Individual Economists

Summer Reading List

The Big Picture -

 

 

I have been busy on a few projects, most of which are wrapping up. Blogging has been light, but I have some fun things teed up in the near future.

I wanted to come out of hiding to share a few recent media mentions of “How Not to Invest,” along with a broader list of summer reading.

The 7 Best Investing Psychology Books from Next Book included HNTI, plus the latest work from my colleagues Ben Carlson (Risk & Reward) and Nick Magiulli (Just Keep Buying).  Along with those three, the top 7 list also includes Nudge by Nobel laureate Richard Thaler; Thinking in Bets by Annie Duke, Fooled by Randomness by Nassim Taleb and Trading in the Zone by Mark Douglas.

The other mention was from Jason Zweig of the WSJ. His Summer Reading List has a dozen books worth your time this summer.

In addition to “How Not to Invest,” it includes Robin Wigglesworth, A Fabulous Debt: The Epic Story of How Bonds Built the Modern World; Joseph Moore, How to Get Rich in American History; Morgan Housel,The Art of Spending Money and Alex Edmans, The Madness of Markets: Why Smart Investors Make Crazy Decisions and How to Exploit Them. 

A lot of good choices!  I have the Wigglesworth and Moore books on my desk, queued up for my hammock reading…

 

 

Sources:
Best Investing Psychology Books: 7 for Managing Your Own Behavior
NextBookList, July 19, 2026

A Summer Reading List
by Jason Zweig
Wall Street Journal, July 14, 2026

 

The post Summer Reading List appeared first on The Big Picture.

Senate Unanimously Votes That Sam Bankman-Fried Should Never Get A Pardon

Zero Hedge -

Senate Unanimously Votes That Sam Bankman-Fried Should Never Get A Pardon

Authored by Micah Zimmerman via BitcoinMagazine.com,

The Senate passed a resolution on Wednesday stating that Sam Bankman-Fried should “under no circumstances” receive executive clemency, a rebuke of the FTX founder’s request that President Donald Trump commute or pardon his sentence.

The measure, S. Res. 772, cleared by unanimous consent, a procedure that adopts a resolution when no senator objects. It expresses the sense of the Senate that Bankman-Fried should receive neither a pardon nor a commutation, and it affirms the chamber’s commitment to “the rule of law and integrity of the United States financial system.” 

The resolution is nonbinding and does not limit the president’s constitutional power to grant clemency.

Senators Cynthia Lummis, a Wyoming Republican, and Ruben Gallego, an Arizona Democrat, sponsored the measure. The two serve as the top Republican and top Democrat on the Senate Banking Committee’s digital assets subcommittee. They introduced the resolution on June 17, days after Bankman-Fried filed a formal pardon application with the Justice Department.

Lummis is the crypto industry’s most committed advocate in Congress and has spent years drafting the legislation the industry seeks. On this measure she has led the push to keep one of the industry’s most infamous figures in prison. “He had his day in court,” Lummis said when she and Gallego introduced the resolution. Gallego’s statement closed with four words: “Keep him locked up.”

The text of the resolution states that Bankman-Fried’s 25-year sentence “reflects the extraordinary scale and deliberateness of his crimes, his lack of remorse, and the catastrophic harm inflicted upon millions of victims.”

Bankman-Frieds’ attempts to get out of jail

Bankman-Fried, 34, filed his petition on June 8. His application seeks a “pardon after completion of sentence,” a form of clemency that would not erase his conviction but would restore civil rights such as voting and jury service and lift barriers to licensing, employment, and housing after he leaves prison. 

He is not eligible for release until around 2044.

Trump said in a January interview that he had no intention of pardoning Bankman-Fried. During his second term the president has granted clemency to other figures tied to crypto and to online markets, including Binance founder Changpeng Zhao and Silk Road creator Ross Ulbricht, along with other white-collar offenders.

A jury convicted Bankman-Fried in November 2023 on seven counts tied to the collapse of FTX, a case prosecutors described as one of the largest financial frauds in U.S. history. American customers lost more than $8 billion. A judge sentenced him to 25 years in prison in 2024.

Bankman-Fried ran two companies at the same time. FTX was a crypto exchange, which holds customer money the way a broker does and is not supposed to spend it. Alameda Research was a trading firm he owned. 

He moved billions of dollars in FTX customer deposits to Alameda, which used the money for trades, venture investments, political donations, and Bahamian real estate. FTX’s software exempted Alameda from the rules that would have forced it to cover its losses like any other trader.

The arrangement came apart once Alameda’s balance sheet was found and reported that much of what the firm counted as assets was FTT, a token FTX had created and could issue at will. The collateral behind Alameda was, in effect, an asset its sister company had invented. The exchange Binance said within days that it would sell its FTT holdings, and the price of the token dropped.

Customers moved to withdraw their deposits, and FTX could not return the money because it was no longer there. The exchange filed for bankruptcy on Nov. 11, 2022.

CoinDesk was the first to report on FTX’s dubious balance sheets.

Tyler Durden Thu, 07/16/2026 - 11:05

1 In 30 Koreans Margin-Called As Kospi Crashes, Regulator Suspends New Levered ETFs, Hikes Margins

Zero Hedge -

1 In 30 Koreans Margin-Called As Kospi Crashes, Regulator Suspends New Levered ETFs, Hikes Margins

For the first time in over three years, South Korea’s central bank raised its policy interest rate by 0.25% points to 2.75%, inline with expectations, and kicking off a monetary tightening cycle aimed at containing inflationary pressures spurred by the AI-driven semiconductor boom. It also helped spark a fresh rout in Korean stocks whose daily volatility has become borderline farcical with daily 5% swings having become the norm. 

The move on Thursday was the Bank of Korea’s first rate increase in more than three years as well as its first under Shin Hyun-song, a renowned international economist who took over leadership of the central bank in April.  Before Thursday’s move, the BoK had held rates at 2.5% since May 2025 at the conclusion of an easing cycle.

As the FT notes, Shin has stressed the need for tighter monetary policy in recent weeks, pointing to robust economic growth driven by a surge in demand for memory chips on the one hand and persistent weakness in the won, elevated inflation and growing financial imbalances on the other (these, are of course, connected, as the collapsing currency helps cheap chip exports, which raises core inflation for consumer electronics both domestically and globally).

“Korea is expected to see the effects of the semiconductor boom spill over into domestic demand. Therefore, underlying inflationary pressures are likely to be stronger and persist for longer than previously anticipated,” he told a press conference on Thursday. “We will respond until we are convinced that inflation stabilizes at our target level.”

Shin has said that the semiconductor export boom was feeding through to stronger household spending, wage growth and investment, increasing the risk that inflation would remain elevated for a considerable period. 

Indeed, as shown in the chart above, Korean consumer inflation is running well above the bank’s 2% rate, rising 3.2% in June from a year earlier, its fastest rate since December 2023. The country’s reliance on imported energy has also raised concerns as the conflict in the Middle East has roiled global energy markets.

The central bank also highlighted sizeable bonus payments at leading chipmakers Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, which it said could contribute to broader wage gains and stronger consumer demand.

One reason for the hike was the relentless plunge in the won: despite South Korea’s record current account surplus, the won has remained under pressure, weakening 5% against the dollar year to date to its lowest level since the 2008 global financial crisis and ranking among Asia’s worst-performing currencies.

Analysts blame the currency’s weakness on exporters retaining overseas earnings for reinvestment and overseas equity purchases by Korean institutional and retail investors. The weaker won has pushed up import costs, including for energy. Surging housing prices in Seoul and surrounding areas, coupled with high household debt, are also a concern for Korean authorities.

The crashing won has benefited the country's exporters: the central bank said that the economy is continuing to benefit from the AI boom. Exports surged 70.9% in June from a year earlier, the fastest growth rate in nearly half a century. The near record exports helped boost the country's economy: Korea posted its strongest growth last quarter in nearly six years, and the government this week upgraded its economic growth forecast for 2026 to 3% from 2%, exceeding the IMF’s 2.6% projection.

Of course, the tighter financial conditions did not help the stock market which slumped 6.4% and reversed all of Wednesday's gains.

However, the bigger catalyst behind the latest Korean rout which sent the Kospi back into bear-market territory after falling about 27% from its June peak, and to the lowest level since April, triggering another set of KOSPI/KOSDAQ sell sidecars in the early-morning... 

... was an emergency market monitoring meeting for the Korea's financial regulator, which unveiled measures to curb risks from single-stock leveraged exchange-traded funds, seeking to stabilize a local stock market that has seen wild swings, as individual investors use record amounts of debt to chase profits amid artificial-intelligence-related jitters.

