Zero Hedge

Logistics Stocks Crater As "AI Scare Trade" Crushes Sector, Slams Broader Market

Logistics Stocks Crater As "AI Scare Trade" Crushes Sector, Slams Broader Market

First it was SaaS (in particular, and Software in general), then Private Credit, then Insurance Brokers, then it was Financials/Broker/Wealth Managers that were hammered on Tuesday, then Real Estate Service stocks tumbled yesterday, and today it is the turn of Logistics stocks to plunge as investors followed the bouncing AI disruption ball and freaked out over the sector’s vulnerability to the newest crop of artificial intelligence applications and tools that can disrupt countless industries.

As the brutal "AI Scare Trade" bouncing ball hits yet another sector, we have seen a painful selloff among big trucking stocks such as DSV and Kuehne and Nagel, both of which are down double digits.

The selling is attributed to a 9:15am ET press release from Algorhythm Holdings - a "leading AI technology company" - which announced that its "SemiCab platform in live customer deployments is enabling its customers’ internal operations to scale freight volumes by 300% to 400% without a corresponding increase in operational headcount."

These results, detailed in SemiCab’s recently published industry white paper, demonstrate how the company’s AI-driven Collaborative Transportation Platform is transforming freight management from a labor-intensive, manual process into a highly automated, intelligence-led system. In fact, individual operators using SemiCab have been able to manage more than 2,000 loads annually, compared to the traditional industry benchmark of approximately 500 loads per year per freight broker, demonstrating a 4x improvement in workforce productivity.

“Historically, logistics has been constrained by human bandwidth,” said Gary Atkinson, Chief Executive Officer of Algorhythm Holdings. “Every increase in volume requires more planners, more dispatchers, and more manual intervention. Our SemiCab platform breaks that dependency by embedding intelligence directly into the freight operating system.”

According to the release "the AI-driven leverage of SemiCab’s platform directly supports stronger unit economics and capital efficiency for its customers. As volumes increase, customers benefit from:"

  • Lower cost per load;
  • Higher asset utilization;
  • Reduced administrative overhead; and
  • More predictable service levels.

Of course, it is unclear - and will be unclear for months if not years - just how disruptive this AI platform will be to established businesses which have invested billions in established processes, but in keeping with the recent trend of selling (and shorting) potentially affected sectors first, and asking questions much later, the results has been the immediate loss of market cap across the logistics/industrials sector. 

The selling adds to AI disruptions fears already pressuring Software, Games, Private Credit and Real Estate Brokerage names which have all been crushed in recent weeks, and all of which are again underperforming today. 

As Goldman trader Christian DeGrasse writes, "the same exact tape is just repeating itself - almost anything previously tagged by ‘AI-risk’ narrative, whether deemed ‘rational or not’, is underperforming (CRE Brokers, Office REITs, Wealth, Info services, select exchanges, Insurance brokers, payments, Fintech) – while the alts started out somewhat stable but are starting to wobble, as are the banks (which largely have been immune to the ‘scare’ – with superregionals in particular being an attractive hideout within fins .. reach out for people’s views there)"

REITs (especially the large caps) continue to outperform as a hideout zone .. Towers, Datacenters (EQIX Earnings +), Senior Housing in Healthcare, SPG in Malls, WY, Triple nets, etc …

We’re getting lots of requests for color - Nothing ‘new’ is out there in Fins (staying vigilant), but this ‘scare’ does continues to broaden out, with the ‘new sector’ of the day under pressure from fears of AI-competition being logistics/transports in industrial (down double digits as of send).

Names previously thought of as AI winners are getting re-thought and reasessed for potential risks. Valuation and multiples matter too.

Indeed, according to traders, the ongoing "AI scare trade" is weighing on sentiment and has pushed the S&P sharply lower...

... with the associated degrossing now also impacting such AI-immune sectors (one hopes) as gold and silver.

The best recap of what's going on comes from Goldman's Alex Mitola who writes that in terms of Flows, "what has stood out most over the last few days, is NOT heavy supply like price action might suggest, but the COMPLETE LACK OF WILLINGNESS from investors to step in and defend during any of these sharp sell offs."

Until that changes, expect see such sector-specific meltdowns every day, as AI disruption becomes the name of the game.

Tyler Durden Thu, 02/12/2026 - 11:44

"A Good Way To Destroy Your Country": Rogan Blasts Democrats' Open Border Insanity

"A Good Way To Destroy Your Country": Rogan Blasts Democrats' Open Border Insanity

Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

Joe Rogan has zeroed in on the Democrats’ border fiasco, calling it a direct path to America’s downfall by inviting criminals and chaos across the line.

The podcast powerhouse argues that while the U.S. was built by immigrants, unchecked entry under Democratic policies is flooding the nation with murderers and cartel thugs, all in an effort to populate cities with voters loyal to the left—pure political gamesmanship at the expense of public safety.

Rogan laid out the stark reality of America’s immigration roots clashing with today’s border free-for-all.

“The whole thing is tough now because we’re a country that’s established by immigrants, but you can’t have an open border. You can’t just have anybody come through because there’s going to be a bunch of criminals that come through, and you don’t want that. You don’t want your country to be more crime infested,” Rogan said.

“You don’t want your country to have murderers and cartel members just coming into the country and now getting citizenship and being able to vote and organizing, and that’s crazy. That’s a good way to destroy your country,” Rogan urged.

He further accused Democrats of turning illegal immigration into a cynical tool for power grabs, overwhelming sanctuary cities and stacking the deck in swing states.

“When you just let everybody in, and you let in 10 million people, and how do you — unless they get arrested while they’re here — what do you do? And even then, like a lot of them during the Biden administration, they were getting let go. In sanctuary cities [they would let] people go. It’s just crazy,” Rogan said.

He added, “Because they just want a bunch of people in these swing states for the census. So they get more congressional seats, and if they get these people and give them the ability to vote, now you have a built-in voter base. You can just rig the election.”

This critique comes amid the fallout from Biden-era policies like the CHNV migrant parole program, which fast-tracked over 530,000 nationals from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Venezuela into the U.S. with legal status and work permits—straining resources and enforcement to the breaking point.

Contrast that with President Trump’s 2025 crackdown, where executive actions on border security prompted over two million illegal migrants to self-deport, slashing southern border encounters to historic lows. It’s a clear win for America First priorities, proving that strong enforcement works when leaders actually prioritize citizens over political stunts.

Rogan’s takedown highlights the danger in Democratic compassion claims: preaching open arms while cities buckle under crime waves and resource drains.

These policies erode the very fabric of fair elections and national sovereignty. As Rogan points out, letting in unvetted masses isn’t mercy; it’s a calculated move to entrench power, sidelining American workers and safety.

Democrats’ border negligence is a betrayal of the American people, paving the way for more crime, division, and electoral manipulation.

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, 02/12/2026 - 11:20

The Men And Women In The High Castle

The Men And Women In The High Castle

By Michael Every of Rabobank

US payrolls stronger, US yields up, stocks flat as anything hit by AI was too, oil sideways, and USD/JPY at 153 vs 159 a few days ago. Fed-speak was all over the place. Schmid said restrictive rates are needed to cool inflation. Miran said there’s still a variety of reasons to cut rates. Hammack said the labor market is finding a healthy balance and rates should stay on hold. And as they all speak, 2026’s book of changes unfolds.

Von der Leyen clashed with France and Germany over the EU’s core climate law, the latter pair backing CEOs in Antwerp demanding climate regulations are eased to halt rapid deindustrialisation (in the green space as well as in old industries). However, Paris and Berlin are attacking each other over that issue (i.e., who gets the subsidies).

The key informal leaders meeting in a Belgian castle today will see more clashes and breaches. The Euro defence lobby opposes the Commission's role in defence spending. There is no agreement on what ‘Made in Europe’ means, as the UK, outside the castle wall like King Arthur in The Holy Grail, argues it should be let in. VdL just attacked “unnecessary” national laws, mirroring some states’ views of EU laws. Her Commission will set an end-2026 deadline for the EU to integrate all its capital markets, or allow member states to do so at their own speed. The ECB is lobbying for a common EU corporate legal framework; and both the Bundesbank president and the FT editorial team put out missives for the mass issue of Eurobonds for “strategic autonomy.” EU markets don’t seem to be reacting to any of the above. Yes, this isn’t a crisis, as with Greece – but it is a crisis. The old regime of technocrats sees the world has changed – but can they do so?

The Trump-Netanyahu meeting ended with ‘Trump wants a deal’: but did anyone expect the headline: “We attack Friday”? Another US aircraft carrier is heading to the region, alongside other preparations for Iran to deal with. Indeed, when Trump says ‘deal’, that now seems to include ballistic missiles and terror proxies, both unacceptable to Tehran. The US is also considering acting vs tankers carrying Iranian oil, even if wary what that would do to energy prices.

Mirroring that, the Russian press is talking about Iranian oil being escorted to Cuba by the PLA Navy, and Russia’s shadow fleet by their navy, which would raise the stakes and risk a new Cuban crisis or its equivalent in Europe. The fact this is being discussed underlines how hard power now matters: sanctions, shmanctions, price cap, price shmap – can you physically interdict a ship? Can you resist any such measures being taken against your trade flows via military strength or the importance of what you export? That’s what strategic autonomy looks like.

The US energy secretary is to visit Venezuela to try to jump start oil production, seen as a Herculean task. That’s as the EPA will water down regulations so carbon isn’t a pollutant, marking another huge step towards environmental deregulation. Trump also signed an executive order to shift the Department of War to coal for its vast power demands: khaki certainly isn’t green.

The US House of Representatives voted to remove Trump’s Canada tariffs, cheering tariff opponents. However, only a handful of Republicans flipped, and Trump can veto it if it were to pass the Senate, which is unlikely. Conversely, the FAA head said Canada will certify US Gulfstream jets following sabres being rattled by Trump. At the same time, suggestions Trump wants to end the USMCA this summer, likely deepening bilateral trade relations with Mexico and weakening them with Canada, which greatly weakens Canada, cannot be dismissed.

Trump and Xi reportedly ‘agreed to roll back tariffs’ on one quick take: the actual news is they are to extend their trade truce for another year. If that’s the main outcome from their April meeting one wonders why it’s happening. (Which some may ask after the EU meeting too.)

There were announced changes to the US-India trade deal from the US side, following a backlash from Indian farmers – that does show tweaks can be made, as they already have elsewhere.

Indonesia will sign a US trade deal, and join Trump’s Board of Peace, next week. Will nickel flows will be involved given Indonesia dominates global supply and just announced it will be reducing output to force prices higher? (NB, Canada is full of nickel too but no longer produces much, “because markets.”)

In technology, the Chinese press notes how AI and delivery drones are pushing their logistics costs to new lows. SMIC said the chip industry is in “crisis mode” as output is sucked up by AI: it will respond with more localization. ByteDance is reportedly developing its own AI chip in conjunction with Samsung. US hyperscaler AI spending is now set to hit over $600 billion. And all this is happening as some sit and talk about how to boost competitiveness in a High Castle.

Then again, there are good arguments for moats and drawbridges: the Pentagon wants to include AI within its secure networks. “Would you like to play a game?” still send shivers down the spine of a child of the 80s, like ‘Skynet’ and ‘The Matrix’ may still do to others. But here we are. At the very least, the world of work around is going to be transformed, even if some are taking the blue pill and think it won’t impact them.

That’s as Anthropic, the makers of Claude --doing transformative things even for individuals and SMEs-- has publicly warned the program could be misused for "heinous crimes.” That’s following Anthropic’s safeguards research head quitting while warning, “I continuously find myself reckoning with our situation. The world is in peril. And not just from AI, or bioweapons, but from a whole series of interconnected crises unfolding in this very moment. We appear to be approaching a threshold where our wisdom must grow in equal measure to our capacity to affect the world, lest we face the consequences.

He’s moving to the UK to “become invisible” for a period of time, adding: “I feel called to writing that addresses and engages fully with the place we find ourselves, and that places poetic truth alongside scientific truth as equally valid ways of knowing, both of which I believe have something essential to contribute when developing new technology.” How does one put poetry into ‘scientific’ GDP? By asking, “What is GDP *for*?”

Or look to the I Ching at the heart of The Man in the High Castle, a book set in a world where the West lost WW2. It says: “When flowing water… meets with obstacles on its path, a blockage in its journey, it pauses. It increases in volume and strength, filling up in front of the obstacle and eventually spilling past it... Do not turn and run, for there is nowhere worthwhile for you to go. Do not attempt to push ahead into the danger... emulate the example of the water: Pause and build up your strength until the obstacle no longer represents a blockage.” And what does that imply your GDP, or your markets, should look like?

Tyler Durden Thu, 02/12/2026 - 10:40

US Existing Home Sales Collapsed In January

US Existing Home Sales Collapsed In January

After managing a 1.4% YoY rise in 2025 (dramatically down from the 9.7% YoY rise in 2024, and 33% YoY collapse in 2023), US existing home sales were expected to drop 4.6% MoM in January (following December's outsized 5.1% MoM surge), despite a tumble in mortgage rates.

The analysts were correct on the direction but wrong on the scale as existing home sales plunged 8.4% MoM in January from a downwardly revised +4.4% MoM in December. That is the biggest MoM drop since February 2022...

Source: Bloomberg

While some suggested this could be impacted by the Winter Storms, this is based on contracts signed in November/December... and the biggest decline was in The West (which had zero weather impact)

Nevertheless, realtors gonna realtor:

“The below-normal temperatures and above-normal precipitation this January make it harder than usual to assess the underlying driver of the decrease and determine if this month’s numbers are an aberration,” NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun said in a statement.

That MoM plunge pulled the total SAAR down near 15 year lows...

Without an extended period of improved affordability, the recovery in the housing market is likely to be prolonged.

The NAR report showed the median selling price rose 0.9% from a year earlier to $396,800 last month.

First-time buyers represented 31% of buyers of existing homes in January, up slightly from 29% in the prior month and higher than a year ago.

The inventory of previously owned homes increased 3.4% in January from a year ago to 1.22 million.

A pickup in supply through 2025 has helped to tame price growth, though Yun said on a call with reporters that listings need to increase much more to help improve sales.

On the bright side, it appears mortgage applications are rebounding as the year started with lower rates...

Source: Bloomberg

Arguably, existing home sales have much further to go to the upside as the lagged mortgage rate has continued to decline... so what triggered this collapse?

Source: Bloomberg

Finally, circling back to where we started, NAR expects home sales to rise a stunning 14% this year, higher than most other forecasts but a figure that NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun said he feels “confident” in. That assumes more inventory will come on the market, mortgage rates will hover around 6% and the Fed will cut interest rates another two times, compared to policymakers’ median projection for one.

Tyler Durden Thu, 02/12/2026 - 10:09

Ahead Of EU Competitiveness Summit: Macron Pushes Eurobonds

Ahead Of EU Competitiveness Summit: Macron Pushes Eurobonds

Submitted By Thomas Kolbe 

As the 27 EU heads of government convene with EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on Thursday, the stakes are high from a fiscal perspective. A decisive item on the agenda at Belgium’s Alden Biesen Castle is the so-called Draghi Plan.

The question hovering above it all is as simple as it is explosive: How can the obvious productivity and growth weakness of the Eurozone economy be overcome? For years, economic dynamism has lagged behind other major economies, with structural barriers stifling investment and innovation. Over-indebtedness and bureaucratic weight press down like lead on EU economies.

For former ECB President and former Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi, the answer is clear. He calls for a massive, debt-financed stimulus program to give Europe’s economy a new jolt. The scale and financing of this initiative mark a profound turning point in European financial policy.

It is the hour of the central planners and Euro-bureaucrats. In Alden Biesen, the European Union’s course will be determined – and how it responds to its economic weakness.

Two years ago, Draghi laid out his strategy to strengthen the EU’s competitiveness. In short, Eurozone countries would raise €800 billion annually in joint debt and invest these funds strategically in renewable energy, digitalization, and coordinated European industrial policy. This, he argues, would close the massive competitiveness gap with the US and China. Simply put – EU intellectual processes usually operate on modest ambition.

The Draghi Plan represents a profound paradigm shift. It implies the completion of the Capital Markets Union and the creation of an EU-wide debt pool – precisely the instrument that former Chancellor Helmut Kohl had deemed an absolute red line for abandoning the Deutsche Mark and introducing the euro.

Kohl’s skepticism was not unfounded. For those familiar with the fiscal behavior of countries such as France, Greece, Italy, or Spain, such a step would be nothing short of a sacrilege. It is evident that any national budget politician would rely without hesitation on Germany’s fiscal solidity – which, as we know, has been effectively crucified by Chancellor Friedrich Merz in the past year.

The openly discussed fiscal hubris in the Draghi vein is accompanied by cautiously inserted bureaucratic verbosity. Progressivism and populist appearances aside, it is clear that the EU’s bureaucratic apparatus and its national branches cannot be circumvented – this construct has become the actual power base of politics, its bureaucracy serving as an extended arm and visible presence in the provinces.

