guns; no tech, no hype, just fundamentals. Critics said he didn’t ‘get it’. His returns lagged, but his investors stayed loyal.

When the bubble burst in 2000, Buffett emerged unscathed, vindicated, and wealthier. His story is a reminder that sometimes the tortoise really does beat the hare, if the tortoise has patient shareholders.

Buffett’s success wasn’t just about his investment philosophy, it was about the trust he had built with his investors over decades. They understood that his approach was long-term, even if the market wasn’t. Compared to investor that are more reactive to short-term performance , Buffett’s investor base acted more like partners than clients. That kind of long-term perspective is invaluable when swimming against the tide.

Source: Bloomberg

All told, the contrarian’s road can be lonely and often met with scepticism. You not only have to be right about the endgame, but also have to stay invested long enough to enjoy it. As one market wit quipped, contrarian investing can feel like ‘standing in front of an oncoming train and mumbling, ‘it will stop…’

History shows us that overheated markets cool down – bubbles tend to burst – but often not before testing the resolve of those who challenge prevailing market sentiment. Yet for the fund managers who can resist the rally, deploy the right tools, and manage patient capital, the rewards of contrarian courage can be substantial.

Going  against the crowd in a bubble isn’t just a test of conviction, it’s an opportunity to shine when the dust finally settles.

Tyler Durden Fri, 10/17/2025 - 14:40

Auto Loan Delinquencies Surge 50% As Cracks Deepen Across U.S. Credit Markets

Zero Hedge -

Auto Loan Delinquencies Surge 50% As Cracks Deepen Across U.S. Credit Markets

A month after bankruptcies of subprime auto lender Tricolor and auto-parts supplier First Brands, new cracks emerged in U.S. credit markets. This week, Zions and Western Alliance disclosed they were victims of loan fraud tied to funds investing in distressed commercial real estate. The revelations come amid broader credit trouble, and shifting our focus back to autos, there's new data this morning about credit products tied to the riskiest consumers that have seen a 50% surge in delinquencies. 

Bloomberg cites data from the credit-scoring company, VantageScore, which reveals that delinquencies among the low-tier consumers have surged 50% since 2010. Fueling the delinquencies is a perfect storm of record-high car prices, elevated interest rates, longer loan terms, and monthly payments that average nearly as much as rent for some folks. 

Since 2019, new vehicle prices have jumped over 25% to $50,000, while average monthly payments reached $767, with 20% of borrowers paying over $1,000 per month. Loan rates now exceed 9%, worsening the affordability crisis.

Notably, prime and near-prime borrowers are now defaulting faster than subprime consumers, as lenders tightened standards for the lowest-credit segment, according to the report. The average auto loan balance has risen 57% since 2010, and many borrowers are "upside-down", owing more than their cars are worth.

"We're seeing the cost of cars and the cost related to car ownership increase enormously," VantageScore chief economist Rikard Bandebo said in an interview. "In the past five years, it has increased even faster."

Bandebo continued, "That's a double... You've been hit by the increased cost of the car and then the financing cost of the car."

"Consumers now are in a more precarious position than they've been since the last recession," Bandebo said. "We've seen this growing trend over the last several years of more and more consumers struggling to make ends meet, and it's looking like that trend is going to continue into next year."

Here's the sequence of alarming events unfolding in the credit markets in recent weeks:

And by late this week:

UBS analyst Jolie Ho commented on the credit market cracks:

Two U.S. regional banks, Zions and Western Alliance, said they were the victims of fraud on loans to funds that invest in distressed commercial mortgages, fueling concern that more cracks are emerging in the credit markets. Zions sank 13% on Thursday after it disclosed a $50 mn charge-off for a loan underwritten by its wholly-owned subsidiary. Western Alliance shed almost 11% after it said it made loans to the same borrowers. Bloomberg reported that the disclosures add to recent loan blowups, including bankruptcies at subprime auto lender Tricolor and auto-parts supplier First Brands. JPMorgan and Fifth Third reported hundreds of millions in combined losses tied to Tricolor, while Jefferies revealed exposure to First Brands. While these hits can be easily absorbed by the biggest U.S. banks, the totals are worrisome for regional lenders. U.S. credit-risk gauges worsened on Thursday, with the spread on the Markit CDX North American Investment Grade Index widened as much as 1.69bp to 54.47, as reported. A similar gauge for junk bonds, which falls as credit risk climbs, dropped as much as 0.49 point to 106.87.

Meanwhile, rate traders have priced in two 25 bps cuts by year's end. 

Let's not forget about the government shutdown... All is troubling.

Tyler Durden Fri, 10/17/2025 - 14:20

US Regulators End Climate Oversight Framework For Big Banks

Zero Hedge -

US Regulators End Climate Oversight Framework For Big Banks

Authored by Tom Ozimek via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Federal regulators will no longer require banks to spell out how they manage climate-related financial risk, following objections from officials in the Trump administration and Republican lawmakers, who said that climate policy was distorting financial regulation.

A woman walks in the rain in New York City, on Oct. 13, 2025. Spencer Platt/Getty Images

In a joint move announced on Oct. 16, the Federal Reserve, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency rescinded a set of rules called the Principles for Climate-Related Financial Risk Management for Large Financial Institutions.

Introduced in 2023, the rules applied to banks with more than $100 billion in assets and were intended to incentivize institutions to integrate climate considerations into governance, scenario analysis, and risk oversight.

Regulators said the withdrawal reflects a return to long-standing safety and soundness standards that already require banks to manage all material risks—without singling out climate.

The agencies do not believe principles for managing climate-related financial risk are necessary,” the notice stated, while a Federal Reserve memo further clarified that such guidance risked distracting banks from focusing on core vulnerabilities such as credit, liquidity, and operational risk.

“Existing safety and soundness standards require large financial institutions to have effective risk management processes commensurate with the size, complexity and risk of their activities,” the memo stated, adding that existing rules and guidelines “are sufficient to help ensure financial institutions are managing all material risks.”

Fed Governor Christopher Waller welcomed the move with a two-word statement: “Good riddance.”

Michelle Bowman, the Federal Reserve’s vice chair for supervision, also backed the rollback, saying in a statement that the climate framework had created “confusion about supervisory expectations” and imposed compliance costs and burdens without improving financial stability. She said banks should focus on “core risks” such as credit and liquidity rather than speculative long-term climate scenarios, and that the rules could reduce credit supply and raise borrowing costs for American households.

“One likely potential consequence could be to discourage banks from lending and providing financial services to certain industries, forcing them to seek credit outside of the banking system from non-bank lenders,” Bowman said. “This could result in decreasing or eliminating access to financial services and increasing the cost of credit to these industries. These costs will ultimately be borne by consumers.”

But the decision drew dissent from several other Fed officials. Federal Reserve Governor Michael Barr called the rescission “short-sighted” and said it would “make the financial system riskier even as climate-related financial risks grow.” He pointed to recent disasters such as Hurricane Helene and the California wildfires as evidence of mounting financial exposure.

The rescission contains literally no evidence to support taking this step only two years after putting the principles into effect,” Barr said. “We owe the public a rational, evidence-based explanation for our actions, and this rescission fails that test.”

Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, while accepting the board’s decision and noting the benefit of regulations that are clear and predictable, said that she expects banks to remain vigilant in assessing severe weather risks.

“My view has not changed since 2023: to the extent severe weather events could cause disruptions to specific firms or to the financial system, I would expect that large banks would seek to be proactive in monitoring, assessing, and appropriately addressing such risks,” Cook said. “I also believe it is advantageous for the banking industry to have stable, well-understood supervisory expectations.”