The Financial Services Commission said Thursday that it would suspend new listings of single-stock leveraged ETFs, ban securities firms and asset managers from advertising or marketing such products, and triple the minimum cash deposit for new investments to 30 million won, equivalent to around $20,000.

The measures, which are long overdue and should have been implemented while millions of retail investors were piling into the bubble earlier this year, are aimed at curbing speculative trading and reducing risks tied to highly leveraged investment products following recent bouts of market volatility. 

Most of these ETFs, launched in South Korea in May to track surging and often volatile memory-chip stocks, have been blamed for recent stock-market volatility. They are largely tied to Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, which together account for about half of the benchmark Kospi’s market capitalization. 

At the center of the volatility are Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, whose shares fell 8.8% and 12%, respectively, on Thursday. Even so, Samsung shares have more than doubled and SK Hynix shares have nearly tripled this year. Such leveraged ETFs are designed to amplify daily moves in the underlying stocks by two times, and according to most traders they exacerbate volatility through the daily rebalancing needed to maintain their investment objective.

Yes, they help accelerate gains on the way up, but once momentum turns, what ensues is a historic destruction of wealth. Nowhere is this more obvious than in the 3x levered Kospi ETF, KORU, which is down 70% from its all time high hit on June 1, and is back to where it was at the end of January.

Herald van der Linde, HSBC’s head of equity strategy for Asia Pacific, said in a note Thursday that risks include intensifying retail participation, much of it through newly issued leveraged single-stock ETFs and margin lending, estimated at $23 billion, in South Korea. Foreign investors’ exposure to South Korean memory-chip stocks is rising, likely keeping market volatility elevated and reinforcing the case for diversification, he said.

Foreigners, however, were not hanging around for today's rout: they, together with local institutions, jointly turned back as net sellers in KOSPI, with selling focused on Tech (-$1.0bn/-$1.6bn), while retail investors were net buyers (+$2.6bn in Tech). Local instos were the main net sellers today (selling -$1.6bn in KOSPI), while their ETF net-selling (-$738mn) amounted to c.46% of the total net-selling.

At the forefront of today's rout were the usual suspects: SK Hynix plunged -11.5% and Samsung Electronics tumbled -8.8%, giving back all of yesterday's gains to retrace towards the 100DMAs as they tracked US overnight weakness in the SOX/SKHY.

Unfortunately, the "emergency measures" are too little too late. as we said earlier this week, the party for Retail Kospi investors - who have bought everything foreign investors had to sell - is ending: retail Margin Calls are soaring, hit 5% last Friday and on Monday will be far higher.  Finally, retail brokerage deposits plunge by 30trn won to lowest level since feb 20

What's worst of all is that as Ioannis Blekos on Goldman's trading desk noted, as of July 13, "a total of over 1.2 million leveraged retail accounts across the Korean market triggered margin calls. Approximately 320,000–360,000 accounts were fully liquidated by brokers. South Korea has an adult population (aged 15–64) of 35.7 million people… i.e. 1 in 30 (3.4%) adults got margin called."

And so, once again regulators are "boldly" stepping in only after the market tumbles, and millions of local investors are left with nothing. If only they had been more proactive, and popped the Korean stock bubble before it reached record proportions and assured huge losses... 

So what happens next, now that the Korean bubble has burst: look for all that capital to shift to China. 

“Now that selling momentum builds in the Korean semis, investors are returning to China where valuations are depressed,” Vey-Sern Ling, managing director at Union Bancaire Privee, said, adding China’s tech performance has been inversely correlated with high-flying Korean memory names recently.

With leading Korean chip names down, investors are rotating out of the country, said Yi Ping Liao, portfolio manager at Franklin Templeton. “But interestingly it doesn’t look like a broad based rotation out of tech as Taiwan tech and China tech remain well supported.”

Conveniently for those wondering where to go, one week ago Goldman gave the answer in "As Korea Tumbles, Goldman Tells Clients To Rotate To "China AI Value Chain"."

Tyler Durden Thu, 07/16/2026 - 10:45

US Slaps Brazil With 25% Tariffs After Rubio Says Socialist Leader "Failed To Negotiate In Good Faith"

Zero Hedge -

US Slaps Brazil With 25% Tariffs After Rubio Says Socialist Leader "Failed To Negotiate In Good Faith"

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio revealed on X late Wednesday night that the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR) is set to impose a 25% tariff on "most Brazilian imports."

"Let there be no confusion about why: President Lula and his government have not negotiated with the US in good faith," Rubio said.

He added, "His economic policies are bad for Americans and bad for Brazilians. For the past year, Lula has put his own ego ahead of making a deal for the welfare of the Brazilian people, and these tariffs are the price for that."

USTR released a statement saying the 25% tariffs on certain Brazilian goods come after a yearlong Section 301 investigation that found trade and regulatory practices in the South American country unfairly restricted US commerce.

"Safeguarding American economic interests against unfair trade practices is the bedrock of President Trump's America First policies," Trade Representative Jamieson Greer wrote in a statement.

Greer commented on Bloomberg TV: 

Bloomberg cited a senior administration official who said imports of coffee, beef and certain ethanol products would be exempt from the new duties.

Honing in on Rubio's X post, which said Lula's “economic policies are bad for Americans and bad for Brazilians," the bigger issue here is that Lula is an unhinged socialist.

The Trump team, along with folks adjacent to the administration, has been working to reshape Latin America's political landscape by shifting the region away from socialist governments sympathetic to China and toward right-wing, capitalist governments more aligned with the US. The effort is part of a broader Western Hemisphere defense strategy.

Americas Political Map: Presidential Shift From Left To Right

Country-by-country presidential shift tracker

Following the stunning Colombian presidential race, in which Trump-backed Abelardo de la Espriella won the election, the next major race to watch will be Brazil's. Lula is expected to face right-wing Senator Flávio Bolsonaro in the run-up to October's presidential election.

Tyler Durden Thu, 07/16/2026 - 10:25

Das: Déjà Vu All Over Again! Are Stock Markets Repeating Dot.Com Mistakes?

Zero Hedge -

Das: Déjà Vu All Over Again! Are Stock Markets Repeating Dot.Com Mistakes?

Authored by Satyajit Das via NewIndiaExpress.com,

The sky-high valuations of space and AI firms today are similar to that of internet ventures before 2000. Herd instinct is leading promoters and investors, not financial and technological reality

Burning cash rapidly, with large unfunded commitments, space and AI businesses are all dependent on uncertain funding access (Express illustrations | Mandar Pardikar)

The listing of SpaceX and forthcoming artificial intelligence floats bear similarities to the lead-up to the 2000 dot-com crash, which resulted in losses of over $5 trillion.

Even survivors like Amazon, Microsoft, Cisco, Dell and eBay, which had sufficient cash to ride out the turmoil, suffered massive falls in share price that took years to recover.

Today, familiar mistakes around technology, investment approach, business models, valuation and oversight are being repeated. Like the actress Tallulah Bankhead, investors believe that if they have to live life again, they want to make the same mistakes—only sooner.

The dot-com boom was built around the internet, its enabling infrastructure and retail commercialisation as applications developed. Investors with little technical knowledge piled in, hoping for huge returns. Today’s focus is space and AI. 

Take SpaceX, an unwieldy conglomeration of Starlink satellite operations, a space launch business, a controversial social media service, a struggling AI venture as well as plans for orbital data centres, a moon base and an inter-planetary colonisation programme. The satellite broadband and X platforms use established technologies, but the launch business’s cost advantage relies on reusable rockets that remain a work in progress. Orbiting data centres and interplanetary colonies are technically unproven. The SpaceX prospectus provided unhelpful techno-babble—extending “the light of consciousness to the stars” and harnessing the sun “to power a truth-seeking AI”.

During booms, investors aggressively finance prospects with limited understanding and less due diligence, feeding herd-like tactics and poor business models that amplify risks and speculative excess. While some lessons have been learnt, others are recurring. SpaceX’s launch revenues are underwritten by the US government. That business and Starlink will face significant challenges from nationally sponsored and subsidised competitors, especially in Europe and Asia, because of increasing reluctance to outsource critical national infrastructure to US interests. 

Then there are other AI businesses hitting the stock market in the months ahead. One reason OpenAI pivoted away from a retail to an enterprise focus, replicating Anthropic’s strategy, was lacklustre conversion of free users to subscriptions. But companies have balked at the cost as suppliers switch from subscription models to payment for tokens, with many users now placing caps on usage.

OpenAI and Anthropic’s income and growth are also affected by increasing competition from cheaper, open-sourced—primarily Chinese—models, the threat of regulation and export bans because of potential AI security applications. The cost of the models themselves is growing because of scarcity of skills alongside shortages of processors, electricity and water for cooling.