The number of regulations issued and interventions in market processes almost defines political power within this structure. Meanwhile, the Union, in the mode of green-transformation central planning, is heading toward economic disaster without the bureaucratic apparatus being in the least affected.

Among the loud proponents of this policy is French President Emmanuel Macron. On Tuesday, he explicitly called for permanent joint borrowing capacities at the EU level.

Macron, a president without a people, whose approval ratings hover around 15 percent, went further than Draghi’s hubris: he demanded funding via the issuance of €1.2 trillion in joint Eurobonds annually. Naturally, these funds would flow into green and digital technologies, as well as the growing European defense complex, to deliver the hoped-for economic breakthrough. Green still seems the color of hope, while European daily life sinks into deep gray. 

Macron’s move to another funding level is understandable given his country’s precarious fiscal situation. With public debt over 115 percent and a deficit well above five percent this year, it is practically impossible to overcome the parliamentary deadlock and enforce the minority government supported by President Sébastien Lecornu.

France remains the ungovernable, reform-incapable millstone now thrown around the necks of other Europeans.

Yet it would be unfair to focus solely on France, without noting the enormous fiscal holes in other countries. The Mediterranean problem cannot be solved under the current political design. Countries such as Finland, and especially Belgium, also stagger toward a serious funding crisis of their overstretched welfare states.

EU Europe is far more than just a club of debtors. Within Brussels’ leadership circle, there is consensus to postpone pressing reforms – such as ending the ideological open-borders policy or limiting overstretched welfare states – through new debt and ever higher levies on the middle class.

The debate over introducing a wealth tax in Germany, or raising inheritance taxes on corporate assets, underscores the technocratic mindset of the political class and the intent to shift fiscal burdens onto a shrinking middle class.

With the US stepping back from the phalanx of globalists and central planners, the EU faces pressure: either comply with Washington’s new political strategy – accept deregulation, establish a new border regime, and abandon the civilization-hostile green transformation project – or continue its own course, effectively in a negative fiscal spiral.

The alternative will likely be presented at the EU summit: a “carry on” approach, accelerating the descent down a tilted slope, in the hope of somehow surviving the passage of time.

Europe’s bureaucratic representatives now deliberate over competitiveness – failing to see that their own existence logic and institutional design are the root cause of economic weakness. Macron, von der Leyen, and Merz appear less as actors than as symptoms of a postmodern cultural problem: the rejection of civic values, the erosion of cultural capital, and the disregard for meritocratic principles accelerate the decline of Western economies.

Competitiveness requires more than state investment and financial incentives. It thrives only on a foundation of value-based thinking, stable family structures, and intergenerational responsibility.

Education, diligence, and innovation can only flourish if individual achievement is recognized. Equally crucial are social bonds that transmit knowledge and skills from one generation to the next.

Without this cultural and moral foundation, any polity degenerates into a form of parasitism, most evident in Europe’s growing welfare structures.

The imposition of colossal debts to stabilize the fatal European socialization experiment on future generations constitutes the ethical sin of this policy and will massively accelerate the EU’s decline.

* * * 

About the author: Thomas Kolbe, born in 1978 in Neuss/ Germany, is a graduate economist. For over 25 years, he has worked as a journalist and media producer for clients from various industries and business associations. As a publicist, he focuses on economic processes and observes geopolitical events from the perspective of the capital markets. His publications follow a philosophy that focuses on the individual and their right to self-determination

Tyler Durden Thu, 02/12/2026 - 09:45

"Modern Money Only Works By Cheating": If You're Long Bitcoin (Or Not Long Bitcoin), Read This...

"Modern Money Only Works By Cheating": If You're Long Bitcoin (Or Not Long Bitcoin), Read This...

Tl;dr: Bitcoin exists not to replace fiat money but as a provocative "hard object" in an elastic monetary world. Modern fiat succeeds by cheating - deferring pain, socializing losses, and bending rules to absorb crises (Weimar rigidity led to hyperinflation; 1929 rigidity was abandoned for elasticity in the 1930s; 2008 and COVID responses bent rules to survive). Fiat buys time during trauma but creates ratcheting inflation that disproportionately burdens the asset-poor, while rewarding mobile capital.

Bitcoin recreates gold's key elusive trait: non-discretionary, issuer-risk-free scarcity in digital form. Unlike gold (which responds to price via new supply), Bitcoin's 21-million cap is mechanically enforced by code and time, refusing incentives. This makes it an potential anchor beneath fiat - collateral for credit expansion - if it scales to gold-like market value (~$45T vs. Bitcoin's ~$1T).

Yet the real risk lies not in math (256-bit cryptography remains robust against classical attacks) but in human coordination: governance, quantum threats requiring consensus upgrades, and holder temperament during violent drawdowns. Markets price Bitcoin's gap to gold not from doubts about scarcity, but from uncertainty about whether humans can endure its rigid, psychologically demanding process without capitulating. Bitcoin tests endurance more than code - its value hinges on who holds it, and for how long.

*  *  *

For the OG ZeroHedgers, Hugh Hendry's name will be well known and well respected.

For others, the infamous Scot made his bones being the ultimate contrarian to the world's order and making a killing through the great financial crisis for himself and his hedge fund partners.

Google is your friend to find the many times we posted on Hendry's musings in the late 2000s, early 2010s.

On the nature of panics and capital destruction (from Eclectica Fund commentary, August 2007): "Panics do not destroy capital; they merely reveal the extent to which it has been previously destroyed by its betrayal into unproductive works."

On speculation ending (August 2008 interview, amid the crisis escalation): "There is no role for speculation or speculators today. This is kaput. If we were Second World War generals, we've exposed our flanks and the enemy is advancing."

Hendry frequently emphasized contrarianism, asymmetry in bets (e.g., tail-risk protection with high upside in disasters), and skepticism of consensus. He drew inspiration from existentialist ideas, once saying principles like "God is dead, life is absurd, and there are no rules" guided his investing - fitting for someone willing to bet aggressively against the crowd pre-crisis.

His was the best performing macro hedge fund in 2010.

During Trump 1.0 he warned about the decline of Europe: "In Europe we anticipate further duress in the political commitment to the European project as the success of Trump’s economic stimulus plan keeps US growth humming along leaving the continent badly exposed as a politically fractured economy without the resolve to implement successful growth strategies."

This was him in 2020 before the inflation crisis: "Chaos is coming... The mood of the nation is what unleashes the inflationary genie...it is not a monetary phenomenon."

A few years after apparently retiring to St.Barts, the former Eclectica asset management co-founder is living his best life and sharing his thoughts via substack.

Hendry recently opined on "Bitcoin & The Human Problem", explaining why certainty breaks us before price does.

bitcoin is down more than fifty percent from its high, and that fact alone is not even the bad news. historically, it usually gets worse. seventy percent drawdowns. eighty percent. this is not an anomaly, it is the pattern. the real question however is not why bitcoin does this, but why we keep pretending that this time will be different for us.

every cycle, people search for external explanations. leverage. regulation. china. quantum computing. the excuse does not matter. what matters is that the moment price falls hard enough, belief collapses. not because the thesis changed, but because the human brain cannot tolerate certainty paired with delayed reward under stress. when the future is clear but distant, and the present is painful, we choose relief now over reward later. always.

this is where monetary ideology dies and psychology takes over. under threat, we rewrite reality to avoid pain. we call it cognitive dissonance if we want to sound clever, but it is really just survival instinct. beliefs are luxuries. when belief becomes dangerous, it is abandoned instantly. peter denies jesus the moment belief threatens his safety. bitcoin does the same thing to its disciples. the king of hard money is worshipped right up until holding him becomes intolerable.

bitcoin’s fatal flaw, if it has one, is not technological. it is revelatory. it shows you the future too early and too clearly. a million dollars per coin is not a vague hope, it is a vivid image. our brains are not designed to hold that vision steady through violent volatility. we are not wired to lose money while knowing, with unbearable clarity, that patience would eventually make us rich. that contradiction fries the nervous system.

so the price falls, the new money panics, and belief evaporates on contact with stress. bitcoin is not failing. we are. gullible, imaginative, hysterical creatures who can glimpse the future but cannot emotionally survive the path to get there. the asset does not break. the holder does.

this is also why we will be replaced by machines. not because they are smarter, though they are, but because they can tolerate certainty without emotion. they do not flinch at drawdowns. they do not seek relief. they simply execute.

the bitter punchline is that nothing has changed. the future remains intact. the path remains unbearable. accumulation only becomes possible when holding becomes intolerable. below fifty thousand. really below forty. that is the ritual. that is the prayer. bitcoin does not need faith. humans do, and we keep losing it at precisely the wrong moment.

But, his latest note "Bitcoin & The Problem Of Hardness" is a masterpiece in seeing the big picture as he wends his way from the old world to the present day, explaining why mathematics, trauma, and human temperament matter more than ideology in modern money...

[ZH: Hendry writes in a unique style, without using capitals, we have chosen to preserve that style, though we have bolded a few sections of particular interest.]

For years, i treated bitcoin as something i understood well enough to have an opinion on, but not well enough to take apart properly.

that wasn’t laziness. it wasn’t lack of curiosity. it was the quiet assumption that whatever bitcoin was trying to solve, modern finance had already found a workaround.

this fourth, violent drawdown forced me to reconsider that assumption.

not as a trade, not as a belief system, but as a monetary object with consequences. at this point in its life, repeated collapses are no longer a curiosity. they are a feature that demands explanation.

this piece is my attempt to finally map the terrain i’d been circling for years: bitcoin’s hardness, its fragility, its human governance, and its uneasy relationship with a world that increasingly runs on elastic money and digital abundance. it’s not a defence. it’s not an indictment. it’s an audit.

writing it surprised me. i came away less certain about price, more certain about structure, and far more interested in the question of whether bitcoin’s biggest risk has ever been the mathematics at all.

if you’ve felt confident dismissing bitcoin, or confident believing in it, this is written for you. it left me sharper. i hope it does the same for you.

hugh.

a hard object in an elastic world.

bitcoin is not here to save the world. its here because the world learned the hard way that modern money only works by cheating. cheating time. cheating pain. cheating death. we built systems that survive by bending, by socialising loss, by pretending tomorrow can always carry what today can’t. and it mostly worked. worked well enough that america never failed, markets never cleared, and catastrophe was deferred again and again.

but in doing so, we quietly erased something that used to matter. the idea that there should exist at least one asset that doesn’t bend. one thing that refuses discretion. one thing that doesn’t care who’s in power, who’s desperate, or who’s about to break. bitcoin is not an improvement on the system. it is a provocation aimed at it.

a hard object thrown into an elastic world to see what happens.

that provocation only makes sense once you recognise what elastic money left behind. as societies embraced fiat, the global pool of savings did not become defenceless. inflation arrived, but it was hedgeable. equities, property, credit, productive ownership. capital learned how to run. what didn’t reappear was another asset that hedged inflation without introducing credit risk.

gold has of course played that role for centuries. scarce, apolitical, jurisdictionless, created without leverage, owing nothing to anyone. an inflation hedge that was simultaneously riskless. when gold was demoted as a monetary standard, that role was tolerated, not replaced when gold was ransacked between the long years of 1980 and 2011. curious minds looked for an alternative.

bitcoin emerged inside that gap. not as a rejection of fiat, and not as a tool for managing economic cycles, but as an attempt to recreate gold’s most elusive property in digital form. not merely scarcity, but scarcity without issuer risk. not just protection against dilution, but insulation from discretion. this is why bitcoin’s design is so severe. if the objective were simply to hedge inflation, the world already has dozens of ways to do that. the harder ambition is to build an asset that can sit beneath the monetary system as collateral rather than inside it.

that ambition now collides with modern finance. credit expands not on trust, but on what can be pledged. this is why stablecoins matter. they fuse the credit-risklessness of us treasuries with hard constraints elsewhere in the system. they are the clearest signal yet that the future of fiat will be built on better collateral, not moral restraint. bitcoin has a seat at that table only if it can scale into a recognised, liquid, riskless anchor. and that requires market value. not sentiment. not belief. but a market value deep enough to support global credit creation without fragility.

this is why the comparison with gold is unavoidable. gold is roughly forty-five trillion dollars. bitcoin remains under one. the gap is not philosophical. it is functional. geology has already earned its role. mathematics is still auditioning.

the question is not whether bitcoin is scarce enough, portable enough, or clever enough.

the question is whether an asset enforced by code and human coordination can ever be trusted, at scale, in the way an asteroid once was.

this is what this paper is about.

not whether bitcoin replaces fiat. it will not.

not whether elasticity is immoral. it is not.

fiat in an age of abundance.

the defining monetary lesson of the twentieth century was not ideological. it was traumatic. it emerged not from debates about socialism versus capitalism, or keynes versus hayek, but from the lived experience of what happens when economic systems impose rigidity on societies already under extreme stress.

after the first world war, germany was not a failed society. it was bruised, diminished, politically unstable, and deeply resentful, but it remained functional. industry existed. labour existed. institutions existed. the system was strained, not yet broken. the collapse came later, and it was not inevitable.

versailles changed that.

the treaty was not merely punitive. it was vindictive and economically illiterate. reparations were demanded in hard terms, payable in gold, at precisely the moment germany’s productive capacity was being constrained. forgiveness was absent. flexibility was absent. economic reality was ignored.

when germany struggled to meet those obligations, the response was not renegotiation but enforcement. in 1923, french and belgian forces occupied the ruhr valley, seizing control of germany’s industrial heartland, its coal, its steel, its metal production, while still demanding gold payments to the allied victors. output was taken. gold was still required. rigidity was imposed from both ends.

this was the breaking point.

what followed was not ideological radicalisation in the abstract, but economic paralysis in practice. unemployment surged. production collapsed. a growing share of the adult population became economically useless. not inefficient. not underpaid. useless. idle. watching. waiting. that condition does not produce reflection or moderation. it produces rage. and hyper-inflation.

hard money did not cause the collapse of weimar germany. but it failed catastrophically to absorb the trauma. and when institutions fracture under mass unemployment, money fractures with them. hyperinflation wasn’t softness. it was panic. it was the monetary expression of legitimacy evaporating in real time.

that sequence mattered. and it was remembered.

a decade later, the world faced another shock that threatened to replay the same pattern at a far larger scale. the crash of 1929 produced mass unemployment, collapsing demand, and the genuine possibility that the american system would follow germany down the same path. the ingredients were familiar: idle men, shuttered factories, political stress, and a rigid monetary framework that transmitted pressure rather than absorbing it.

this time, the response changed.

gold was abandoned as the governing constraint, not because it was immoral or discredited, but because it was brittle. too rigid to cope with systemic trauma. under gold, pressure concentrates until something snaps. under fiat, pressure disperses. elasticity replaced purity. monetary doctrine abandoned to keep the system intact.

the response was ugly. it was unfair. it produced deserved anger. but it worked.

the united states survived intact. unemployment was brutal, but the political centre held. extremism remained marginal. fiat didn’t heal the trauma, but it prevented it from metastasising. that became the lesson: in moments of economic shock, hardness accelerates entropy, while monetary elasticity buys time. and time, in stressed societies, is the difference between repair and collapse.

this was not an argument against scarcity. it was an argument against rigidity in the wrong place, at the wrong time. fiat emerged not as an ideological triumph, but as an adaptive response to the catastrophic failure of hard constraints under conditions of mass unemployment.

that distinction matters, because bitcoin did not arrive to overturn this lesson. it arrived long after, in its aftermath.

fiat’s ugly success.

over the subsequent century, that logic has been tested repeatedly, and each time it has been reaffirmed under pressure.

the global financial crisis of 2008 was not a scare or a stress test. it was a system-wide cardiac arrest. the banking system was insolvent in any meaningful sense. the only open question was whether circulation could be restarted before institutional damage became permanent. the response was not elegant. rules were bent. balance sheets were expanded. losses were socialised. hard constraints were suspended to keep the system alive. it was ugly, unfair, and morally nauseating to me and many others. it also worked.

the same pattern repeated during the pandemic. supply chains froze. borders closed. hospitals filled. the phrase “human extinction” escaped the laboratory and entered the bloodstream of culture. belief alone was enough to threaten collapse. once again, fiat leaned in. too much some say. money expanded. credit expanded. time was frozen. people were paid to stay home while the system was held upright. once again, rigidity was rejected in favour of elasticity. once again, the worst tail events were avoided.

this is what fiat does well.

it absorbs shocks that hard systems transmit. it disperses pressure instead of concentrating it. it allows societies to survive periods of mass dislocation without forcing immediate liquidation of people, institutions, or legitimacy. in a world repeatedly exposed to financial crises, pandemics, and geopolitical shocks, this has proven to be a feature, not a bug.

elasticity, however, is not free.

the cost shows up as inflation. not as a temporary inconvenience, but as a ratchet. prices spike, settle, and then remain elevated. grocery bills do not return to their old levels. this is the mechanical consequence of pushing risk forward in time. fiat smooths the present by borrowing from the future.