The rollback marks a broader effort by the Trump administration to unwind climate-related directives across financial agencies and limit the role of environmental, social, and governance factors in regulatory supervision.

That shift has extended beyond the banking regulators. In September, the U.S. Financial Stability Oversight Council, chaired by Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, voted to disband two panels dedicated to analyzing climate-related systemic risks. Bessent said the decision was a necessary refocus on “core financial stability issues,” including bank safety, liquidity risks, and oversight of nonbank financial firms.

Climate advocates called the move a setback for efforts to prepare the financial system for extreme weather disruptions.

Tyler Durden Fri, 10/17/2025 - 14:00

If We Measured The Economy By Quality-Of-Life Instead Of GDP, We'd Be In A Depression

Zero Hedge -

If We Measured The Economy By Quality-Of-Life Instead Of GDP, We'd Be In A Depression

Authored by Charles Hugh Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

GDP is like collecting data on passenger satisfaction with the dessert cart on the Titanic and declaring everyone is delighted as the great "unsinkable" ship settles into the icy waters of the Atlantic.

That Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is an outdated and misleading metric of the economy is widely accepted. The problem isn't an abstraction, as we manage what we measure and so policymakers and citizens alike make decisions on what's being measured. If what's being measured is misleading, then we're flying blind.

Economist Joseph Stiglitz has long advocated for an overhaul for what we measure economically, focusing on well-being rather than adding up transactions. A new book The Measure of Progress: Counting What Really Matters, explains the difficulty of the overhaul. A recent article on the topic addressed the urgency of the task (Foreign Affairs, May/June 2025, paywalled):

"For Americans, these are tumultuous times. Inequality in income and wealth is at historically high levels. Artificial intelligence is reshaping society at an unprecedented pace, prompting layoffs and putting entire professions at risk. According to an estimate by the Brookings Institution, up to 85 percent of current workers in the U.S. labor force could see their jobs affected by today's generative AI technology. In the future, that percentage could climb even higher.

At moments of danger and uncertainty, it is usually the task of governments to protect people and help them navigate change--to step in when markets cannot. Yet Americans seem to have little belief in Washington's capabilities. Over the past two decades, public trust in the U.S. government has plummeted by 40 percent. Some Americans believe the federal government has been absent. Others believe it has failed to meet pressing challenges, including the rising cost of living, and the potential disruptions of AI. Either way, Washington has its work cut out for it as the government tries to regain Americans' trust.

So where can it start? The Measure of Progress, meanwhile, takes aim at the economic data that states use. According to Coyle, analysts evaluate the economy using outdated, limited metrics, causing policymakers to misunderstand the challenges citizens face.

Coyle's book is focused on understanding the economy as it exists today. But her argument--that analysts and governments have failed to properly measure peoples' well-being--is equally essential. The metrics that economists use, Coyle insists, are inherently flawed and do not sufficiently represent the reality of economic activity and value. That poses an immense problem for policymakers and analysts, distorting their view of the world and potentially leading them to faulty conclusions and ineffective policies."

The problem is multi-faceted. GDP and other metrics were institutionalized in the industrial age, where agriculture and factory production were easy to measure. As these sectors' share of the economy has slipped, the "hard-to-measure" parts of the economy are now dominant--81.5% by one estimate.

There are many other critical wrinkles in measuring the economy as it is. The book raises the issue of unpaid work, such as families caring for elderly parents and the unpaid "shadow work" that we're required to do now to keep all of our technology functioning. All this activity occurs outside the traditional market.

Since our metrics don't put a price tag on clean air and functional ecosystems, these are left out of the calculations, as if they don't exist. Not only do they exist, they're critical to our well-being. The book discusses natural capital accounting as an alternative, but alternative measures like this are inherently more challenging than toting up transactions.

What if we decided to measure the economy by the quality of life of the citizenry? While there are endless possibilities of what goes into quality of life, we can start with these basics:

1. Our physical and mental health.

2. The health of our social order--our social contract, social trust, communities and trust in our key institutions

3. The security and stability of our livelihoods and financial future.

Defining health isn't that difficult. A healthy person doesn't need any medications because, well, they're healthy, so there's no need for any interventions. A healthy person has an HDL / triglyceride ratio (calculated by dividing your triglyceride level by your HDL cholesterol level) well under 2, can walk a mile without even noticing, can stand on each foot for an extended time, and so on.

As for mental health, numerous studies have found that social connections are critical to our overall health, along with what we might call sufficiency--enough financial resources to secure the basics of life, and enough opportunities to fulfill one's potential.

Let's go through some charts of what we already measure. Here is a chart of our metabolic health. Over 50% of adult Americans are diabetic or prediabetic. This is a serious disease that shortens our lives.

Only a quarter of the adult population is normal (i.e. healthy) weight, reflecting an unhealthy lifestyle of processed foods and inactivity.

As for mental health, consider teen depression rates. Teen suicide rates have also risen. There is no way to interpret this as healthy.

Loneliness--a measure of declining social connections--is also rising sharply.

I prepared this chart of our unhealthy lifestyle and built environment in 2008. Nothing has changed. We can try to sugarcoat all these, but sugarcoating doesn't change reality.

Turning to the social and economic sources of stability, security and opportunity, consider the astounding rise of student loan debt, as attending college / university went from being affordable to requiring lifetime debt serfdom.

Student loan delinquencies reflect precarity and insecurity, not prosperity and security.

As for opportunity in an economy and society that claims to be a "level playing field," the benchmarks of middle-class security are no longer within reach. The number of 30-year olds who are both married and homeowners has plummeted. Yes, we can quibble about statistics like this, but quibbles are apologists' favorite tools: it's not so bad. But this is just more sugarcoating.

This chart of spending by income group reveals an enormous wealth-income divide. The top 10% collect virtually all the unearned income (from investments), collect over 40% of all the earned income and account for half of consumer spending. The bottom 60%--200 million Americans--account for one-quarter of total spending--half of what the top 10% (34 million Americans) spend.

The chart of generational wealth indicates opportunities to build wealth were more accessible pre-2000. Those graduating from high school or university in 2008 or later experienced a much different economy than their parents.

The health of the society is a key element in stability, security and opportunity. Social trust is eroding.

Trust in elites and institutions reflects the wealth-income divide. The top 10% reckon everything's going great because they're doing great. Meanwhile, the bottom 90% live in a completely different world.

Being born into a wealthy household offers numerous advantages that are difficult for those without these advantages to match. Admissions to elite university reflect this divide. This reflects a neofeudal economy and social order.

The wealthy own the vast majority of income-generating assets. The majority depend on wages for their living. The decline of wages' share of the economy over the past 50 years is consequential, reflecting the cumulative transfer of $150 trillion from wage earners to capital over the past five decades.

Wealth and income inequality has reached levels that do not reflect a healthy economy or social order.

The share of income going to the bottom 90% has declined.

The bottom 50% of American households own a tiny slice of the nation's financial wealth. The vast expansion of central bank stimulus and the resulting asset bubbles haven't increased the wealth of the bottom 170 million Americans, which hovers at 2.6%--signal noise compared to the 31% owned by the top 1% and the 68% owned by the top 10%.

How would we rate the US economy in terms of quality of life? It's clear that we'd have to conclude it's in a deep Depression. Can we really sugarcoat all this with claims everything's going great because GDP is rising and AI is making some of us rich?

As for all the cheerleading about how great the economy is doing--GDP is like collecting data on passenger satisfaction with the dessert cart on the Titanic and declaring everyone is delighted as the great "unsinkable" ship settles into the icy waters of the Atlantic.

