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UAE Unveils Jet-Powered Kamikaze Drone As War Gets A Lot Scarier UAE state-backed defense company EDGE Group has released footage on X, unveiling a new low-cost, jet-powered kamikaze drone, the latest signal that the hyperdevelopment of drone warfare is accelerating. EDGE Group unveiled the Shadow 25, a jet-powered loitering munition described as a rapid-strike system designed to deliver precision attacks against fixed targets. Shadow 25 can reach speeds in excess of 650 mph, about 5.42 times faster than the Iranian Shahed-136 drone. It has a range of 155 miles, which EDGE says offers "new opportunities to swiftly neutralize stationary enemy targets." Capability built for modern operations. Combining jet-powered speed, advanced guidance, and precision targeting, SHADOW 25 supports forces with rapid, reliable, mission-ready performance when it matters most. pic.twitter.com/yaEessVgTZ — EDGE (@_edgegroup) March 27, 2026 EDGE is one of the UAE's top national defense companies, developing, manufacturing, and supporting military and security products and services, including autonomous systems, missiles, naval platforms, electronic warfare, and radar systems. Company Structure (data via Sayari): Corporate Network (data via Sayari): EDGE has also been expanding its industrial footprint and international partnerships. In 2025, it said it operated more than 170 manufacturing and assembly facilities across the UAE. Our takeaway is that after four years of hyperdevelopment in drone warfare across Ukraine, the US-Iran conflict now appears poised to unleash an evolutionary leap in drone warfare. The next phase is likely to be defined by fast strike drones and more advanced AI-enabled targeting, further compressing the kill chain and deepening battlefield automation. Across Eurasia, war is spreading, from Ukraine to the Gulf. Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 04:15
The Food Supply Chain Is Breaking... Again Authored by John Rubino, Spring has sprung, which means seeds that were planted in late winter are starting to germinate. They’re hungry and will only grow to their full nutritional potential if they’re well fed. But that, apparently, isn’t happening, as fertilizer supplies are interrupted by yet another pointless Middle East war. The result? Global food shortages that might dwarf the COVID-era Costco-hoarding mess of recent memory. Here’s an overview: Shanaka Anslem Perera @shanaka86 BREAKING: The nitrogen trap just closed. Three locks snapped shut simultaneously. The planting window is closing behind them. And the food the world eats next year is now being decided by molecules that cannot reach the soil in time. Lock one: the Strait of Hormuz. The IRGC permissioned corridor allows oil tankers from friendly nations to pay $2 million in yuan and pass. It does not allow fertiliser vessels to pass at any price. Zero approved fertiliser transits in 24 days. The Gulf supplies 49 percent of the world’s exported urea and roughly 30 percent of traded ammonia. That supply is not delayed. It is denied. The gate opens for molecules that fund the gatekeeper. It stays closed for molecules that feed the planet. Lock two: Russia. The world’s largest exporter of ammonium nitrate just halted all AN exports until after April 21. Three to four million tonnes per year, gone from global markets at the exact moment the Northern Hemisphere needs it most. The official reason is “domestic priority.” The strategic effect is leverage. Russia earns windfall revenue from the oil price spike its ally’s war created, then removes the fertiliser that farmers need to plant through the crisis. The disease and the cure, again, from the same address. Lock three: China. Beijing has banned exports of nitrogen-potassium blends and phosphate fertilisers through August 2026. China is the world’s largest phosphate producer and a major nitrogen supplier. The ban removes the last alternative source that could have compensated for Hormuz and Russia. Three locks. Three countries. Three deliberate decisions timed to the same biological calendar. The biological calendar does not negotiate. Corn requires nitrogen at the V6 to VT growth stage or kernel set is permanently reduced. Wheat requires it at tillering and jointing or grain fill collapses. Rice requires it at transplanting or yield drops 20 to 40 percent in low-input systems. These are not economic models. They are cellular processes. The plant either receives nitrogen during the window or it does not. If it does not, no subsequent application, no price increase, no policy reversal can recover what was lost. The damage is written into the biology of the seed. The US Corn Belt window closes mid-April. European top-dressing is happening now. Indian Kharif preparation begins in May. Bangladeshi Boro rice transplanting is underway this week. Every one of these windows is closing while the three largest sources of nitrogen on Earth are simultaneously locked: Hormuz by military blockade, Russia by export decree, China by trade ban. The USDA Prospective Plantings report arrives March 31. The FAO Food Price Index publishes April 3. These will quantify what the molecules already know: the nitrogen did not arrive. The yield loss is locked in. The 5 to 10 percent global drag will concentrate where the buffers are thinnest: subsistence farms in Bangladesh, Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, where a 20 percent shortfall does not mean lower profits. It means hunger. Sri Lanka banned synthetic fertiliser in 2021. Rice yields collapsed 40 percent. The government fell. In 2008, fertiliser and oil spiked simultaneously and food riots erupted across 30 countries. In 2026, the strait blocks fertiliser while Russia and China withdraw the alternatives, and the planting windows close on a planet with nowhere else to turn. The war is fought with missiles. The famine is fought with molecules. The molecules are trapped behind three locks on three continents, timed to the one calendar that cannot be paused, extended, or negotiated: the calendar written into the DNA of every seed in the soil. Read a deeper dive here... This is Why We Should Have Gardens…and Gold, Goats, and Guns Even after the pandemic, many (most?) people in the developed world continue to view “food supply chain disruption” as a tin-foil-hat concern. They’re apparently wrong. Again. And note that higher food prices are just the first-order effect of a fertilizer shortage. The second and third-order impacts are geopolitical and possibly military. So let this latest “peak complexity” signal encourage you to keep prepping. Anticipate shortages, higher prices, even more chaotic politics, and take some of the steps we’ve been discussing here. Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 03:30
US Senators Seek To Sanction Hungary Over Obstructing Ukraine Aid Because US Congress is perfectly functional, and all domestic issues have been resolved (one would very ironically think), the FT reports that a bipartisan pair of US senators are set to introduce legislation calling for sanctions to be imposed on senior Hungarian officials involved in obstructing aid to Ukraine. If passed, the Block Putin act would require President Trump to impose financial sanctions and visa bans on Hungarian government officials involved in the country’s purchases of Russian oil and gas, and who have sought to block support for Ukraine. The introduction of the bill comes as Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has held up a €90bn EU loan to Ukraine as he faces a tough re-election campaign ahead of parliamentary elections next month. Opinion polls indicated Orbán, who has served as prime minister since 2010, could lose power. The opposition Tisza party’s lead stood at 23% points on Wednesday, according to pollster Median. Pro-government polls show a slight lead for Orbán’s ruling Fidesz. Orbán, historically aligned with Vladimir Putin, has accused Kyiv of disrupting the flow of Moscow’s oil to Hungary by stalling repairs to the Druzhba pipeline, which transits Ukraine. Democrat Jeanne Shaheen and Republican Thom Tillis, co-chairs of the Senate Nato observer group, are set to introduce the legislation this week. The pair have been outspoken about Europe’s continued dependence on Russian energy. Tillis said: “The United States and our allies must remain united in supporting Ukraine and in cutting off the revenue streams that fuel Putin’s war.” “This bill holds senior Hungarian officials accountable while giving Hungary a clear path to get back in line with its allies by ending its reliance on Russian energy and stopping its obstruction of support for Ukraine,” he added. Shaheen, the top Democrat on the Senate foreign relations committee, said: “It is beyond belief that vice-president Vance is reportedly planning on visiting Hungary to provide an electoral boost to a corrupt government that continues to help fund Russia’s war machine.” “If we want this war in Ukraine to end, the Trump administration needs to be consistent in holding our allies to the same standards; no one, especially Viktor Orbán, should get a free pass,” she said. While much of the continent has sought to wean itself off Russian oil and gas supplies since Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Hungary and Slovakia have increased their dependence on Russian energy... and lucky for them, as now the "rest of the continent" is about to go dry as a result of the Iran war. Complicating matters, Trump is very close to Orbán and has endorsed his re-election bid. Politico on Wednesday reported preparations were being made for US vice-president JD Vance to visit Hungary days ahead of the elections. Trump has criticized Europe for continuing to buy Russian energy and has urged the continent to take the lead in supporting Ukraine. “They’re buying oil and gas from Russia while they’re fighting Russia,” Trump said in his address to the UN General Assembly in September. The draft text of the bill, which has been seen by the FT, does not mention Orbán explicitly as a target of the sanctions. Therefore, it would fall to the Trump administration to determine which Hungarian officials have been involved in holding up aid to Ukraine and continuing the country’s dependency on Russian energy, a congressional aide said. Orbán and his foreign minister Péter Szijjártó have long sought close ties with Russia, with Szijjártó meeting his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov more than 20 times since the start of the war in 2022. The ruling Fidesz party has made anti-Ukraine messages the central element of its election campaign and insisted on maintaining Russian oil imports. “If President [Volodymyr] Zelenskyy wants to get his money from Brussels, he must open the Druzhba crude pipeline,” Orbán said in a video message to the Ukrainian president last week. “They tell us openly that they don’t want to allow cheap Russian oil through to Hungary, so the situation is very simple. No oil — no money.” Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 02:45
'The Era Of Deportations Has Begun!' - European Parliament Backs Remigration Efforts In Major Victory For The European Right Authored by Thomas Brooke via Remix News, The European Parliament has taken a major step toward a far tougher migration regime, approving a new negotiating mandate for legislation designed to speed up the deportation of illegal migrants and tighten enforcement across the bloc. In a vote on Thursday, MEPs backed the so-called Returns Regulation by 389 votes to 206, with 32 abstentions, clearing the way for talks with the European Council on a new legal framework governing the removal of illegal migrants who have no right to remain in the European Union. The result was driven by support from a broad right-wing and center-right coalition, including the European People’s Party (EPP), the European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR), Europe of Sovereign Nations (ESN), and Patriots for Europe (PfE), illustrating how the balance of power on migration has shifted in Brussels. The proposal is intended to overhaul the EU’s weak returns system, long criticized for allowing rejected asylum seekers and other illegal migrants to remain in Europe for years. When the regulation was initiated by the European Commission last year, Migration Commissioner Magnus Brunner summed up the scale of the failure when he said, “One out of five people who are told to leave the EU, actually leave the EU, and that is not acceptable.” NEW: The European Parliament has voted in favor of progressing a stricter legal framework for the deportation of illegal migrants. Migrants with a deportation order will be required to cooperate with the authorities to facilitate their return, and could be detained for up to two… pic.twitter.com/vvDPtgrg1B — Remix News & Views (@RMXnews) March 26, 2026 The new framework would introduce stricter return procedures, longer detention in some cases, wider entry bans, and penalties for those who refuse to cooperate with their own deportation. It would also open the door to so-called return hubs outside the EU, an idea that was fiercely attacked by Brussels only a few years ago when Britain pursued a Rwanda plan, and Italy signed its Albania agreement. Conservatives hailed the vote as a breakthrough. Charlie Weimers, vice chair of the ECR, called it a landmark moment for his party and for tougher border enforcement in Europe. “New, stricter return rules are the Sweden Democrats’ biggest negotiating success ever in the EU. It will soon be possible to send home those who are not supposed to be in Europe, and return hubs outside the EU will be made possible. The era of deportations has begun!” EPP chairman Manfred Weber also stated, “Today we are clearly demonstrating that European solutions to take on illegal migration are possible. European citizens expect decisive action, and we are delivering. Anyone who does not have a right to remain in the EU must leave.” French nationalist MEP Marion Maréchal presented the vote as a turning point for the right. “It was a historic step for the coalition of the right in committee, and it is now a victory in the plenary session of the European Parliament: the ‘return regulation’ for greater firmness toward undocumented migrants has been voted through by the MEPs. After adoption in trilogue, it will be up to the French government to take action!” NEW: The European Parliament has voted in favor of progressing a stricter legal framework for the deportation of illegal migrants. Migrants with a deportation order will be required to cooperate with the authorities to facilitate their return, and could be detained for up to two… pic.twitter.com/vvDPtgrg1B — Remix News & Views (@RMXnews) March 26, 2026 In a press release, Patriots for Europe declared that “European voters have long demanded a fundamental shift in migration policy” and that “a first decisive step has been taken.” The group argued that the old Brussels approach had failed completely and said the new agreement would help restore control to national governments. “Crucially, this new agreement shifts the paradigm towards minimum harmonization,” it said. “Instead of imposing a rigid, one-size-fits-all dictate from Brussels, this framework returns control to the national capitals.” Patriots for Europe also highlighted several measures it says will make the system far more effective, including “severe consequences for non-cooperation,” stricter detention rules, and an end to what it described as abuse of the appeals process to delay removals indefinitely. The group said the maximum detention period had been extended to 24 months and that migrants deemed security risks could now be placed in enhanced-security facilities or prisons. Left-wing organizations reacted with alarm, accusing the EPP of joining forces with nationalist parties and abandoning the old parliamentary cordon sanitaire. The European Council on Refugees and Exiles (ECRE) said the decision would “normalize measures that stigmatize migrants” and weaken rights protections, while Amnesty International condemned what it called an “increasingly harmful and draconian direction” in EU migration policy. This backlash, however, confirms how dramatically the debate has changed. Policies, such as remigration, once denounced as extreme, are now moving into the mainstream of EU law, and the focus in Brussels is no longer on managing migration flows, but on removing those who are not entitled to stay. Read more here... Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 02:00