this matters most for those without assets. for the disenfranchised, inflation is not a macroeconomic abstraction or a debate about models. it is a daily budgetary pressure. rent before wages. food before leisure. energy before dignity. when prices ratchet higher, there is no portfolio adjustment, no rebalancing, no clever hedge. there is only less room to breathe.

modern financial systems are exceptionally effective at protecting those who already participate in them. the franchise holders. equities rise with nominal growth. property absorbs inflation and then some. credit, leverage, index-linked instruments, real assets, productive ownership. the menu is broad, liquid, and proven. elasticity doesn’t destroy capital for insiders. it often enriches them. asset prices inflate faster than wages precisely because the system is designed to keep capital mobile and solvent.

the burden falls elsewhere.

what inflation punishes is not thrift in some moral sense, but exclusion. money left idle because it must be. capital that cannot move because it does not exist. patience without agency. this is not a judgment about behaviour. it is a structural outcome. fiat rewards participation and mobility, not fairness. and over long periods of sustained monetary elasticity, that distinction compounds into something corrosive. something unfair.

this is where bitcoin enters the story, not as a solution to inequality, and not as a replacement for fiat, but as a strange and uncomfortable experiment. a mathematical object offered to the world without permission, leverage, or jurisdiction. a bearer asset in digital form. one that could, in principle, be owned by anyone with access to a phone and an internet connection. no bank account required. no credit history. no gatekeeper.

for the disenfranchised, that possibility mattered. not because bitcoin guaranteed protection, but because it offered asymmetry. if the experiment failed, little was lost. if it succeeded, if a provably scarce, apolitical, non-discretionary asset could be recognised at scale, the upside was transformative. not charity. social escape velocity. that truth remains.

but the promise remains unresolved. and it brings us back to the central tension of this paper. bitcoin’s relevance, credibility, and ultimate utility depend not on ideology, but on scale. to function as an anchor inside a fiat system. to serve as collateral, to support credit, to matter. the market capitalisation of bitcoin must approach that of gold. anything smaller remains a speculation. anything larger becomes infrastructure.

this is why the question is no longer academic. after fifteen years, bitcoin is no longer a curiosity. it is a lab rat running in real time, being tested as to whether mathematical scarcity can earn the trust, liquidity, and legitimacy that geological scarcity acquired over centuries. and whether doing so can widen access to riskless inflation protection, rather than merely creating a new priesthood.

this distinction sharpens as economies approach a shock larger than weimar or 1929: the displacement of labour by machines. automation and artificial intelligence are not just productivity stories. they are redundancy events. entire categories of work will vanish faster than societies can reassign income, purpose, or dignity. in that world, the fragile variable is not capital. it is employment.

fiat will almost certainly be called upon again. not as ideology, but as necessity. universal credit, fiscal transfers, monetary elasticity. these are the tools required to cushion employment shock and prevent social fracture when labour is displaced at scale. this is not conjecture. it is the only mechanism modern states possess to manage such transitions.

and importantly, this world does not lack inflation hedges. what is missing is something narrower and more structural: non-discretionary scarcity at industrial scale. assets that can sit at the base of the monetary system as collateral, not because they promise growth, but because they promise constraint.

gold once played that role. perhaps it will again. bitcoin is an attempt to recreate it digitally. not as salvation, and not as an alternative to elasticity, but as a potential anchor beneath it. the unresolved question is whether bitcoin can grow large enough, liquid enough, and trusted enough to serve that role when the singularity arrives.

how gold actually works.

gold has long been understood as money that sits outside politics. it is trusted precisely because it is not governed by decree, not issued by states, and not altered by committees. its neutrality is earned through distance. it is dug from the ground, refined at cost, and accumulated slowly. for centuries, that physical constraint has made it a reliable anchor when confidence in human institutions has failed.

but gold’s scarcity is often misunderstood.

when gold traded at roughly three hundred dollars an ounce in the early 2000s, global proven and probable reserves were estimated at around forty-five to fifty thousand tonnes. exploration budgets were thin. lower-grade ore was uneconomic. entire jurisdictions were ignored. supply looked finite because, at that price, it effectively was.

that picture changes when price changes.

today, with gold trading around five thousand dollars an ounce, estimated proven and probable reserves are closer to sixty-five to seventy-two thousand tonnes, despite decades of continuous mining. higher prices reclassify rock into ore. tailings into assets. deposits once dismissed as marginal suddenly become viable. jurisdictions previously considered uneconomic re-enter the map.

this is not debasement. it is response.

gold does not dilute itself politically. it expands itself industrially. when price rises, supply responds. not instantly. not recklessly. but structurally. historically, global gold supply has grown at roughly three percent per year. that rate is slow enough to preserve trust, but persistent enough to matter over long horizons.

by the end of this century, if history is any guide, the total stock of gold mined plus proven and probable reserves will have roughly doubled. no votes will be taken. no rules will be changed. physics will simply do what physics allows.
this is both gold’s strength and its limitation.

gold’s hardness is governed by geology. it obeys natural law, not human coordination. that makes it politically neutral and socially legible. but it also means that gold cannot refuse incentives. when the reward is high enough, more effort is applied. more technology is deployed. more supply eventually emerges.

gold responds to price.

that property does not make gold inferior. it makes it comprehensible. markets understand geological scarcity instinctively. they know how it behaves under stress. they know how it leaks. slowly. predictably. impersonally.

this is the benchmark against which bitcoin is inevitably measured. not because bitcoin is trying to replace gold, but because gold represents the oldest and most trusted expression of non-sovereign scarcity.

bitcoin enters this landscape not as a moral challenger to gold, but as a mechanical one. its claim is not that gold is weak, but that there exists another form of hardness, governed not by physics, but by time and rule.

that distinction is where the argument begins.

a different kind of hardness.

bitcoin’s claim is not philosophical. it is mechanical.

unlike gold, bitcoin does not respond to price. it does not expand when demand rises, and it does not contract when demand falls. its supply is governed entirely by time, according to a schedule fixed at inception and enforced by the network itself. that schedule does not care about recessions, wars, elections, panics, or the bitcoin price.

bitcoin was capped at birth. twenty-one million units. not an estimate. not a reserve calculation. not a probabilistic assessment signed off by a committee. a hard ceiling, defined in code and indifferent to circumstance. roughly ninety-four percent of that supply has already been issued. the remainder will be released slowly, on a predetermined path, with issuance effectively exhausted by around 2040. after that, the supply does not grow.

this is what makes bitcoin unusual. gold’s scarcity is governed by geology and incentives. bitcoin’s scarcity is governed by rules and time. when the gold price rises, supply eventually responds. when the bitcoin price rises, supply does not. instead, issuance tightens mechanically through the halving process, which reduces the flow of new coins roughly every four years regardless of demand.

this is not a moral hierarchy. it is a structural asymmetry.

gold is scarce because it is hard to extract. bitcoin is scarce because it is hard to change. gold’s constraint is physical. bitcoin’s constraint is social and procedural. one obeys physics. the other obeys consensus. both are forms of hardness, but they behave differently under stress.

by the end of this century the total stock of bitcoin will be unchanged. there will be no technological breakthrough that unlocks new bitcoin deposits. no reclassification of marginal code into viable supply. no price signal that induces expansion. scarcity is enforced by design, not discovered over time.

this is why bitcoin is often described as algorithmically scarce. not because it is digital, but because its supply dynamics are explicitly non-responsive. it is a system constructed to refuse incentives. where gold yields, bitcoin remains inert.
that inertness is the feature. it is also the source of discomfort.

markets are comfortable with scarcity that leaks slowly and impersonally. they are less comfortable with scarcity that depends on rule adherence and human coordination. geological systems do not argue back. social systems do. and the harder the rule, the more attention is paid to whether it can be broken.

bitcoin’s hardness, therefore, is not just a question of numbers. it is a question of credibility. not whether the rules are strict, but whether they can remain strict under pressure. not whether scarcity is defined, but whether it can survive stress without being renegotiated.

this is where bitcoin stops looking like a commodity and starts looking like a monetary regime. a red flag perhaps. its scarcity doesn’t rest on trust in institutions or authority, but it does rest on the collective willingness of participants to enforce rules that cannot be appealed, amended, or suspended for convenience.

that is a powerful design choice. it is also a demanding one. and its why bitcoin cannot be evaluated solely on the basis of its supply curve. the market is not just pricing scarcity. it is pricing the process required to maintain it.

that process is where the real uncertainty begins.

abundance and the exception.

what happens to scarcity in a world where almost everything else becomes abundant.

over the long arc of technological progress, the dominant trend is collapse in marginal cost. compute becomes cheaper. energy becomes more efficient. bandwidth expands. manufacturing scales. even intelligence and creativity, once thought irreducibly human, begin to look reproducible. the direction of travel is clear. more output, less input. more capability, less cost.

this abundance is not evenly distributed, but it is relentless.

the consequence is that scarcity erodes almost everywhere. goods that were once expensive become cheap. processes that once required labour become automated. advantages that once persisted collapse under replication. for capital, this creates opportunity. for labour, it creates displacement. entire categories of work can disappear faster than societies can reassign income, status, or purpose.

this is not a policy failure. it is a feature of technological speed.

but abundance sharpens the value of what does not scale. as more assets become reproducible, the appeal of assets that are deliberately constrained increases. not as replacements for fiat, and not as solutions to inequality, but as anchors. reference points. stores of value whose scarcity is not a function of demand, innovation, or political discretion.

gold has played this role for centuries. its scarcity leaks, but slowly enough to remain legible. bitcoin proposes a different anchor. one whose scarcity is not discovered over time, but enforced from the outset. in a world where almost everything responds to incentive, bitcoin is constructed to refuse it.

this is the context in which bitcoin should be understood. not as a bet against fiat, and not as a utopian alternative to modern states, but as an engineered exception in an environment of accelerating abundance. its relevance increases not because fiat is failing, but because fiat is succeeding in a world where the primary challenge is managing transition rather than enforcing discipline.

scarcity is collapsing across the economic landscape. where it persists, it does so either because physics enforces it, as with gold, or because rules do, as with bitcoin.

that distinction sets the stage for the central question the market is still wrestling with. not whether scarcity matters, but whether scarcity enforced by human process can command the same confidence as scarcity enforced by nature. the risk is not mathematical.

at the heart of this paper is not the price of bitcoin, not the narrative, but the thing that actually makes it scarce in practice. the lock.

bitcoin’s supply is only as hard as the mechanism that enforces ownership. that mechanism is encryption. not trust. not reputation. not authority. mathematics. ownership is defined by the ability to produce a valid cryptographic proof. if you can produce it, the network recognises you as the owner. if you can’t, the coins don’t move. there is no appeal, no administrator, no override, no discretion. the rule is absolute.

this is what gives bitcoin its hardness. not belief, but enforcement.

the lock itself is built on a key space so large that ordinary intuition fails. bitcoin’s current security rests on 256-bit cryptography. that number sounds abstract, but its meaning is concrete. it implies a universe of possible keys so vast that guessing the correct one is not merely unlikely, but physically meaningless. the standard analogy holds because it is accurate: it is equivalent to predicting the outcome of 256 perfectly fair coin tosses, correctly, in a single attempt. the number of possible outcomes dwarfs the number of atoms in the observable universe. not by a margin, but by orders of magnitude.

this is why bitcoin’s scarcity feels real. not asserted. not agreed upon. enforced by a wall that cannot be climbed with any conceivable amount of classical computing power. brute force does not fail slowly here. it fails categorically.

but no wall built from mathematics is eternal.

this is not heresy inside cryptography. it is orthodoxy. cryptographic systems are not laws of nature. they are assumptions about what is computationally infeasible given the machines we can build. quantum computing, if it matures to sufficient scale and reliability, does not gradually erode those assumptions. it invalidates them. in principle, certain mathematical problems that are intractable today become solvable. locks that once looked cosmological become penetrable.

this does not mean bitcoin is vulnerable today. it does mean that its hardness is not geological. it is conditional.

this is where discussion usually collapses into nonsense. critics speak as if bitcoin is on a ticking clock, moments from cryptographic collapse. advocates respond with hand-waving, invoking “bigger keys” or future upgrades as if the problem dissolves on contact. both positions miss the point.

the reality is more disciplined. cryptography is not out of tools. alternative ways of securing digital ownership already exist. increasing security parameters does not linearly increase difficulty; it explodes it. problem spaces expand faster than attackers can realistically pursue. even under aggressive assumptions about future machines, there are known constructions that push feasible attacks back beyond plausible horizons.

the constraint is not mathematics. it is coordination.

engineering disciplines do not harden systems today against threats that are distant, speculative, and underspecified. doing so imposes costs now for dangers that may arrive differently, or not at all. but good engineering does preserve optionality. it builds systems that can migrate. it avoids dead ends. it leaves room to move without tearing the structure apart.

conservative choices. minimal complexity. maximum headroom.

the lock wasn’t chosen because it was eternal, but because it was overwhelmingly strong relative to any foreseeable attack, while leaving open a path to adaptation if the world changes. the mathematics are formidable. probably sufficient for decades. perhaps longer. the real uncertainty does not live inside the encryption itself. it lives in whether a system that enforces absolute rules can coordinate calmly when those rules eventually need to change.

this distinction matters, because it reveals where the real risk lies.

coordination without a conductor.

bitcoin’s greatest vulnerability is not that mathematics will suddenly fail. it is that adaptation requires agreement.

cryptography can be upgraded. rules can be amended. but only through a slow, voluntary process that depends on human coordination.

software can change. can people?

the market understands this intuitively. it doesn’t price bitcoin as if its code were fragile. it prices bitcoin as if its governance were untested under existential pressure. not because the tools are missing, but because the process has never been forced to prove itself in extremis.

power in bitcoin is negative, not positive. the ability to say “no” matters more than the ability to say “yes.” control is distributed through indifference rather than command. participants who care deeply must persuade participants who often do not. that asymmetry is intentional. it makes capture difficult, but it also makes change slow.

there is an old joke, best told by monty python, about revolutionary movements. everyone agrees on the enemy. everyone agrees on the objective. and yet the room is full of factions who despise one another far more than they fear the empire they claim to oppose. the people’s front, the popular front, the other front that split off last year after a disagreement about principles. the comedy works because it is painfully familiar. shared goals are easy. shared coordination is not.

bitcoin’s existential risk looks uncomfortably similar.

the empire, in this case, is not a political power but a technological one: quantum computing. the objective is clear and universally agreed. protect the lock. preserve the scarcity. keep ownership unforgeable. nobody disputes that. and yet, beneath that agreement sits a familiar fragmentation. different camps, different thresholds, different definitions of danger. some insist the empire is decades away and not worth acknowledging. others want to mobilise immediately. some fear that any coordination is betrayal. others fear that delay is suicide.

bitcoin will not be tested by whether quantum computing arrives tomorrow or in thirty years. it will be tested by whether a system built to resist authority can still recognise an empire when it appears, and act together without collapsing into its own people’s front of judea. rome, in the sketch above, barely needs to intervene. the factions do the work themselves. bitcoin’s challenge is to prove that it can do the opposite. that a system built on voluntary consensus can still recognise a real threat, act deliberately, and preserve its core rules without fragmenting into rival truths.

that is the real hardness test. not whether the locks are strong enough, but whether the people guarding them can tell the difference between principle and paralysis when it finally matters.

quantum as a social stress test.

if quantum computing ever becomes relevant to bitcoin, it will not arrive as a cinematic rupture. there will be no single moment when the system is “broken.” instead, it would surface as a gradual erosion of a specific assumption: that only the holder of a key can authorise the movement of coins. the threat is not to the ledger itself, but to the exclusivity of ownership.

this distinction matters. bitcoin does not depend on secrecy in the abstract. it depends on the idea that control cannot be impersonated. if a new class of machines were ever able to reconstruct ownership credentials from publicly visible information, the system would not collapse overnight. but ownership would become contestable. and contestable ownership is where scarcity begins to blur.

such a threat would not arrive evenly. bitcoin ownership is not a single, uniform thing. some forms of ownership already expose more information than others, simply by how they were created or how they have been used. coins held in older address formats, coins that have reused addresses repeatedly, coins that have moved through transparent scripts, or coins sitting on exchanges necessarily reveal more public data about the conditions under which they can be spent.

other coins are quieter. coins held in newer formats, coins that have never moved, coins protected by more conservative spending conditions disclose far less information to the outside world. they would remain safer for longer, not because their owners are more virtuous, but because there is less surface area to attack.

the result is that pressure would build asymmetrically. some coins would become attractive targets earlier, while others would remain effectively untouched. the system would not fail all at once. it would experience localized stress, visible theft attempts, and contested ownership at the margins. that asymmetry matters. it is precisely what would force the system to confront change before catastrophe, rather than after it.

at that point, bitcoin’s challenge would no longer be mathematical. it would be procedural.

the first step would be agreement on the threat itself. not philosophically, but operationally. what does “quantum capable” mean in practice? how powerful would such machines need to be? how reliable? how accessible? how much warning time would exist between theoretical vulnerability and real-world exploitation? without consensus on the threat model, there can be no consensus on the response.