These businesses all have uncertain paths to profitability, with SpaceX, whose primary profitable business currently is Starlink, warning in its prospectus: “We have a history of net losses and may not achieve profitability in the future.” Burning cash rapidly, with large unfunded commitments, these businesses are all dependent on uncertain funding access.

Yet, valuations have again decoupled from reality. In October 1999, shortly before the dot-com crash, the market cap of 199 internet stocks tracked by Morgan Stanley was $450 billion, against annual sales of about $21 billion and collective losses of $6.2 billion. Now consider that SpaceX raised around $75 billion in June, based on a market valuation of almost $1.8 trillion, or over 90 times of current revenue and 220 times earnings. Analysis by Morningstar argued that even using generous assumptions SpaceX was worth less than half that amount. OpenAI and Anthropic are expected to be valued in excess of $1 trillion. These values would be higher than those implied by their latest funding rounds. 

Current prices are not shaped by future free cash flows, but expressions of tribal affiliation and identity alongside deep faith in a technology. On the day that SpaceX listed, an equity trader gave a speech on the firm’s trading floor: “In 1969 we put a man on the moon… Now let’s go to Mars!” For many, SpaceX shares were cheap on a new extra-terrestrial measure: a price-to-universe ratio!

With negative earnings and cash flow, in a reprise of 2000, values are based on unreliable indicators like ‘eyeballs’ (unique website visitors or page views). With loss-making companies currently trading at a premium to money-making firms, as in the late 1990s, promoters do not want to be profitable as it would mean a lower valuation.

As in 2000, there is an absence of corporate governance. The imperious Elon Musk, the world’s first paper trillionaire, will control the world’s first ‘orbital infrastructure conglomerate’ using a dual-class share structure that reduces shareholder oversight and ensures that he cannot be removed. Musk’s known disregard for governance and self-dealing strategy shifts were dismissed. 

As in the dot-com bubble, banks, analysts and media, despite obvious conflicts of interest, play a pivotal role amplifying the ‘new economy’ narrative. Goldman Sachs, one of the underwriters, expects SpaceX’s AI revenue to increase 100-fold by 2030. Banks involved in the SpaceX offering received fees totalling more than $500 million. Exchanges desperate to boost the number of tech stocks listed agreed to include SpaceX in indices under expedited entry rules, meaning investors—especially passive investors—would have to sell existing holdings to make way for SpaceX, Anthropic and OpenAI shares. Intermediaries will benefit from large trading volumes. 

The real purpose of the current round of IPOs is to allow insiders to cash out, transferring risk to over-enthusiastic and unsuspecting investors. In 2000, once the 180-day lock-up period expired, allowing original funders and employees to sell restricted shares, there were widespread sell-offs as supply flooded the market. Listing overvalued stock also provides founders with currency for acquisitions. Musk may merge SpaceX with Tesla, consistent with his previous transactions involving Solar City, Twitter, and xAI. Given his unfettered control of SpaceX, it would obviate the need for an expensive and heavily-leveraged transaction to take Tesla private.

Like the dot-com episode, this too is likely to end badly. To paraphrase historian Christian Wolmar writing about British railways, booms cannot be sustained on “little more than optimism feeding on itself”.

Tyler Durden Thu, 07/16/2026 - 10:05

Vance Slams Israeli PR Campaign To Keep War Going 'Indefinitely', & Undermine Him

Zero Hedge -

Vance Slams Israeli PR Campaign To Keep War Going 'Indefinitely', & Undermine Him

In a new interview on the world's largest podcast, Vice President JD Vance warned that "elements" of the Israeli government want to keep the Iran war going "indefinitely," and were pursuing an aggressive campaign to manipulate US public opinion -- going so far as to vilify Vance for his role in pursuing a diplomatic solution. In his nearly three-hour interview on the Joe Rogan Experience, Vance also tried to gently distance himself from Trump's decision to join Israel in launching a war on Iran and said the White House had botched its communications regarding the Epstein files. 

"There are some people within [Israel's] system, we know beyond a shadow of a doubt, who are manipulating and trying to change American public opinion to keep the war going on indefinitely. Again, not towards any objective, but just indefinitely," Vance said, noting that the attacks have not only been directed against US policy, but against him personally. He directed Rogan and his audience to read a recent Time article describing the big-budget mechanism Israel has sponsored to try to shore up Republican support for the war and for Israel. 

"It’s like worth reading because it lists a bunch of people who have quite literally been paid by a former Trump campaign person who was himself paid by certain elements within the Israeli government. And those people are attacking me viciously for quite literally trying to accomplish the negotiation objective that the president set for the country."

Vance was referring to former Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale, who now runs a communications firm called Clock Tower X. He is also Chief Strategy Officer of Salem Media Group, a conservative multimedia conglomerate. Last summer, Israel started paying Parscale's firm $1.5 million a month to create 100 pieces of digital content every month to be shared across multiple social media platforms. Controversially, Parscale also promised the “integration of narrative messaging into Salem Media Network properties and aligned distribution channels.”

As for how to end a war that's even less popular than the Vietnam War at its worst polling, Vance defended diplomacy and ridiculed hawkish critics whose grand plan is to only to "bomb them to oblivion." While Trump has been threatening to go on a rampage against Iran's bridges and energy infrastructure if the country doesn't bend to his wishes, Vance echoed the wisdom of many military and geopolitical observers who lampoon the idea that the US military can conquer any country -- much less one that's as large as Western Europe -- using only air power: 

“You can bomb them. You can take away their radar. You can take away some of their drones and some of their missiles, but it’s just too easy to fire at ships in the straits. So, you’ve got to actually be willing to talk and to try to figure out the problem.”

With each passing week and month, the unpopularity of the war on Iran looms larger and larger where Vance's 2028 presidential ambitions are concerned. Vance has been using interviews to delicately distance himself from the decision to attack, and he did so again with Rogan. When the podcaster asked Vance about the extent to which he agreed with Trump's decision to launch a war on Iran, Vance deftly used Trump's own characterizations to distance himself from the decision:

"Well, the president said publicly that 'JD was less enthusiastic about it.' I think that was the exact phrase that he used. I mean my attitude towards this, man, as you know, is the vice president— I’m not a public commentator. My job is to give the best advice I can to the president of the United States. I think he’s said a little bit about what that advice was. 

In April, a lengthy New York Times report on the decision to start the war portrayed Vance as a skeptic who warned that a war could unleash regional chaos and involve a high number of casualties -- including damage to Trump's coalition, a large segment of which was attracted by Trump's repeated promises not to start new wars. Describing the fateful meeting on Feb 26 that preceded the war's launch two days later, the Times paraphrased Vance as saying, "You know I think this is a bad idea, but if you want to do it, I’ll support you."

Now, nearly five months later, 14 American service members are dead, more than 400 wounded, more than $100 billion has been squandered, the US arsenal significantly depleted, the Strait of Hormuz is largely closed, fuel prices have soared, a global economic catastrophe lurks, and the Iranian people have rallied around their government. Given the war has turned into such a fiasco, it's not clear how much credit Vance will get for having been anything less than a zealous opponent willing to publicly challenge the war from the start.  

Regarding the Epstein files, Vance disputed the notion that the Trump administration sought to hide anything from the American people, instead attributing the controversy to poor public communications about the files. “We absolutely screwed up the comms of the Epstein files,” Vance said. “We just did. But do I think the reason we screwed up the comms is because we were trying to hide something? No.” He faulted then-US Attorney General Pam Bondi for having "overstated what we had and what we didn’t have,” as she was caught up in "the political moment." 

Though he stopped short of saying Epstein was working for Israel, Vance emphasized Epstein's links to both US and Israeli intelligence agencies. "He clearly had connections to the upper— the highest levels of American intelligence. He clearly had connections to the highest levels of Israeli intelligence," Vance said, later adding, "I’ve asked whether there were documents connecting Jeffrey Epstein directly to our intelligence agencies or anybody else’s, and the answer is no. But if that stuff existed, it wouldn’t exist in 2026." 

Here's the full interview: 

Tyler Durden Thu, 07/16/2026 - 09:45

Cracking Up And Joining Up

Zero Hedge -

Cracking Up And Joining Up

By Michael Every of Rabobank

Geopolitics is front and center, even in Argentina–England at the World Cup, where the contested Falklands/Malvinas, which could have oil reserves, saw jingoist 1980’s language. Yet it’s Hormuz, where 1980’s-style tanker wars are underway, that’s the penalty spot.