Global Demand Destruction: Subsidies, Empty Gas Stations, Rationing, Flight Cancelations, Export Limits, Price Controls In the past two weeks we have discussed demand destruction as a result of soaring oil prices (here and here), and we are increasingly seeing anecdotal evidence of just that (here is a table from Goldman we showed previously, laying out where demand destruction is most acute). We start, as always, with Asia which has emerged as ground zero of the global energy crisis - as a reminder last week we first presented a map by JPMorgan's resident commodity expert who how the shockwave from the Iran war spreads across the world, hitting Asia first, then Africa and Europe, before settling on the US, but mostly California. Source According to UBS, a shortage of jet fuel in Asia and very high prices for what is available are now leading to greater flight cancellations. European jet fuel trades around $1713/tonne, up 114% since the war began. Singapore fuel is up around 140%. Both Vietnam Airlines and Air New Zealand have had to cancel flights due to limited fuel supply. Let's go down the list. 1. Panic buying prompts PM to reassure Australians over fuel supply (bbc) Australia will halve its fuel excise for three months from Wednesday after prices soared to a record last week as the impact of the Iran war spreads. Meanwhile, the average price of a liter of diesel jumped above A$2.82 last week, while petrol was almost A$2.40, both the highest in at least 20 years. The average price in rural regions like the Northern Territory was even higher, a blow to farmers and long-distance transport firms. The temporary cut would reduce the price of petrol and diesel by about 26 Australian cents ($0.18) per liter, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said at a press conference Monday in Canberra. “The longer this war goes on, the worse the impacts will be,” he said. The government will also reduce the heavy road user charge for the next three months, and delay the next planned increased in that charge by six months. The measures are expected to cost about A$2.55 billion and to lower CPI by 0.5 ppt, Treasurer Jim Chalmers said. Albanese has sought to reassure Australians that the country's fuel supply remains "secure" as prices soar and following reports of panic buying and petrol stations running dry since the start of the Iran war. There have been reports of truck drivers and other motorists stranded, while businesses say rising costs are affecting their viability. The government says demand and distribution issues have caused shortages rather than supply, which it says remains at the same level as before the war began. In Cairns, Queensland, the BBC found a small independent garage that tells a pretty typical story in Australia. It has run out of unleaded petrol and the price of diesel is 85% higher than it was before the war in Iran started. In New South Wales, Australia's most populous state, one in seven retailers say they are out of at least one type of fuel. The price of diesel in Sydney has meanwhile risen to the 314.5 cents a litre as of Thursday, according to the National Roads and Motorists' Association (NRMA), its highest ever price. Hundreds of petrol stations across the country have reported running out of at least one type of fuel this week. But shortages are due to people changing their buying habits, NRMA spokesperson Peter Khoury told the BBC. "People are filling up jerry cans of fuel and storing it in their garages," he said. "We're hearing increasingly of transport companies telling their drivers that if you're half full and you see diesel, buy it." 2. Japan Says Oil Reserves for Domestic Use Amid Asia Pleas for Aid (bbg) Japan’s trade minister said the country will sell oil from its reserves to domestic refiners as a general rule, signaling that the government isn’t currently planning to channel national supplies directly to other Asian nations seeking assistance. “Regarding the sale of strategic petroleum reserves, we are certainly targeting domestic oil and refining companies,” Trade Minister Ryosei Akazawa said Friday, pointing out that they were legally established to secure Japan’s own energy supplies. “However, the situation may differ somewhat for joint reserves with oil-producing countries. We intend to closely monitor developments and make appropriate decisions on a case-by-case basis.” Other Asian countries are facing similar oil supply challenges. The Philippines and Vietnam have reportedly sought support from Japan, which holds some of the world’s largest oil reserves. In addition to its own reserves, Japan also has reserves held with oil producing nations like Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait. Akazawa said he is well aware of the Philippines’ dire situation, noting that its reserves are far smaller than Japan’s while it relies heavily on the strait to secure oil, as Japan does. 3. Japan to relax rules from April to boost coal-fired power amid LNG import risks (reuters) Japan's industry ministry will relax rules for one year to increase the use of coal-fired power plants in the fiscal year starting April, as the U.S.-Israel war with Iran adds uncertainty to liquefied natural gas imports, it said on Friday. Japan takes delivery of some 4 million metric tons of LNG annually - or around 6% of its total imports - via the Strait of Hormuz, which has been effectively closed due to the war. "There is increasing uncertainty about future LNG procurement. We believe that it is necessary to increase the operation of coal-fired power plants and save LNG fuel," an industry ministry official told a special government panel. The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry proposed suspending for one year its 50% cap on the capacity utilisation rate of coal-fired power plants with generation efficiency below 42%. LNG consumption could then fall by about 0.5 million tons a year, or slightly more than 10% of the LNG it imports via the Strait of Hormuz, according to a METI's estimate. The ministry will implement the change from April 1 as an emergency measure and there were no objections from the panel members, the official told Reuters. Japan has an LNG stockpile of around 4 million tons, METI data showed. Its thermal power generation largely depends on LNG and coal, with a small portion covered by oil, with electricity also being generated from nuclear power and renewable energy. So far, Japan has restarted 15 nuclear power reactors of 33 which remain operable after the Fukushima Daiichi disaster in 2011. 4. India Slaps Taxes on Fuel Exports as Iran War Jolts Supply (bbg) India has announced a series of tax changes including a levy on fuel exports, as the country tries to shield consumers from the impact of a deepening conflict in the Middle East that has upended energy supply. The South Asian nation imposed a 21.5 rupee (23 cents) per liter duty on exports of diesel and 29.5 rupees on jet fuel, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman said in a post on X. “This will ensure adequate availability of these products for domestic consumption,” she said. India has also slashed taxes on locally sold gasoline and diesel by 10 rupees per liter each, a reduction intended to help keep prices stable at the pump. As the third-largest oil consumer, India is among the countries most impacted by the war in the Persian Gulf and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which connects the region with the wider world. It has seen acute shortages of liquefied petroleum gas, used for cooking, and of liquefied natural gas. The country raised LPG prices earlier this month and subsequent speculation around a likely increase in pump prices of diesel and gasoline has led to panic buying, with people lining up outside forecourts. The energy crunch comes at a delicate time for a price-sensitive country, with elections in key states where Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party is looking to expand its foothold. Opposition parties have been pressing for more forceful measures to address the fuel crunch. Madhavi Arora, an economist at Emkay Global Financial Services, estimates the government’s annualized revenue loss from tax cuts at about 1.55 trillion rupees ($16.4 billion). Diesel and jet fuel together form a significant portion of India’s refined product exports. Last month, India supplied around 500,000 barrels a day of the two products combined, out of the roughly 1.2 million barrels a day of fuels exported, tanker trading data from intelligence firms Vortexa and Kpler showed. The government will lose 70 billion rupees every fortnight due to the excise duty cut, Vivek Chaturvedi, chairman of the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs, told reporters at the daily government briefing on the situation. However, it expects to collect about 15 billion rupees over the same period from export taxes levied on jet fuel and diesel, he said. 5. Thailand Tightens Fuel Pricing, Supply Disclosure Amid Shortages (bbg) Thailand is tightening oversight of fuel pricing and supply as authorities ramp up efforts to address shortages across parts of the country. Refineries must display selling prices at their sites along with current inventory levels, under new directives outlined by the Energy Ministry late Thursday. Traders are required to adhere to declared prices and cannot charge above government-set levels, it said. The Southeast Asian country has faced fuel shortages in several provinces as the Middle East conflict drives up global oil prices, widening the gap between subsidized domestic rates and international markets. Fears of tighter supplies have sparked panic buying, particularly of diesel, despite government assurances that stocks can last about 100 days. While authorities have taken steps to shore up supplies to retail outlets, many pumps have had to ration fuel as agriculture and industrial users queued up with jerry cans along with commuters to buy diesel. Diesel demand has jumped to about 87 million liters per day from an average 67 million liters before the start of the conflict, according to the ministry. The government has already raised retail prices to ease pressure on subsidies. However, even after Thursday’s increase, it is still subsidizing diesel at 19 baht (58 US cents) per liter, pushing the oil subsidy fund’s deficit to about 38 billion baht, acting Energy Minister Auttapol Rerkpiboon said. 6. Vietnamese Airlines Slash Flights From April on Jet Fuel Crunch (bbg) Vietnamese airlines will significantly reduce flights and scale back operations from April as soaring jet fuel prices and supply constraints squeeze the industry, prompting carriers to focus on core routes as the Middle East conflict drags on. Vietnam Airlines, the national carrier, will suspend seven domestic routes from April 1, according to a document from the Civil Aviation Authority of Vietnam. The airline plans to cut 10-20% of its flights per month in the next quarter if jet fuel reaches $160-$200 per barrel, the document said. That could mean up to 18% of its international flights being canceled and up to 26% on domestic routes. Low-cost carrier Vietjet Air is targeting an 18% reduction in total capacity in April, including a 22% cut in domestic flights and an 11% reduction in international routes, the document said. Bamboo Airways passengers are expected to see the biggest disruption in April, with flights halved to 15–17 per day. Vietnam has moved to shore up energy security after severe disruptions to oil and gas flows through the Strait of Hormuz, prompting the government to tap its emergency fuel fund to stabilize prices. The country’s two domestic refineries meet around 70% of its domestic demand, but more than 80% of its crude imports come from Middle East. The government announced on Friday it will temporarily freeze some taxes on gasoline, oil and jet fuel until April 15 as an ‘urgent’ move to stabilize the domestic market and ensure national security due to the ongoing conflict 7. Asia employs energy price control and subsidies (WoodMac) Asian governments have rapidly deployed an unprecedented array of cushions to protect the hardest-hit sectors and consumers. But such interventions come at a staggering cost and, if oil prices remain high, some Asian governments will soon hit fiscal breaking point. Asian countries are trying to prevent a repeat of the 2022 cost-of-living crisis. Beyond demand-side management, Asian governments have shifted from market pricing for oil products to aggressive intervention. A plethora of policy responses are being rolled out across the region. Most, though, amount to pretty much the same thing – subsidies for consumers. Price caps at the pump are the go-to lever, with governments compensating losses through a variety of mechanisms. In Indonesia, losses by national oil company (NOC) Pertamina will be recovered by government compensation later; Japan and Malysia have a similar scheme for their refiners and fuel suppliers. In Thailand and Vietnam, oil company losses are currently made good from dedicated funds – though the longevity of these funds is already being tested. China, meanwhile, has a US$130/bbl crude price ‘cap’ on refined product prices that refiners can pass through to customers. Perhaps in anticipation of higher prices, China introduced subsidies on diesel and gasoline this week despite the cap not being breached. India has a twist on the theme. The government moved fast to freeze retail prices but the state-owned oil marketing companies initially have to absorb the losses. Once these become unsustainable, the central government intervenes by cutting taxes, essentially sacrificing tax revenue to keep the pump price stable. The affordability of current subsidy schemes varies greatly by country. Thailand and Vietnam have tapped into budget rainy-day funds to make subsidy payments. But Thailand’s fund is already in deficit, while Vietnam’s will be fully drawn by early April under the current subsidy scale. Expanded fiscal deficits look near-certain through 2026 across much of Asia. If Brent averages US$100/bbl for four months, India is hit hardest among Asia’s major economies: we estimate a cost equivalent to 0.7% of GDP and 7.2% of government revenue in fiscal year 2025-26. Indonesia is in danger of breaching its legal limit of 3% on its fiscal deficit if subsidy payments persist On to Africa... 