the second step would be the introduction of new ownership rules. a new kind of lock. bitcoin does not replace its rules abruptly. it adds them cautiously. new rules are typically introduced in ways that allow voluntary adoption before anything old is disabled. this bias toward gradualism is deliberate. it reduces the risk of fragmentation, but it also stretches timelines.

the third step, and the one that dominates everything else, would be migration.

bitcoin cannot move coins on behalf of their owners. there is no administrator. no emergency authority. no recovery desk. holders would need to upgrade wallets, generate new addresses, and move their coins deliberately. exchanges would need to adapt. custodians would need to adapt. hardware manufacturers would need to adapt. this would be a multi-year process under the best of circumstances.

and then comes the question bitcoin has spent most of its existence trying to avoid.

what to do about the old rules.

leaving old ownership rules valid forever preserves neutrality. it ensures that coins valid under the rules at the time remain valid indefinitely. but in a world where those rules are compromised, it also leaves a permanent attack surface. disabling old rules protects the system more aggressively, but it strands anyone who is slow, offline, confused, or dead.

there is no solution here that is clean.

this is where the existence of lost coins becomes unavoidable. it is widely believed that satoshi nakamoto mined roughly one million coins in bitcoin’s earliest days and never moved them. beyond that, several million more coins are thought to be lost owing to forgotten keys, destroyed hardware, or owners who have died. estimates vary, but something like fifteen to twenty percent of the total supply may already be permanently inaccessible.

those coins cannot migrate. they do not upgrade. they do not respond. they simply sit.

in purely economic terms, this creates a tempting argument. disabling old rules would freeze a large share of supply. the remaining coins would instantly become more valuable. incumbents would benefit. attentiveness would be rewarded. scarcity would tighten mechanically. from a price perspective, it looks clean.

but bitcoin is not priced like a system that optimises for incumbent profit. it is priced like a system that optimises for rule legitimacy.

retroactively invalidating ownership that was valid under the rules at the time crosses a line bitcoin has been extraordinarily careful to avoid. not because it is sentimental, but because once a system demonstrates a willingness to forgo legitimate ownership for convenience, every remaining holder must price the risk of being next. the question shifts from “how scarce is this” to “what future behaviour might disqualify me.”

that uncertainty does not announce itself as outrage. it shows up as a higher risk premium. as hesitation. as capital demanding optionality rather than commitment.

history offers guidance here, but only if the analogies are used carefully. the gold confiscation of 1933 is often cited in these debates. it is relevant, but frequently misunderstood. gold did not lose its status as a politically neutral store of value. globally and over time, it retained it. what changed was the monetary regime attempting to bind itself to gold, not gold itself.

the united states abandoned gold because the standard had become too rigid to absorb trauma. deflation was crushing the economy. unemployment was mass. legitimacy was failing. the choice was not between fairness and enrichment. it was between preserving individual claims and preserving the system itself. that was a regime change, not an opportunistic confiscation.

bitcoin’s quantum problem, if it ever becomes real, belongs in that category. not discretionary loss within a stable framework, but a question of whether the framework itself can survive without resetting its assumptions. that does not remove the legitimacy cost. it explains when such a cost might be tolerated.

the bar, however, is extremely high.

any decision to disable old rules would create visible losers. estates. early participants. long-term cold storage. institutions with slow governance. people who played by the rules as they understood them at the time. history shows that such losses can be judged necessary, but only under existential justification, never economic optimisation.

this is why bitcoin has been so resistant to discretionary change. it will tolerate loss. it will tolerate dead keys. it will tolerate entropy. what it resists, almost to the point of paralysis, is retroactive punishment by rule change.

this is the real stress test quantum computing represents. not whether new cryptographic tools exist. they do. not whether mathematics can scale. it can. the question is whether a system built on voluntary consensus can coordinate early enough, calmly enough, and at sufficient scale to protect its own scarcity without tearing its legitimacy apart.

that answer will not be found in code. it will be found in human behaviour.

and that, more than any algorithm, is what markets are still trying to price.

drawdowns and temperament.

bitcoin is down roughly fifty percent. this is not unprecedented. it has happened before, roughly four times, and in several instances the drawdown extended to seventy or even eighty percent. these episodes are often described as failures. they are better understood as stress tests of temperament.

when major assets halve in value, the correct response is not moralisation. it is allocation. this is true of equities, bonds, property, and commodities. when the s&p falls sixty percent, long-term investors do not debate its legitimacy. they buy it. when long-dated treasuries lose half their value, the instruction is the same. systemic assets occasionally experience violent repricing and then persist. bitcoin, if it is to be treated seriously, cannot be exempt from that logic.

this does not mean bitcoin is risk-free. it is not. it carries idiosyncratic risks that traditional assets do not. protocol risk. governance risk. technological risk. those risks are real, and they are reflected in price. they don’t nullify the asset. they explain its volatility.

the mistake is to confuse volatility with fragility.

bitcoin is not protected from pain. it is protected from dilution. supply does not respond to price. losses cannot be offset by issuance. drawdowns, therefore, must be absorbed entirely through repricing. that makes them feel extreme. but it also means that recovery, when it occurs, is not undermined by structural expansion.

this is where temperament replaces ideology. and what is unusual is the emotional intensity attached to these moves.

bitcoin doesn’t behave like an asset that allows gradual accommodation. it confronts holders with repeated tests of conviction. sharp losses followed by long stretches of waiting. certainty about the long-term supply combined with uncertainty about near-term price. that combination is psychologically demanding in a way most assets are not.

this is not a bug. it is the consequence of a system that refuses to smooth outcomes through discretion. volatility is the price of rule rigidity. markets understand this intellectually. individuals struggle with it emotionally.

this is the point at which ideology tends to collapse. narratives fail. communities fracture. people who articulated the thesis most clearly are often the first to abandon it under pressure. not because the thesis changed, but because holding it became economically intolerable.

bitcoin’s drawdowns, then, are not evidence that the system is broken. they are evidence that it is still being held by humans.

that distinction matters as the argument turns to psychology, belief, and the limits of human endurance in the face of certainty combined with delay.

believe, mispricing, and the human discount.

if bitcoin were only a mathematical object, its pricing would be straightforward. fixed supply. known issuance path. no discretion. no response to price. scarcity enforced mechanically rather than culturally. in that world, valuation would be an exercise in discounting time and adoption, not temperament.

but bitcoin is not held by mathematics. it is held by people.

this is the gap the market continues to price. not uncertainty about the code, but uncertainty about human behavior under stress. not whether the rules will hold, but whether holders will.

from inception, bitcoin was framed as revelation rather than instrument. the hardest money. the chosen alternative. the end state. this framing attracted capital, but it also attracted devotion. and devotion is not a stable pricing mechanism. it produces extremes. euphoric bids followed by violent repudiation. certainty on the way up, disgust on the way down.

markets are comfortable pricing scarcity created by geology. they have centuries of experience doing so. gold does not ask holders to believe anything. it does not demand patience under explicit stress. it does not confront its owners with countdowns, halvings, or visible issuance cliffs. its supply leaks quietly over centuries. impersonally. nobody has to watch it happen.

bitcoin is different. its scarcity is pristine, but it is also theatrical. the issuance schedule is known. the halving dates are calendared. the future is visible. and humans do not handle visible certainty well, especially when the reward is delayed and the price path is violent.

behavioral finance has names for this. temporal discounting. loss aversion. cognitive dissonance. but labels are beside the point. the practical outcome is simple. people sell not when the thesis breaks, but when holding becomes psychologically intolerable.

this is why drawdowns cluster around moments of structural clarity rather than structural failure. the halving does not damage bitcoin. it clarifies it. supply tightens. expectations rise. volatility follows. and under that pressure, the weakest element in the system is exposed.

the weakest element is not the cryptography.

it is not the supply rule.

it is not the network.

it is the holder.

this is not a moral judgment. it is a structural observation. bitcoin asks humans to do something they are historically bad at: tolerate long periods of stagnation and drawdown in exchange for a future that feels intellectually certain but emotionally distant.

gold went through this process over decades. from 1980 to 2011, it failed to make a real high. the thesis did not change. the environment did. but those who were right too early experienced thirty years of indistinguishable wrongness. many abandoned the asset not because it stopped being scarce, but because waiting became unbearable.

bitcoin is compressing that experience into years rather than decades. its adolescence has been marked by repeated, brutal repricing. each one framed as terminal. each one survivable. the speed intensifies the stress. the transparency magnifies it.

this is why the valuation gap between bitcoin and gold remains so wide. gold’s scarcity is enforced by physics and tolerated by human indifference. bitcoin’s scarcity is enforced by code and tested by human psychology. markets price that difference.

to say bitcoin may be mispriced is not to claim inevitability. it is to observe that the discount applied to it appears to be dominated less by doubts about mathematics and more by doubts about the human process required to endure it.

whether that discount narrows over time is not a question of code.

it is a question of who ends up holding the asset.

and for how long.

the transition from narrative-driven ownership to process-driven ownership is slow, but it is not hypothetical. it has happened before. equity markets in the early 20th century were dominated by individuals reacting emotionally to price. today they are shaped by institutions, mandates, and machines that do not care how a drawdown feels, only how it fits within a distribution.

bitcoin appears to be moving through a similar maturation, compressed in time and amplified in volatility. early ownership was ideological. then speculative. what comes next is procedural. assets that survive long enough tend to shed believers and acquire custodians.

this shift does not eliminate volatility. it changes its character. drawdowns become less about loss of faith and more about rebalancing flows. price discovery becomes less theatrical and more mechanical. the asset stops asking to be believed in and starts being held because it fits.

hardness, elasticity, and what the market is still pricing.

it is worth returning, briefly and soberly, to first principles.

this is not an argument against fiat. nor is it a plea for monetary purity. fiat is not a mistake. it was a response. it emerged from the wreckage of the twentieth century, shaped by mass death, political collapse, and the recognition that rigid systems amplify trauma rather than absorb it. elastic money was not designed to be virtuous. it was designed to prevent societies from tearing themselves apart under economic stress.

by that standard, it has largely succeeded. again and again, in 1929, the 1970s, in 2000, 2008 and in 2020, fiat absorbed shocks that would otherwise have produced mass unemployment, institutional collapse, and political extremism. the cost has been inflation, moral hazard, and periodic outrage. but the alternative was worse. history makes that clear.

bitcoin does not exist to replace this system. it exists alongside it, asking a narrower and more uncomfortable question.

how much hardness can a monetary asset sustain without breaking its holders.

gold answers that question geologically.

supply responds to price. scarcity leaks slowly. nobody has to endure explicit tests of faith.

bitcoin answers it mathematically.

supply is fixed. issuance is known. scarcity is absolute. and the burden of adjustment falls entirely on price and psychology.

this difference matters for valuation.

gold’s total market value is roughly forty five trillion dollars. bitcoin’s is under one. geology is not forty five times more convincing than mathematics. but geology is indifferent to belief, while bitcoin requires humans to live inside its rules. markets price that difference aggressively.

bitcoin’s challenge has never been proving its hardness. it has been surviving the consequences of it. repeated drawdowns are not evidence that the system is flawed. they are evidence that its constraints are real. scarcity enforced without discretion produces volatility. volatility tests holders. most fail. a few persist. over time, ownership concentrates in hands that can tolerate the process.

this is why the asset still looks mispriced to some observers including myself. not because the mathematics are uncertain, but because the market continues to apply a heavy discount to the human process required to hold it. that discount may persist for years. it may narrow slowly. it may never fully disappear. none of those outcomes invalidate the structure.

bitcoin was framed early as revelation rather than instrument. that framing attracted devotion, and devotion made the journey harder than it needed to be. gold’s history offers a cautionary parallel. being right too early feels exactly like being wrong. conviction held without relief curdles into capitulation.

what matters now is not belief, but endurance.

bitcoin does not promise comfort. it does not promise justice. it does not promise to save anyone. it offers one thing only: a set of rules that do not bend to price, politics, or persuasion. whether that is valuable depends entirely on who is holding it and why.

the mathematics will almost certainly hold long enough. the question has always been whether we will.

and that, more than code or cryptography, is what the market continues to price.

hugh.

Read much more from Hugh at his 'The ACID Capitalist' substack here...

Tyler Durden Thu, 02/12/2026 - 09:20

CME Explores First-Ever Rare Earth Futures Contracts

CME Explores First-Ever Rare Earth Futures Contracts

CME Group is drawing up plans for what could become the first-ever futures contract tied to rare earths, according to three people familiar with the matter, offering governments, companies and lenders a potential tool to manage exposure to a market long dominated by China, according to Reuters.

The proposed contract would track neodymium and praseodymium (NdPr), typically traded together and used to produce permanent magnets found in electric vehicle motors, wind turbines, drones and fighter jets. While discussions are ongoing, no final decision has been made. Liquidity remains a concern, as rare earth trading volumes are small compared with most established metals markets.

Rival exchange operator Intercontinental Exchange has also examined launching rare earth derivatives, though two sources said its efforts are at an earlier stage. CME declined to comment, and ICE did not respond to requests for comment.

Reuters writes that volatile pricing has been a major obstacle for Western rare earth projects seeking funding. Banks have been wary of backing new mines and processing facilities because producers lack reliable ways to hedge against sharp price swings. According to Shanghai Metals Market data, NdPr prices in China have surged roughly 40% this year to their highest levels since mid-2022, after sliding by half in the 15 months through May 2023. Currently, benchmark prices are set in China and reflected in assessments by agencies including Fastmarkets and Benchmark Mineral Intelligence.

China controls about 90% of processed rare earth supply, complicating Western efforts to diversify sourcing. Rare earths — a group of 17 elements essential to electronics, defence systems and the energy transition — have become a strategic priority. The U.S. recently introduced a $12 billion strategic stockpile and formed a preferential trade bloc with allies focused on critical minerals. Last July, Washington agreed to a multibillion-dollar package with MP Materials that included a 15% stake and a price floor linked to NdPr.

A futures contract could help both producers and industrial buyers, including EV manufacturers, manage price risk more effectively. "It's such a key missing piece of the puzzle for the industry right now," one source said.

CME, already active in lithium and cobalt futures markets, recently reported quarterly profit ahead of Wall Street forecasts, with average daily trading volumes climbing 7.5% to a record 27.4 million contracts.

Tyler Durden Thu, 02/12/2026 - 09:05

NYC Mayor Urges State Lawmakers To Pass Tax Hikes On The Wealthy, Corporations

NYC Mayor Urges State Lawmakers To Pass Tax Hikes On The Wealthy, Corporations

Authored by Kimberly Hayek via The Epoch Times,

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani called on state lawmakers Wednesday to approve a 2 percent personal income tax increase on the city’s wealthiest residents as well as a hike in the corporate tax rate in a bid to close a multibillion-dollar budget gap.

The mayor testified in a New York State Senate 2026 budget hearing about how the city’s projected deficit had decreased from $12 billion to $7 billion.

He attributed the improvement to “assuming an aggressive posture on savings without compromising city services, incorporating updated revenue and bonus estimates, and using in-year reserves.”

Mamdani said nonetheless that New York remains “placed on a ledge,” and needs more revenue from high earners and businesses.

“I believe the wealthiest individuals and most profitable corporations should contribute a little more so that everyone can live lives of dignity,” Mamdani, a democratic socialist, said in prepared remarks.

“That’s why—along with raising the corporate tax—I’m asking for a 2 percent personal income tax increase on the most affluent New Yorkers.”

The mayor will release the city’s preliminary budget next Tuesday. He conjectured the personal tax surcharge, proposed to affect those earning more than $1 million annually, would close the remaining deficit by nearly half of what’s remaining. Mamdani also underscored his campaign pledge to increase the state’s corporate tax rate from 7.25 percent to 11.5 percent.

Gov. Kathy Hochul and the legislature must approve any tax changes.

In her budget presentation last month, the governor expressed opposition to any such hikes.

“We’re able to make transformative investments in our future. Without raising taxes. Without saddling the next generation with mounds of debt.”

Mamdani during his campaign promoted progressive reforms to fund proposals such as free public transit, rent stabilization and housing programs, universal child care, and a $30 minimum wage, leading to his upset win over more moderate Democrats.

He called for a 2 percent surcharge on high earners on the campaign trail.

Estimates suggested it could create approximately $4 billion annually to support increased public services and affordability programs, as well as offset costs for broad social investments while not saddling middle- and low-income residents.

France’s experiment with a similar surtax on high incomes underperformed revenue projections.

It yielded €400 million in its first year against an expected 1.9 billion euros. The tax changes led to taxpayer optimizations, relocations, and implementation delays.

The New York mayor’s office has not detailed timelines or projected economic impacts, and state lawmakers are expected to consider the proposals in upcoming sessions.

Meanwhile, California voters will consider a proposed billionaire tax on the November 2026 ballot, which would impose a one-time 5 percent tax on residents with more than $1.1 billion in assets.