*  *  *

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Tyler Durden Fri, 10/17/2025 - 13:25

"Outraged" Trump Refuses To Adhere To Global Carbon Tax On Shipping

Zero Hedge -

"Outraged" Trump Refuses To Adhere To Global Carbon Tax On Shipping

The United States will vote “no” to a global carbon tax proposed by the International Maritime Organization (IMO) on Oct. 17, President Donald Trump said on Truth Social.

“I am outraged that the International Maritime Organization is voting in London this week to pass a global Carbon Tax,” he said in the post on Oct. 16, urging others to reject the proposal.

“The United States will NOT stand for this Global Green New Scam Tax on Shipping, and will not adhere to it in any way, shape, or form.

“We will not tolerate increased prices on American Consumers OR the creation of a Green New Scam Bureaucracy to spend YOUR money on their Green dreams.”

The net-zero framework proposal that was put before the U.N. agency specializing in regulating marine transport would require ships to comply with a global fuel standard for large oceangoing vessels, 5,000 tons or larger, to force the shipping industry’s greenhouse gas emissions down to net zero by 2050.

As T.J.Muscaro reports via The Epoch Times, the president’s opposition to the tax proposal follows a statement his administration made on Aug. 12.

Signed by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick, Secretary of Energy Chris Wright, and Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy, the statement declared that the United States would retaliate against any of the member states of the IMO that backed it, stating it would be a global carbon tax that “harms the interests of the American people.”

“Under this framework, ships would have to pay fees for failing to meet unattainable fuel standards and emissions targets. These fees will drive up energy and transportation, and leisure cruise costs,” the statement read.

“Our fellow IMO members should be on notice that we will look for their support against this action and not hesitate to retaliate or explore remedies for our citizens should this endeavor fail,” it stated.

“We will fight hard to protect the American people and their economic interests.”

A vote would only occur at the IMO if member states do not agree upon a proposed regulation.

There are 176 member states of the IMO, but a passing vote would require a two-thirds majority of only the 108 member states that ratified previous legislation aiming to reduce shipping pollution.

If passed, the global emissions tax would take effect in 2027 and become “the first in the world” to impose greenhouse gas pricing and mandatory emission limits across an entire industry sector.

The Epoch Times has reached out to the IMO for a response to the U.S. president’s statement.

*  *  *

Astaxanthin // Peak Focus // Mushroom 10x

Tyler Durden Fri, 10/17/2025 - 12:25

"The World Is Changing More Rapidly Than Anyone Could Have Imagined A Few Months Ago"

Zero Hedge -

"The World Is Changing More Rapidly Than Anyone Could Have Imagined A Few Months Ago"

By Elwin de Groot, head of macro strategy at Rabobank

Whatever...

US equity markets extended their losses yesterday as bond yields fell on the back of a decline in US regional bank shares. The S&P index lost 0.6%, the yield on 10y UST’s dropped more than 5 basis points. The market had the finger pointed at the collapse of the subprime auto lender Tricolor Holdings, underscoring the increased sensitivity of the equity market at these elevated levels. Meanwhile, the IMF said it sees “significant downside risks” to global growth following the renewed tensions between the US and China.

Bloomberg writes that Argentinians are dumping the peso, as they believe a devaluation is unavoidable. This potentially undermines the rescue package, including a $20bn swap line, put up by US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. Things likely got worse when, earlier this week, President Trump linked Argentinian leader Javier Milei’s success in the upcoming midterm elections to US support: “If he wins we’re staying with him, and if he doesn’t win we’re gone”, Trump said. That sounds more like a ‘whatever’ than a ‘whatever it takes’ US strategy …

French PM Lecornu can already buy himself an “I’m a survivor” t-shirt after surviving two confidence votes yesterday. Whether he survives the looming budget debate is another matter, as his fate now rests with MPs willing to back the budget. If the government sticks to its pledge not to invoke Article 49.3, a majority must actually vote for it.

Socialists leader Olivier Faure warned: “If parliament is not respected and the pension reform isn’t suspended, we would censure immediately.” Markets, meanwhile, are back at square one: the 10-year yield spread narrowed to 76bp from 86bp last week, and the CAC-40 erased October losses—though spreads remain wider than before Bayrou’s confidence vote announcement in August. MNI quoted EU officials saying the “New Fiscal Rules give Lecornu Budget leeway.” Where have we heard that before?

Macron and Lecornu have bought time, but France’s fiscal—and economic—challenges remain.

Beyond Paris, the global stage looks increasingly like an “eat or be eaten” arena where statecraft tools dominate. Wielding such tools successfully, however, is reserved for the ‘happy few,’ requiring economic heft, financial reach, strategic commodities, a strong bureaucracy, political agility, and military muscle.

That explains why small but wealthy economies like Switzerland drew the short straw: since August 7, Swiss goods face a 39% tariff—except generic drugs and Ticino-refined gold. It explains why weaker economies, especially in Africa, struggle against dumping practices due to weak frameworks and enforcement. It explains why several Asian nations agreed to lower tariffs on U.S. goods in exchange for still-high U.S. tariffs. And even the economically large but politically and militarily weaker EU faces limits. Meanwhile, if you have the commodities, you call the shots: Qatar warned yesterday it may halt business with the EU—including LNG supplies—unless Brussels revises its corporate sustainability rules, Reuters reported.

The US has demonstrated the clearest examples of applying such statecraft, as highlighted by our global strategist Michael Every. Presumably, also, because the US does hold the strongest cards (or at least thinks it holds them). This week and last, it was China’s turn to show it has such statecraft cards up its sleeve. It has introduced port fees for US ships (in response to the US port fees on Chinese built/operated ships coming into effect on 14 October) and underscored its dominance in critical raw materials, particularly rare earths, with a further tightening of its export controls regime.

Whether both players have a full grasp of their own and their opponent’s tools and power(s) remains an open question; uncertainty over that may actually be the strongest guardrail to prevent this power struggle from running completely out of control. That said, it’s even harder to see the spirit going back into the bottle. In other words, the world is changing more rapidly and profoundly than many would have imagined only a few months ago.

And the US keeps trying to drag its allies into its statecraft framework - “President Trump has instructed the ambassador and myself to tell our European allies that we would be in favour of whether you would call it a ‘Russian oil tariff’ on China or a ‘Ukrainian victory tariff’ on China,” Mr Bessent told reporters in Washington on Wednesday. “But our Ukrainian or European allies have to be willing to follow. We will respond if our European partners will join us.”

The strategy would introduce a 500 per cent levy on imports from China, with the money generated being used on weapons for Ukraine’s military. 500 is obviously Trump-style language, -and would effectively be counterproductive as it would halt most trade with tariff revenue close to nothing- but it does carry a serious undertone and the line of reasoning more fits ‘decoupling’ than ‘de-risking’.

For Europe de-coupling seems like no entry territory (unless China would truly block critical raw materials to European markets ?). It explains why Europe is often portrayed as the one being ‘squeezed’ in the middle. Whilst that remains a useful framing of the overall global picture, Europe is not standing still completely. The lack of key enabling factors such as military strength and political agility (read: unity) are visibly slowing things down, however.

For example, the EU has been slow with the implementation of its Competitiveness Compass agenda (a descendant from the 20204 Draghi and Letta reports); The ‘Draghi Observatory’ concluded in September that out of 383 recommendations, only 11.2% have been fully delivered.