The US is striking Iran again night and day, as Tehran warns of an “existential war”. Reports have Trump leaning towards expanding US military operations; others say what he’s been hitting widen his options for escalation; and Trump has stated Iran “will be defeated soon.” However, the Financial Times today leads with Trump’s ex-defence chief saying the US will not win the war from the air, a sentiment echoed in the Wall Street Journal – and boots on the ground are highly unlikely.

Iran is attacking the Hormuz oil lifeline of ship-to-ship shuttle runs, with some vessels now reportedly refusing US-military guided transits. The US just hit a tanker heading for Kharg Island under the renewed Iran blockade, as some wonder again if the US could try to take control of Iran’s southern islands – which would certainly take boots on the ground.

The IRGC has threatened all global energy workarounds to Hormuz: that includes the Red Sea, where the Houthis may be preparing to attack; it might also involve Azerbaijan’s oil trade with Israel, meaning either striking Iran’s well-armed northern neighbour or the Eastern Mediterranean route its oil arrives via. Markets would move markedly if these developments were to occur.

Israel-Lebanon talks are getting some results, with agreement for Israel to pull back from two pilot zones to allow the Lebanese army to prove it can keep the territory free from Hezbollah – the IDF notably just killed three of the latter, and Trump is still talking about Syria fighting Hezbollah instead. PM Netanyahu will meet Trump in the US on Monday, as many fault lines are seen between the two. However, the flurry of radical domestic legislation the Israeli government just launched ahead of an October 27 election Knesset dissolution may suggest the foreign policy arena is not where they will look to flex for would-be voters.

Elsewhere, US General Caine is pleading with defense contractors to build weapons faster, as munitions constraints linger: the US Air Force plans to buy 28,000 low-cost cruise missiles ahead, showing procurement pivots are happening. The Secretary of War is also going to give US troops testosterone shots to make them stronger, as many NATO allies struggle to recruit the soldiers, sailors, and pilots that a military build-up will require; and senior defense officials are pushing for more censorship and are said to be looking at Cuba military options.

The EU again failed to strike a new Russia sanctions deal after three days of talks, with Athens reportedly opposing them to shield a Greek shipping company. On the other hand, the EU and Ukraine struck a deal to tap into €10bn of unspent SAFE funds to build drones in Ukraine – with a carve-out to buy some components from China. Ominously, Lithuanian and Latvian leaders also warned that Russia is planning infrastructure attacks on the Baltics or Poland, with other suggestions of potential false flag operations as the trigger for such.

Against that backdrop, and what Ukraine is doing to Russian refineries, a benchmark Bloomberg measure of crack spreads now stands above the panic peak of 2022, so while Brent oil is $85 --bang in line with where Joe DeLaura expected it to hover at while ‘Comfortably Bomb’ plays out-- the price of a barrel of diesel is around $147.  

The EU also just published a report calling China a “key enabler” and a “crucial enabler” of Russia’s war on Ukraine, further noting that: “At the centre of this transformation lies the determination of some powers, Russia and China foremost among them, to establish regional dominance and reshape the global order in line with their interests, fostering a return to a sphere-of-influence logic.”

That language echoes European complaints already made about the US, as a Pew survey shows that Xi now beats Trump in terms of popularity. But given nobody gets to vote on that, how much does such soft power matter? In that regard, the X thread from the US Under Secretary of War poopooing the idea of Middle Powers having options other than siding with the US (or China), which we noted yesterday, drew polarised reactions.

Those who pushed back strongest came from politics or economics, with a few from the military; by contrast, those who said the blunt (so unhelpful) US argument was true think across those disciplines. As a good example, Velina Tchakarova’s ‘The Middle Power Mirage: Colby, the Sceptics, and the Verdict Nobody Wants’ states: “Here is the strategic reality the convening class prefers to avoid. We are in a new Cold War between two systems, Pax Americana 2.0 and the DragonBear, the structural alignment of Chinese and Russian power across every systemically relevant domain. In that contest, middle powers without sufficient strategic leverage or autonomy will not be neutral conveners. They will be the first victims, hollowed out or cannibalized for the sake of global supremacy, or they will become the battlefield itself. There is no comfortable third space for the underprepared.” She also underlines that preparations can be made for that kind of third space, but they are fiscally, political-economically, and even ‘civilisationally’ uncomfortable.

That’s as EU-China trade data this week saw Brussels state that safeguard measures permitting tariffs and quotas against import surges may “become legitimate on a case-by-case basis.”; the UK Treasury suggest alignment of its financial system with the US, not the EU, and a stablecoins framework that opens the door for the USD variant to be used; Bloomberg says ‘Trump's Aides See China Cheating on Trade, But Shun Retaliation’ - there are too many fish to fry in Hormuz, it seems; and India’s PM Modi is pushing to cut import reliance to shield the economy from shocks.

Against this backdrop, national elections are now more existential than during the 2000’s policy consensus for ever more globalisation. Today, each vote can push or pull economies towards one of the two global poles of power, tipping the balance between them and/or legacy vs emerging stakeholders within them.

In that light, Trump is to give an address today focused on “free and fair elections” rumored to be politically explosive, as Democratic Party Senator Fetterman warns he’ll leave the party if it turns its back on Israel, and Supreme Court justices worried about their safety were told by Congress, “There’s not a money fairy up here.” In the UK, the terror inquiry into the murder of former MP Ann Widdecombe continues, as a man was arrested for threatening to shoot Reform UK leader Nigel Farage, who is involved in a scandal over a cash gift ‘for his security’. The Times of Israel opines that ‘Netanyahu hits new lows in his battle for survival; there will be a great deal of damage for better leaders to undo’; and Ukraine’s President Zelenskyy just ousted his reformist defence minister amid a government reshuffle, which critics have called a serious strategic error.

In short, norms are cracking up around us, not just in refined products, but in less ‘refined’ economics and politics.

To predict how this plays out one needs to join things up; and that involves looking at who is willing to join up, and where.

Tyler Durden Thu, 07/16/2026 - 09:30

UBS: TSMC's 'Surprise CapEx Hike' Reinforces Confidence In AI Supply Chain

Zero Hedge -

UBS: TSMC's 'Surprise CapEx Hike' Reinforces Confidence In AI Supply Chain

TSMC, or Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., the world's largest contract chipmaker, raised its 2026 spending and revenue outlook on Thursday morning, a move UBS analysts said "boosts confidence in the AI supply chain."

TSMC manufactures chips designed by companies such as Nvidia, Apple, AMD, Qualcomm and Broadcom. It is a major supplier of Nvidia chips used in AI data centers. The company now expects 2026 capital expenditures of $60 billion to $64 billion, up from its previous forecast of $52 billion to $56 billion, while projecting dollar-denominated revenue growth of slightly more than 40%.

Here are second quarter results (courtesy of Bloomberg):

  • Net income NT$706.6 billion, estimate NT$623.73 billion
  • Gross margin 67.7%, estimate 67.1%
  • Operating profit NT$766.6 billion, estimate NT$742.75 billion
  • Operating margin 60.3%, estimate 58.6%
  • Sales NT$1.27 trillion, estimate NT$1.27 trillion

Third quarter forecast:

  • Sees sales $44.6 billion to $45.8 billion, estimate $43.11 billion (Bloomberg Consensus)
  • Sees gross margin 65% to 67%, estimate 65.9%
  • Sees operating margin 56% to 58%, estimate 57.7%

"AI-related demand continues to be extremely robust," TSMC Chairman C.C. Wei told analysts on a post-earnings call. 

TSMC also plans to invest another $100 billion in Arizona, lifting that total commitment to $265 billion. The expansion will include additional 2-nanometer chip plants and advanced packaging facilities to meet multi-year demand across the Americas. 

Wei added, "This is to build several or more semiconductor logical wafer fab for two nanometer MP [mass production] technologies, as well as advanced packaging fabs to support the strong multi-year demand from our leading U.S. customers."

CFO Wendell Huang said, "Our conviction in the AI megatrend is very strong.The capex in the next three years will be even more, significantly higher than in the past three years."

UBS analyst Crystal Hsu told clients earlier that "TSMC's Surprise Capex Hike Boosts Confidence In AI Supply Chain."

Hsu continued:

Despite TSMC's relatively conservative gross margin outlook for Q2 and Q3, investors generally believe the company prioritizes customer relationships and may smooth margin trends through the second half of the year.

The increase in capex guidance to USD 60–64 bn came as a positive surprise, as TSMC rarely raises capex guidance in Q2 and the magnitude of the revision exceeded 10%. Investors expect a positive read-through for the semiconductor production equipment (SPE) space.

More importantly, TSMC's constructive commentary could help restore market confidence, as many investors see little change in the underlying fundamentals despite the market pullback over the past month, which appears to have been driven largely by positioning and sentiment rather than by a deterioration in fundamentals.