Tyler Durden Thu, 02/12/2026 - 08:45

Initial Jobless Claims Refuse To Signal Labor Market Stress

Initial Jobless Claims Refuse To Signal Labor Market Stress

Following the impressive payrolls data (revisions aside), the number of Americans filing for jobless benefits for the first time fell to 227k last week (down from 232k - which was a notable jump)...

Pennsylvania and Missouri saw the biggest declines in initial claims while Texas and Virginia saw the largest rise...

Which is odd because the week before, Pennsylvania saw the largest increase in jobless claims...?

Continuing jobless claims ticked up from their lowest since May 2024...

Finally, WTF is going on in the labor market - Payrolls beat (but revisions were ugly), JOLTs are tumbling, Surveys suggest a tough labor market (jobs hard to get far worse than jobs plentiful), but... initial jobless claims remain flat near multi-decade lows?

Which is weird because before 2019, the two time series sync'd up very well - as one would expect...

Should we just be ignoring surveys completely now?

Tyler Durden Thu, 02/12/2026 - 08:35

US Futures Rise As European, Asian All Time Highs Spill Over

US Futures Rise As European, Asian All Time Highs Spill Over

Futures are higher but there continues to be tangible angst below the surface as traders are aggressively shorting potential AI losers, while US stocks continue to fall behind the rest of the world. “It’s a paradox in that markets are holding, breaking records, yet investors remain cautious,” says Vontobel’s head of equities Jean-Louis Nakamura. As of 8:00am ET, S&P and Nasdaq futures are up 0.3%, with premarket strength in Mag7, Semis and Cyclicals while Energy and Materials underperform. It’s unclear right now which stocks will be hurt by AI, but it’s clear that traders are nervous. “The slightest miss on earnings is brutally penalized and substantial beats are required to boost share prices,” said Nakamura. Bond yield stabilize, flat to down 1bp across the curve with USD also flat. Commodities are mostly lower with Energy and Metals weaker (WTI, Precious down less than 1%) and Ags higher. Today’s macro data focus is on jobless claims and existing home sales. With the stabilization in the bond market and net positive WTD macro data, we may investors push the market higher into tmrw’s CPI where only a materially hawkish print is likely to shift the market narrative.

In premarket trading, Mag 7 stocks are mostly higher (Alphabet +0.5%, Amazon +0.3%, Apple -0.2%, Nvidia +1.2%, Meta Platforms +0.4%, Microsoft +0.4%, Tesla +0.5%), 

  • Coal stocks are up after the Trump administration ordered the Pentagon to purchase electricity from coal plants and announced funding for upgrades to coal facilities.
  • Baxter International (BAX) falls 14% after the medtech company posted fourth quarter results.
  • Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO) drops 7% after the company gave a weaker-than-expected forecast for profitability in the current quarter, spurring concerns that mounting memory-chip prices are taking a toll on the company.
  • Cognex (CGNX) is up 23% after the electronics components company forecast revenue for the first quarter that beat the average analyst estimate.
  • Equinix (EQIX) rises 9% after the data center operator’s 2026 revenue guidance beat the average analyst estimate. Analysts are positive about the increased bookings and highlight a boost to the company’s forecast from accelerated AI demand.
  • Fastly (FSLY) soars 40% after the cloud-platform provider posted fourth-quarter results that beat expectations and management gave a robust full-year forecast.
  • ICON (ICLR) sinks 33% after the company said the audit committee launched an internal investigation into its accounting practices.
  • Paycom Software (PAYC) falls 9% after the company’s outlook was seen as disappointing and pointing to tepid growth trends.
  • Trip.com ADRs (TCOM) fall 5% after China Central Television reported that the city of Beijing had summoned the internet firm along with 11 others over issues related to train ticket sales.
  • Viking Therapeutics (VKTX) rises 13% after the biotech said it plans to advance its oral obesity drug to Phase 3 in the third quarter of this year.
  • Zoetis (ZTS) climbs 4% after the animal health company gave a forecast for adjusted earnings per share for 2026 that topped Wall Street’s expectations

With US stocks lagging gains in Asia and Latin America this year, the moves underscore how sensitive the market has become to companies’ exposure to the infrastructure behind the AI boom. Memory-chip shortages and pricing are coming up frequently as topics in company earnings reports and conference calls.

“This is a year of the bullish stock market, but a very volatile stock market — and the volatility will be induced by the AI trade, which is evolving,” said Beata Manthey, head of European Equity Strategy at Citigroup Inc. “Right now we are concentrating on losers. But we also need to discover who the new winners are going to be.”

The AI winners and losers trade is playing out across the world, helping Asian markets — with a heavy concentration of AI hardware firms — extend their lead over the US. That’s left the S&P 500 ranking 69th among the 92 stock indexes tracked by Bloomberg, according to Markets Live. Among sectors, jitters over software have given the ‘old economy’ stocks in the Dow Jones Transportation Average a new lease of life

And in single stocks, the huge memory-chip needs of AI are rippling out. Japanese chipmaker Kioxia surged after its guidance beat estimates, while Cisco shares are lower in premarket trading after saying that mounting memory chip prices are hurting its margins. Elsewhere in the AI space, Anthropic is said to be nearing the completion of a deal to raise more than $20 billion in a funding round with a plethora of big investors. And Softbank announced a near-$20 billion investment gain on OpenAI.

Since Jan. 9, there has been a larger swing for the average S&P 500 stock compared to 99% of the time over the past three decades. The 10.8% move, averaged on an absolute basis in that time, has created a windfall for investors with long dispersion positions, according to data from Nomura. US stocks appear less vulnerable than in recent weeks after hedge funds reduced positioning in January, according to JPMorgan strategists.

Traders are also keeping a close eye on key US economic data. Jobs numbers on Wednesday came in surprisingly strong, and attention now turns to Friday’s inflation report for clues on future policy moves by the Federal Reserve.

In politics, Trump’s tariff policies suffered their strongest political blow yet with the Republican-led US House passing legislation aimed at ending the president’s levies on Canadian imports. The US and Japan are closing in on the first three projects to be funded by Tokyo’s $550 billion investment vehicle, as part of their bilateral trade deal.

Out of the 346 S&P 500 companies that have reported so far in the earnings season, 77% have managed to beat analyst forecasts, while 19% have missed. CBRE, Exelon and Iron Mountain are among companies due to report results before the market open. CBRE earnings come in the face of a real estate services ‘AI scare trade’ which hit the sector on Wednesday. Earnings from Applied Materials, Coinbase and Airbnb follow later.

Europe's Stoxx 600 rises 0.5% to 624.50, hitting a new record high on Thursday amid a flurry of positive earnings, including from EssilorLuxottica SA and Siemens AG. Financial services outperform, as Nuveen’s deal to buy Schroders Plc sends the UK asset manager soaring. Here are some of the biggest movers on Thursday:

  • Schroders shares jump as much as 31%, the most since 2008, after the firm agreed to be bought by US asset manager Nuveen for £9.9 billion ($13.5 billion), a 34% premium to Wednesday’s closing price.
  • EssilorLuxottica shares jump as much as 10%, the most since October, after the eyewear maker reported better-than-expected sales for the fourth quarter, riding a boom in demand for AI-powered glasses.
  • Siemens gains as much as 6.2%, hitting a record high, after delivering order beats in both Digital Industries and Smart Infrastructure in the first quarter, and boosting its EPS guidance for the full year.
  • Autostore shares surge as much as 17%, the most since mid-August, after the Norwegian warehouse automation firm delivered a strong revenue beat in the fourth quarter.
  • Hermès gains as much as 3.1% as the French maker of the Birkin bag reported fourth-quarter sales and full-year profits that beat estimates.
  • Michelin shares rise as much as 6.2% to the highest since May, after the French tiremaker’s plan to buy back as much as €2 billion worth of shares positively surprised analysts, who also noted improvement in earnings momentum.
  • Adyen shares slump as much as 20% after the payments firm gave a revenue growth target that missed estimates, citing “continued macroeconomic uncertainty” weighing on market volume growth.
  • Magnum shares fall as much as 16% in Amsterdam after full-year results that Jefferies analysts said will fuel concern over the impact of weight-loss drugs on demand.
  • Verisure shares drop as much as 11% to a new record low, after the security services firm missed fourth-quarter adjusted Ebitda estimates, despite strong growth in new installations.
  • RELX shares give up early gains as analysts at Morgan Stanley said one set of robust numbers will not settle the broader debate on how artificial intelligence may impact the software and information services sector.
  • Sanofi shares drop as much as 5.1%, the most since Dec. 15, after the French drugmaker changed its chief executive following big bets on research spending which didn’t produce quick results, in a move that Jefferies analysts said “will be debated.”
  • Mercedes shares fall as much as 5.7% after the German carmaker said margins would remain under pressure in 2026 due to US tariffs and China competition.

Earlier in the session, Asian stocks climbed, poised for a fifth day of gains, on continued investor optimism over benefits for the region’s technology hardware suppliers from the artificial intelligence boom. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose as much as 0.9%, on track for its best week since September 2024. South Korea’s Kospi jumped 3.1% to extend its lead as the world’s best-performing market this year, driven by gains in memory makers Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix

The region’s stocks are outperforming global peers this year on extended enthusiasm for AI infrastructure firms, even as doubts over high spending and potential obsolescence of older business models rattle other markets. The MSCI Asia gauge has jumped about 13% so far this year versus the 1.4% advance in the S&P 500 Index, marking its best start to the year relative to the US gauge this century.  The US gauge ranks 69th among the 92 stock indexes around the world tracked by Bloomberg. South Korea is the world’s best-performing market with a 30% surge.

Elsewhere, Japanese stocks extended gains on hopes that Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s decisive election win may boost spending. Hong Kong shares fell, bucking the broader regional gain, while mainland China equities traded flat ahead of Lunar New Year holidays. There’s no trading in Taiwan through next week.

In FX, USD/JPY is down marginally on the session but well off the APAC lows as questions surface over whether the post-election yen rally is running out of steam. The Bloomberg Dollar Index falls 0.1% with losses most pronounced against the franc and kiwi. The pound was unfussed by soft Q4 GDP metrics.

In rates, treasuries hold small gains, outperforming European bonds ahead of weekly jobless claims data and 30-year new-issue auction.The US 10-yr yield is unchanged at 4.17%. Bunds and gilts are similarly contained. US yields richer by 1bp to 2bp curve with curve spreads little changed; new 10-year yield near 4.165% is 1.5bp lower on the day, slightly outperforming bunds and gilts in the sector. $25 billion 30-year new-issue auction at 1pm New York time concludes this week’s Treasury supply; Wednesday’s 10-year tailed by 1.4bp. WI 30-year yield near 4.795% is ~3bp richer than January’s, which stopped through by 0.8bp. 

In commodities, spot gold and silver are giving back some of yesterday’s gains, down 0.4% and 1.2% respectively. WTI futures are down 0.1% after failing to hold onto the mild APAC bid. Bitcoin is up 0.5%.Bitcoin briefly slid under $67,000, while Japan’s super-long bonds extended their post-vote rally as Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s historic election win soothed investor concerns about fiscal policy.

Today's US economic calendar slate includes weekly jobless claims (8:30am) and January existing home sales (10am). Fed speaker slate includes Logan (7pm) and Miran (7:05pm)

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 mini +0.2%
  • Nasdaq 100 mini +0.2%
  • Russell 2000 mini +0.5%
  • Stoxx Europe 600 +0.3%
  • DAX +1.4%, CAC 40 +0.6%
  • 10-year Treasury yield little changed at 4.17%
  • VIX -0.2 points at 17.46
  • Bloomberg Dollar Index -0.1% at 1180.38
  • euro little changed at $1.1881
  • WTI crude -0.4% at $64.4/barrel

Top Overnight News

  • In a closed-door meeting with Senate Republicans Wednesday, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent agreed with lawmakers who suggested the Senate Banking Committee could investigate Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, instead of the Justice Department. Semafor
  • China has confirmed that discussions were under way about US President Donald Trump’s planned visit in April, when sources said the two sides were expected to extend their current trade truce by up to one year. SCMP
  • One year after Chinese startup DeepSeek rattled the global tech industry with the release of a low-cost artificial intelligence model, its domestic rivals are better prepared, vying with it to launch new models, some designed with more consumer appeal. DeepSeek, Alibaba, ByteDance are set to release new AI models. RTRS
  • Futures signaled that gains in Asian equities may extend to the US. Treasuries were flat after strong jobs data sparked a jump in yields. The dollar, gold and oil edged lower. BBG
  • The “buy Japan” trade gained momentum after PM Sanae Takaichi’s decisive election victory increased investor confidence. The country’s long-dated bonds jumped, while the Topix extended its rally. BBG
  • The UK economy grew less than forecast in the fourth quarter, piling pressure on Keir Starmer. GDP rose 0.1%, falling short of the 0.2% consensus. The pound was little changed. BBG
  • The House of Representatives has voted to overturn Trump’s tariffs on Canada in a major rebuke of the US president’s signature economic policy. FT
  • The Fed’s Jeff Schmid said rates should remain at a “somewhat restrictive” level, while Stephen Miran said January’s strong jobs report doesn’t warrant delaying further cuts. BBG
  • Global oil inventories surged by 477 million barrels in 2025, the fastest build since 2020, as supply outpaced slowing demand, the IEA said, forecasting a record surplus in 2026. BBG
  • “Old Economy” stocks are back in the lead. The Dow Jones Transportation Average has outpaced the S&P 500 in the past six weeks, as investors pivot from megacap tech to rails, truckers and airlines. BBG

Trade/Tariffs

  • Chinese buyers are reportedly buying around 1mln tonnes per month of Australian barley due to a local feed supply shortage, traders report. Chinese buyers are reportedly booked near 2.5mln tonnes of US sorghum over the past three months to replenish domestic feed grain shortfall, traders report.
  • Indian Trade Minister said textiles will receive no duties if raw material is from the US.
  • China's Commerce Ministry announced a tariff of up to 11.7% (prev. 42.7%) on EU dairy products; effective from the 13th of February.
  • China's Commerce Ministry, on Canada canola anti-dumping tariffs, said investigation period extended to March 9th.
  • China's Commerce Minister said China and the US are to maintain close communication at all levels through trade and economic consultation mechanisms.
  • China's chief trade negotiator Li Chenggang met with Mexico's deputy economy minister in Beijing.
  • China's top trade negotiator met with Westinghouse Electric Company CEO on Tuesday.
  • Taiwan and the US are reportedly to sign a reciprocal trade agreement on February 13th.
  • US President Trump posted "Canada has taken advantage of the United States on Trade for many years. They are among the worst in the World to deal with, especially as it relates to our Northern Border".
  • US President Trump posted "Any Republican, in the House or the Senate, that votes against TARIFFS will seriously suffer the consequences come Election time, and that includes Primaries!".
  • US House majority backs resolution to eliminate Trump's tariffs on Canada.
  • US President Trump and Chinese President Xi are poised to extend trade truce by up to a year during April meeting in Beijing, according to SCMP citing people familiar with discussions.

A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk

APAC stocks were ultimately mixed with a slightly positive bias amongst the major indices as the region reflected on earnings releases and the better-than-expected US jobs data, while Japan's benchmark hit a fresh record high on return from holiday, before fading the gains. ASX 200 was led higher by strength in utilities and financials after shares in Origin Energy and ANZ Group rallied post-earnings, but with upside in the broader market capped by hawkish rhetoric from RBA Governor Bullock. Nikkei 225 swung between gains and losses, in which the index initially climbed to above the 58,000 level for the first time, but then briefly wiped out all of its gains as  currency strength persisted. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were mixed with the Hong Kong benchmark dragged lower by underperformance in the likes of Budweiser and NetEase following their earnings releases, with the latter also weighed by tech/AI-related headwinds, which dragged other large tech names lower such as Tencent, Baidu and Meituan, while AI startup Zhipu shares surged around 36% after the release of its new model. Conversely, the mainland treaded water following another firm liquidity operation by the PBoC and after China's State Council held a session on boosting AI use, with Premier Li urging to promote the use of AI in various sectors, while there are also expectations for the US and China to extend the trade truce by up to a year during the expected Trump-Xi meeting in April.

Top Asian News

  • Japan is said to have requested US Fed/NY Fed JPY rate check back in January.
  • Japan's top currency diplomat Mimura won't comment on FX levels and said closely watching markets with a high sense of urgency, also said they are not lowering our guard and are in contact with US authorities.
  • Japanese Finance Minister Katayama discussed with PM Takaichi about how to proceed with tax credits for benefits and sales tax cut on food, while she did not discuss forex with the PM, according to Jiji.
  • Softbank (9984 JT) CFO Goto said nothing has been decided about an additional funding round for OpenAI.