That said, the European Commission (EC) is intensifying trade defense measures, making 2025 a record year for anti-dumping tariffs and protectionist actions. On 7 October, it proposed a new steel safeguard regime to replace the current system in July 2026, cutting tariff-free import volumes by 47% and doubling out-of-quota tariffs to 50%, a move partly influenced by the recent US-EU framework agreement. The EC is also considering pre-conditions for Chinese investments in Europe, such as mandatory technology transfers, signaling a strategic shift toward statecraft. Meanwhile, the EU announced it has achieved its €300 billion Global Gateway investment target two years early, focusing on sustainable infrastructure and strategic corridors, particularly in Africa, to rival China’s Belt and Road.

Energy independence remains a priority, with plans to ban Russian oil imports by early 2026 and gas by 2027, pending (final) parliamentary approval. At the Copenhagen summit (1–2 October), leaders debated strengthening EU defense capabilities, including a proposed “European Drone Wall,” though feasibility concerns persist. Discussions also revealed divisions over a €140 billion interest-free loan for Ukraine funded by frozen Russian assets, despite Germany softening its stance. A plan to “buy European” in public procurement - to boost domestic firms and counterbalance protectionist US trade policies as well as China’s weaponization of critical dependencies - is also in the works. But countries haggle about the definition of ‘European’. Overall, the EC’s actions underscore a more assertive and strategic EU posture globally, but it obviously cannot match the depth and speed of the US.

The EU yesterday unveiled a five-year defense roadmap aimed at closing critical capability gaps and modernizing its security architecture.

The plan introduces four flagship initiatives:

  1. the European Drone Defence Initiative (operational by end-2027),
  2. Eastern Flank Watch,
  3. European Air Shield, and
  4. European Space Shield.

It calls for coordinated defense spending, joint coalitions, and a target of 40% joint procurement by 2027. Member States are urged to collectively address shortfalls by 2030, accelerating production and strengthening defense industries while maintaining support for Ukraine.

The roadmap signals concrete ambition beyond bureaucracy and is expected to feature prominently at next week’s Brussels summit. This looks set to be the key event to watch next week.

Tyler Durden Fri, 10/17/2025 - 12:05

Average New Car Price In U.S. Tops $50,000 For First Time Ever

Zero Hedge -

Average New Car Price In U.S. Tops $50,000 For First Time Ever

With U.S. car prices continuing to climb, the average cost of a new vehicle has officially crossed the $50,000 mark - a milestone analysts say was inevitable, according to Yahoo Finance.

According to Kelley Blue Book (KBB), the average transaction price reached a record $50,080 in September, up 2.1% from August and 3.6% year over year—the largest annual increase in more than two years.

“We’ve been expecting to break through the $50,000 barrier. It was only a matter of time, especially when you consider the best-selling vehicle in America is a pickup truck from Ford that routinely costs north of $65,000,” said Erin Keating, executive analyst at Cox Automotive, which owns KBB.

Keating noted that wealthier households are driving demand for new cars, supported by access to capital and better loan terms. Meanwhile, lower-income buyers have shifted to the used market as cheaper new models disappear. The $20,000 market for cars is “extinct,” she said.

Yahoo writes that recent CPI data backs this up: new vehicle prices rose 0.3% in August and 0.7% year over year, while used vehicles climbed 1% and 6%, respectively. The September CPI report has been delayed by the government shutdown.

KBB said tariffs have created “new cost pressure” across the industry, with many trade deals unfinished and a 25% rate still applied to vehicles imported from Mexico and Canada.

A surge in electric vehicle sales also pushed prices higher. The expiration of the federal EV tax credit on Sept. 30 prompted a wave of last-minute purchases, lifting September’s numbers. KBB estimated EVs made up 11.6% of sales, with an average transaction price topping $58,000.

Incentives also played a growing role in September’s record prices, Zero Hedge noticed while digging deeper into the KBB report, with average discounts rising to 7.4% of the average transaction price, or about $3,700 — the highest level so far in 2025. A wave of new 2026 model-year vehicles and a richer mix of luxury and EV models helped push transaction prices higher, with more than 60 models now averaging above $75,000.

Electric vehicle sales surged nearly 30% year over year in the third quarter, reaching a record 437,000 units, as buyers rushed to lock in incentives before they expired. KBB estimated the average EV price at $58,124 in September, up 3.5% from August, while Tesla’s average slipped to $54,138, down 6.8% year over year amid lower-priced Model 3 and Model Y trims.

Looking ahead, KBB doesn’t expect relief. The average new MSRP hit $52,183 in September, up 4.2% year over year. “It is important to remember that the new-vehicle market is inflationary. Prices go up over time, and today’s market is certainly reminding us of that,” Keating said.

Tyler Durden Fri, 10/17/2025 - 09:40

Outrage As Israeli Fans Banned From Attending Football Match In The UK

Zero Hedge -

Outrage As Israeli Fans Banned From Attending Football Match In The UK

Authored by Thomas Brooke via Remix News,

The decision to bar Israeli fans from attending Maccabi Tel Aviv’s Europa League match against Aston Villa on Nov. 6 has sparked a political firestorm in Britain, with critics warning it sends a “shameful message” about antisemitism and public order in the country.

Aston Villa confirmed on Thursday that no away fans will be allowed into Villa Park, Birmingham, for the fixture following an instruction from the Safety Advisory Group (SAG), which issues safety certificates for all matches at the stadium. The club said the decision followed concerns from West Midlands Police about “public safety outside the stadium bowl and the ability to deal with any potential protests on the night.”

“The club is in continuous dialogue with Maccabi Tel Aviv and the local authorities throughout this ongoing process, with the safety of supporters attending the match and the safety of local residents at the forefront of any decision,” Aston Villa said.

The ruling follows weeks of campaigning by local Independent MP Ayoub Khan, who represents Birmingham Perry Barr. Khan, who had called Maccabi fans “violent” and argued the club should “not even be participating in European competition,” welcomed the SAG decision.

“From the moment the match was announced, it was clear that there were latent safety risks that even our capable security and police authorities would not be able to fully manage,” he said. “With so much hostility and uncertainty around the match, it was only right to take drastic measures.”

The decision has been widely condemned by political leaders. Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who only hours earlier had pledged to Jewish communities that he would “do everything in my power to guarantee Jewish communities the security they deserve,” wrote on X that the decision was “wrong.”

“We will not tolerate antisemitism on our streets,” he said. “The role of the police is to ensure all football fans can enjoy the game, without fear of violence or intimidation.” However, Starmer offered no indication that the government would intervene to overturn the ban.

Former immigration minister and current Shadow Justice Minister Robert Jenrick was among the first to demand that West Midlands Police reverse the decision. “Use Public Order units. Use mutual aid,” he said. “We can’t be a country where the safety of Jews cannot be guaranteed in some areas. The Home Secretary must be clear that if this isn’t reversed, she’ll intervene and heads will roll.

Jenrick linked the decision to his earlier comments about Birmingham’s integration challenges, remarks that were widely criticized last week. “Last week, I was attacked for pointing out that parts of Birmingham were a failure of integration. But now Israeli football fans are banned from watching their team play at Villa Park, as the police can’t guarantee their safety. Maybe I wasn’t wrong after all,” he said.

Opposition leader Kemi Badenoch called the development a “national disgrace.” “How have things come to this?” she asked. “Starmer pledged that Jews are welcome and safe in Britain, that he stands shoulder to shoulder with the Jewish community, and will use the full force of his government to prove it. Will he back those words with action and guarantee that Jewish fans can walk into any football stadium in this country? If not, it sends a horrendous and shameful message: there are parts of Britain where Jews simply cannot go.”