Shares of TSMC were marginally higher in Asia, closing up a little more than 1%. The stock has gained 59% this year as the AI boom propels chipmakers to new highs. But in recent weeks, the AI trade has hit a brick wall as Goldman warns of rising hyperscaler bond issuance and mounting stress in credit markets.

TSMC's accelerating expansion comes a day after ASML Holding delivered strong earnings and raised its full-year guidance. ASML produces lithography machines, the equipment that chipmakers such as TSMC use to manufacture advanced semiconductors.

Tyler Durden Thu, 07/16/2026 - 06:55

10 Thursday AM Reads

The Big Picture -

My morning train WFH reads:

• What Americans Need to Understand About China: Ezra Klein interviews former Australian PM Kevin Rudd — one of the West’s most fluent China hands — on the gaps in American understanding that keep producing bad policy. (New York Times)

Jony Ive is cooking in the OpenAI kitchen. “Perhaps a computer that makes you feel that you want to hug it is in order?” The former Apple design chief is now deeply embedded in OpenAI’s hardware ambitions. What happens when the man who designed the iPhone tries to design the AI device that replaces it? (Feed Me) but see Generative AI Is an Engineering Disaster: A shockingly inefficient trillion-dollar project. The Atlantic’s cover piece argues that generative AI isn’t just overhyped — it’s fundamentally unreliable as engineering, and the industry is in denial about it. The systems don’t work the way their makers claim they do. (The Atlantic)

Two Million Workers Are Locked Out of an Improving Job Market: The share of job seekers out of work for six months or longer is hovering near highest level in five years. Share of job seekers out of work for six months or longer hovering near highest level in five years The headline numbers look better. But two million people — disproportionately older, less educated, or formerly incarcerated — aren’t benefiting from the recovery at all. (Wall Street Journal)

Mapping the World’s Prices 2026: Which are the world’s cheapest and most expensive cities? Mapping the World’s Prices, now in its tenth edition, is the definitive guide to quality of life, rental costs and prices for phones, coffee, taxis and more in 69 cities from Abu Dhabi to Zurich. (Deutsche Bank Research Institute)

JPMorgan is closing in on a $1 trillion market cap after posting record profits: The Wall Street giant’s market cap stood at about $935 billion. It would be the first bank to ever join the $1 trillion market cap club. Jamie Dimon’s bank is approaching a market cap that would have been unthinkable a decade ago. Record profits, dominant market position, and a stock price that reflects both. (Quartz)

Failing is Common, Trying is Rare: Putting in a mediocre effort at a given task is deeply irrational if our goal is success at that task. But often, when we put in a mediocre effort, it’s because we have other covert goals we’re not really acknowledging. The real bottleneck isn’t failure — it’s the unwillingness to attempt anything in the first place. Most people don’t fail; they never start. (Raptitude)

What Would Jesus Design? A growing number of faith-forward interior designers are decorating homes Christ-first. Turns out it’s as good for business as it is for their souls. Architectural Digest visits the Christian interior-design movement. What would Jesus design? Apparently: lots of neutrals. (Architectural Digest)

How Ukraine Brought the War to Russia: Long-range drone and missile strikes on Russian soil have shifted the balance of the conflict—will they be enough to end it? (The New Yorker) see also US military smartphones targeted through roaming and ad tech: Cyber attacks tried to track down American personnel in Middle East as Tehran attacked forces in the region. (Financial Times free)

Researchers are uncovering ADHD’s links to these other health conditions: A growing body of evidence suggests that people with ADHD may be at risk for anxiety, disordered eating, migraines, long covid and other problems. The diagnosis turns out to travel with a surprising amount of company. A useful survey of the emerging comorbidity research. (Washington Post)

There’s an Injury Epidemic in Pro Sports. There’s Also a Recovery Revolution. Athletes are pushing their bodies to astonishing feats, knowing that medical advances can heal them quickly.Pro sports has an injury epidemic and a recovery revolution running simultaneously. Bodies break faster; the science fixes them faster. (New York Times)

Video of the day: The Billy Joel Interview

Be sure to check out our Masters in Business next week with Jason Wenk, founder and CEO of Altruist, a modern custodian built as a clean sheet from the ground up, fully integrated with artificial intelligence. He began his career at Morgan Stanley before launching Retirement Wealth Advisors, and then FormulaFolios. The through-line of his career has been creating lower-cost, tech-enabled, financial advice.

 

Capital Markets Strategy. The AI Arms Race

Source: MUFG

 

Sign up for our reads-only mailing list here.

 

The post 10 Thursday AM Reads appeared first on The Big Picture.

Ukraine Intensifies Attacks On Russian Tankers In The Black Sea

Zero Hedge -

Ukraine Intensifies Attacks On Russian Tankers In The Black Sea

By Charles Kennedy of OilPrice.com

After striking 116 vessels linked to Russia’s shadow fleet in the Sea of Azov in recent weeks, Ukraine’s military is turning its sights on ships in the Black Sea, hitting in drone attacks as many as 20 vessels overnight on Wednesday.

Ukrainian forces struck 17 Russia-linked oil tankers, 2 gas carriers, and one tugboat early on July 15, drone unit commander Robert Brovdi said on Telegram today, adding that an official report with video evidence would follow later in the day.

“The first round of the naval battle is over,” the commander wrote, referring to the Sea of Azov, where Ukraine had focused its drone attack efforts in the past few weeks, alongside targeting refineries deep into Russian territory.

“Now, the Black Sea,” Brovdi said, hinting that Ukraine’s campaign to strike oil and gas vessels is expanding to the Black Sea, a key export route for crude and fuels from the south of Russia.

Ukraine has ramped up drone attacks against Russian shipping in the Sea of Azov and Taganrog Bay. Ukrainian officials reported striking 15 vessels in a single overnight operation on July 14, bringing their total to over 105 targeted ships within an eight-day window. These strikes have been targeting tankers and cargo ships suspected of belonging to Russia’s "shadow fleet" or transporting looted Ukrainian grain and fuel supplies.

Russia has also attacked commercial vessels near Odesa. A Tuesday attack killed five seafarers and injured 12 others in one of the deadliest single strikes on commercial shipping since the start of the war. According to Odesa authorities, a Russian drone struck a Togo-flagged general cargo ship while it was unloading fertilizer, sparking a major fire, while the Russian defense ministry claims the strikes were targeting military cargo.

The ramp-up of the naval strikes comes alongside a months-long Ukrainian campaign to hit Russian refineries to cripple fuel supply and deepen the fuel crisis in Russia.

Tyler Durden Thu, 07/16/2026 - 06:30

G7 Partners Have Low Confidence In President Trump

Zero Hedge -

G7 Partners Have Low Confidence In President Trump

Confidence in U.S. leadership has fluctuated significantly over the past two decades, closely tracking changes in the occupant of the White House.

As Statista's Felix Richter shows in the following chart, based on data from past and present editions of Pew’s Global Attitudes Survey shows, confidence in President Donald Trump among key U.S. allies has mostly been low, although it has edged up slightly compared to the end of his first term.

 G7 Partners Have Low Confidence in President Trump | Statista

You will find more infographics at Statista

Interestingly, Trump’s current ratings are broadly in line with those recorded for George W. Bush toward the end of his presidency.

Bush’s low standing in many Western European countries at the time was largely shaped by opposition to the Iraq War and broader concerns about U.S. foreign policy.

By contrast, confidence in U.S. leadership rebounded sharply under Barack Obama, who consistently received high approval ratings across G7 countries.

While views of Joe Biden were also relatively positive, they never reached Obama era highs and deteriorated gradually over time.

Overall, the data highlights how strongly international perceptions of the United States tend to shift with changes in leadership and foreign policy direction.

Tyler Durden Thu, 07/16/2026 - 05:45

Japan's Landmark Vote Reclassifies Bitcoin And Crypto As Financial Assets

Zero Hedge -

Japan's Landmark Vote Reclassifies Bitcoin And Crypto As Financial Assets

Authored by Micah Zimmerman via The Epoch Times,

Japan’s parliament passed an amendment on Wednesday that reclassifies cryptocurrency as a “financial asset,” a shift that pulls bitcoin and other digital assets out of the country’s payments regime and into the framework that governs stocks, bonds, and investment trusts, according to a report from public broadcaster NHK.

The change strips crypto of its prior status under the Payment Services Act, where regulators treated it as a means of settlement, and folds it into the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act (FIEA), the same statute that oversees traditional securities. 

The amendment moves bitcoin and other crypto under a single investor-protection standard. NHK reports the change takes effect within a year, with a target of fiscal 2027.