European bourses (STOXX 600 +0.5%) are entirely in the green, with the DAX 40 (+1.2%) leading gains and CAC 40 (+0.9%) following closely behind. On the other hand, the Dutch AEX (-0.5%) lags, weighed by Adyen and Magnum earnings. Sectors hold a mostly positive bias with Financials (+1.3%) and Telecommunications (+1.0%) leading the pack. Schroders (+28.5%) leads in financials after Nuveen agreed to purchase the company for GBP 9.9bln. Deutsche Boerse (+2.0%) is also higher, after acquiring a further 20% stake in ISS STOXX, which is expected to be accretive to cash EPS in the first full year. Movers include Siemens (+5.7%), Hermes (+1.3%) and Mercedes-Benz (-2.0%). Siemens missed top-line expectations but raised its FY EPS guidance helping shares higher. Hermes posted earnings that beat estimates and highlighted that 2026 prices increases would be lower than it was in 2025. For Mercedes Benz, the Co. guided its Adj. ROS below market consensus.

Top European News

  • EU Court Advisor said they should stop the release of c. EUR 10bln in funds for Hungary.
  • UK Chancellor Reeves is to limit the deregulatory drive as she seeks closer UK relations with the EU, according to FT.

Central Banks

  • Fed's Hammack (2026 voter) said unemployment rate looks like it's stabilising, adds we have the labour market broadly in balance but noted inflation is still too high. Consumer spending holding in driven by upper incomes. Important for Fed to get inflation back to 2%. Current Fed Funds Rate is right around neutral. Local contacts say growth is picking up. Good for the Fed to stay on hold right now and doesn't need to fine-tune rate policy.
  • Fed Governor Miran said Wednesday's NFP report does not mean the Fed can't lower rates. Think if you increase supply then you get a decline in inflation. If you blame supply chain failures for higher inflation, stands to reason pushing supply out lowers inflation. Deregulation opens up an output gap. I'd be very Happy to stay, but not up to me. What happens later this year will depend on choices the President and the Senate make.
  • ECB's Makhlouf said that the ECB is in a good place, adding that inflation is currently on target.
  • ECB's Cipollone said preserving monetary sovereignty has been a key objective of our single currency.
  • ECB's Villeroy said expected France's economic growth in Q1 to be between 0.2-0.3%, and in line with the 1% annual growth expected in 2026.
  • BoE's Breeden said it is reasonable to expect rate cuts across the next couple of meetings if the economy evolves as expected.
  • RBA Assistant Governor Hunter said need to assess extent to which recent rise in inflation is temporary, adds labour market has stabilised recently, but remains a bit tight; expects labour markets to remain tight and inflation above target for some time.
  • RBA Governor Bullock said economy performing reasonably well, labour market a positive development, adds the Bank will monitor data and act if inflation becomes entrenched, warning that further rate hikes may be needed. She further added that the board decided inflation at around 3-point something was unacceptable.
  • CBRT raises its end-2026 inflation forecast to 15-21% (prev. 13-19%).

FX

  • G10s are mostly firmer against the USD. Kiwi leads, followed by the GBP, whilst the Aussie lags a touch; the latter seemingly paring back recent strength.
  • DXY is incrementally lower today. As a reminder, the index was choppy in the prior session following a strong NFP report and as markets continue to digest reports that President Trump is looking exit the North American trade pact. Currently, the index resides towards the lower end of a 96.77-97.07 range, and further pressure could see a test of the prior day’s low at 96.49. Focus today will be on the US Jobless Claims, and then an appearance from the POTUS.
  • GBP is slightly firmer this morning, largely attributed to the slight USD weakness. Earlier, a mixed GDP report spurred two-way action in Cable; in brief, December’s M/M figure printed in-line with expectations, whilst the Y/Y component and Q4 prelims metrics came in softer than expected. GBP/USD fell from 1.3617 to 1.3607 before paring, and then strengthening as the morning progressed. ING opines that, given recent seasonality-related factors, it expects the economy to “bounce back” a bit in Q1. On monetary policy, the bank believes that if recent growth and labour market weakness persist alongside falling wage growth, then a March cut is “highly likely”. As it stands, Cable currently sits at the upper end of a 1.3604-1.3654 range.
  • JPY is currently moving at the whim of the USD, with USD/JPY towards the midpoint of a 152.26-153.54 range. Further pressure in the pair could see a test of the lows seen in late January, when Jiji reported that Japan asked the US to conduct USD/JPY rate checks. In terms of the environment for JPY, markets are continuing to increase bets of faster BoJ normalisation. Mizuho’s Koshimizu, speaking to Reuters, highlighted that improved growth prospects, clearer policy strategy and inflation continuing to remain above the BoJ’s target, may allow the Bank to deliver three rate hikes this year – suggesting that a hike could come as early as March or April. Markets currently price in a 60% chance of a hike in March, 92% chance in June and fully priced in for July.

Fixed Income

  • A contained start for most benchmarks.
  • Gilts are the relative outperformers after soft GDP data. The benchmark opened higher by 18 ticks before climbing another nine to a 91.30 peak and notching a fresh WTD high. Weighing on the UK's 10yr yield to a 4.47% trough. For the BoE, the data works in favour of the doves who wanted to cut last week and somewhat skews the narrative towards a March cut vs current pricing for April. However, pricing didn't really move as we await next week's CPI and employment/wage metrics; furthermore, while the series was weak, the economy was still resilient during a tumultuous Q4, a finding that tempers the otherwise dovish impulse.
  • JGBs returned from Wednesday's holiday lower, reacting to the US NFP print and bearish UST action. Pressure that proved fleeting as the benchmark lifted to a 132.02 peak with gains of just over 10 ticks at best. However, that upside faded across the APAC session to a 131.52 trough. Drivers for this include a Reuters interview with Mizuho's Kozhimizu, who expects as many as three hikes by the BoJ in 2026, and a move as soon as March or April is entirely possible. As it stands, just 3.5bps of tightening is implied in March, 14bps in April and 23.6bps in June, with a move not fully priced until July, where 30bps is implied.
  • Bunds firmer, but contained, in narrow 128.62-76 parameters. Specifics for the bloc light, no move to a handful of ECB remarks, which stuck to the script.
  • A similar story for USTs, rangebound in APAC hours towards the mid-point of the post-NFP drop. Holding at 112-11+ in thin parameters that are well within Wednesday's 112-00 to 112-20 bound. Today, the US docket is comparatively light, with supply and weekly jobs the highlights. Barring a surprise on those, it may be a bit of a filler day into Friday's CPI.
  • Italy sells EUR 6.25bln vs exp. EUR 5-6.25bln 2.40% 2029, 3.15% 2033, 3.25% 2032 BTP.
  • Australia sold AUD 150mln in 2035 indexed bonds, b/c 3.97, avg. yield 2.4127%.

Commodities

  • WTI and Brent are mildly lower this morning and currently trade within a USD 64.18-65.10/bbl and USD 68.86-69.85/bbl range, respectively. Really not much driving things for the complex this morning; action seemingly a paring back of some of the geopolitically-driven strength in the prior session, where reports suggested that the Pentagon was preparing a second aircraft carrier to deploy to the Middle East. It is worth noting a bout of pressure was seen in early European trade, though this lacked a clear driver. Elsewhere, the IEA OMR cut its 2026 global oil demand and supply growth forecast.
  • Spot gold has been lacklustre thus far throughout the European morning, with the yellow metal trading around the USD 5,075/oz mark at the time of writing, still within yesterday's USD 5,019.71-5,119.35/oz range, with fresh catalysts on the lighter side. Alongside news flow, the Dollar remains relatively muted following yesterday's NFP-driven volatility, which proved to be short-lived. Both the Dollar and XAU have been moving sideways since awaiting the US CPI tomorrow.
  • Copper prices were indecisive during the APAC session, reflecting mixed sentiment in China, with the Hang Seng and Shanghai Composite diverging overnight. However, early positive sentiment from Europe keeps prices underpinned, and offsets some of the weakness from the APAC session, providing support to the red metal. 3M LME Copper is currently trading around USD 13.3k/t in a narrow 13,2k-13.339k/t range.
  • Vitol CEO said Russia and Iran's oil buyers are reaching for Western supply.
  • IEA cuts 2026 global oil demand growth forecast to 850k BPD (prev. 930k BPD); cuts 2026 global oil supply growth forecast to 2.4mln BPD (prev. 2.5mln BPD). Lowers 2026 forecast for non-OPEC+ supply growth to 1.2mln BPD (prev. 1.3mln BPD). Escalating geopolitical tensions, snowstorms and extreme temperatures in North America, and Kazakh supply disruptions sparked the reversal to a bullish market.
  • Goldman Sachs sees a boost to mine supply growth slowing considerably in 2027/28 which would the ex-China market into deficit.
  • Saudi crude oil supply to China is set to rise to at least 53mln barrels in March, according to sources.
  • US Energy Secretary Wright states Venezuela oil quarantine is essentially over, calling it a historic pivot, but noted political prisoners remain an issue.
  • US President Trump directs Department of Energy to issue funds to coal plants in states including West Virginia and Ohio.
  • Venezuela's interim President Rodriguez said hopes relationship with US progresses without obstacles; talked with US Energy Secretary about deals on oil, gas, power, and mining; look forward to move forward as fast as possible.

Geopolitics: Ukraine

  • Ukraine's Air Force warns of a likely launch of Russian intermediate-range ballistic missile.
  • An oil refinery has reportedly caught fire in Russia's Komi due to a drone attack, RIA reported.
  • Russia warns it will retaliate if Europe tries to create military capabilities against it, according to Al Arabiya.
  • Witnesses reported explosions in Ukraine's capital of Kyiv.

Geopolitics: Middle East

  • Turkish top diplomat said US and Iran are showing flexibility on a nuclear deal, according to FT.

Geopolitics: Other

  • South Korean MPs say North Korea is accelerating its program to develop and manufacture drones based on experience from the Russia-Ukraine battlefield, citing the spy agency.
  • North Korea is said to be developing a submarine that can carry 10 submarine-launched ballistic missile, according to an MP citing South Korea's spy agency. North Korea-Russia collaboration excludes modern tech and nuclear programs. North Korea seeks to improve relations despite dissatisfaction with China.
  • Sounds of explosions at the US base in the countryside of Al-Hasakah, Syria, due to the explosion of mines, Al Arabiya reported citing sources; details light.
  • US Energy Secretary Wright said US wants no conflict and no military action for the Americas. US is working seven days a week to issue new licenses.

US Event Calendar

 

DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

I’ve been energised by a leadership offsite for the last couple of days, so if members of my team are reading this, hopefully I won't get it wrong and end up with team meetings today that resemble something from “The Office”. While I was in learning mode, markets put in a mixed performance yesterday, as investors weighed up a very strong US jobs report, growing geopolitical risks and a fresh decline in software stocks. On the upside, that jobs report included the biggest jump for nonfarm payrolls in over a year, which led to growing confidence that the US economy had kept up its momentum into 2026. But the print also solidified existing concerns about inflation, which got further support thanks to another jump in oil prices amidst mounting speculation about a potential US strike on Iran. Finally, today sees a symbolically important EU leaders summit on strengthening the single market. Mario Draghi is attending and his competitiveness paper will no doubt be heavily referred to. While firm commitments are unlikely, it’s an incredibly important meeting on the future roadmap for Europe so all eyes will be on what progress is made.

That jobs report was the big story yesterday, with the release proving much stronger than expected. The headline was that nonfarm payrolls grew by +130k in January (vs. +65k expected), marking their biggest monthly jump since December 2024. Indeed, it was a big contrast from fears earlier this week about a low number, as Kevin Hassett had warned on Monday that markets should expect “slightly lower jobs numbers”, albeit without specifics about when this might be. Then on top of the upside payrolls surprise, the unemployment rate unexpectedly fell back to 4.3% (vs. 4.4% expected), so the print very much leant in a more hawkish direction. Admittedly, there were some negative revisions to previous months, with the 2025 total payrolls gain revised down from +584k to +181k. But we already knew the downward revisions were coming, so markets were much more focused on the strong print for January rather than the backward-looking content.

With the jobs report coming in strongly, markets moved to price out the chance of rapid Fed rate cuts this year. For instance, the chance of a rate cut in one of Chair Powell’s final two meetings (March and April) plunged from 47% to 23%. And looking at the full year, the amount of cuts priced by the December meeting fell -7.1bps on the day to 53bps. In turn, that more hawkish profile led to a clear bear flattening in the Treasury curve, with the 2yr yield (+5.8bps) up to 3.51%, whilst the 10yr yield (+3.0bps) moved up to 4.17%.

Whilst Treasuries saw a clear selloff, equities saw a more mixed performance, with the S&P 500 (-0.005%) ultimately closing less than a basis point lower on the day. Initially, the index opened strongly, boosted by the very strong jobs report. However, there was then a fresh decline in software stocks, with that component of the S&P 500 down -2.58% on the day, including strong declines for IBM (-6.50%), ServiceNow (-5.54%), Workday (-5.66%) and Salesforce (-4.37%). Financial services (-1.35%) were under pressure on two fronts. First, AI-disruption fears weighed on asset managers, with names like Charles Schwab (-3.83%), Invesco (-3.11%), and T Rowe Price (-2.95%) underperforming. Second, the bitcoin selloff also led crypto-adjacent stocks to weaken, with Coinbase (-5.73%), Block (-6.09%), and Robinhood (-8.91%) among the worst performers in the index. So those losses offset advances for some of the more defensive sectors like energy (+2.59%) and consumer staples (+1.20%), leaving the overall index fairly flat.

In the background, oil prices continued to climb yesterday as fears mounted about an escalation over Iran. In terms of the latest, President Trump met Israeli PM Netanyahu at the White House yesterday, where President Trump said he “insisted that negotiations with Iran continue to see whether or not a Deal can be consummated.” The President later posted to social media that “Last time Iran decided that they were better off not making a Deal, and they were hit with Midnight Hammer — That did not work well for them. Hopefully this time they will be more reasonable and responsible.” So by the close, Brent crude was up +0.87% to $69.40/bbl, and this morning it’s up another +0.25% to $69.57/bbl.

Earlier in Europe, most assets had seen a relatively stronger performance, with the STOXX 600 (+0.10%) just about closing at a fresh record. That was driven by a strong gain for UK equities, and the FTSE 100 (+1.14%) was also at a new record of its own. But it was a different story across much of the continent, with the DAX (-0.53%), the CAC 40 (-0.18%) and the FTSE MIB (-0.62%) all losing ground. Meanwhile for sovereign bonds, there was a more consistent rally, but UK gilts were once again leading the way, with 10yr gilt yields down -3.0bps on the day. Otherwise, those on 10yr bunds (-1.6bps), OATs (-2.6bps) and BTPs (-1.6bps) all fell back slightly too.

Overnight in Asia, markets are looking much more positive again after the weak close on Wall Street yesterday. The KOSPI (+2.64%) is leading the way, on course for another record high, and the Nikkei (+0.25%) is also on course for a record as Japanese markets returned from Wednesday’s holiday. However, equities in mainland China have been more steady, with the CSI 300 (+0.04%) only posting a modest advance, whilst the Shanghai Comp (-0.01%) has slipped back very slightly. Meanwhile in Hong Kong, the Hang Seng (-1.15%) has posted larger declines. But looking forward, US equity futures are pointing to a stronger start, with those on the S&P 500 up +0.31%.

Looking forward, today will also see EU leaders gather in Belgium for a summit on strengthening the single market. They’ll be joined by former ECB President Mario Draghi, who wrote a report on EU competitiveness, and we heard from several EU leaders yesterday as well. For instance, French President Macron said that if the EU wanted to “transform the productivity and competitiveness”, then “the only way is to have common issuance of debt”.  Separately, German Chancellor Merz said that there should be “bold” steps from the EU to reverse its decline, saying the EU should “deregulate every sector”. Our economists also have a preview for the summit here.

Looking at the day ahead, data releases include the UK’s Q4 GDP reading, the US weekly initial jobless claims, and existing home sales for January.  Central bank speakers include the ECB’s Cipollone, Radev, Stournaras, Lane and Nagel. Otherwise, EU leaders will be meeting today in Belgium.

Tyler Durden Thu, 02/12/2026 - 08:29

EU Seeks To Close Russia Crypto Loopholes In New Sanctions

EU Seeks To Close Russia Crypto Loopholes In New Sanctions

Authored by Helen Partz via CoinTelegraph.com,

The European Union is finalizing a new package of sanctions aimed at closing loopholes that officials say have allowed Russia to use cryptocurrency to circumvent existing restrictions.

The EU is seeking to “ban all cryptocurrency transactions with Russia” as part of the upcoming 20th sanctions package, the Financial Times reported on Tuesday.

Unlike previous efforts targeting Russia-linked entities spun out of already sanctioned platforms, the newly proposed measures are broader and are designed to close Russia’s crypto loophole entirely.

“Any further listing of individual crypto asset service providers […] is therefore likely to result in the set-up of new ones to circumvent those listings,” according to an internal European Commission document on the proposed sanctions, cited by the FT.

Brussels seeks total shutdown of Russia-linked crypto channels

While the new sanctions package is still being finalized and is expected to be adopted on Feb. 24, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said last week that the measures would target 20 additional Russian regional banks, as well as several banks in third countries.

Among the foreign lenders, the EU has proposed sanctioning two Kyrgyz banks, Keremet and OJSC Capital Bank of Central Asia, along with banks in Laos and Tajikistan, Reuters reported on Monday. If approved, the listed institutions would be barred from transactions with EU individuals and companies.