8. Kenya Plans to Stabilize Fuel Price as Outages Hit Some Stations (bbg) Kenya plans to stabilize fuel prices as some stations run out of supply in the East African nation that typically depends on Middle East imports to meet demand. Vitol Group’s Vivo Energy, the biggest retailer in the country, said Thursday in a post on X that increased fuel demand resulted in temporary outages at some of its outlets. Kenya’s Treasury Secretary John Mbadi the same day outlined initial measures to be taken by the government to keep petrol and diesel prices from surging. Kenya will utilize its petroleum development levy to cap pump prices, though a lengthy war could become an emergency, Mbadi told lawmakers in the capital, Nairobi. “It is my hope that we will not see this war prolonged for another month or so.” Many African economies, particularly in East and Southern Africa where the Middle East is a major exporter, are running on weeks of stored refined products as the Iran war chokes shipments through the Strait of Hormuz. Governments have this week sought to reassure residents that there are sufficient stocks and asked them not to hoard fuel. Kenya’s outlying gas stations have been the first to dry up as major oil companies are holding back from wholesaling product that would normally be distributed, according to a lobby group of independent operators. “Rural stations are the worst hit — we can’t get product at competitive prices,” said Martin Chomba, chairman of the Petroleum Outlets Association of Kenya. About 68% of Kenya’s 6,200 gas stations are non-franchised and a “substantial number are not able to access products,” he said. ... and Europe 9. Czechs May Cap Fuel Margins as Premier Slams Retail Prices (bbg) The Czech government said it’s considering regulating retail margins at gas stations after Prime Minister Andrej Babis criticized the two largest fuel distributors in the country for what he called “outrageous” prices at the pumps. Local media have reported that cost of petrol and diesel in the Czech Republic has shown one of the biggest jumps in the European Union since the outbreak of the war in Iran. While several nations in central and eastern Europe have adopted measures to ease the impact of surging oil on households and businesses, the Czech government rejected opposition proposals to lower excise taxes because of the impact on budget deficit. “Instead, we are prepared to do something actually effective, and that is for instance regulating margins at the pumps,” Finance Minister Alena Schillerova said in a post on X Friday. “This option and other steps will be the main topic at the government meeting on Monday.” The premier, a chemicals and agriculture billionaire who returned to power last year, urged Poland’s Orlen SA and Hungary’s Mol Nyrt to lower their prices immediately. “I’m asking you not to abuse the current situation in supply of fuels caused by the Iran crisis,” Babis said in a video on his Facebook account. Officials in Prague previously stated they wouldn’t cut fuel taxes to ease the hit from energy shock, saying such a move wouldn’t guarantee lower retail prices. Orlen Unipetrol, the Czech unit of the Polish group, is operating in line with the law and its prices are set by the market, the CTK newswire reported, citing spokesman Pavel Kaidl. A spokesman for Mol’s Czech unit told the Seznamzpravy news website that fuel prices are determined mainly by oil prices on international markets, while taxes also have a significant influence. 10. Poland Plans Fuel Tax Cuts to Shield Consumers From High Prices (bbg) Poland is joining a group of countries that shield consumers from surging fuel prices with a plan to cut taxes and cap prices at the pump, according to Prime Minister Donald Tusk. The government will reduce the value-added tax and excise levies on fuels as well as impose a cap on retail prices that will be set daily in line with wholesale levels, Tusk told a news conference on Thursday. The moves, which need parliamentary approval, are expected to slash fuel costs by 1.2 zloty ($0.32) per liter and could take effect by Easter, Tusk said. The cabinet is also preparing windfall tax on fuel refiners — a measure that’s set to impact Polish energy champion Orlen SA, the largest company in Warsaw’s benchmark WIG20 stock index. Its shares have lost as much as 6.7% in the wake of the announcement. The oil-importing nation has seen one of the sharpest increases in fuel prices among European Union members since the start of the Iran war. Unleaded gasoline costs have jumped 22%, while diesel by 40%, according to European Commission data. This compares with average increases of around 15% for gasoline and 26% for diesel across the 27-nation bloc. * * * And as the global shockwave from the Iran war gets more acute, expect the response from officials and authorities to become increasingly more panicked. Tyler Durden Sun, 03/29/2026 - 23:38
Birthright Citizenship Is National Suicide Authored by Daniel Greenfield via The Gatestone Institute, Last year the Trump administration designated Mexico's Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG) as a terrorist group, allowing the military to carry out strikes against it and its leadership, but the massive drug cartel across the border understands the weaknesses of our system all too well. That's why its new leader has American citizenship. Law enforcement, intelligence agencies and the military will have to jump through all sorts of legal hoops to spy on, target or take out Juan Carlos Valencia Gonzalez, who has a $5 million bounty on his head, but he has the best protection in the world because he was born in California. The new cartel leader's drug-dealing Mexican parents had a baby in America. That child became a US citizen who runs a Mexican drug cartel that the government has designated as being at war with the United States, and yet we can't simply remove his citizenship. And targeting the cartel boss without removing his citizenship will set off wails from Democrats and the Tucker Carlson wing of the GOP, who still whine that the United States took out Anwar Al-Awlaki, the head of Al Qaeda's Yemeni operation, a sworn enemy of America, who happened to be born here when his father, a grad student, was in New Mexico on a Fulbright scholarship. Americans of a century ago would have been baffled that foreign enemy leaders who happened to be born to foreign nationals in this country were somehow immune to being killed in battle or that their citizenship couldn't be quickly and easily removed. Back then most of our modern problems were unthinkable because committing treason, aligning with any foreign government, including joining its army or voting in its elections, marrying a foreigner or just returning to your home country meant denaturalization. (As did dodging the draft or deserting from the military.) Had the common-sense provisions of the Expatriation Act of 1907 or even the milder Nationality Act of 1940 been in force today, we wouldn't have the farce of cartel and terrorist leaders who still hold our citizenship, active traitors with citizenship, "refugees" who spend most of their time back home or a Somali senator linked to fraud who is still voting in Minnesota elections. Under these provisions, Bill Clinton would have lost his citizenship, and the "refugees" and "migrants" who maintain homes abroad, the women who marry foreign nationals for cash to give them citizenship, and the anchor baby would be as extinct as the dodo. Unfortunately, a series of poorly grounded Supreme Court decisions unconstitutionally seized the powers of the executive and legislative branches to withdraw citizenship on most grounds based on a misreading of the notoriously poorly written Fourteenth Amendment. The Warren Court's deliberate misreading of the Fourteenth Amendment's awkward attempt to define all black people as citizens, "all persons born in the United States and not subject to any foreign power... are declared to be citizens," somehow trumped the clear language of Article I, Section 8, Clause 4 that Congress has the power "to establish an uniform Rule of Naturalization". In a series of bad decisions, Supreme Court rulings argued that serving in a foreign military, desertion, marrying foreigners, and voting abroad did not merit denaturalization. These rulings relied on now widely discredited premises, such as defining the Constitution's "cruel and unusual punishment" term as being anything that the justices disapproved of, and "evolving standards of decency" which allowed judges to redefine the law to fit liberal mores. These abuses of judicial activism that reached their peak during the Warren Court also gutted the constitutional powers of Congress and made denaturalization a dead letter in the law. By the time Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez held that a Mexican born in the United States who returned to Mexico to avoid military service couldn't be stripped of his citizenship because it violated his due process, denaturalization was a dead letter that could hardly be utilized except for naturalization fraud by immigrants who had lied about not committing war crimes abroad. This was not strictly true because the provisions punishing treason or allegiance to an enemy power with denaturalization are theoretically still in effect, but administrations haven't had the stomach to try them out. The Trump administration may be willing to take on "treason citizenship" and a more conservative Supreme Court may be willing to overturn Earl Warren. Indeed, even the Fourteenth Amendment had emphasized "not subject to any foreign power". Both the left and the right tend to misunderstand "birthright citizenship." The Fourteenth Amendment's accidental introduction of the foreign concept into American law helped demolish citizenship as a meaningful participatory act rather than the involuntary one it was elsewhere. "Birthright citizenship" is neither an immigrant ideal nor "magic dirt." Rather it was the principle of "Jus Soli" or "Right of the Soil," which, in British law, was limited to those "born under the obedience, power, faith, ligealty or ligeance of the King". America's founding principles were highly skeptical of both notions that were rooted in monarchial, rather than republican principles. Monarchy made everyone born under the jurisdiction and sovereignty of the Crown into a "subject". Allegiance to the Crown was not voluntary the way that it was in America. That was why the Founding Fathers, including Thomas Jefferson, labored to defend the right of "expatriation" which still remains the only unquestioned form of denaturalization. The American Revolution was predicated on the idea of citizenship as a voluntary action rather than an involuntary compact created by a place of birth. The growing intrusion of "Jus Soli" began with the Fourteenth Amendment, which, rather than quickly naturalizing freed black slaves, clumsily made everyone born here and "not subject to any foreign power" citizens. By the late 19th century, the Supreme Court had begun dismantling any meaningful limitations on citizenship, with United States v. Wong Kim Ark embracing the British notion that the sovereignty under which a child was born made him a citizen. But if sovereignty makes a child a citizen, then Anwar Al-Awlaki and Juan Carlos Valencia Gonzalez are fully American. And that's not only absurd; it's national suicide. The prototype for American citizenship is neither "Jus Soli" nor the "Sovereignty of the Crown," but the concluding words of the Declaration of Independence, in which we "pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor." A nation built on anything else is either a tyranny or an absurdity. Some on the left and the right now argue for tyranny or absurdity. Birthright citizenship is not a liberal idea but an illiberal one. It was liberal only relative to the even more illiberal idea that citizenship came from personal allegiance to a monarch. America was based on neither tyranny nor absurdity, but a voluntary community of mutual allegiance that it is possible to join and to withdraw from, and to be tossed out of and barred from for disloyalty. Past Supreme Court decisions reversed the tyrannical one-way allegiance of monarchy and instead replaced it with a one-way allegiance in which the state was obligated to do everything for the citizen, but nothing at all was required from the citizen. Not even allegiance. Even asking them not to run terrorist organizations and drug cartels at war with America is asking too much. No nation can survive on such principles. America is not a monarchy or a tyranny, and there are legitimate concerns about giving the state the easy power to strip away citizenship, but if citizenship can't even be removed from the people who pledge allegiance to Al Qaeda and ISIS, then, to paraphrase President John F. Kennedy, what does it ask of us to do for our country, and what does it even mean beyond a set of legal complications? The only pathway to reviving America is to make citizenship into a meaningful act of allegiance, not an accident of birth. Immigration in this regard is not the problem; immigration without allegiance is the real crisis, but so is the citizenship without allegiance of the likes of Bill Ayers of the "Weather Underground" who can trace his ancestry back to John Ayer, who came to this country from England in 1635 and was one of the original settlers of some of the Puritan towns. America needs to exercise the traditional ability it once had to make citizenship meaningful by also making it selective, controlling immigration, ending the automatic grants of citizenship for happenstance births, and once again making citizenship conditional on ongoing allegiance. Anything else is not citizenship; it's a national death wish. Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ZeroHedge. Tyler Durden Sun, 03/29/2026 - 23:20