Japan’s new authority over bitcoin and the crypto asset class

Japan’s cabinet first approved this measure as a draft amendment in April 2026, but that step only sent the bill toward the Diet for debate. Wednesday’s vote marks the final enactment into law, alongside formal approval of a separate plan to cut the top tax rate on crypto gains from 55% to a flat 20% starting in 2028.

The move rewires how Japan supervises the asset class. As financial instruments, crypto assets now fall under insider-trading rules that bar issuers, exchange operators, and other parties with access to non-public information from trading ahead of events such as token listings, delistings, or major technical incidents.

Exchanges face new disclosure obligations. Platforms must publish data on each token’s issuer, blockchain design, and volatility profile, a standard that mirrors the reporting demands placed on securities firms. Regulators also gain broader market-surveillance authority over the sector, according to local reports. 

Penalties climb under the new law. The maximum prison term for unregistered crypto operators rises from three years to 10, while the top fine increases from 3 million yen to 10 million yen, near $62,000. The tougher enforcement signals a move to treat crypto misconduct with the same severity as securities fraud.

A path to bitcoin ETFs and a tax cut

The reclassification carries two consequences that reach beyond compliance.

First, it opens a path for spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds. Because FIEA governs the products that funds can hold, moving crypto under its umbrella removes a structural barrier that kept Japanese asset managers from launching regulated bitcoin ETFs.

Second, it clears the way for a tax overhaul. Japan taxes crypto gains as miscellaneous income at rates that reach 55 percent, among the steepest treatment in any major market. Lawmakers approved a plan to cut the top rate to a flat 20 percent, a level that matches the tax on stock gains. The reduction, tied to the 2026 Tax Reform Outline, activates in 2028.

The reforms arrive as Japan accelerates a broader Web3 push and as regulators weigh reserve requirements for exchanges that resemble the buffers held by securities firms. User accounts on Japanese exchanges have grown, and domestic crypto firms are positioning for a wider base of retail investors.

For an industry that has long viewed Japan as an early and cautious mover, the vote marks a decisive turn toward legitimacy. 

The country that once served as a template for crypto regulation is now aligning digital assets with its capital markets, a decision that could pressure other jurisdictions to follow.

Tyler Durden Thu, 07/16/2026 - 05:00

Baltic Leaders Claim Moscow Eyeing Wave Of Infrastructure Attacks In Europe

Zero Hedge -

Baltic Leaders Claim Moscow Eyeing Wave Of Infrastructure Attacks In Europe

NATO's 'eastern flank' members are at it again, seeking to hype an imminent Russian threat which they now say will target their critical infrastructure

The presidents of Poland, Lithuanian and Latvia have joined together and issued a dire warning over an impending plot on Wednesday, citing intelligence reports.

"We are talking about energy and transport infrastructure, facilities where damage could... disrupt the functioning of the entire energy system," Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda said at a joint press conference in Vilnius, alongside his Latvian counterpart, Edgars Rinkevics.

"This planning is taking place at the highest level, effectively in Moscow," Nauseda stated.

And Rinkevics followed by asserting, "Even without a total Ukrainian victory, Russia may indirectly test Article 5 and response mechanisms at the alliance and European Union levels," he said.

via Latvian Presidency's office

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov quickly disputed the allegations that Russia is planning sabotage operations or some kind of invasion of Europe..

"This is just another fresh batch of scare stories designed to keep the brainwashing going and prepare the population for further militarization," he said.

Baltic governments have especially been warning about a Russian 'invasion' in some form or the other going back years into the Ukraine war.

Even lower security officials have chimed in, for example back in 2025, Renatas Požéla, head of Lithuania’s fire and rescue service, warned

"It is possible that we will see a massive army along the Baltic borders with the obvious goal of conquering all three countries within three days to a week."

In that prior instance he was talking about Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. Their leaders and officials have been among the most outspoken anti-Russia hawks throughout the Ukraine conflict.

Moscow has long insisted that it has no intention of invading any EU or NATO member state. Tensions have soared, however, due to somewhat frequent drone incursions into European territory. But the Kremlin has said these are chiefly Ukrainian drones spilling over.

Tyler Durden Thu, 07/16/2026 - 04:15

You Will Not Believe What's Happening In This Tiny English Village

Zero Hedge -

You Will Not Believe What's Happening In This Tiny English Village

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity News,

Residents of the small leafy Oxfordshire village of Piddington have delivered a thunderous rebuke to Westminster's latest asylum experiment.

With roughly 180 adults casting ballots on July 4, 175 backed holding a referendum on breaking away from the United Kingdom in protest against plans to house up to 1,250 single adult male asylum seekers at an adjacent former Ministry of Defence Site.

That works out to a 96% yes vote in a community of around 370 people where decisions about their future are being made without them.

The move comes after the Home Office announced in late June it would convert the redundant military storage facility - sitting right between Piddington and Upper Arncott - into basic accommodation for single men aged 18 to 65.

Utility companies have already received instructions to prepare power, water and sewage connections, with work eyed for late August or early September. No detailed public proposal or full impact assessment has been published. Locals say the site was never built for this purpose and sits next to a children's play area and reserve.

Piddington resident Ian Darby captured the frustration felt by many when he spoke out against the total lack of engagement from officials.

Parish Council Chairman Tim McNally framed the vote as a natural response to being driven into a corner.

"We had an incredible result with almost two-thirds of the village voting, the rest were children, and an acceptance of 96%. It was truly astonishing. Self-determination is what people want whilst they are being ignored and driven into a corner. This is a natural human instinct and reaction. The Principality of Piddington, the village that roared, will put together their council and representatives to empower themselves."

Local resident Graham Rixon called the scale "completely inappropriate." "We're a village of 350 people - there's another village down the road of even less people, and they're going to dump 1,200 people here."

"Most of them probably won't speak the language, so there's going to be communication problems, and as far as I know, no help's been set up for language," he continued, adding "We haven't had any detail of how it's going to work, so if it does go through, it'll be a mess - inadequate provision has been made. We're supposed to live in a democracy, and this is just trying to bypass democracy and get it all done before anyone notices."

Another resident from nearby Arncott, Gwen McEwan, described the prospect as "frightening." She asked why her village should be penalised while British people wait for housing and noted that local children already pay £300 a term for the bus to school. "If they come here, I won't be paying any council tax."

Chairman McNally highlighted the human side: "We have young children, we've got elderly people. People actually have the comfort to walk at night through the village without consequence."

Concerns centre on groups of bored single men potentially roaming near homes and the play area, language barriers, and pressure on already limited rural services in a place over two miles from the nearest shop with no pavement along the B-road.

Liberal Democrat MP Calum Miller for Bicester and Woodstock has called the isolated site unsuitable and demanded ministers pause the plan, publish a full impact assessment, and come to the area to explain themselves directly. He said the decision feels like one taken in secret in Whitehall and imposed on local people treated as an afterthought.

The Home Office maintains the move forms part of closing asylum hotels and shifting claimants into basic ex-military accommodation to end the perception that illegal arrival leads to hotel stays.

It points to falling hotel numbers and reduced overall asylum costs. Critics note the approach simply relocates the same pressures into small communities that never asked for them and lack the infrastructure or policing to absorb sudden demographic change.

This is not an isolated outburst. Across Britain, similar top-down placements of large numbers of single adult male asylum seekers into former military sites or new housing have triggered the same pattern of ignored residents, safety worries for women and children, and strained local resources.

In one case a village of just 150 people faced 121 migrants placed in 21 new-build houses originally meant for social housing, sited next to a children's playground and primary school. Locals reported teenage girls taking longer routes to avoid the area.

Another former RAF base targeted for up to 1,500 people sat on contaminated ground with no power, water or phone lines initially, requiring massive taxpayer upgrades while the base exit opened onto a resident's driveway.

The pattern continues in Barnham, Suffolk - a peaceful village of just 600 people now facing plans to house over 1,000 asylum seekers at the nearby disused RAF site. That influx would nearly triple the local population. The base sits only two minutes from a primary school and beside a nature reserve.

Residents report teaching their children basic safety measures such as locking doors and staying quiet. Fencing around the site already has holes that allow easy exit. Public meetings on the plans have been restricted, and critics describe the broader approach as "Operation Scatter" - deliberately dispersing claimants into rural areas with limited facilities and minimal local input.

Watch how the policy has already played out in other small places:

In Crowborough, East Sussex, residents formed a volunteer security patrol after hundreds of single male asylum seekers were moved into a former training camp, creating what locals described as a village within a village.

Women reported carrying personal alarms and taking self-defence classes even in daylight. One volunteer stated the group provided "a visible presence to provide safety and security. We are a deterrent."