“In order to ensure that sanctions achieve their intended effect [the EU] prohibits to engage with any crypto asset service provider, or to make use of any platform allowing the transfer and exchange of crypto assets that is established in Russia,” the Commission’s document reportedly states.

Sanctioned A7A5 emerged as one of the largest non-dollar stablecoins in 2025

The report suggests that the measures may target Russia-linked payments platform A7 and its ruble-pegged stablecoin, A7A5. The operator has denied facilitating sanctions evasion, calling such claims politicized and unsupported by evidence.

Despite facing multiple rounds of sanctions, A7A5 emerged as one of the fastest-growing non-dollar stablecoins by market value in 2025, according to data from CoinMarketCap and DefiLlama.

Top five largest non-USD stablecoins by market capitalization. Source: DefiLlama

Some analysts, however, questioned the reliability of the token’s reported activity.

Blockchain analytics company Global Ledger said it identified patterns consistent with wash trading that may have inflated A7A5’s volumes and simulated demand. Global Ledger also expressed doubts about the EU’s ability to fully restrict crypto transactions involving Russia.

Analysts question whether EU can fully enforce crypto sanctions

“The EU’s recent move to impose a blanket ban on Russian crypto activity — specifically targeting the A7A5 stablecoin — highlights a fundamental misunderstanding of decentralized liquidity,” Global Ledger co-founder and CEO Lex Fisun told Cointelegraph.

Fisun said the holders of tokens such as A7A5 can swap them into globally traded stablecoins through autonomous onchain liquidity pools, without relying on centralized intermediaries that conduct compliance checks.

Once assets move through large global exchanges and liquidity hubs, transaction histories can become increasingly difficult to trace, he said, adding:

“At this stage, distinguishing these funds from legitimate market activity becomes a technical impossibility […]. For European exchanges to enforce such a ban, they would essentially have to block all flows from major global trading hubs, a move that would paralyze the legitimate crypto market.”

While sanctions may succeed in cutting Russian entities off from regulated European platforms, Fisun said decentralized infrastructure remains resistant to direct censorship, making a complete technical blockade unlikely.

The developments come as Russia advances domestic legislation on digital assets. On Tuesday, Russian lawmakers passed a law on its third reading establishing the procedure for freezing and confiscating digital currency.

Tyler Durden Thu, 02/12/2026 - 07:20

These Are The Countries That Earn The Most From Tourism

These Are The Countries That Earn The Most From Tourism

Each year, the global tourism economy generates trillions in revenue as travelers explore new destinations and revisit old favorites.

According to UN Tourism data, international tourist receipts reached a total of $1.74 trillion in 2024, which is up 14% from pre-pandemic levels in 2019.

Visual Capitalist creator Iswardi Ishak mapped the countries that benefit most from this spending, revealing which economies gain the most from foreign visitors.

Unsurprisingly, the U.S. leads by a wide margin, earning $215 billion from international visitors.

Europe dominates the top ranks, with Spain ($106.5 billion), the UK ($82.5 billion), France ($77 billion), and Italy ($58.7 billion) all drawing in major tourism income.

Japan ($54.7 billion), China ($39.7 billion), and Thailand ($42.7 billion) round out Asia’s biggest earners.

United Arab Emirates stands out, generating $45.5B, a number that rivals Europe’s tourism powerhouses.

Here’s a closer look at the data:

Country/Territory International Tourist Receipts (2024, USD Billions) United States of America 215.0 Spain 106.5 United Kingdom 82.5 France 77.0 Italy 58.7 United Arab Emirates 57.0 Türkiye 56.3 Japan 54.7 Australia 52.0 Canada 49.9 Thailand 42.7 Saudi Arabia 41.0 Germany 40.1 China 39.7 India 35.0 Mexico 33.0 Macau 31.7 Portugal 30.0 Austria 26.3 Singapore 23.8 Greece 23.4 Netherlands 22.6 Hong Kong 22.5 Switzerland 22.3 Malaysia 20.8 Indonesia 16.7 South Korea 16.7 Croatia 16.2 Egypt 15.3 Poland 15.0 Vietnam 12.2 Denmark 11.3 Morocco 11.3 Dominican Republic 11.0 Sweden 10.7 New Zealand 9.8 Belgium 9.4 Philippines 9.3 Czech Republic 9.1 Colombia 8.7 Qatar 8.4 Hungary 8.1 Ireland 7.9 Norway 7.8 Russia 7.6 Luxembourg 7.5 Iraq 7.4 Brazil 7.3 Jordan 7.2 South Africa 6.4 Panama 6.0 Puerto Rico 6.0 Romania 5.7 Costa Rica 5.5 Albania 5.4 Argentina 5.0 Maldives 4.8 Lebanon 4.7 Georgia 4.4 Bulgaria 4.3 Jamaica 4.3 Finland 4.2 Cyprus 4.0 Tanzania 3.9 Peru 3.7 Bahrain 3.7 Cambodia 3.6 Slovenia 3.6 El Salvador 3.5 Iceland 3.2 Uzbekistan 3.2 Chile 3.2 Sri Lanka 3.2 Serbia 3.1 Aruba 3.0 Andorra 2.9 Tunisia 2.9 Malta 2.8 Kazakhstan 2.6 Oman 2.6 Armenia 2.5 Israel 2.3 Kuwait 2.3 Uruguay 2.2 Azerbaijan 2.0 Bosnia and Herzegovina 2.0 Lithuania 2.0 Mauritius 2.0 Ecuador 1.8 Slovakia 1.7 Guatemala 1.7 Estonia 1.6 Montenegro 1.6 Uganda 1.5 Latvia 1.4 Barbados 1.4 Laos 1.3 Cuba 1.3 Saint Lucia 1.3 Ethiopia 1.2 Ghana 1.2 Fiji 1.1 Ukraine 1.0 Kyrgyzstan 0.96 Seychelles 0.93 Zambia 0.90 Antigua and Barbuda 0.88 Moldova 0.82 Belize 0.81 Honduras 0.79 Paraguay 0.77 Pakistan 0.75 Bolivia 0.74 Mongolia 0.64 Nepal 0.63 Republic of Macedonia 0.62 Botswana 0.59 Rwanda 0.58 Nicaragua 0.51 Bermuda 0.51 Bangladesh 0.44 The Gambia 0.44 Namibia 0.43 Grenada 0.36 Nigeria 0.30 Samoa 0.23 Mozambique 0.21 Bhutan 0.20 Zimbabwe 0.20 Anguilla 0.19 Brunei 0.13 Algeria 0.13 Palestine 0.13 Dominica 0.09 São Tomé and Príncipe 0.07 East Timor 0.06 Malawi 0.06 Djibouti 0.05 Haiti 0.04 Suriname 0.04 Solomon Islands 0.03 Tajikistan 0.02 Angola 0.02 Eswatini 0.02 Montserrat 0.01 Lesotho 0.01 Why Some Countries Earn More Than Others

Tourism receipts depend on several factors: not just the number of visitors, but how much each tourist spends. The U.S., for example, combines high visitor volumes with high average spending. Meanwhile, countries like Maldives or Jamaica may have smaller absolute totals but are far more dependent on tourism as a share of GDP.

In Europe, cultural heritage, high-speed transportation, and proximity to major markets help countries rack up significant tourist spending. Spain, which now outpaces even France, offers an unusually wide range of tourism experiences, from world‑class beaches and island archipelagos to historic cities, gastronomy, and cultural heritage. This diversity helps attract visitors year‑round and from multiple source markets. As a result, the country became the most-visited nation in the EU in 2024.

Tourism in Conflict Zones: The Ukraine Example

One of the more surprising figures in the dataset is Ukraine’s $1B in international tourism receipts. Despite the ongoing war, some regions of the country, particularly in the west, have remained relatively stable and open to humanitarian, business, and diaspora-related travel. Ukrainians returning to visit family and international volunteers have contributed to tourism-like spending, even under extraordinary conditions.

Tyler Durden Thu, 02/12/2026 - 06:55

Welcome To The 'EUSSR': Unpopular European Regimes Grasping For Power Crack Down On Dissent

Welcome To The 'EUSSR': Unpopular European Regimes Grasping For Power Crack Down On Dissent

Authored by Robert Williams via The Gatestone Institute,

Governing elites in Europe, in what increasingly appears to be the EUSSR (European Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) race to the bottom, have been growing ever more unpopularDisapproval ratings are skyrocketing. In France, 77% of the public disapprove of President Emmanuel Macron. In Britain, 68% disapprove of Prime Minister Keir Starmer. In Germany, 64% disapprove of Chancellor Friedrich Merz, and in Spain, 61% have had it up to here with Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez.

In other parts of Europe, such as Germany and France, all sorts of pseudo-legal acrobatics are being generated to prevent political opponents from running for high office (such as here and here).

So, if you are an unpopular regime desperately clinging to power, what do you do? It's easy! Iran's ayatollahs, China's Xi Jinping, Russia's Vladimir Lenin, Josef Stalin and Vladimir Putin could tell you. You simply crack down -- more than ever -- on free speech and dissent!

In supposed democracies, this latest "benefit " to your people - cracking down on dissent "democratically" -- means using technology rather than firepower to crush freedom of speech.

Concerning age limits for children, there is a valid argument to be made that leaving the faces of a generation staring at screens all day appears to be impairing not only their education but also their ability to socialize with anyone not an AI chimera, algorithmed to agree narcotically with everything uploaded, including the best ways to how to put their young, ostensibly deficient lives to an end.

As the founder and CEO of Telegram, Pavel Durov wrote on X:

Today, Telegram notified all its users in Spain with this alert:

Pedro Sánchez's government is pushing dangerous new regulations that threaten your internet freedoms. Announced just yesterday, these measures could turn Spain into a surveillance state under the guise of "protection." Here's why they're a red flag for free speech and privacy:

1. Ban on social media for under-16s with mandatory age verification: This isn't just about kids—it requires platforms to use strict checks, like needing IDs or biometrics....

⚠️Danger: This will force over-censorship—platforms will delete anything remotely controversial to avoid risks, silencing political dissent, journalism, and everyday opinions. Your voice could be next if it challenges the status quo....

⚠️Danger: Governments will dictate what you see, burying opposing views and creating echo chambers controlled by the state. Free exploration of ideas? Gone—replaced by curated propaganda....

⚠️Danger: Vague definitions of "hate" could label criticism of the government as divisive, leading to shutdowns or fines. This can be a tool for suppressing opposition. These aren't safeguards; they're steps toward total control. We've seen this playbook before—governments weaponizing "safety" to censor critics....

Demand transparency and fight for your rights. Share this widely—before it's too late.

Durov, incidentally, born in the Soviet Union in 1984 – of all Orwellian dates! – left Russia in 2014 after Russia's FSB security service demanded that his company, VKontakte, hand over the personal data of Ukrainian Euromaidan protesters and opposition figures, and for refusing to censor posts on his site.

In Spain, in addition to an arguably justified ban on social media for people under 16 years old, Sanchez's government is introducing a legislative package consisting of five additions to censor speech online.

First, social media platform executives will not just be fined for failing to remove "illegal, hateful or harmful" content from their platforms in a timely way – they will also now face criminal liability, including possible imprisonment. As Durov warns:

"This will force over-censorship—platforms will delete anything remotely controversial to avoid risks, silencing political dissent, journalism, and everyday opinions. Your voice could be next if it challenges the status quo."

"Sanchez," Elon Musk said more bluntly, "is the true fascist totalitarian."

Second, amplifying "illegal" or "harmful" content through the algorithms will become a crime.

"We will turn algorithmic manipulation and amplification of illegal content into a new criminal offense," Sanchez said.

"No more hiding behind code. No more pretending technology is neutral."

Third, according to Sanchez:

"We will implement a hate and polarization footprint system to track, quantify, and expose how digital platforms fuel division and amplify hate. For too long, hate has been treated as invisible and untraceable, but we will change that."

The problem, of course, is that usually "hate" is never defined -- meaning that anything and everything can be labeled "hate" and often is. Judgments about what constitutes "hate" become entirely subjective and run the danger of existing exclusively "in the eye of the beholder."

In Sudan, for instance, a British teacher at an elementary school was sentenced to 40 lashes and a term in prison for having allowed her students to name a teddy bear Muhammad. In Iran today, people who protested against the regime are being sentenced to death for "waging war against God."

The United States officially enshrines freedom of speech in the First Amendment to the Constitution:

"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

US courts have ruled that only child pornography and immediate, direct and credible threats, as well as a few other limitations, are banned.

Some governing elites in Spain apparently want to ban X there altogether.

"The next battle should be aimed at limiting... and likely banning Twitter," Minister of Youth and Children Sira Rego stated.

Spain's Deputy Prime Minister Yolanda Díaz, announced that she has left X and that whoever remains on X "is feeding hate policies."

France is planning a similar move, "to ban minors from Instagram and TikTok," and Germany is also seriously considering introducing such a ban as well. Germany's Christian Democratic Union — the conservative party led by Chancellor Friedrich Merz and the largest in the governing coalition — is reportedly set to discuss the issue at its national party congress on February 20-21, 2026.

DenmarkGreece and Britain are also in various stages of either introducing or seriously considering banning X, and European authorities are simultaneously seeking to come up with other ways to close down X.

At the beginning of February, French authorities and European Union police agency Europol raided X's offices in Paris, over "suspected abuse of algorithms, plus allegations related to deepfake images and wider concerns over posts generated by the platform's AI chatbot, Grok," according to Time Magazine.

According to The Telegraph, the raid "was triggered in the first place by an MP in Emmanuel Macron's centrist party complaining, after Musk's purchase, that X had 'reduced diversity of voices', and a separate complaint that the site hosted 'nauseating political content'".

In Britain, according to The Telegraph:

"[T]he Information Commissioner's Office launched an investigation into deepfakes on X, running in parallel to the Ofcom inquiry into the platform. Liz Kendall, the Technology Secretary, has said the Government will give its 'full backing' should the watchdog decide to block access to the site in the UK and accused those opposing the measures of allying with 'those who think the creation and publication of sexually manipulated images of women and children is acceptable'."

All this is in addition to a €120 million fine that the European Commission has imposed on X under its "Delete. Silence. Abolish" Digital Services Act.

To the European governments that refuse to acknowledge that many of their citizens are sick and tired of their repressive policies, when the ayatollahs slaughter their citizens in Iran, it is not a pressing problem, but banning X is of the highest priority.

Tyler Durden Thu, 02/12/2026 - 06:30

"Winner Takes All": UBS Speaks With Swiss Watch Industry Insider On "Stabilizing Market"

"Winner Takes All": UBS Speaks With Swiss Watch Industry Insider On "Stabilizing Market"

The Bloomberg Subdial Watch Index, which tracks secondary-market prices for the 50 most-traded watches by value, has been ticking higher for about a year, rebounding from a multi-year slump that followed the Covid-era luxury watch mania fueled by cheap interest rates and easy money.

Our last note on the secondary watch market was about a month ago, covering the rebound in prices from a 2025 low (read here) and the shifting tastes of Gen Z collectors (or at least the ones with money).

To add more color to the Swiss watch cycle, UBS analysts, led by Zuzanna Pusz, spoke with a veteran industry insider.

Pusz's key takeaway from the conversation with the expert is that the industry has "entered a stabilization phase following the post-Covid boom and the subsequent normalization period marked by pronounced weakness in China."

Here's the full takeaway that gives readers more guidance on what to expect from the luxury timepiece industry this year:

Stabilising industry momentum, but outlook remains uncertain

Earlier today, we hosted a call with a seasoned Swiss watch industry expert to discuss the latest industry trends and brand dynamics. In summary, the expert believes the industry has entered a stabilisation phase following the post-Covid boom and the subsequent normalisation period marked by pronounced weakness in China. While he expects 2026 to be a better year than 2025, it remains uncertain whether growth will return across the board given ongoing macro-political uncertainty. Market trends remain volatile and divergent: (1) US continues to show strength; (2) Europe faces uncertain demand, heavily influenced by tourism flows and FX; and (3) Asia lacks broad-based momentum, with China stabilising but Japan weakening. Overall, the call reinforced our view that the luxury recovery is still in its early stages and that investors should remain selective. LVMH and CFR remain our top picks, while Swatch and Pandora continue to be rated Sell.

"Winner takes all" amid polarised brand performance

On brand performance, the expert highlighted continued market share gains among the outperformers, including Rolex, albeit with shorter waiting lists. He also noted the rising popularity of "microbrands", which are gaining visibility thanks to lower barriers to entry and growing "wrist/voice" share. Regarding Swatch Group specifically, the expert did not identify any clear idiosyncratic drivers behind the improving H2 sales momentum (c. FX +5% vs. Swiss watch exports -3%), aside from positive traction at Breguet and the group's ability to more easily supply retailers amid tariff concerns (inventory >100% of sales) compared to stock constrained peers. Nevertheless, he also pointed out the likely distortion of the FHS Swiss watch export statistics due to tariff-related volatility in today's context. Lastly, he expects continued consolidation within the retail landscape, with publicly listed groups likely to optimise their brand portfolios and refocus on more efficient assets.