The controversy was further inflamed by a widely shared video of Birmingham Imam Asrar Rashid calling for attacks on visiting Maccabi fans. “We will show no mercy toward Maccabi Tel Aviv fans who will arrive in several weeks for the match against Aston Villa,” he said in a recent address to Muslims.

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage said the decision “takes racial discrimination to a whole new level.”

The issue also comes less than a year after violent attacks targeted Maccabi Tel Aviv supporters in Amsterdam during a Europa League match against Ajax, which Dutch opposition leader Geert Wilders described as a “pogrom.”

Videos from the incident showed Jewish fans being beaten, thrown into canals, and even run over by vehicles, with one assailant shouting, “That’s for Palestine, motherfucker,” as he repeatedly kicked a victim lying motionless on the ground.

The Jerusalem Post reported that mobs attempted to storm buildings where Jewish supporters had barricaded themselves, and former Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett urged people to “act by any means” to save their lives.

Read more here...

Tyler Durden Fri, 10/17/2025 - 09:20

Futures Rebound From Overnight Plunge After Trump Eases Trade Fears

Zero Hedge -

Futures Rebound From Overnight Plunge After Trump Eases Trade Fears

US equity futures initially tumbled for much of the overnight session on mounting market liquidity and regional bank concerns, but erased almost all losses just after 7am ET when US President Trump spoke to Fox and calmed fears of a trade war with China, lifting sentiment following yesterday's steep declines in banking stocks.S&P 500 futures fell as much as 1.5% before paring the loss to 0.2% as of 8:00am ET. Here is a snapshot of Trump's comments on Fox News this morning which helped reverse the selloff:

  • TRUMP SAYS HE'S MEETING WITH CHINA'S XI IN TWO WEEKS

  • TRUMP, ASKED IF HIGH CHINA TARIFFS WILL STAND: NO

  • TRUMP ON CHINA TRADE: WE'LL SEE WHAT HAPPENS

  • TRUMP: CHINA IS ALWAYS LOOKING FOR AN EDGE

  • TRUMP ON CHINA TRADE: I DON'T KNOW WHAT'S GOING TO HAPPEN

  • TRUMP ON CHINA TARIFFS: IT'S NOT SUSTAINABLE

  • TRUMP: 100 PERCENT TARIFF IS NOT SUSTAINABLE

  • TRUMP ON CHINA TARIFFS: WE'RE GOING TO DO FINE WITH CHINA

  • TRUMP ON CHINA TARIFFS: WE HAVE TO HAVE A FAIR DEAL -FBN

Friday’s crop of earnings helped bolster regional banks, with Truist Financial Corp., Regions Financial Corp. and Fifth Third Bancorp all rising in early trading after they reported lower provisions for credit losses than expected. Overnight, there were not much incremental positive headlines. ORCL updated its revenue and EPS guidance and beat expectations; however, this positive update has been widely expected with a high bar entering this earnings season. Bond yields are 1-4bp lower; USD is lower. Commodities are mixed: oil lower; base metals mostly higher. The US economic calendar includes August TIC flows at 4pm. Housing starts and import/export price indexes will be delayed due to government shutdown. Fed speaker slate includes Musalem at 12:15pm, and Fed’s external communications blackout ahead of the Oct. 29 Fed policy decision begins Saturday

All the majors still remain down from Trump's initial tweet last Friday

In premarket trading, Magnificent Seven stocks are lower (Microsoft -0.4%, Alphabet -0.4%, Apple -0.1%, Amazon -.1%, Meta -0.6%, Nvidia -1.2%, Tesla -0.8%).

  • Cryptocurrency-linked stocks fall as Bitcoin liquidations continue and broader global equities markets selloff amid trade tensions between the US and China and worries over US regional banks.
  • AST SpaceMobile (ASTS) falls 4% after Barclays downgrades the wireless telecommunications stock to underweight from overweight, citing expensive valuations.
  • CSX (CSX) rises 2.8% after the freight transportation company reported third-quarter revenue above analysts’ estimates.
  • Eli Lilly & Co. (LLY) declines 3% after President Donald Trump said the price of the blockbuster diabetes drug Ozempic could come down to just $150 a month.
  • Fifth Third (FITB) rises 2.6% after the company reported earnings per share for the third quarter that beat the average analyst estimate. Net interest income FTE also also came in just above expectations.
  • Huntington Bancshares (HBAN) rises 1.6% after posting third-quarter results.
  • Micron (MU) falls 1.3% as Reuters reports that the chipmaker plans to stop supplying server chips to data centers in China after the business failed to recover from a 2023 government ban on its products in critical Chinese infrastructure.
  • Truist Financial (TFC) rises 1.1% after the financial services company reported adjusted earnings per share and non-interest income that came in above the average analyst estimates

After a week when fears about escalating trade tensions between Washington and Beijing fueled sharp swings in stocks, Trump told reporters that current tariffs on China were “not sustainable” and confirmed he would meet with Xi Jinping in South Korea in the coming weeks, helping ease nerves.

The volatility has seen the VIX rise to its highest level since April. Meanwhile, havens such as Treasuries and gold erased gains following Trump’s remark and lender results.

“This very much looks like end-of-cycle symptoms, where we can see hints of complacency in lending standards,” said Raphael Thuin, head of capital markets strategies at Tikehau Capital. “With this year’s rally and costly valuations, the temptation to take profits and secure year-to-date gains is high.”

Still, while some analysts said the situation resembled the 2023 US regional banking crisis that led to the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and UBS Group AG’s takeover of Credit Suisse, they expect the market reaction to be short-lived. Indeed, a rout in regional banks, sparked Thursday by news that Zions Bancorp and Western Alliance Bancorp were victims of fraud on loans to funds that invest in distressed commercial mortgages, appeared primed to reverse. 

“In the end, the crisis was contained, but that was not immediately clear,” said Leonard Cohen, chief executive officer of Ginjer Asset Management in Paris. “The third quarter results of US banks were good so investors are taken by surprise and wondering if they didn’t miss the forest for the trees.”

Concern about credit quality in the US economy is adding to disquiet among investors already uneasy about renewed trade tension between the US and China, the US government shutdown and a potential AI bubble. From the return of headline risk to jitters around a regional banking crisis, the market is getting the reaction in volatility that was broadly expected by derivatives strategists — albeit about a month later than the seasonal window suggested historically. Confidence that stocks can quickly reclaim record highs has been shaken.

Meanwhile, BofA said that stocks saw a fifth week of inflows, at $12.4 billion for the week ended Oct. 15. S&P 500 capital expenditures will likely grow 17% in 2025, boosted by AI hyperscalers’ investments, spending that’s constraining outlays on buybacks, according to Goldman Sachs strategists. Strategist Ryan Hammond cut his 2026 buyback growth forecast to 9% from 12% to “reflect the continued rotation from buybacks to capex among AI-exposed stocks”.

As for earnings season, with the occasional exception, it remains very strong: of the 51 S&P 500 companies that have reported so far this earnings season, more than 82% have beaten analysts’ forecasts, nearly 16% have missed, and 2% were as expected. 