The same town had earlier braced for up to 600 men at the army camp site, with orderly protests drawing thousands and residents installing extra fencing and alarms on peripheral properties. Trust in government evaporated as plans advanced with minimal consultation.

The housing angle runs deeper still. Projections show migrants set to absorb nearly 40% of all new homes built in the UK by 2030 under current net migration trends, even as 1.3 million British households sit on social housing waiting lists.

The policy of clearing hotels by dispersing claimants into rural and suburban sites simply shifts the burden onto native communities already competing for homes, schools and GP appointments.

Piddington's symbolic independence vote stands as the latest expression of a growing refusal by ordinary Britons to accept being treated as collateral damage in a national experiment they never consented to.

The village that roared on July 4 has drawn its line. Whether Westminster hears it or continues treating rural England as disposable real estate for imported populations remains to be seen. Self-determination, once stirred at the smallest scale, has a habit of spreading.

Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.

Tyler Durden Thu, 07/16/2026 - 03:30

Russia Struggles To Deliver Crude Oil As It Hits 135 Million Barrel Traffic Jam

Zero Hedge -

Russia Struggles To Deliver Crude Oil As It Hits 135 Million Barrel Traffic Jam

Russia is struggling to deliver all of the crude it’s being forced to ship overseas in the face of escalating Ukrainian drone strikes on its refineries.

Nearly 135 million barrels of Russian crude oil are currently stranded at sea as a result of Ukraine’s airstrike campaign targeting refineries with the intent to cripple crude processing. The offshore backlog is forcing Moscow to significantly ramp up export volumes according to OilPrice.com.

Intensive Ukrainian drone strikes, including recent hits on the Gazprom Neftekhim Salavat and Afipsky processing facilities, have knocked out roughly one-third of Russian domestic refining capacity bringing it to ~3.91 million barrels per day, the lowest level seen since 2005.

As a result, Moscow is now being forced to divert more barrels to international markets despite the country pumping just 8.93 million barrels a day in June--roughly 830,000 b/d below its OPEC+ quota.

However, major export hubs are experiencing massive gridlock with limited buyers of sanctioned Russian crude, with Sokol and Sakhalin Blend cargoes facing week-long delays transferring from shuttle tankers to ocean-going vessels, while ESPO crude is piling up near the Kozmino terminal.

Russia’s shadow fleet tankers are now accumulating near Egypt’s Mediterranean coast and Indonesia’s Riau Islands. Many are masking destinations or sitting idle because international buyers increasingly refuse to touch sanctioned cargo due to secondary penalties.

Russia's oil revenues are shrinking despite high export volumes due to a combination of lower global crude prices, widening discounts for Russian Urals and delivery delays.

Russia’s seaborne crude exports averaged 4.13 million barrels per day during the four weeks through June 28, the highest four-week rate since early 2022.

However, Russia’s four-week crude export revenues fell by about $200 million to $1.68 billion a week as Urals prices retreated sharply from their Iran-war highs. China and India accounted for roughly 1.8 million barrels per day of identified purchases, while Turkey and Syria imported about 160,000 bpd and 40,000 bpd, respectively, according to Bloomberg data. Another 1.9 million bpd was listed as “unknown destination” in Bloomberg’s tanker-tracking data, suggesting the final buyers were not disclosed while the cargoes remained in transit.

Tyler Durden Thu, 07/16/2026 - 02:45

"Free Speech Has Its Limits", Rules Czech Supreme Court

Zero Hedge -

"Free Speech Has Its Limits", Rules Czech Supreme Court

Via Remix News,

The Czech Supreme Court has upheld a suspended prison sentence imposed on a former dissident who publicly wore clothing displaying symbols associated with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

According to Echo24, botanist Pavel Křivka walked through Pardubice in April 2024 wearing a black sweatshirt bearing a large white letter ‘Z’ and the Russian words “For Victory.”

Lower courts convicted him of publicly approving a crime against peace and sentenced him to six months in prison, suspended for two years. An appeal to the Supreme Court has now been rejected.

“Freedom of expression is one of the fundamental rights of a democratic society, but it has its limits,” court spokeswoman Gabriela Tomíčková said.

“According to the Supreme Court, public support or approval of the most serious international crimes exceeds the limits of expression which is entitled to full constitutional protection,” she added.

The court said a person does not need to make a speech or explicitly attempt to persuade others to commit an offense. Publicly displaying symbols can itself constitute a crime when their meaning is sufficiently clear.

Judges also rejected Křivka’s argument that the Z symbol does not appear on an official list of prohibited imagery. They ruled that its meaning must be assessed in context and said the combination of the letter Z and the “For Victory” slogan could not reasonably be interpreted as anything other than support for Russian aggression.

The court said Křivka’s education and experience in public and political life meant he would have understood the symbolism. He had also repeatedly expressed opinions on Russia and Ukraine.

Prosecutors described the hoodie as “warmonger clothing” and argued that Křivka intended to stir hostility toward Ukraine and Ukrainians. His lawyer maintained that wearing clothing he liked was not illegal.

The letter Z first appeared on Russian military vehicles during the February 2022 invasion before becoming a wider propaganda symbol used at rallies, on billboards, on clothing and across Russian social media.

Křivka had previously criticized the rulings of the lower Czech courts. “I did not commit any propaganda for war or genocide or anything like that. I walked down the street in standard clothes, clothes that I bought in China when I was there to teach Czech. We have much more freedom in China than in the Czech Republic,” he said in February, as cited by Novinky.cz.

Read more here...

Tyler Durden Thu, 07/16/2026 - 02:00

All Socialists Are Ignorant, But Some Are More Ignorant Than Others...

Zero Hedge -

All Socialists Are Ignorant, But Some Are More Ignorant Than Others...

Authored by Lloyd Billingsley via AmericanThinker.com,

In The Law, published in 1850, Frédéric Bastiat made a case against “legal plunder,” the perversion of the law to violate liberty and property rights.

Nearly 100 years later in The Road to Serfdom, Friedrich Hayek warned that socialists, whatever their intentions, lacked the knowledge to command the economy.

Hayek also explained how the worst always get on top in socialist regimes, and after the German National Socialists’ Anschluss in 1938, he did not return to his native Austria. In 1983, President Reagan brought Hayek to the White House, and in 1991 President George H.W. Bush awarded Hayek the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Nobel laureate Milton Friedman authored Capitalism and Freedom and became a national figure with the “Free to Choose” series on PBS. 

Basic Economics by Thomas Sowell also upheld the virtues of the market over government command of the economy.

Those now proudly calling themselves “democratic socialists” seem unaware of these authors and show little if any inclination to engage in debate.

The surging socialists are even more unaware of works that show socialism as it actually existed under its most enthusiastic promoters. Consider, for example, the experience of Malcolm Muggeridge. His magisterial Chronicles of Wasted Time (1972) devotes a chapter to “A Socialist Upbringing.” The Muggeridge household jostled with politicians, scholars, and clergy dedicated to the cause, along with Labor Party stalwarts such as Ramsey MacDonald and Fabian socialists Sidney and Beatrice Webb. Their collective efforts aimed to benefit “the workers,” who were never present at any of their events.

“A worker is someone for whom everything is done as long as he keeps off stage,” Muggeridge noted, and “the whole notion of a working class with a specific political or cultural, or even spiritual role qua working class is a fantasy invented by guilt-stricken renegade proletarians like D.H. Lawrence, or by renegade bourgeoisie on the run like William Morris or, for that matter, Marx and Engels themselves, or just by a sociologist looking for a subject and a job.”

After stints teaching in India and Egypt, Muggeridge wound up in the first “workers’ state,” the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR), as the Moscow correspondent of the Manchester Guardian. Correspondents ran contests to see who could pass off the most fatuous story to the regime’s foreign admirers. Muggeridge convinced Lord Marley that the long lines for everything were intended to give zealous workers a chance to rest. When a British lawyer asked if the Soviets practiced habeas corpus, A.T. Cholerton of the Daily Telegraph told him they strictly adhered to habeas cadaver.

Stalin’s collectivization of agriculture claimed more than a million victims in Ukraine, but Walter Duranty of the New York Times contended that there was no forced famine there. Muggeridge decided to see for himself. “This particular famine was planned and deliberate, not due to any natural catastrophe like failure of rain, or cyclone, or flooding,” he wrote. “There is not only a famine but a state of war, a military occupation... Peasants with their hands tied behind their back being loaded into cattle-trucks at gunpoint.” After breaking this story, Muggeridge was widely vilified while Duranty’s mendacious reports won a Pulitzer Prize.

In August, 1939, Stalin signed a pact with Hitler’s Germany. “I had been expecting such a development,” Muggeridge wrote, “never losing an opportunity to say that Bolshevism and National Socialism were the same thing, except that one was a Slav version and the other Teutonic.” Margarete Buber-Neumann described that reality in Under Two Dictators: Prisoner of Stalin and Hitler.