LNG Crisis From Bad To Worse As Storm Damage Adds Weeks To Restart Of Chevron Wheatstone Plant The perfect storm surrounding the global LNG supply chain, which hit a brick wall two weeks ago when Iranian attacks shuttered 17% of Qatar's LNG output following devastating strikes on the Ras Laffan plant, the largest in the world, just went from metaphorical to literal after storm damage to Chevron’s Wheatstone gas plant in Western Australia is hampering efforts to restart operations and the facility won’t be back online fully for weeks, adding even more turmoil to the global LNG market. Wheatstone gas plant, Australia As Reuters reports, tropical Cyclone Narelle was estimated to have disrupted Australian LNG facilities along the northern and western coasts, and disrupted supply equating to more than 30 million metric tons per year. Combined with the shock from conflict in the Middle East, more than a quarter of global LNG supply has been disrupted, MST Marquee analyst Saul Kavonic said on Friday. “The Wheatstone gas facility near Onslow has had equipment damage from the severe weather, which has impacted restart activities,” Chevron said in a statement, adding that “while damage assessments continue at both the onshore Wheatstone plant and offshore Wheatstone Platform, it is likely to be a number of weeks before production returns to full rates to allow time for repairs to be safely completed." As we reported last week, Chevron said earlier in the week that one of three LNG production units at its Gorgon plant was halted, as well as a platform that feeds Wheatstone, which is a two-train LNG project which produces 8.9 million tons a year, about 15% of which is meant to be reserved for the domestic market. On Sunday it said the 15.9 million ton Gorgon LNG export facility and domestic plant continued to operate at full rates, adding that all of its three trains returned to full production on Sunday. The storm also hit infrastructure feeding Woodside Energy Group's North West Shelf export plant. The company said it’s working to resume normal operations, and output continues at its Macedon and Pluto gas facilities. Woodside also said ship loading at Pluto LNG is restarting following the reopening on Saturday of Dampier port. Gorgon, Wheatstone and North West Shelf accounted for almost half of Australia’s exports last month, or about 8.4% of the global trade, according to researcher EnergyQuest. Australia became the world’s second-largest LNG exporter when Qatar shut down production this month after Iranian airstrikes damaged its facilities. The country most impacted from the Australian outage will likely be China, which following the Qatar force majeure production halt has been forced to rely on Australian product to a far greater degree. Tyler Durden Sun, 03/29/2026 - 22:45
US To Let Russian Oil Tanker Deliver Fuel To Cuba: Report A week after Russian tankers loaded with fuel for Cuba were diverted due to a months-long US oil blockade, the US Coast Guard is permitting a Russian vessel carrying an estimated 730,000 barrels of crude oil to reach Cuba, the NY Times reports, citing an official briefed on the matter. The tanker - Anatoly Kolodkin - owned by the Russian state-controlled shipping company Sovcomflot under U.S. sanctions since 2024 - left Primorsk, Russia on march 9, and is now expected to dock at the port of Matanzas as early as Monday night or Tuesday. This development marks a notable pause in the administration’s “maximum pressure” campaign, which has included threats to third-party nations, the escorting of at least one earlier tanker away from Cuba, and recent Treasury Department measures explicitly barring Cuba from any waivers on Russian-origin oil. Despite two U.S. Coast Guard cutters positioned in the region capable of interception, no orders were issued to stop the vessel. The Coast Guard referred questions to the White House, which did not respond. The decision avoids an immediate and potentially thorny naval confrontation with Russia in the Caribbean, even as President Trump has publicly suggested military options toward Cuba. At a recent investment conference, Trump stated he believed he would have “the honor of taking Cuba” and added, “Cuba is next, by the way,” in reference to possible use of force after the Iran conflict. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has similarly called for new leadership in Havana, stating that “Cuba’s economy can’t change unless their system of government changes.” NOW: Trump on Cuba: "Within a short period of time, it's going to fail, and we will be there to help it out." pic.twitter.com/ssPdCmDraq — Bruce Snyder (@realBruceSnyder) March 30, 2026 Temporary Relief for a Collapsing Energy Grid The arrival could buy Cuba at least a few weeks of breathing room before its fuel reserves are exhausted again. The island has suffered repeated nationwide blackouts - including one lasting 29 hours in March - severe gasoline and diesel shortages, paralyzed agriculture and transportation, and deteriorating medical services. Diesel, the most critical product from this crude once refined, powers trucks, tractors, and many smaller power plants; shortages have even left humanitarian aid stranded in warehouses. Meanwhile, waste has been piling up. Energy analyst Jorge Piñón of the University of Texas told the Times that the cargo will take roughly three weeks to refine and another week to distribute nationwide. While not a permanent fix, it should help stabilize the grid, reduce blackouts, and support essential government functions, including security forces. Cuba already generates about 40% of its electricity from domestic crude and has accelerated solar installations, but the remaining capacity relies heavily on imported diesel and fuel oil. Piñón estimates the Russian oil could be consumed in under a month, with some reserved for strategic needs. “It buys them time,” he said, “but this is not a magic wand.” Earlier attempts at relief have faltered: another Russia-origin vessel (the Sea Horse, carrying diesel) diverted and remains in Venezuelan waters without discharging its cargo. Cuba has received only minimal fuel imports in 2026 amid the tightened blockade, which intensified after the U.S.-backed change in Venezuela’s leadership. Cuban officials, including Deputy Foreign Minister Carlos Fernández de Cossío, have signaled resolve, stating the military is preparing for possible aggression while hoping it does not occur. Former Cuban diplomat Carlos Alzugaray observed that the Trump administration appears to expect the Cuban government to collapse under pressure, but Havana believes it can endure - and has been negotiating, apparently. * * * SUNDAY NIGHT CUTOFF IN 3, 2, 1... Tyler Durden Sun, 03/29/2026 - 22:10
Beyond Muscle: New Research Shows Creatine Powers The Brain - Fast Creatine is an amazing compound that our bodies make naturally. Long used in the gym for peak muscle performance, a flood of recent research shows that it has profound effects on brain metabolism, cognitive performance under stress (including sleep deprivation), memory, attention, and even mood support. It's also extremely safe for the vast majority of people. Most people need 2-3 grams/day as a baseline - with our bodies making roughly 1g/day from amino acids in the liver, kidneys, and pancreas. According to new studies, boosting creatine intake beyond baseline is extremely good for your brain in everyday healthy adults. One 2024 systematic review and meta-analysis (Frontiers) of 16 randomized controlled trials found that regular creatine supplementation led to improvements in memory and gains in attention and processing speed. These benefits showed up across adults (including healthy individuals). Another review highlighted particularly noticeable memory gains in healthy older adults. And if you're elbow-crawling at work after a night of insomnia, a big dose can have significant effects and kick in fast (within a couple of hours). In one double-blind, randomized study (Nature), participants running on fumes after 21 hours of sleep deprivation experienced a 10.3% boost in word memory performance (plus 17.7% faster processing) and 16–29% gains in processing speed for language, logic, and numeric tasks. But before we get into the science... Let's get this out of the way; you probably know we sell creatine, so this is obviously an ad. But whether you buy it from us or not, you should take note of what these studies have found and consider taking it as part of your daily stack. Long story short, it works well, we use it, and the stuff we sell is high-grade, pure micronized creatine (5g/scoop). The jar it comes in is pretty big and it lasts a while. Support yourself & support the site - buy some here. And if you don't buy ours, just check it out. Actual product: And now for the studies Gym rats have known this for decades about Creatine, it increases strength, muscle mass, and training capacity by rapidly regenerating the body’s cellular fuel, ATP. The latest research suggests that this molecule may be less a niche performance enhancer and more a universal energy buffer for human life. Brain Benefits in Healthy Adults A 2024 systematic review and meta-analysis in Frontiers in Nutrition looked at 16 randomized controlled trials involving 492 adults. Creatine supplementation showed positive effects on memory, attention time, and processing speed. A separate 2023 meta-analysis in Nutrition Reviews focused specifically on memory in healthy individuals and found overall improvements, with particularly noticeable gains in older adults. The two studies found; Better overall memory performance with creatine supplementation Faster attention and quicker thinking/processing speed Particularly noticeable memory improvements in healthy older adults (ages 66–76) Stronger benefits often seen in women and people aged 18–60 Improvements showed up in both healthy adults and those under various types of stress Fast-Acting Support When Sleep-Deprived When you're running on empty after little or no sleep, brain energy systems take a hit. The 2024 Scientific Reports (Nature) study tested whether a single high dose could help. Fifteen healthy adults went through 21 hours of sleep deprivation twice. They received either a large dose of creatine monohydrate (0.35 g/kg body weight - roughly 20–30 grams for most people) or a placebo. Brain scans showed better preservation of energy metabolites, and cognitive testing revealed real improvements: a 10.3% boost in word memory (with 17.7% faster processing) and 16–29% gains in processing speed on language, logic, and numeric tasks. Effects started showing within about 3 hours. This doesn't replace sleep, but it suggests creatine can act as a quick buffer when you're seriously short on rest. Short-Term Loading Improves Sleep and Cognition A December 2025 randomized, double-blind trial in Nutrients tested a practical 7-day loading protocol in 14 physically active men (20 g/day, split into 4 × 5 g doses). After loading, participants reported significantly better subjective sleep quality and went to bed earlier. They also showed improved performance on a cognitive attention test and reduced muscle soreness, plus better output in high-intensity exercise. This adds to the picture: even in normal training life, short-term higher dosing can help how you feel and perform when sleep isn't perfect. Safety: One of the Best Profiles Out There Creatine monohydrate has been studied extensively for decades. A comprehensive 2025 review in Frontiers in Nutrition analyzed over 680 clinical trials involving more than 12,800 participants (with doses up to 30 g/day and use lasting up to 14 years). No clinical adverse events were linked to creatine, and minor side effects were no different from placebo. Worldwide adverse event reporting over 50 years also shows creatine mentioned in an extremely small fraction of cases despite billions of doses consumed. It remains one of the safest and most researched supplements available for healthy people. Practical Takeaways for Most People Daily maintenance: 3–5 grams per day (one scoop of our product = 5g). Simple, effective, and what most long-term users stick with for brain and body support. Short loading phase: 20 g/day (split into 4 doses) for 5–7 days if you want faster saturation, then drop back to 3–5 g. Occasional high-dose rescue: Around 20–30 g (body-weight adjusted) when you know sleep will be terrible. Hydrate well and don't make it a habit — it's for occasional use. Vegetarians and vegans often notice bigger effects since they get almost none from diet. Women and adults in the broader 18–60+ range also tend to show good responses in the studies. Creatine won't turn you into a genius or fix chronic sleep debt, but the growing evidence shows it can be a cheap, convenient daily tool to help your brain's energy systems work better - whether you're grinding through work, training, aging, or just trying to stay sharp. We take it every day. If you're ready to add it to your stack, grab a jar here. Or pick up any high-quality micronized creatine monohydrate - the research is what matters most. This is for informational purposes only and not medical advice. Consult your doctor before starting any supplement, especially if you have kidney concerns or other health conditions. Tyler Durden Sun, 03/29/2026 - 21:25