In Europe, Deutsche Bank AG and Barclays Plc stayed more than 5% lower, with a gauge of lenders leading regional declines. The Stoxx 600 was off by 1.5%, amid broad declines in banking stocks on both sides of the Atlantic, and for tech stocks in US premarket trading. Here are the biggest movers Friday:

  • EssilorLuxottica jump as much as 12% and to a record high after the eyewear group reported third-quarter revenue that soared past estimates, lifted by a new batch of AI glasses with partner Meta Platforms
  • Vitrolife rises as much as 8%, one of the few gainers in the European health-care sector after US President Donald Trump advanced his campaign promise of making IVF less expensive and more widely available in the U
  • European defense stocks slump after President Donald Trump said he would meet Vladimir Putin for a second time “within two weeks or so” to discuss ending the war in Ukraine
  • Novo Nordisk shares fall as much as 7%, the most since July 29, after US President Donald Trump said the White House will negotiate to lower prices for weight-loss drugs such as Novo Nordisk’s Ozempic
  • Volvo shares fall as much as 8%, after the Swedish truckmaker said it expects a slowdown to extend into next year as uncertainties linked to President Donald Trump’s tariffs weigh on demand in North America
  • Tomra falls as much as 15%, the most since June, after the Norwegian recycling equipment company reported earnings. DNB Carnegie says company is showing weakness in all regions
  • Norion Bank falls as much as 12%, the most since March, after the Swedish niche lender reported earnings that fell short of estimates
  • QT Group shares fall as much as 22%, the most in two monthst, after the Finnish technology group cut its operating margin forecast for the full year

Earlier in the session, Asian stocks slumped, hurt by lingering worry over US-China frictions and as loan problems at two American regional banks heightened concerns about the credit market. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index fell as much as 1.2%, snapping a two-day gain, with financials and tech hardware the biggest drags. TSMC dropped, with investors seen taking profits after the chipmaker raised its revenue outlook on strong AI demand. Hong Kong and mainland China benchmarks were among the worst performers amid the ongoing trade spat with the US. Investors also are positioning after the strong recent rally, with eyes on next week’s Fourth Plenum policy meetings. Japanese stocks fell as investors eye continued uncertainty over the local political situation. Key gauges also slid in Indonesia, Taiwan and Australia.

In Fx, the dollar reverses an earlier decline. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index is up to 1208; the Swiss franc and yen were the biggest gainers but have since reversed much of their gains.

In rates, Treasury yields reversed losses with outperformance at the short-end, and the 10Y rising 2bps to 4.00% after sliding as low as 3.93%.

In commodities, gold reversed its overnight surge, and after touching another record high of $4,380 it has since dropped below $4,300. Oil prices in the red, with WTI futures slipping below $57/barrel and Brent holding above $60/barrel. Crypto tumbling too, with Bitcoin touching the lowest since June.

Looking at the US economic calendar calendar includes August TIC flows at 4pm. Housing starts and import/export price indexes face delays due to government shutdown. Fed speaker slate includes Musalem at 12:15pm, and Fed’s external communications blackout ahead of the Oct. 29 Fed policy decision begins Saturday

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 mini -0.1%,
  • Nasdaq 100 mini -0.4%,
  • Stoxx Europe 600 -1.0%,
  • DAX -2%,
  • CAC 40 -0.6%
  • 10-year Treasury yield +2 basis point at 3.99%
  • VIX -1.7 points at 24.5
  • Bloomberg Dollar Index up to 1208.23
  • euro +0.1% at $1.1702
  • WTI crude -1% at $56.87/barrel

Top Overnight News

  • The White House is poised to ease tariffs on the US auto industry, a move that would deliver a major win for carmakers that have aggressively lobbied to stem the fallout from record-level import duties. The Commerce Department is slated to announce a five-year extension for an arrangement that allows automakers to reduce what they pay in tariffs on imported car parts. BBG
  • US Senator Majority Leader Thune said the Senate is expected to vote next week on a bill to pay federal workers who have been forced to work without pay which would include the military, according to Punchbowl.
  • Donald Trump will host Volodymyr Zelenskiy at the White House today. The Ukrainian President will also meet representatives from defense companies including Raytheon during his US visit. BBG
  • Shares in US regional banks fell on Thursday after two lenders disclosed that they were exposed to alleged fraud by borrowers, raising concerns about the health of bank loan portfolios. The disclosures by Western Alliance Bank and Zions Bank follow the recent failures by car parts maker First Brands and auto lender Tricolor, which have left credit investors nursing losses and are under scrutiny from the US DOJ.  FT
  • The Trump administration's slashing of the federal workforce amid the government shutdown is threatening AI work at the Commerce Department: Axios
  • Tech companies aggressively shift their supply chains out of China – Microsoft aims to produce the majority of its new products outside of China as early as next year, while AWS is expanding its supply chain shift down to the component level. Nikkei
  • Micron plans to stop supplying server chips to data centers in China after the business failed to recover from a 2023 government ban on its products in critical Chinese infrastructure, two people briefed on the decision said. Micron was the first U.S. chipmaker to be targeted by Beijing - a move that was seen as retaliatory for a series of curbs by Washington aimed at impeding tech progress by China's semiconductor industry. RTRS
  • The US asked South Korea to increase soybean imports during trade negotiations, DongA Ilbo reported. American supplies account for half of the country’s purchases. BBG
  • ORCL AI World proving to be another sell-the-news event after yesterday's TSM print as it trades lower in the pre this morning. ORCL closed +3% yesterday after projecting better margins than expected at its Analyst Day, but moved lower after the company announced further long-term revenue and profit forecasts after the close (ORCL -3.6% premkt). H/T GS TMT Trading
  • Novo Nordisk shares dropped (NVO -450bps premkt) and Eli Lilly fell premarket (LLY -420bps) after Trump said the price of Ozempic may come down to just $150 a month — compared to about $1,000 currently. BBG
  • The Trump administration is sharply increasing U.S. military pressure on the government of Nicolás Maduro, Venezuela’s authoritarian president, with a dramatic show of aerial threats in recent days as the Pentagon mounts a major troop buildup in the region. NYT
  • On US Obamacare credit extension, Punchbowl writes "it's true" that there are House Republicans who want to extend the credits; however, House Republican leadership does not want to, and their view is "hardening as the shutdown drags on"
  • Fed Governor Miran said the downside of tariffs has been nowhere near what people predicted and that tariffs have had no material signs of growth drag or inflation spike, while he doesn't think the cost of tariffs will be passed onto consumers.
  • Fed's Kashkari (2026 voter) said it is too soon to know the effect of tariffs on inflation and the impact of tariffs is taking longer to be felt than had guessed, while he expects services inflation to trend down and it is possible that goods inflation could spill over. Furthermore, he said the job market is slowing down and it is challenging to read signals without core government data because of the shutdown, as well as noted that most folks say they are still concerned about inflation.

Trade/Tariffs

  • US State Department said Secretary of State Rubio and USTR Greer met with Brazil's Foreign Affairs Minister Vieira and had very positive talks regarding trade and ongoing bilateral issues, while they agreed to work together to schedule a meeting between President Trump and President Lula at the earliest possible occasion.
  • US State Department said China's sanctions against Hanwha Ocean's (042660 KS) US-linked units are attempts to undermine US-South Korea cooperation and coerce South Korea.
  • South Korean Finance Minister said it's 'uncertain' whether US President Trump will accept Korea's position against an 'upfront' USD 350bln payment related to their tariff/trade agreement, according to Yonhap.

A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk

APAC stocks were predominantly lower as the region followed suit to the losses on Wall Street, where risk sentiment took a hit as regional bank concerns were reignited following loan fraud disclosures by Western Alliance and Zions Bancorp. ASX 200 was led lower by underperformance in financials, energy and tech, while gold miners were boosted by the  record highs in the precious metal. Nikkei 225 retreated amid a firmer currency and as banking stocks suffered in sympathy with US counterparts, while uncertainty lingered ahead of next Tuesday's PM vote with the Japanese Innovation Party noting a 50-50 chance of a coalition with the LDP. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp conformed to the downbeat mood amid US-China frictions, with both sides blaming each other for the tensions.