The Potsdam native married Heinz Neumann, a rising star in the German Communist Party (KDP). The Communist International (Comintern) sent the couple on various assignments before bringing them to Moscow during Stalin’s purge campaign. Heinz Neumann was tried and executed the same day with no word to Margarete. She soon found herself in the Lubianka prison before being sentenced to five years in the corrective labor camps then holding 1.3 million prisoners.

In the vast Karaganda complex, Buber-Neumann was forced to perform “a certain labor quota” in the fields. “We were always hungry,” the prisoner wrote, and field workers were in the “fourth and worst category” when it came to food. In these conditions, Zena, a Gypsy girl, is told she should go to school and learn about socialism.“I don’t like it!” Zena shoots back “You can go and **** your mother with your socialism! I’m a free Gypsy.”

Preyed on by criminals, who were very cozy with camp bosses, Margarete manages to survive. During the Stalin-Hitler Pact, the secret police (GPU) changed her sentence to removal from the Soviet Union.

In early 1940 the Soviets put the prisoner of Stalin on a train headed for the Brest-Litovsk bridge into occupied Poland. There GPU men and SS officers jointly check the list of names. The prisoners were then “sent on in cattle trucks to Bialas" and “marched through the streets under SS guard.” Then it was on to Ravensbrück, the National Socialists’ largest concentration camp for women. In Under Two Dictators, Buber-Neumann describes the forced labor, torture, and executions in exacting detail.

“Historians have long regarded it as a standard work on Nazi camps and the Gulag,” notes professor Nikolaus Wachsman in his introduction. “But among a general readership in the English-speaking world, the book is virtually unknown.”

The fearful symmetry of German National Socialism and Soviet Communism doubtless caused journalists, academics and politicians deliberately to ignore the book.

Add these works to those of George Orwell, whose 1984 portrayed the totalitarian world of Ingsoc (English Socialism). In Orwell’s Animal Farm, the revolutionary victors proclaim that all animals are equal -- but some more equal than others. In 2026 safe to say, all socialists are ignorant, but some more ignorant than others -- and willfully so.

Arthur Koestler took note of Buber-Neumann’s experience in his contribution to The God That Failed, published in 1949. In Arrow in the Blue (1952) Koestler explained, “The well-meaning ‘progressives of the Left’ persist in following their old, outworn concepts. As if under the spell of a destructive compulsion, they must repeat every single error of the past. One can only watch in horror and despair, for this time there will be no pardon.”

Those who value their liberty must decide how that applies moving forward.

Tyler Durden Wed, 07/15/2026 - 23:25

"Sub-Second Detect- To-Fire": Futuristic Dome Turret Could Be US Military's Answer To Drone Swarms

Zero Hedge -

"Sub-Second Detect- To-Fire": Futuristic Dome Turret Could Be US Military's Answer To Drone Swarms

Picket Defense Systems is developing a next-generation counter-drone turret designed to eliminate the delays conventional systems face when targeting fast-moving, one-way attack drones or incoming swarms. This is a major vulnerability confronting the US military and allied forces as drone threats proliferate across modern battlefields that Picket plans to solve.

Its Inferno RTC uses a 54-barrel hemispherical array that continuously maintains 360-degree coverage, allowing the turret to select and fire the optimal barrel without needing to rotate and lock onto the target first.

"Fixed multi-barrel hemispherical array — no slewing delay. Sub-second detect- to-fire. No dead zones, no blind spots, no reaction time," Picket wrote in a slide deck.

Defense Blog recently explained why Picket's 54-barrel hemispherical array could represent the next evolution in turret design for defeating fast-moving drone swarms:

The aiming latency problem the Inferno is designed to solve is one of the most technically challenging aspects of close-in drone defense, and it has become increasingly urgent as adversaries have adopted tactics specifically designed to exploit it.

Conventional counter-drone gun systems, whether mounted on vehicles or fixed at a site, must physically slew a barrel to point at an incoming threat before firing, a process that takes measurable time even on fast-actuating electromechanical systems. Against a single drone approaching at moderate speed, that delay is manageable.

Against a coordinated swarm of fast-moving targets approaching from multiple directions simultaneously, it creates engagement sequencing problems that single-barrel systems have no mechanical solution for.

The Inferno's continuously rotating architecture eliminates that sequencing problem by having a barrel already in approximately the right position for any threat vector at any moment.

Picket appears to be targeting the civilian counter-drone market with a dual-use turret designed for critical infrastructure, data centers, energy facilities, airports, stadiums, and commercial ports.

Our late-January note, titled "Explosion in AI Data Center Buildouts Will Demand Next-Gen Counter-Drone Security," revealed a shocking reality that many high-value assets around the world remain largely vulnerable to low-cost kamikaze drones.

About a month later, we published a report that showed the first-ever data center in the world was hit by an Iranian attack drone in the Gulf region. This was a major wake-up call for the US, hyperscalers, militaries, and other governments that are now racing to harden airspace against these small but deadly threats.

Related:

What we suspect is coming down the pipe is a procurement supercycle for drone and counter-drone systems, which we believe is already in the early chapters and will accelerate in 2027. How to profit.

Tyler Durden Wed, 07/15/2026 - 23:00

Hegseth Announces New Mandatory Military Testosterone Tests

Zero Hedge -

Hegseth Announces New Mandatory Military Testosterone Tests

Authored by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times,

Department of War Secretary Pete Hegseth on Wednesday announced a measure to screen U.S. armed forces members’ testosterone levels and offer therapy as a way to optimize the military’s performance.

“While we invest heavily in our weapon systems, platforms, and gear, our most decisive tactical advantage will always be the individual warfighter,” Hegseth said in a video, titled, “The High-T Department of War,” released on X.

“We have a sacred duty to maintain that advantage, which is why we must constantly look for new ways to optimize your performance, your resilience, and your long-term health.”

The hormone tests will be initiated for troops aged 30 and older, although soldiers under that age threshold can voluntarily get tested, the Pentagon chief said.

Hegseth explained that the new screening program will make sure that troops “have the right testosterone levels to operate at [their] absolute best because it’s well-established science that as we age, testosterone levels often naturally drop.”

“This initiative, it’s not about artificial enhancement. It’s about restoring and optimizing your natural capabilities, protecting your longevity, and ensuring you have the biological foundation required to sustain the fight,” he continued. 

“We owe our warriors the absolute best medical care in the world. And this program delivers on that obligation.”

The screenings, he added, will be mandatory for service members who are eligible, but that treatment would be voluntary. “If treatment is recommended, it’s entirely your choice to receive testosterone replacement therapy,” Hegseth said.

The Department of War has not yet issued more details on when the screening requirement would be implemented or when more medical guidance will be released.

Hegseth, a former member of the National Guard and Fox News host, has initiated stricter fitness standards for the U.S. military, also working out with service members in videos posted on social media. In addition, he imposed a ban on most service members from having beards.

“By addressing these health markers early, we’re keeping you on the leading edge of lethality and giving you the same level of support that you give this nation—the absolute best,” Hegseth said Wednesday.

Testosterone levels in men decline naturally with age and have been linked to issues such as mood changes, weight gain, and a loss of muscle mass or hair. But health experts have debated for years how to diagnose the problems and whether they should be treated with replacement therapy.

Hegseth’s announcement comes as Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and other Trump administration officials are moving to make it easier for doctors to prescribe testosterone. Last month, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) proposed easing prescribing limits on testosterone gels, pills, patches, and injections.

Some studies have shown overall declines in young and adolescent males’ testosterone levels since the 1990s. An Israeli global study released earlier this month found that male testosterone levels have halved in the past 50 years, a researcher involved in the study told The Guardian in an article published July 7.

Another study published in 2020 by The Journal of Urology found that testosterone deficiency has a prevalence of 10 percent to 40 percent among adult males, and 20 percent among males aged 15 to 39 years old.

A Yale researcher involved in the study, Soum Lokeshwar, said that the overall decline in testosterone could be attributed to several factors including “an aging population with older males exhibiting lower testosterone levels” as well as an “increase in comorbidities, including diabetes, which may have cause this testosterone decrease nationally.”

Previously, the FDA had issued caution about using certain testosterone products, saying in early 2025 it was “adding a warning about the risk of increased blood pressure to the prescribing information of testosterone products that currently do not include this information based on the results of separate blood pressure monitoring studies.” However, the agency said it removed a previous warning about a possible risk of heart attack or stroke when comparing such treatments with a placebo.

Tyler Durden Wed, 07/15/2026 - 22:35

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