Growing appreciation for luxury watches among younger cohorts

The expert also pointed to a structural shift in the consumer base, driven by the sustained entry of younger buyers into the watch category - despite long concerns that younger generations are moving away from traditional wristwatches. This cohort, initially drawn in through social media, sneaker culture, the MoonSwatch phenomenon, and reselling dynamics, played a key role in both the Covid-era surge and the subsequent normalisation as speculative behaviour faded. Despite this volatility, the expert views this demographic shift as durable, with younger consumers now firmly embedded in the market and representing a long-term tailwind for the industry. He also noted a modest increase in women's self-purchases, though not yet at a scale that materially reshapes overall demand. When asked whether the appeal to younger buyers might be linked to the rise in metal prices and a perceived "store of value" dynamic, he stressed that this narrative applies mainly to vintage models rather than modern watches. Looking at brand implications of recent "fashion" trends in the category, he reiterated his positive stance on Cartier and a potential improvement in dynamics for Piaget (both Richemont, Buy).

Earlier Tuesday, shares of French luxury group Kering jumped as much as 14% in Paris trading, the biggest intraday move in almost six years, after better-than-expected fourth-quarter sales at its Gucci unit. The UBS Luxury basket (UBXELUX) rose nearly 2%, driven largely by hopes of a turnaround at the luxury house. 

At UBS, analyst Justinus Steinhorst told clients that Kering's results "boosted hopes of a turnaround," lifting the UBXELUX basket.

From luxury watches stabilizing to early signs of traction at Gucci, the bigger question is whether the luxury industry as a whole is finally turning.

Professional subscribers can learn more about the consumer trends on our new Marketdesk.ai portal​​​​.

Zero Hedge Thu, 02/12/2026 - 05:45

Meet The Meta Supplier Behind Ray-Ban Smart Glasses

Meet The Meta Supplier Behind Ray-Ban Smart Glasses

For some time, we've been on the right side of this call: Meta's smart glasses are the clear winner versus Apple Vision Pro for one simple reason: they're built for daily life. The value proposition is obvious too. They're priced only a notch above high-end Ray-Bans, yet drastically cheaper than the goofy-looking $3,500 Vision Pro headset.

Let's take a step back to December 2024:

One of our focuses has been Meta's smart glasses supply chain. That work highlighted how Meta reportedly took a nearly 3% stake in EssilorLuxottica, the world's largest eyewear maker and the parent of Ray-Ban and Oakley, in a deal valued at around $3.5 billion last summer.

The investment only made sense at the time, with research firm Sensor Data showing increased downloads of the Meta app that implied surging demand for the smart glasses, while Apple Vision Pro slid into the abyss.

Fast forward to today. EssilorLuxottica reported fourth-quarter sales rose 18% (constant currency) to 7.6 billion euros, well above the roughly 11% increase Wall Street analysts tracked by Bloomberg expected.

Growth was driven by surging demand for Meta's Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses and Oakley smart glasses. The company sold more than 7 million units last year.  

Full-year 2024 adjusted operating income rose 6.8% to 4.5 billion euros, but the adjusted margin was 16%, about 70 basis points lower than 2023 (constant exchange rates), with pressure intensifying in the second half.

"Looking ahead to the next five years, we are committed to delivering solid revenue growth, with the adjusted operating profit's pace broadly aligned," CEO Francesco Milleri and Deputy CEO Paul Du Saillant wrote in a statement.

Since the Meta Ray-Bans launched in September 2023, shares of EssilorLuxottica in Europe have nearly doubled, though they've more recently pulled back about 21% from the high reached in late 2025.

Last month, smart glasses took center stage at CES 2026 in Las Vegas.

Goldman analyst Jerry Shen recently published a detailed view of the AI and AR glasses supply chain, breaking it down by the companies that supply the critical components behind these devices (read report).

Vision Pro can't do this...

Tim Cook blew it with Vision Pro ... Meta takes the win.

Apple cooked.

Tyler Durden Thu, 02/12/2026 - 04:15

Erik Prince, Israeli Advisers Operated With Congolese Special Forces

Erik Prince, Israeli Advisers Operated With Congolese Special Forces

Via The Libertarian Institute

American mercenary Erik Price and Israeli soldiers operated with Congolese special forces battalions. Congo has been fighting against multiple rebel groups. 

According to Reuters, the Israeli advisors' role is limited to training, and Erik Prince is providing drone support. The outlet reports that the assistance helped Congo take a city back from two rebel groups, the Congo River Alliance (AFC) and the March 23 Movement (M23).

Reuters: Erik Prince, founder of Blackwater, attends a police and military presentation, in Guayaquil, Ecuador on April 5, 2025.

A senior Congolese defense official explained that Kinshasa "needed help recapturing Uvira and pulled in every resource they could."

They added that the presence of Americans on the frontlines is keeping the AFC and M23 from launching new attacks.

Prince's firm is also helping to secure Kinshasa and improve tax revenue collection. Sources told Reuters that Americans have been pulled off the frontlines, but could return

Prince is a notorious American mercenary. His first firm, Blackwater, is responsible for the Nisour Square massacre, which left 17 Iraqis dead.

Prince later rebranded and sold Blackwater. He is a long-time ally of the US president, and the men responsible for murdering the Iraqi civilians were ultimately pardoned by Trump during his first term.

However, Prince has formed other private security firms that have conducted operations around the globe. His company, Vectus Global, has a contract with the Haitian government to conduct anti-drone operations

Several civilians have been killed by drones in Haiti, including eight children at a birthday party. According to the scant details in The Guardian on the last September strike:

At least eight children were killed and six others seriously injured in a drone attack on a birthday party in Haiti’s capital where an alleged gang leader was distributing gifts, according to relatives and activists.

The explosions happened Saturday night in Cité Soleil, which is controlled by Viv Ansanm, a powerful gang coalition which the US has designated as a foreign terrorist organization.

One of its leaders, Jimmy Chérizier , best known as Barbecue, vowed to avenge the attacks, with a total of at least 13 people killed, according to residents.

Although it’s unclear if those strikes were conducted by Prince or the US-installed in Port-au-Prince.

Tyler Durden Thu, 02/12/2026 - 03:30

Japan Restarts World's Largest Nuclear Plant, 15 Years After Fukushima Shutdown

Japan Restarts World's Largest Nuclear Plant, 15 Years After Fukushima Shutdown

Japan resumed operations at the world’s largest nuclear power plant this week, marking a key development in the country’s return to nuclear energy almost 15 years after the Fukushima disaster.

The reactor is located at the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Plant, in Japan’s Niigata Prefecture.

It is the world’s first nuclear power plant to use an advanced boiling water reactor.

Panoramic view of units 5-7 of the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa nuclear power plant.

Kashiwazaki-Kariwa’s total capacity is 8.2 GW, which is enough to power a few million homes.

The site is operated by the Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO), which also ran the Fukushima plant.

While the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa facility was not damaged by the Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami, all seven of its reactors have remained offline since the accident amid tightened safety requirements and public scrutiny.

We noted back in December, Niigata prefecture’s assembly session vote revealed the community’s deep divisions over the restart, in spite of lawmakers giving their backing to Hanazumi.

“This is nothing other than a political settlement that does not take into account the will of the Niigata residents,” an assembly member told fellow lawmakers during the session.

Around 300 protesters gathered outside the assembly holding billboards with signs expressing their opposition to the resumption in operations, such as  “No Nukes” and “Support Fukushima.”

“I am truly angry from the bottom of my heart,” Kenichiro Ishiyama, a 77-year-old protester from Niigata city, told reporters after the vote.

“If something was to happen at the plant, we would be the ones to suffer the consequences.”

Brought back to life on February 9, the reactor had been shut down for more than a decade. 

“We will continue to conduct integrity checks of the plant equipment under actual steam operating conditions, while fully and sincerely responding to inspections by the Nuclear Regulation Authority,” Tepco officials stated.

As interestingengineering.com reports, the 1,356-megawatt (MW) advanced boiling water reactor (ABWR) was restarted at 2pm local time with criticality confirmed just over an hour later at 3:20pm.

For clarity, criticality refers to the condition when a nuclear reactor is maintaining a self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction.

“We will continue to demonstrate through our actions and results that we are making safety our top priority at the Kashiwazaki-Kariwa Nuclear Power Plant,” Tepco representatives pointed out.

The reactor was first restarted in the evening of January 21.

However, according to the company, shortly after midnight on January 22, an alarm in the control rod monitoring system halted the withdrawal of one control rod.

As a result, the unit’s restart was suspended while an investigation into the cause of the alarm was carried out. Tepco said it intends to gradually raise the pressure inside the reactor once operations resume.

It will resume power generation and transmission on February 16.

As we previously detailed, Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi has expressed her support for nuclear restarts to counter the cost of imported fossil fuels, which account for 60–70 percent of the country’s total electricity generation.

Last year, Japan spent 10.7 trillion yen ($68 billion) on imported liquefied natural gas and coal, representing a tenth of the country’s total import costs.

Despite its declining population, Japan expects energy demand to rise over the next decade, due to the power needs of artificial intelligence (AI) data processing centers.

The country has set a target of doubling the portion of nuclear power in its electricity mix to 20 percent by 2040.

Japan’s top nuclear power operator, Kansai Electric Power, said in July it would begin conducting surveys for a reactor in western Japan, in what is planned to be the country’s first new plant since the Fukushima disaster.

Tyler Durden Thu, 02/12/2026 - 02:45

German MPs Shoot-Down Idea Of Paying WWII Reparations To Poland With Weapons

German MPs Shoot-Down Idea Of Paying WWII Reparations To Poland With Weapons

Via Remix News,

German politicians stress cooperation in the wake of the suggestion that Germany finance Polish armaments as reparations for World War II.

Wolfgang Ischinger, chairman of the Munich Security Conference, had proposed that Germany provide Poland with military equipment, emphasizing that “Poland is a frontline state.”

Poland has been vocal in its demand for what it says amounts to €1.3 trillion in World War II reparations Germany must pay for the crimes, deaths, and massive property destruction caused by the 1939-1945 occupation. 

Despite some discussions, Germany has long maintained that Poland renounced all claims to reparations in 1953.

“From the Polish perspective, the issue of reparations remains unresolved,” he said in an interview for Die Welt, cited by wPolityce.

“What if Germany, recognizing Poland’s role as a frontline state, gave Warsaw a submarine, a frigate or a few tanks?” Ischinger asked.

German politicians and experts have since expressed their concerns with the idea.

Thomas Erndl, spokesman for the defense policy of the CDU/CSU parliamentary group in the Bundestag, told Die Welt that there was no need for this because a strong Bundeswehr protects not only Germany but also its allies.

“The brigade stationed in Lithuania is a visible sign of our solidarity as allies… If we all focus our efforts on rapidly expanding our military capabilities, and thus on guaranteeing our European security, historical sensitivity will play a subordinate role,” Erndl argued.

Adis Ahmetović, spokesman for foreign policy of the SPD parliamentary group, emphasized that gaining Poland’s trust can only come from a stronger foundation.

“Some of our partners, such as France and Poland, sometimes show reticence. Trust is not built through symbolic gestures like military donations, but through reliable and close cooperation. Therefore, it is essential to consistently deepen and further develop proven formats, such as the Weimar Triangle,” she said.

“We should not allow ourselves to be distracted, let alone exploited, in the process of building a common European defense, which all of Europe is waiting for,” added Marie-Agnes Strack-Zimmermann from the Free Democratic Party, chairwoman of the European Parliament’s Defence Committee.

Agnieszka Brugger, spokeswoman for security policy of the Green Party parliamentary group in the Bundestag, seemed confused by the idea, stating, “Conflating such a strange idea with the very delicate and difficult issue of ‘reparations’ is not very helpful.”

“It seems a bit strange, and perhaps even paternalistic, to want to give weapons systems to a country that has been determinedly and successfully building one of NATO’s strongest conventional armed forces for years,” Professor Carlo Masala from the Bundeswehr University in Munich told Die Welt.

CDU foreign policy expert Roderich Kiesewetter noted: “We cannot buy ourselves out of our responsibility to defend Europe by simply giving up a few tanks.”

Read more here...

Tyler Durden Thu, 02/12/2026 - 02:00

FTC Probing Pediatrician Group, Non-Profit Over Gender Dysphoria Treatments For Kids

FTC Probing Pediatrician Group, Non-Profit Over Gender Dysphoria Treatments For Kids

Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times,

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is examining statements from several organizations that have promoted drugs and surgeries for minors who believe they are a different gender, according to documents made public on Feb. 10.

FTC officials sent civil demands for documents to the American Academy of Pediatrics and World Professional Association of Transgender Health, documents posted online by the FTC show.

In the demands, dated Jan. 15, the FTC said officials are probing whether groups have “made, or assisted others in making, false or unsubstantiated representations or engaged in unfair practices in connection with the marketing and advertising of Pediatric Gender Dysphoria Treatment” in violation of federal law that bars people from engaging in deceptive practices affecting commerce and disseminating false advertisements.

Officials asked for each type of pediatric gender dysphoria treatment that the organizations advertised or promoted and information on financial relationships between the organizations and pharmaceutical companies, hospitals, or doctors involved in treating gender dysphoria.

They also want to know about the process for how the American Academy of Pediatrics developed its 2018 statement outlining its position on care for youth labeled as “transgender,” and how the World Professional Association of Transgender Health came up with its Standards of Care Version 8, which contains guidance for doctors contemplating giving children puberty blockers or cross-sex hormones, or performing surgeries on children questioning their gender.

FTC Chairman Andrew Ferguson said in 2025 the agency would investigate whether the gender transition procedures were being offered under unfair or false claims.

The inquiry is looking into whether people, particularly children, were harmed by false or unsubstantiated claims about “gender-affirming care.”

The American Academy of Pediatrics said in a response to the civil demand, filed with the FTC, that the FTC was going beyond its scope in the probe and that the demand should be quashed.

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The World Professional Association of Transgender Health issued a similar response in a petition to revoke the demand directed to it.

The FTC and the two groups did not respond to requests for comment by publication time. If the petitions are turned down, the groups could turn to the courts.

Several other organizations sued the FTC over a separate probe.

A federal judge said in 2025 that the FTC’s civil demands in that investigation likely violated the constitutional rights of the organizations.

The new developments came after two medical groups, the American Society of Plastic Surgeons and the American Medical Association, said that there is uncertainty regarding treatments for gender dysphoria and that doctors should largely steer clear of surgeries on children.

They also followed a jury in New York finding two doctors liable for the breast removal surgery they supported and performed on a 16-year-old girl.

Tyler Durden Wed, 02/11/2026 - 22:35

America's Top Restaurant Winner Slaps Diners With Mandatory Tip And Woke Lecture On Receipt

America's Top Restaurant Winner Slaps Diners With Mandatory Tip And Woke Lecture On Receipt

The top-rated restaurant in America (at least according to Food & Wine's 2025 pick) is now buried under a pile of one-star reviews after deciding to lecture diners on receipts about the supposedly "racist" history of tipping, while auto-adding a non-negotiable 20% service charge to every bill, SFGate reports.

A customer enters during a soft opening at Burdell in Oakland, Calif., on Sept. 6, 2023. The Michelin Guide restaurant recently received an onslaught of poor reviews following a viral Reddit post.  Douglas Zimmerman/SFGATE

The fury began with a now-deleted Reddit post of the woke note tacked onto receipts at Burdell, the Oakland soul-food spot that's become a progressive darling with Michelin nods and critical acclaim.

Tipping in the US has an ugly past, allowing the continuation of underpaid labor,” the receipt lectured. “We don’t like that history. Included on your check is a 20% Service Charge which we use to pay hourly staff a consistent and livable wage, not dependent on archaic tipping customs or chance. No need to add anything else. Thank you!”

Predictably, the internet did what it does best by review-bombing the place on Yelp with complaints about everything from terrible food to claims of hidden fees, despite the restaurant insisting the charge is disclosed on menus and its website. Some diners felt ambushed by the mandatory add-on and the moralizing footnote.

Chef-owner Geoff Davis has since scrambled to find an excuse for all the hate, landing on claiming that mainly non-locals are simply jumping on a culture-war bandwagon.

Most of the people who left reviews are from outside our region and community,” Davis told SFGate. “They’re using this as a crusade against Oakland, DEI, and the moment that we’re in. People are upset about a lot of things in America right now.”

It blows my mind that there are so many restaurants that employ this model, and we’ve been doing it for so long with no surprise for the most part,” he added.

Davis previously faced backlash over his sky-high prices, saying that it's an “uphill fight” to operate a soul-food restaurant because of America's past, according to SFGate.

“It is what it is, and as Americans, we have to understand that racism is part of our core identity as a country. All we can do is do the best work that we can,” Davis told the news outlet.

Tyler Durden Wed, 02/11/2026 - 22:10

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