Top Asian News

  • Japan's LDP and CDP agreed to hold a vote to decide Japan's next PM on October 21st, while it was also reported that Japan Innovation Party co-leader Yoshimura said the chance of a coalition with the LDP is 50-50.
  • Japan's Ishin Party (Innovation Party) Co-head Fujita announces big progress with the LDP following talks; will enter the stage of finalising details, final discussions are very delicate.
  • Japan's Komeito party is reportedly arranging not to vote for the opposition PM candidate, according to Kyodo.
  • BoJ's Uchida says Japan's economy is recovering moderately, although there are some weak signs. The BoJ will continue to raise interest rate if prices move in line with our forecast.

European equities (STOXX 600 -1.8%) opened entirely in the red and dipped soon after the cash open, before finding a base where indices currently reside. The ongoing US regional banking fears remain at the forefront of traders' minds. European sectors are all negative. Banks/Financial Services unsurprisingly underperform, given the aforementioned banking fears. Elsewhere, Defence names across Europe have been pressured after the White House suggested that the latest Trump-Putin conversation was good and constructive. US equity futures (ES -1% NQ -1.2% RTY -1.6%) continue to extend the losses seen in the prior session, in-fitting with the risk tone. It is worth highlighting that the Regional Banking ETF (KRE) is lower by roughly 2% in the US pre-market.

Top European News

  • BoE's Mann said the UK labour market is loosening but not falling off a cliff, while she added that the UK yield curve now provides a more appropriate financial condition for the UK economy.
  • ECB's Scicluna said the ECB must not rush further interest rate action, because the effects of higher US tariffs on prices aren't yet clear, according to Bloomberg.

FX

  • DXY is net lower with the USD showing a divergent performance vs. peers on account of the risk-averse moves triggered by the recent selling in regional US banks. As such, the USD is weaker vs. havens (CHF, JPY) and bid vs. risk-sensitive currencies (AUD, NZD). The question for markets is whether the selling pressure in Zions and Western Alliance Bancorp (on account of exposure to fraudulent loans) is a deep systemic issue or something that will have limited contagion, as per the SVB debacle in 2023. DXY hit a new low for the week at 98.02 (coincides with the 50DMA), before bouncing off the lows.
  • EUR is up against the USD for a fourth session in a row on account of an aversion by the market to bid up the USD amid regional banking concerns and markets continuing to find solace in the developments in French politics this week. On the latter, with Lecornu having survived two no-confidence motions and odds of legislative elections by year-end receding to just 27% (vs. 50%+ earlier in the week), attention now turns to the subsequent debate and potential passage of the budget, as well as Moody's rating on France next Friday. Elsewhere, headline EZ HICP Finals were unrevised, and had limited impact on the Single-Currency. EUR/USD has eclipsed its 50DMA at 1.1692.
  • JPY outperforms major peers on account of a haven bid alongside the selling in global equity markets. Subsequently, USD/JPY has slipped below the 150 mark for the first time since October 6th. From a domestic viewpoint, focus remains on the political landscape with the JIP co-head announcing "big progress" in discussions with the LDP party and stating that they will be entering the stage of finalising details. On the BoJ, comments from Governor Ueda over the past 24 hours have reiterated the Bank's view of raising rates if its economic forecasts are realised, whilst Assistant Governor Shimzu has noted that the Bank must tread carefully. USD/JPY has delved as low as 149.39 with the next downside target ahead of the 149 mark coming via the 6th October low at 149.04.
  • The recovery in the pound vs. the dollar has faltered today on account of the broader risk tone. From a macro perspective, this week in the UK has been characterised by soft labour market metrics and sluggish growth with the former increasingly acknowledged by several BoE speakers this week. Next week also sees flash PMI and retail sales metrics, which are likely to be hampered by ongoing budget-related angst. Today's speaker slate includes BoE’s Pill, Greene & Breeden.
  • Antipodeans are both lower vs. the USD on account of the risk-averse tone in the market with AUD continuing to lag its antipodean peer following yesterday's soft jobs metrics from Australia.
  • PBoC set USD/CNY mid-point at 7.0949 vs exp. 7.1154 (Prev. 7.0968)

Fixed Income

  • USTs are firmer, as the US regional banking backdrop remains at the forefront of market focus for today. USTs peaked at 114-02 early doors, sending the US 10yr yield below the 4% mark for the first time since April; for reference, the April low was 3.86%. Since, the benchmark has pulled back to just below the 114-00 mark but holds onto gains of c. 5 ticks on the session and around 25 on the week, as things stand.
  • Bunds are bid, given the general risk tone and FTQ seen after the US regional banking flareup on Thursday. Bunds peaked at 130.59 early doors before seeing a relatively sharp pullback as the European morning got underway, to a 130.22 low; but, still firmer on the session. European specific newsflow of note for fixed income a little light, aside from largely unrevised headline HICP metrics. The docket ahead features ECB’s Nagel and Rehn.
  • Gilts gapped higher by 46 ticks, acknowledging the upside seen in peers on Thursday after the Gilt close as the US regional banking situation reverberated to the broader risk tone. Opened at 93.10 and extended to a 93.17 peak, notching a new high for the week and taking the benchmark to its highest since July when Gilts briefly traded above 93.50. Amidst this, the UK 10yr yield found itself under pressure and to a 4.45% low; the lowest since July when 4.41% printed. Ahead, we have a handful of BoE speakers due. On the hawkish side, Pill and Greene feature and are followed by the usually more neutral Breeden.

Commodities

  • WTI and Brent are pressured today amidst the ongoing risk-off sentiment, and as traders digest the latest constructive commentary surrounding the latest Trump-Putin call. The White House described that call as "good and productive" and have agreed to convene a meeting of high-level staff next week. WTI and Brent are currently trading towards the lower end of their respective USD 56.73-57.56/bbl and USD 60.30-61.11/bbl range.
  • Spot gold continues to advance and remains at top end of the day's range (USD 4,279.10-4,380.79/oz). Price action this morning fairly rangebound, but ultimately at elevated levels given the risk-off environment.
  • Base metals are lower across the board, pressured by the risk tone; 3M LME Copper currently off by around 1.6% in a USD 10,461.6-10,637.5/t range.

Geopolitics

  • Hamas said the return of Israeli hostages' bodies may take time as some were buried in tunnels destroyed by Israel and others remain under rubble, while the retrieval requires equipment to remove rubble, which is currently unavailable due to Israel's entry ban on such tools. Furthermore, it stated that it remains committed to the Gaza agreement and is keen to hand over all remaining hostages' bodies.
  • "Israeli Foreign Minister: Israel is committed to Trump's plan, but Hamas is violating the agreement by holding the remains of 19 of our dead hostages", according to Sky News Arabia
  • US President Trump said regarding Russian President Putin and Ukrainian President Zelensky, that they might do separate meetings, while he will probably meet Putin over the next two weeks. Trump commented that Tomahawks are also needed for the US, and he responded that he will speak to Senate Majority Leader Thune after House Speaker Johnson, about the Putin call and make the right determination, when asked about Russian sanctions.