Leading Democrat Calls For Reparations For Illegal Immigrants Authored by Jonathan Turley, As Chicago and other blue cities move toward reparations for African Americans, Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D, Wa.) wants reparations for illegal immigrants for the trauma caused by immigration enforcement. At the same time, various Democrats are making clear that they want to entirely defund and eliminate Immigration and Customs Enforcement. So, after the Biden Administration allowed in millions over an open border, Democrats would eliminate ICE and some like Jayapal would pay illegal immigrants reparations. Rep. Jayapal declared on Friday: “They need to be brought before us, and they need to be held account [sic] for the trauma that they have created, and we are going to have to have some form of reparation for the kids and the families that have been traumatized through all of this.” While not calling for reparations, other democrats have picked up the theme that someone has to pay for the trauma caused by immigration enforcement. Rep. Maxine Dexter (D, Or.) echoed the mantra of Democratic members that “The administration has terrorized our communities and mine in the Willamette Valley.” Rep. Christian Menefee (D-TX) told constituents, “I can’t imagine seeing my kid in a jail cell just because of where he was born, just because of what language he speaks at home.” Jayapal fought back tears in her “shadow hearing” on Friday after calling for reparations, stating, “I still cannot believe that we are doing this to our own children.” U.S.-born President Donald Trump is the outsider, Jayapal argued: “When the founders put into the Constitution the idea that Congress would have power, they assumed that the party that was in control of Congress would stand up to a dictatorial, authoritarian president.” Jayapal did not mention the many American children killed by what she called “our” migrants. The question becomes, if more groups get reparations, when does this become a form of wealth redistribution? Indeed, according to these members, much of the country has been traumatized by the Trump Administration. What is missing in cities like Chicago facing economic meltdowns is any notion of financial limits. Instead, Democrats are pushing tax hikes and wealth taxes to cover bloated budgets and growing deficits. * * * Pramila would HATE it if you bought this beef Tyler Durden Sun, 03/29/2026 - 21:00
This Is What You Get When Commies Are Running NYC... Authored by Steve Watson via Modernity.news, New York City, already reeling from crime under years of radical leftist rule, now faces a proposal that sounds ripped straight from a communist energy-rationing handbook: mandatory blackouts every night. Manhattan Assemblywoman Deborah Glick is sponsoring the “Dark Skies Protection Act,” which would require businesses and residents to turn off non-essential lighting between 11 p.m. and 5 a.m. Critics are blasting it as a criminal’s dream come true in a city that already struggles with safety after dark. New York City is proposing a World Economic Forum inspired law that would require a blackout to be put in place to save the energy grid. Known as the “Dark Skies Protection Act,” it would require businesses and residents to turn off non essential lighting between 11 p.m. and 5… pic.twitter.com/cf6tFXRJvY — Shadow of Ezra (@ShadowofEzra) March 28, 2026 The bill itself spells out its goals in the legislation: “preserve and enhance the state’s dark sky while promoting safety for people, birds and other wildlife, conserving energy and reducing our carbon footprint, and preserving the aesthetic qualities of the night sky.” It adds: “Our ancestors were able to experience a night sky full of stars, but now 80% of Americans can no longer see the Milky Way and experience its profound beauty.” The full pitch on light pollution reads: “Light pollution has many negative impacts, including the disruption of the natural patterns of wildlife, wasted energy and increased output of carbon dioxide and greenhouse gases, interruption of human sleep and other adverse health impacts, and the loss of the aesthetic qualities and cultural significance of the night sky.” On birds, it states: “70% of bird species migrate each year. And of those birds, 80% migrate at night, using the night sky to help them navigate to and from their breeding grounds. However, as they pass over big cities on their way, they can become disoriented by bright artificial lights, often causing them to collide with buildings or windows.” No bright idea! Lawmaker wants to force NYC to go dark after 11 p.m. - and critics say it's a criminal's dream bill https://t.co/iA55mpypfo pic.twitter.com/mo3pHA9QNA — New York Post (@nypost) March 26, 2026 That’s all well and good, but there is an ongoing rampant crime epidemic in New York City. Is the safety of birds more important in than the safety of people? Lights used for travel would be exempt, but the bill is already drawing fire. One observer on X put it bluntly: “Criminal gangs approve this message.” Another wrote sarcastically: “Good then criminals can maraud the populace under cover of darkness as intended!” “What could go wrong?” a third asked. A fourth added: “I’m all for seeing the stars but New York is not exactly a safe place.” NYS Conservative Party chairman Gerard Kassar summed it up: “I guess Glick wants to push one last ridiculous idea before she retires.” The idiotic cherry on top of this maniac idea comes with Times Square getting spared while the rest of the city is plunged into darkness. This isn’t environmentalism. It’s control dressed up as virtue. In a city where crime already spikes at night and leftist policies have made streets less secure, mandating a nightly blackout is an open invitation for chaos. This is the exact kind of thing you’d expect to see in a communist hellhole, the inevitable result of that ideology—failing grids, forced darkness, and everyday people paying the price while the system pretends it’s for the greater good. The same pattern played out in Cuba, where communist mismanagement triggered repeated total grid collapses, leaving millions without power for days and exposing the rot at the core of that system. New Yorkers wouldn’t be getting safer skies or saved birds—they’d be experiencing rationed freedom while the real problems go unaddressed. This bill may not pass, but the mindset behind it reveals everything about who’s steering the ship in blue-city America. 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. * * * COMMIES HATE IT WHEN YOU FEED YOURSELF Tyler Durden Sun, 03/29/2026 - 18:40
"Green-Dot Sunday" Is Non-Negotiable: Oil Up, Stocks Down As War Begins 2nd Month As last week wore on, it felt increasingly like the market was transitioning from pricing inflation risk (from a 'brief' energy supply shock) to weighing a demand-shock-driven growth scare (from a longer lasting disruption) as bonds rallied in the face of higher oil and lower stocks (stagflation). Last week saw three attempts at unilateral de-escalation (5-day delay, 'ceasefire' proposal, 10-day delay) met with even more supply as the apparent 'Trump Put' or 'TACO' trade is losing its power. Simply put, as Goldman's Shreeti Kapa noted last week, the answer to everything depends on one binary variable: the duration of the war. That in turn depends if there will be safe transit of oil vessels through the Strait of Hormuz. Even if the strait is opened, would we be able to restore oil flows to pre-conflict levels? What is the guarantee for safe passage? Can any ceasefire be trusted? For how long would that hold? This weekend gave us no answers to those questions but did suggest, as Goldman's head of equity execution, Brian Garrett, described: the situation is fluid. Iran says electricity facilities were attacked in Tehran IDF says currently striking Iran targets across Tehran Foreign ministers of regional countries seeking peace & offramp in Pakistan meeting on Sunday. Iran destroyed US AWACS jet at Saudi Airbase Report says Pentagon has been weeks in preparing ground operations as initial Marines arrive in region (WaPo). Fluid indeed... Here's how Garrett started his "weekend" prep note: "the quotation marks around weekend are intentional... ...investors and traders have not had a break in months, with “Green Dot Sunday” turning from a one-off into a 2026 non-negotiable... ...the forthcoming three day “weekend” for US markets is almost unwelcome as the market holiday just means another news/headline session coupled with zero price discovery and zero liquidity." The feedback from various market participants suggests that Brian hit the nail on the head - headline fatigue is real. Here's a few things on Garrett's radar... 1/ CTAs have sold even more global equities... They are quickly approaching max short levels … at a minimum that pressure is abating 2/ Main Street is finally noticing... The texts from college friends and family members is showing some panic... “bg, what did you do to the market” 3/ SPX Call Skew is collapsing... The hope for a quick rebound is diminishing... this is reflected in the cost of an OTM upside strike... 4/ SPX realized correlation remains extremely low for the size of this drawdown... Desk continues to like sector ETFs or custom basket options for those looking to express trades in convexity And in case you needed to hear from another 'expert', here's Iran's de factor leader offering some day-trading advice: Iran's defecto head now pitching premarket trades https://t.co/T6qy3fOPMW — zerohedge (@zerohedge) March 29, 2026 So, Sunday night, dots are green... and oil futures open higher with WTI testing up to $103... Up to 3-week highs... S&P futures are down almost 1%... The dollar is lower (against the JPY) out of the gate and Gold is up modestly, bouncing from a lower open... How long will this opening kneejerk hold? Finally, we given the last words before another busy (if shortened) week to Goldman's Garrett: a silver lining? What is good news is that prices are finally reflecting the issues at hand and the correction has at least started (h/t NDX officially -10% from the highs)... feels like we’re closer to an end than the beginning but also feels like we’re playing a game that doesn’t have “innings” in the classic sense (ie : no one can give you a timeline)... many parties need to want to de-escalate and that’s not evident (yet). Here's the trades Garrett likes: Continue to think receiver (or just simply lower yield) trades make sense Long emerging market equities that benefit from higher commodity prices Short credit (only asset yet to flinch) SPX ratio call spreads, long the 2-3x (pitched last week, still like it and we got traction) Long gold (this one is gaining followership) And don't forget: buy the Monday/Tuesday... ...sell the Thursday/Friday (or Weds/Thurs this week?) Professional subscribers can read Brian Garrett's full "Weekend Prep" note here at our new Marketdesk.ai portal * * * Order by midnight! Tyler Durden Sun, 03/29/2026 - 18:05
Sophisticated Drone Swarms Disrupt Operations At Barksdale Air Force Base Earlier this month, Barksdale Air Force Base in Bossier Parish, Louisiana, faced an unprecedented threat from sophisticated drone swarms. These drones, operating in waves of 12 to 15 units each, loitered over the base for approximately four hours daily, disrupting critical operations and forcing the Air Force to halt activities and shelter personnel. This marked the first time a U.S. air base was temporarily taken out of operation in wartime, a scenario that had never occurred even during World War II. “Barksdale is the headquarters of the Air Force’s Global Strike Command, which is responsible for the nation’s nuclear intercontinental ballistic missiles and strategic bomber forces, including B2, B1, and B52 aircraft,” explains The National Interest. “The base is home to the 2nd Bomb Wing B52s and is the central hub of communications and logistical support for coordinating and directing those forces.” It’s hard to overstate just how alarming this is. Potentially hostile drones were able to operate over a critical military installation for days with what looks like total impunity. And making matters worse, the disruption caused by the drone swarms impacted B-52H aircraft launches for Operation Epic Fury against Iran, delaying critical missions and potentially compromising the effectiveness of the operation. According to a report from Asia Times, “the drones that operated over Barksdale were far more sophisticated than anything seen in Ukraine, where drones are used heavily, and well beyond Iranian capabilities.” The drone waves lasted around four hours each day, an extraordinarily long loiter time for a drone. It is not known if the drones were fixed wing or quadcopter types, or how they were powered (liquid fuel or electrical). Each wave consisted of 12 to 15 drones, and the drones flew with their lights on, intentionally making them visible. Barksdale AFB does not have air defenses, nor does it have fighter jets that can take down drones. The airbase does have some electronic countermeasures that were designed to disable GPS and the datalinks between the drones and their remote operators. The electronic countermeasures failed to work. In fact, their ability to resist broad-spectrum jamming and operate using non-commercial signal characteristics made them particularly challenging to detect and neutralize. The drones also employed varied ingress and egress routes and dispersed patterns, complicating efforts to trace their origins. Despite the base's electronic countermeasures designed to disable GPS and datalinks, they failed to disable the sophisticated drones. At the very least, the incident exposed a major gap in U.S. air defenses, especially at bases like Barksdale that don’t have systems in place to stop this kind of threat. Even more concerning, these drones could potentially carry heavy weapons or conduct surveillance over sensitive nuclear facilities—raising serious national security alarms. It’s not known where the drones came from, but China is believed to be a likely source, given the drones’ advanced capabilities, which appear to outmatch much of the U.S. arsenal. The activity could be retaliation for the 2023 shootdown of Chinese spy balloons, which Joe Biden delayed until after they had already surveilled multiple U.S. military sites. The operation’s persistence and precision point to trained operators who likely smuggled the equipment into the country. This incident makes one thing clear: it’s time for a serious reassessment of domestic air defense, especially as drones become a growing threat. The problem is, the United States is still years away from having effective domestic counter-drone capabilities. * * * Order by midnight! Now with cheaper shipping Tyler Durden Sun, 03/29/2026 - 16:55
Bigger Isn't Better: A Case For Downsizing The Federal Reserve Authored by via Paul Mueller via the American Institute for Economic Research (AIER), President Trump’s conflicts with Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell and with Board of Governors member Lisa Cook have obscured real shortcomings at the Federal Reserve and brought little useful change. These conflicts tend to focus on whether the Fed’s target interest rate is too high or too low. Meanwhile, institutional problems at the Fed have been largely overlooked. But there is an opportunity here with Trump’s nominee for Fed chair, Kevin Warsh. His first task will be navigating a hostile Senate. But should he be confirmed, Warsh’s time would be best spent cleaning up the Federal Reserve system: its personnel, spending, and data. The Federal Reserve System employs 24,000 people. The Board of Governors has about 3,000 employees, while the 12 district banks employ the remaining 21,000. That figure includes 800 to 1,000 professional economists. While the Fed has recently announced plans to reduce its workforce by 10 percent, that would still leave it with more than 21,000 employees. But why shouldn’t the Fed cut headcount by 20 percent to 30 percent, or even more? Does the Fed really need that many employees? After all, this isn’t the 1960s or 1970s when many things had to be done by hand. Not only have there been significant technological improvements and greater automation over the past 50 years, the development of artificial intelligence will also accelerate this trend. As such, the new Fed chair should reevaluate whether the Fed needs so many employees. Besides being wasteful, the high number of economists employed by the Fed has likely influenced the profession to unduly favor the status quo. Those who criticize the Fed or question whether it should even exist find themselves in the wilderness of monetary economics. Employing fewer economists will reduce the Federal Reserve’s gravitational pull on the economics profession. Along with reducing headcount through reorganization and consolidation, the Federal Reserve is ripe for an audit of its spending. Ron Paul popularized the idea of auditing the Fed in 2008. The Federal Reserve is unique in that it can literally create money, and in that it sets its budget independent of Congress. What would you expect the budget trend to be for a fully self-funding organization that can print money? If you said up and to the right, collect your prize. The budget of the Board of Governors of the Fed has grown more consistently than the Federal budget for decades. In fact, why would any office or department at the Fed ever voluntarily reduce its spending? As such, we don’t see examples of significant retrenchment or budget cuts across the Board of Governors. District banks, on the other hand, operate with private-sector participation through their member-bank stockholders, yet they still suffer from bureaucratic bloat because of limited market competition. By restructuring staff, streamlining operations, and auditing Fed spending, the new Fed chair can couch all of this change in terms of modernizing the institution. The Fed has largely failed to keep abreast of technological change when it comes to data, metrics, and execution. It still relies heavily on surveys and anecdotal conversations when it has access to millions of data points, nearly in real-time. Consider the following key indicators that the Fed officials rely on: They measure their key inflation target using the personal consumption expenditures price index, as well as the consumer price index and the producer price index. Yet these numbers come out only once a month. Rather than calling on business leaders to get a read on economic conditions, they could use real-time measures from sources such as the Adobe Digital Price Index or Truflation that use millions of transactions to assess economic activity. Similarly, most of the key indicators that the Fed uses for assessing the strength of the labor market (the unemployment rate, nonfarm payrolls, labor force participation rate, and various measures of underemployment) tend to be released monthly as well. The important measure of economic growth, the gross domestic product (GDP), comes out only quarterly—although there are frequent estimates. Furthermore, the measures of GDP tend to be revised often, too. The Atlanta Fed produces a “GDPNow” number—but it also relies primarily on estimates rather than real-time data. Indicators such as industrial production, retail sales, and business investment are not much better. One area in which the Fed does make use of real-time data is in financial market conditions. Interest rates (e.g., federal funds rate, Treasury yields), credit spreads, and asset prices change in real time and can be used to assess financial stability and the effectiveness of monetary policy. In addition to the delays, most of these core metrics, particularly GDP and the unemployment rate, are lagging indicators. They reflect past economic performance rather than provide real-time insights into current or future trends. In a rapidly evolving global economy, relying heavily on backward-looking data can lead to policy decisions that address emerging challenges too slowly or exacerbate existing ones. The Federal Open Market Committee’s framework often emphasizes aggregate demand management, assuming that inflation is primarily a demand-side phenomenon. But recent economic shocks (supply chain disruptions, energy price spikes) highlight the critical role of supply-side factors. Over-reliance on demand-side metrics can lead to inappropriate policy responses. In fact, many economists argue that the Fed should be less reactive in general. Economist Milton Friedman noted that there were “long and variable lags” between the implementation of monetary policy and its effects. Following predictable monetary rules will likely generate more stability and more growth in the long run. Monetary policy (in terms of target interest rates) matters, but so does operational efficiency, utilization of technology, and access to good information. Institutional reform may also help the Fed rebuild public trust by reassuring people that its decisions reflect reality today rather than reality months ago—or not at all. Cleaning up the Federal Reserve will be a monumental task, but it will also be a legacy. Let’s hope that Warsh is up for the challenge. Tyler Durden Sun, 03/29/2026 - 16:20
Iran Allowing 20 More Ships Through Strait Of Hormuz, Pakistan Says Authored by Ryan Morgan via The Epoch Times, Iran has agreed to allow 20 Pakistani-flagged ships to pass through the Strait of Hormuz unharmed, Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar announced on March 28. Dar presented the announcement as a sign of good faith from Tehran, as Iranian forces continue to threaten commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz. Iran has actively targeted shipping in the region as part of its retaliation for U.S. and Israeli attacks on the leadership and military of the Islamic regime for its nuclear program, which have continued since Feb. 28. “I am pleased to share a great news that the Government of Iran has agreed to allow 20 more ships under the Pakistani flag to pass through the Strait of Hormuz,” Dar said in an X post on Saturday. The Pakistani foreign minister said two ships will be permitted to leave through the narrow maritime passage daily. Oil tanker carrying Saudi crude to Pakistan. Map frm @Kpler pic.twitter.com/qSUSTca7k1 — Anas Alhajji (@anasalhajji) March 29, 2026 In recent days, the Pakistani government has stepped forward as a potential intermediary for communications and further peace talks between Washington and Tehran. Dar said Tehran’s decision to allow these 20 ships through the Strait of Hormuz marks “a meaningful step toward peace and will strengthen our collective efforts in that direction.” The move came two days after President Donald Trump announced that Iran had let 10 oil tankers through the key Middle East waterway. “Dialogue, diplomacy, and such confidence-building measures are the only way forward,” Dar wrote on X. Trump has recently cited progress in negotiations with Tehran to end the war, but Iranian officials have downplayed the significance of the communications. In a statement shared by Iranian state media, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said Tehran had received messages from Washington by way of intermediaries but said, “this is not considered a negotiation.” Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian spoke by phone with Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Saturday. According to the Pakistani prime minister’s office, Pezeshkian said trust is needed in order to advance talks with Washington. During a cabinet meeting earlier this week, Trump said that Iranian officials have, in private, been far more adamant about negotiating an end to the ongoing conflict. “They say, ‘Oh, we’re not talking’ ... They are begging to work out a deal,” Trump said. Last week, Trump threatened to destroy Iranian energy sites if the Strait of Hormuz was not fully reopened to shipping within 48 hours. In response, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps threatened to completely close down access to the Strait of Hormuz and target energy facilities in Middle Eastern countries that host U.S. forces, along with other critical infrastructure like water desalination plants. Trump has since postponed his strike deadline to April 6. Tyler Durden Sun, 03/29/2026 - 15:10
Gamer Backlash Hits Sony After PlayStation Price Hike: "Older Stuff Should Get Cheaper, Not Expensive" Gamers, already upset over rising memory, CPU, and GPU prices, woke up to more bad news this morning. This time, Sony posted a new entry on the PlayStation Blog announcing price hikes for the PS5, PS5 Pro, and PlayStation Portal, blaming “continued pressures in the global economic landscape.” "We know that price changes impact our community, and after careful evaluation, we found this was a necessary step to ensure we can continue delivering innovative, high-quality gaming experiences to players worldwide,” Isabelle Tomatis, Vice President of Global Marketing at Sony Interactive Entertainment, said in the blog post. In the U.S., that means the base PlayStation 5 (disc version) will see its recommended retail price rise from around $499 to $649, an increase of about $150. What Sony meant by “continued pressures in the global economic landscape” to justify the console price hike was not defined. There was also no mention of whether the memory shortage influenced the price increase. Backlash on X was instant: Hot take but I think things should get cheaper the more old that they are, crazy idea! — Synth Potato🥔 (@SynthPotato) March 27, 2026 My PS5 is now worth $200 more than when I bought it. That's nuts. — Wesley ✨ (@wesleytypes) March 27, 2026 Wow… at this point it’s easier to just build a full PC than buy this piece of hardware. pic.twitter.com/e9DBAGWnaP — Mike (@mikeindiee) March 27, 2026 Not fucking really pic.twitter.com/1PUNlEiwOz — Gavin Roberts (@GavinLee5001) March 27, 2026 We told readers in late January: "If you want to buy any consumer goods, PCs, or smartphones ... do it now, as it is for sure all the prices will be increased. Take an average PC, for example. The ratio of memory chips in the BoM [bill of materials] cost has increased from some 15% to almost 40%." * * * Now with cheaper 2-day shipping! Tyler Durden Sun, 03/29/2026 - 14:35
From Market Economist To Military Strategist By Peter Tchir of Academy Securities Technically I’m not an economist, I just play one on TV (CNBC and Bloomberg TV from last Monday). While I am not a military strategist, everyone in the market and corporate America is being forced to be one, to some extent. Academy is in a unique position to offer unbiased, nonpolitical assessments of the conflict with our Geopolitical Intelligence Group (“GIG”). I’ve lost track of how many conversations I’ve had with our retired Generals, Admirals, and Intelligence officers this past week, let alone since the start of the conflict. We cover a lot of topics during our conversations with clients, with Iran being at the forefront. Today I will do my best to provide an assessment of the most pressing concerns. The Geopolitical Intelligence Group has a range of opinions, but I think this is a fair assessment of the current consensus view. It is an honor and a privilege to work with the GIG (as well as a competitive advantage in this environment) and all our veterans. Any mistakes or misrepresentations are my own. That is the same set of conditions that applied to Ceasefire?, which we published earlier this week. That piece remains a useful framework for examining the conditions likely required to reach a deal. However, it was interesting that the President started trying to frame something along the lines of “the regime has changed so much, that it is like regime change.” After a “manic” week like this week, it is sometimes difficult to go back and review what we published last weekend – Another Manic Monday, but that too is worth re-reading. Finally, before jumping into today’s report, Academy’s Around the World Report and Around the World Podcast (with General (ret.) Evans and Admiral (ret.) Buss) were both released this week. Normalizing Tanker Traffic Through the Strait of Hormuz We will try not to use the words “closed” or “open” in this report, because that doesn’t reflect the real issue. It isn’t about “opening” the Strait, it is about convincing the captains (and owners) of ships that they can transit the Strait just like they used to. This is an important distinction, from much of what you might hear or read. From a military standpoint: There is little evidence that the Strait has been extensively mined. Ships are making it through. It is possible they “know” where the mines are, but it is also possible (and likely) that there are relatively few mines. To the extent there are mines, addressing this threat is precisely what the Littoral Combat Ships assigned to 5th Fleet (with mine countermeasures capabilities and helicopter support) are designed to do. The main threats remain rockets, missiles, and drones. Especially those fired close to the shore. The time we have from launch, to detection, to interception is crucial to the success of our defenses. The closer the weapon is at the time of launch, the less time we have to hit it. The U.S. Navy is designed for situations like this. The AEGIS Combat System is specifically designed to defend U.S. ships against such attacks. Mines, mine layers, small ships packed with weapons, and unmanned surface ships (the naval equivalent of a drone) also pose a threat. Why haven’t we seen the Navy patrol the Strait? That is the question, as it has become clear that getting shipping back to normal would reduce the leverage Iran has on the global economy. While it is impossible to know (we are not getting all of the information available), here are some of the themes that come up when discussing this crucial question (it really is the $100 or $150 per barrel question). In all combat situations, there is always a balance between risk and reward. What are the risks of patrolling the Strait today versus striking other targets in Iran? What is the trade-off in risk to U.S. sailors, Marines, pilots, and even the ships today versus what they might be in a day or a week from now? Getting oil (and everything else flowing through the Strait) is a primary economic, and maybe even political concern, but should not drive military decisions. The caution may be because we have real concerns about how many weapons the Iranians are able to train on the Strait. It may be a function of some elements required to patrol the Strait being engaged elsewhere (we are sending more Marines, 82nd Airborne Division paratroopers, and ships to the region). Some of it might be adapting strategy to the asymmetric warfare threat (more on this later). The assessment of the GIG is we will get to the point of patrolling or routinely transiting the Strait, maybe in days, maybe longer, but only once the risk vs reward has been justified. What does it take to convince commercial vessels to go through? In theory, we could set up a “convoy” and send out a naval force (with air cover) and escort ships through the Strait. That is probably what will happen “eventually.” The decision for the Navy to sail in the Strait is very different than that of merchant vessels. The Navy is prepared for this, built for this, trained for this, and it is what those in service signed up to do. The “realistic” assessment from the GIG that I buy into, is it will take days of demonstrating the Navy’s ability to sail in the Strait without getting attacked before most merchant vessels will even think about trying to do it. Take this job and shove it, comes to mind. This is “just a job” to most of the merchant crews (and even the captain) and they are probably getting paid extra time to wait to cross, so it isn’t like they feel the urgency the market might feel. The insurance plan that the President ordered to be put in place will help (more with the owners than the crew), but I haven’t been able to find out much about the status of the U.S. government-backed plan (Chubb is the carrier being used to provide it according to the reports I’ve read). The merchant vessels might not even be comfortable if the Navy is getting shot at. This would be another reason for delaying the attempt until there is more certainty that Iran’s capability to attack the Strait is minimal. Finally, many of the cargo ships are likely going to need to go to port soon. 30 days of eating, and moving around the gulf, take a toll on supplies. The ports they are sailing to, may also not be able to handle them all at once (in the unlikely event they all try to go at once), further limiting how quickly the traffic through the Strait can be normalized. A lot to think about, but I think that is a realistic assessment of the thought process going on. What is against us, how much safer can we make it, and how do we convince commercial vessels to follow suit. Asymmetric Warfare The “concept” is simple – small, cheap weapons, maneuverable, easy to hide, against large expensive systems. Ukraine, first with a plant in the U.K. and now apparently a deal in the Gulf to supply drones, shows how much they have learned in 3 years of war with Russia. Much of which has devolved (or evolved) into drone warfare. Let’s list the “problems” first: Shooting down things that cost in the thousands with things that cost in the millions is a very expensive endeavor. It is far from ideal, but not the biggest problem. Production and replenishment is a more important issue. Have we used a year’s worth of production of some missile systems already? Maybe more. Ships in particular set sail with a limited amount weapons. If we were prepared for a “peer” battle, we were probably expecting to face ships and systems similarly equipped (not as good as the U.S. ones, but similar in concept, cost, etc.). But you cannot just let a “cheap” but effective drone hit you, you need to defend against it. Hopefully, in many cases, other weapons systems that aren’t as costly manage to take out the target. But this need to potentially replenish faster than expected can hamper some efforts. Really difficult to eradicate. Ballistic missile launches are relatively easy to detect. Ballistic missile launchers are often plodding. Mobile, yes, but not like driving a race car. The launchers are vulnerable after they launch, especially when the U.S. and Israel have Air Superiority (better than Supremacy). Step out of a cave, launch, run back into the cave or through some tunnel system. The fact of the matter is it is difficult to completely stop this threat “without boots on the ground.” This type of enemy is not easy to defeat with range weapons, and is likely why we are hearing more and more about the possibility of landing troops not just on one of the islands, but possibly on the coast where they can more thoroughly clear out the enemy positions (no official decision has been made yet regarding using troops in Iran). There are some “good” things: The U.S. military has had drones and has been developing drones for years. That development increased in intensity during the Russia/Ukraine war. It only ramped up further with this new administration. General (ret.) Tata, before starting the confirmation process to be an Undersecretary of War, was very focused on drones. There is no shortage of signals from this administration that they see the need for drones. While a “peacetime” military may be slow to adopt new strategies, that can change abruptly during conflict. Something that might struggle to get acceptance, that might be difficult to fund as it has to come at the expense of other projects, might struggle to get the attention it deserves in “normal” times. This is not normal times, so expect rapid advances in the number and capabilities of U.S. drones in the region. Separately, as discussed last week, if I was Europe I’d set up a drone consortium and start making them as fast as possible, bypassing the expensive military hardware for now. Drones don’t require as much sophistication to produce, so everyone can convert factories and ramp up production relatively quickly. The U.S. may not want to reveal “everything” we have. China is watching the U.S. military closely. They will be learning how our equipment works in the real world (not just in theory). How much damage does a certain missile do? How deep do the bunker busters go? What sort of things are we defending against easily and what is not working? No need to expose your best stuff, if you don’t think you need to. We might see more deployments of new systems. My working assumption is Asymmetric FOR NOW. The U.S. should be closing the gap on asymmetric warfare. Again, is that in time to keep the global economy (especially Asia) from tumbling into recession? I don’t know. While asymmetric warfare is a distinct topic from getting commercial vessels to sail through the Strait, it is highly correlated, and I’m cautiously optimistic this is being addressed at lightning speed. Other Risks The Houthis, until this weekend, had been quiet. Their involvement could open up more shipping problems as they can control a choke point around the Red Sea. It will also cause the U.S. and Gulf Countries to spread their military around. The Saudi pipeline is extremely helpful, but very vulnerable. While Iran (and the Houthis) might not want to attack production facilities or ships at sea, a pipeline like this might be too tempting to pass up. Little evidence of cyber-attacks. Maybe they weren’t as good as people thought? Maybe we hit their computer centers early in the war? Maybe our defenses are that good and we’ve hardened our critical infrastructure? If it is any of the above, it is a solid win for the U.S. Terrorist activity has not really occurred. Similar to cyber, maybe we have done a great job of identifying and destroying their “sleeper” cells. This has also been a positive and is one form of potential Iranian response we haven’t seen (and hope never to see again). Humanitarian Relief? At some point there will be humanitarian issues that need to be addressed in the region. Much of the region imports food. Iran imports food. It is unclear if much is getting through. This may provide a new “twist” to what is going on there. Who will allow what? Will China get involved? (They did make one statement about possibly being involved in humanitarian missions, but no statement about helping to open the Strait). At least not that I’ve seen. Strategic Move to Hurt China by Restricting Access to Oil? This comes up periodically. Was Venezuelan oil first, Iranian oil second, and Russian oil possibly third, all targeted in an attempt to hit China on energy? A way to push back on their control over processed and refined rare earths and critical minerals? There are some parts of what is going on that fit that narrative well. I’m not sure I buy into it. If it is true, it does mean the U.S. will need to see this conflict carried out until there really is a change in Iran regarding how they deal with the rest of the world. It does fit with my view that the administration would like U.S. companies to get some access to Iran’s energy business (and would frame that as helping change the regime over time). Declare Some Form of Victory and Move On The GIG has talked about shifting from the old model where “if we broke it, we fixed it” to one where “if we broke it, we might come back and break it again.” It would leave the region in a confusing state. But some of the messaging (from the President and the Vice President) does have the tone - that we are setting up to declare some sort of victory and move on. Still seems low probability, but it is still possible. Economic Fragility, Affordability, and Recession Risk This will be a separate report in its own right, but nothing that we haven’t been writing about. Supply chain, and economic fragility is real, expect to see cracks soon. Affordability is an issue across the globe, not just domestically. Affordability has only gotten worse. The “working poor” concept is getting some discussion as it would be the start of a very different type of recession. Job loss recessions, we have a playbook for. People with “good” jobs who cannot afford a reasonable lifestyle is new. Not good. Is recession for Asia (ex-China) and Europe my base case? Not quite, but possibly only because I haven’t had the time to think about it. I don’t see a recession for the U.S. (or China), but it is certainly something we should be admitting is a possibility as not only does the conflict continue, but also the willingness to target energy, refiners, smelters, etc., is increasing and will take a toll even if we come to a resolution in the coming weeks. A world where the resolution is ideal or suboptimal won’t even make a difference as the damage is done and permeates throughout the global economy. Bottom Line Expect bond yields to start acting “normally” in a risk-off environment. Friday morning may have been peak unwind/capitulation and peak inflation fear. Friday afternoon might have been the market deciding to at least think about recession and economic slowdown risks. Very cautious on risk here. Could we miss a big relief rally? Possibly, but I think this time (unlike last Monday/Tuesday) the relief rally will require credible evidence that a resolution is coming. Because of that, we will have time to adjust our positioning. Until then, be cautious on risk, add some duration. Credit did feel weak on Friday, which would be a new thing to worry about (credit, not just private credit). Spreads were leaking. So far the equity sell-off hasn’t required much help from credit, but if credit were to turn more negative, we have some serious downside risk for equities. From our Is Credit Whispering or Screaming? and Credit – A Little Louder Now – we’ve identified how we see a path to credit widening. It hasn’t been a primary concern, but we need to revisit that “complacency” as the risks of an economic downturn are increasing. I think I ended sounding gloomier than I feel, but this is a very tricky environment, and military and politics will drive the next 5% on stocks. Hopefully that 5% will be to the upside as ships start sailing through the Strait sooner than the market is expecting! (There, I did finish with some optimism, even if it isn’t how I’m positioned). Tyler Durden Sun, 03/29/2026 - 14:00
DHS Shutdown Now The Longest In US History Authored by Jacki Thrapp via The Epoch Times, The partial shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) became the longest in U.S. history on March 29. The DHS shutdown reached its 44th day on Sunday, breaking the previous record set during the U.S. government shutdown in the fall of 2025. Republican and Democratic lawmakers on Capitol Hill have blamed each other for the standstill while tossing a dizzying array of proposals through the halls of Congress that have not successfully moved forward. Republicans criticized Democrats for not advancing their DHS spending bills as Democrats said they will not approve the funding bill until they are guaranteed to see an overhaul in how immigration operations are handled. The House passed a stopgap plan to fund the DHS for 60 days on March 27 with a 213–203 vote. The bill was sent to the Senate, which just went on a two-week recess. Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) has urged his colleagues to return to Washington and end the DHS shutdown. “If you don’t want to fight fires, don’t become a firefighter,” Lee said during an interview on Fox News. “If you don’t want to take grueling votes at difficult hours and sometimes have to work longer than you want to, maybe you shouldn’t become a United States senator.” The short-term bill to fund the entire DHS passed the House after Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) rejected the Senate’s measure that would have funded most of the department, aside from its immigration enforcement operations. “We hope that someday Democrats finally come to their senses again and put the safety of American citizens first but we’re not holding our breath,” Johnson said during a press conference on Saturday. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) said he would not support the House’s bill that passed on Friday night. “A 60 day CR that locks in the status quo is dead on arrival in the Senate, and Republicans know it,” Schumer wrote in an X post. “We’ve been clear from day one: Democrats will fund critical Homeland Security functions—but we will not give a blank check to Trump’s lawless and deadly immigration militia without reforms.” The shutdown has caused extremely long lines at airports, as many Transportation Security Administration (TSA) agents—who have not received a check since mid-February—have not shown up at work. Nearly 500 TSA agents have quit since the shutdown started because they weren’t able to pay for costs such as gas, groceries, or their mortgages, the DHS said. TSA agents are expected to receive their long-delayed paychecks as soon as March 30, after President Donald Trump signed an executive order. * * * Tyler Durden Sun, 03/29/2026 - 12:50