US Event Calendar

  • 8:30 am: Sep Housing Starts, est. 1320k, prior 1307k
  • 8:30 am: Sep P Building Permits, est. 1343k, prior 1330k
  • 8:30 am: Sep Housing Starts MoM, est. 0.99%, prior -8.5%
  • 8:30 am: Sep Import Price Index MoM, est. 0.1%, prior 0.3%
  • 8:30 am: Sep Import Price Index YoY, est. 0.35%, prior 0%
  • 4:00 pm: Aug Net Long-term TIC Flows, prior 49.2b
  • 4:00 pm: Aug Total Net TIC Flows, prior 2.1b

DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

Market sentiment saw a sharp deterioration over the past 24 hours as news of bad loans at two US regional lenders triggered broader concerns about credit quality, leading US bank stocks to their worst day since early April while the S&P 500 sank -0.63%. Other risk assets also struggled, with US HY credit spreads +10bps wider. Treasuries rallied with the 2yr yield dropping -7.3bps to a 3-year low of 3.42%, also helped by oil prices falling to a new 5-month low. Earlier yesterday, French Prime Minister Lecornu survived his two no-confidence votes, which led to another sizable advance for the CAC 40 (+1.38%), with the STOXX 600 (+0.69%) outperforming its US counterparts. 

An initially positive risk mood turned during the US session yesterday after news that Zions Bancorp (-13.14%) made a $50m charge-off while Western Alliance (-10.81%) alleged it also suffered from fraud on loans to the same borrowers linked to distressed commercial mortgages. While this was an ostensibly isolated story at two banks each less than $10bn market cap, the event drew inevitable comparisons to the regional bank stress that followed the collapse of SVB in March 2023 and raised broader questions over potential credit quality issues after a lengthy period of elevated rates and expansion in private credit, following also the bankruptcy of subprime auto lender Tricolor last month.

US bank stocks struggled in response, as the KBW regional bank index plunged by -6.31% while the S&P 500 banks sector group fell -2.98%, with both posting their worst days since the post-Liberation Day turmoil in early April. The volatility weighed on the broader S&P 500 (-0.63%), with the small cap Russell 2000 (-2.09%) underperforming and the VIX index rising to its highest since April (+4.67pts to 25.31). A cautious mood has continued overnight, with futures on the S&P 500 (-0.44%) and NASDAQ (-0.29%) both lower.

Treasuries rallied amid the risk-off sentiment, with 2yr yields falling -7.3bps to their lowest since September 2022 when the Fed was still midway through its hiking cycle. That came as fed funds futures priced in 54bps of rate cuts by year-end (+5.7bps on the day), the first time that two more 25bps Fed cuts have been fully priced. Meanwhile, 10yr yields fell -5.4bps to a 12-month low of 3.97% and are another -3.0bps lower overnight. The dollar index (-0.46%) lost ground yesterday amid lower rates, while gold saw its biggest daily rise since May (+2.83%) to reach a new high of $4,326/oz and is another +0.79% higher this morning.

That rally in Treasuries came despite measured Fedspeak earlier in yesterday’s session. Notably, Fed Governor Waller reiterated his support for a 25bps cut in October, but said that beyond then, he would be “looking for how the solid GDP data reconcile with the softening labor market”. That suggested Waller may see a December rate cut as not quite a done deal, even as he has been one of the more dovish voices within the FOMC and is one of the five candidates reported to be in the short-list for Fed Chair. By contrast, Governor Miran repeated his call for a larger 50bps rate cut, while Richmond Fed President Barkin said he was still “sanguine” on the employment and inflation outlook. Waller also appeared to echo Powell’s signal earlier in the week that reserves may soon approach ample levels. With the recent shift in tone, our US rates strategists now expect the Fed to announce the end of QT at the December meeting (see here).

A notable exception from the sour risk mood yesterday was the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index (+0.49%), which held onto gains driven by positive results from TSMC and upbeat margin guidance from Oracle (+3.09%).

European markets had closed before most of the US sell-off, with the STOXX 600 up +0.69%. Indices were higher across the continent, led by a +1.38% gain for France’s CAC after French PM Lecornu survived his two votes for no confidence. The government’s chances of survival had improved as the Socialist Party declared they would not vote to topple the government after Lecornu announced that he would suspend the 2023 pension reform until after the 2027 presidential election. The first round vote came fairly close (271 deputies voted no confidence vs the 289 needed), although only 144 deputies voted for no confidence in the second round. The result helped the 10yr Franco-German spread inch -0.6bps lower to 76bps, its lowest since late August. Attention will now turn to passing the 2026 budget, with our economists expecting the government to limit amendments as it seeks to keep the deficit below 5% of GDP. See their note yesterday on the budget process here.

European bond moves were muted overall, with the 2yr bund yield down -1.3bps while the 10yr was unchanged. The front-end rally came as the amount of ECB rate cuts priced by next June rose +3.4bps to 19bps, its highest since August, with investors focusing on the potential for lower oil prices to increase the size of the inflation undershoot expected over the next year. These moves came despite comments by Governing General Council members Nagel, Wunsch and Dolenc playing down the inflation undershoot, while Rehn noted “two sided” risks to the inflation outlook. Meanwhile in the UK, gilts outperformed, with the 10yr yield down -4.2bps after underwhelming August GDP data. While the UK economy grew +0.1% m/m as expected, July was revised down from 0.0% to -0.1% m/m and services activity was flat for a second month running in August (vs +0.1% expected).

Turning to the limited US data amid the shutdown, investors got a surprise when the Philadelphia Fed factory index for October came in much weaker (-12.8 vs +10.0 expected). However, the details of the survey were not quite as weak as the headline and the move ought to be judged together with Wednesday’s Fed Empire reading, which saw a near mirror opposite upside surprise.

Finally on geopolitics, Trump and Russia’s President Putin held a two-hour phone call yesterday. The main outcome was an agreement for the two to meet in Budapest, which Trump suggested could take place “within two weeks or so”, after US and Russia first hold high-level staff talks next week. The US President expressed optimism that the meeting could lead to a breakthrough towards peace in Ukraine, progress on which has stalled since the last Trump-Putin summit in Alaska in August. The Trump-Putin call came just ahead of Ukraine President Zelenskiy visiting Trump in Washington today. Prospects of a new Trump-Putin summit helped ease market fears of new restrictions against Russian oil, with Brent crude falling -1.37% to $61.06/bbl, its lowest since May.

Asian equity markets this morning are mostly following the losses on Wall Street. Across the region, Chinese equities are leading the decline, most of all the Hang Seng (-1.57%), followed by the CSI (-1.27%) and the Shanghai Composite (-1.00%). US-China trade tensions are negatively impacting sentiment with China’s Ministry of Commerce yesterday accusing the US of inciting “panic” over its rare earth controls, saying “the US interpretation seriously distorts and exaggerates China’s measures”. Elsewhere, the Nikkei (-0.98%) is also lower, with financial stocks underperforming after the sharp declines in US regional banks, after having seen substantial gains in the previous two sessions.

Conversely, the KOSPI (+0.23%) is defying the region's negative trend, though it’s given up most of its initial gains of up to +1.23% driven by battery and chemicals shares amid optimism for a potential trade agreement with the US.

In central bank news, BoJ Governor Ueda has indicated that the central bank will persist with tightening measures if confidence in achieving its economic outlook improves, thereby leaving the possibility open for a near-term interest rate hike. Ueda's remarks were the first since Sanae Takaichi's election as the leader of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) earlier this month. Still, 10yr JGB yields are -4.5bps lower this morning, following the move in US Treasuries.

To the day ahead now, and we’ll get central bank speakers including Fed’s Musalem speaks, ECB’s Nagel and Rehn speak, BoE’s Pill, Greene and Breeden speak. Notable earnings include American Express and Volvo. 

Tyler Durden Fri, 10/17/2025 - 09:15

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