"I'm Sorry, But The Fed Has Run Out Of Road" Submitted by QTR's Fringe Finance There is a special kind of denial that only financial markets can sustain. It is the quiet insistence that everything is fine because the S&P is only down about 10%, as if that number alone captures the health of an entire financial system. It is the belief that until equities are in full free fall, nothing truly serious can be happening underneath. But as we know, underneath, things are already starting to break. That is the part people are not fully appreciating. If a modest correction is enough to expose fragility in private credit that is already spilling over to counterparties and sectors like real estate, what exactly happens when there is a real downturn, the kind that actually forces price discovery instead of delaying it? It does not stop at private credit. Private credit flows into private equity, which depends on leverage to generate returns. Private equity flows into commercial real estate, which is already dealing with structural problems that have nothing to do with interest rates and everything to do with demand. Commercial real estate flows into regional banks, which hold the debt and rely on valuations that have not fully adjusted. It is a chain reaction waiting for a trigger. We knew this heading into 2026. At the same time, inflation has refused to cooperate with the Federal Reserve’s plan. U.S. CPI is holding at 2.4% year over year as of February 2026, and core inflation is at 2.5%. That is not an emergency level, but it is also not the 2% target the Fed has spent years insisting is non negotiable. Central banking is not about being approximately correct. It is about maintaining credibility, and credibility does not come from saying close enough. So the Fed is staring at a system where financial stress is building and inflation is still above target, as I’ve been writing they would face for years now. That combination removes the easy answers, and all of a sudden the Fed runs out of road. The next phase of this cycle is almost certainly deleveraging. Not the slow and orderly kind that policymakers like to describe in speeches, but the forced kind. The kind where lenders pull back, refinancing becomes difficult, and assets that were priced for perfection suddenly have to reflect reality. When that process begins in earnest, it tends to accelerate because falling prices create more pressure, which creates more selling, which creates more falling prices. Then, like we are seeing in private credit, psychology eventually breaks and the blame game starts. Who could have seen this coming? 🔥 50% OFF FOR LIFE: Using this coupon entitles you to 50% off an annual subscription to Fringe Finance for life: Get 50% off forever Once that process starts, there are only two broad paths. The first path is to let it happen. Credit contracts, defaults rise, asset prices fall, and the system works through its excesses the old fashioned way. The problem is that the amount of leverage in the system today is enormous, and it has been built during a period of unusually low rates. When you combine high debt levels with higher interest costs, the math becomes unforgiving very quickly. That kind of deleveraging does not look like a mild recession. It starts to resemble something much more severe, potentially deflationary, potentially prolonged. The second path is intervention. The Fed steps in (stop me if you’ve heard this one before), provides liquidity, and expands its balance sheet aggressively. Quantitative easing returns, possibly at a scale that makes previous rounds look restrained. Asset prices stabilize, credit markets function again, and the immediate crisis is contained. This is what my friend Larry Lepard refers to as “the big print”. But here is where the situation becomes genuinely problematic. The Fed cannot cleanly choose the second option, though I think it’s the way they will head. They cannot do it with inflation still running above target without major inflationary consequences. Injecting massive liquidity into a system that has not fully extinguished inflationary pressure risks reigniting it. Not gently, not in a controlled way, but in a way that forces a much harsher response later. The entire credibility of the central bank rests on the idea that it will not tolerate persistent inflation above its target. If it abandons that stance in order to stabilize markets, it risks unanchoring expectations in a way that is very difficult to reverse. Watch the below clip at 50:02 until 52:47 if you want a 2 minute explanation of the direction we will keep heading if we go the inflation route. It’s a trap, in essence. For years, critics have warned about some version of this outcome. They have argued that excessive debt and repeated interventions would eventually leave policymakers with no good options. Those arguments have been easy to dismiss because, historically, the Fed has always managed to navigate crises. Somehow inflation stayed low. The Fed cut rates, it expanded the balance sheet, it restored stability, and the system moved forward. But the current setup is different in a way that matters. We have never had this level of systemic leverage at the same time as a large, opaque private credit market that sits outside traditional banking channels. We have never had an environment where so much of the financial system depends on continued access to cheap or at least predictable financing. And we have never faced the prospect of needing extremely large scale intervention while inflation is still running above target. Each of those factors on its own would be manageable. Together, they create a situation that does not have a clean historical precedent, so what happens next is unlikely to be neat and orderly, though fucked if I know exactly how the chaos or reset it going to play out. The Fed is not in control of a stable system that just needs minor adjustments. It is managing a complex, highly leveraged structure where each decision carries significant tradeoffs. What seems increasingly unlikely is a smooth resolution where the Fed threads the needle perfectly and everything stabilizes without meaningful damage. There is no painless option left. There’s no more road. The more realistic expectation is a policy response that looks inconsistent, reactive, and at times contradictory, because it will be attempting to balance objectives that are no longer fully compatible. And when that happens, it will not feel like a controlled process. It will feel like the system is being managed in real time, with no clear roadmap, and no guarantee that the chosen path leads anywhere good. Now read: A Veteran Investor Sees The System Breaking My Bear Market Stock Shopping List Private Credit Cracks Reach Real Estate The Private Credit Snowball Accelerates Ron Paul: Just Get Out! Now! The Mistaken Identity of Prediction Markets Bigger Isn’t Better: A Case for Downsizing the Federal Reserve I've Reached Peak Lobotomized Consumer QTR’s Disclaimer: Please read my full legal disclaimer on my About page here. This post represents my opinions only. In addition, please understand I am an idiot and often get things wrong and lose money. I may own or transact in any names mentioned in this piece at any time without warning. Contributor posts and aggregated posts have been hand selected by me, have not been fact checked and are the opinions of their authors. 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You are on your own. Do not make decisions based on my blog. I exist on the fringe. If you see numbers and calculations of any sort, assume they are wrong and double check them. I failed Algebra in 8th grade and topped off my high school math accolades by getting a D- in remedial Calculus my senior year, before becoming an English major in college so I could bullshit my way through things easier. The publisher does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information provided in this page. These are not the opinions of any of my employers, partners, or associates. I did my best to be honest about my disclosures but can’t guarantee I am right; I write these posts after a couple beers sometimes. I edit after my posts are published because I’m impatient and lazy, so if you see a typo, check back in a half hour. Also, I just straight up get shit wrong a lot. I mention it twice because it’s that important. EPIC Beef at ZeroHedge Store from @beckranchwy and @ElkinsCattleCo pic.twitter.com/f2SuYasm4u — ZeroHedge Store (@ZeroHedgeStore) September 6, 2025 * * * 2-DAY SHIPPING NOW JUST $25! Tyler Durden Sun, 03/29/2026 - 11:40
Pentagon Eyes 'Weeks' Of Ground Operations In Iran As IRGC Threatens Tit-For-Tat Strikes On Universities Summary Report says Pentagon has been weeks in preparing ground operations as initial Marines arrive in region (WaPo). Foreign ministers of regional countries seeking peace & offramp in Pakistan meeting on Sunday. After two Iranian university campuses struck by attacks, IRGC issues warning for American university campuses in Middle East. Not just 'damaged' but obliterated: images show destroyed US AWACS jet at Saudi Airbase. * * * 'Weeks' of Ground Ops Under Preparation: WaPo Iran's parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the man who many believe is de facto running the country during wartime, has said United States is busy plotting a ground attack despite publicly engaging in diplomatic efforts aimed at finding a ceasefire. Fresh reporting in The Washington Post suggests he could be right: "The Pentagon is preparing for weeks of ground operations in Iran, U.S. officials said, as thousands of American soldiers and Marines arrive in the Middle East for what could become a dangerous new phase of the war should President Donald Trump choose to escalate," the Saturday night report indicated. WaPo further says the plans have been at least weeks in development, writing "Any potential ground operation would fall short of a full-scale invasion and could instead involve raids by a mixture of Special Operations forces and conventional infantry troops, said the officials. All spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss highly sensitive military plans that have been in development for weeks." Bombed-out classroom of Iran's University of Science and Technology, via @Helyeh_Doutaghi It should be obvious to all what an ultra high-risk gambit this would be, and geography certainly isn't in US forces' favor. The report continues, "Such a mission could expose U.S. personnel to an array of threats, including Iranian drones and missiles, ground fire and improvised explosives. It was unclear Saturday whether Trump would approve all, some or none of the Pentagon’s plans." Scramble to Find Offramp: Summit in Islamabad Several regional countries are meeting in Islamabad to try and forge a path toward ceasefire and peace. The four foreign ministers representing Pakistan, Turkey, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia began consultations Sunday. The Pakistani government said over the weekend that its prime minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif is working to "create a conducive environment" for peace negotiations and direct talks between Tehran and Washington as the war reaches one month. Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian is being kept abreast of developments in communications with Pakistan. Some progress emerging?... Iran has agreed to allow 20 Pakistani-flagged ships to pass through the Strait of Hormuz unharmed, Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar announced Saturday. Oil tanker carrying Saudi crude to Pakistan. Map frm @Kpler pic.twitter.com/qSUSTca7k1 — Anas Alhajji (@anasalhajji) March 29, 2026 Pezeshkian told PM Sharif in a Saturday call that "Attacks on infrastructure and assassinations by aggressors show they cannot be trusted." As for the Sunday summit in Pakistan, one question that must be asked is where are the US negotiators? Days ago there was chatter that VP J.D. Vance or perhaps Witkoff or Kushner might be in Pakistan, working on the sidelines, but it's unclear what Washington's posture on diplomacy is at this point. The Consultations among the Foreign Ministers of Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Türkiye, and Egypt have commenced in Islamabad on 29 March 2026. Convened at the invitation of Deputy Prime Minister / Foreign Minister Senator Mohammad Ishaq Dar @MIshaqDar50, the Foreign Ministers during… pic.twitter.com/5capTCXUNO — Ministry of Foreign Affairs - Pakistan (@ForeignOfficePk) March 29, 2026 Attacks on Universities, Infrastructure The last 48 hours saw new US-Israeli attacks on Iran's university of science and technology in the northeast of the capital. Buildings were severely damaged - but reports of casualties have not emerged. Israel has made it clear it is going after an array of targets, including civilian infrastructure in Iran. Iran has over the weekend retaliated in kind, sending more missiles on Israel. Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) is now warning that American university campuses in the Middle East are now fair game. The statement said this is because two Iranian universities have been struck. The IRGC says American universities are now "legitimate targets" unless the US officially condemns the attacks on Iranian schools by noon on Monday, according to Fars. Tit-for-tat attacks on infrastructure escalating: ⚡️BREAKING An Iranian missile has just struck Israel's crucial Rotem Chemicals Plant The plant produces sapphire domes for defence missiles and also helps Israel's nuclear weapons program pic.twitter.com/VuAikqH6ws — Iran Observer (@IranObserver0) March 29, 2026 The IRGC has gone so far as to release a statement urging staff, faculty, and students to vacate and stay away from theses campuses. Some notable American university branches in the Gulf (among dozens) include Texas A&M University in Qatar and New York University in the United Arab Emirates. Not Just 'Damaged' but Obliterated: Images of US AWACS Jet At Saudi Airbase Images have emerged revealing that the Wall Street Journal's initial report that the half-billion-dollar aircraft was merely "damaged" was an enormous understatement. Rather, a large portion of the fuselage has been obliterated, along with the distinctive 30-foot-diameter, 6-foot-thick rotating radar dome that's mounted atop AWACS aircraft. We took a closer look at the photo set here. The images of the destroyed E-3 Sentry were first posted on the Air Force amn/nco/snco Facebook page: "The loss of this E-3 is incredibly problematic, given how crucial these battle managers are to everything from airspace deconfliction, aircraft deconfliction, targeting, and providing other lethal effects that the entire force needs for the battle space," Heather Penney, a former F-16 pilot and director of studies and research at AFA's Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies, told Air & Space Forces Magazine. If this has been carefully kept under wraps until now, what else is the White House and Pentagon not telling the public? * * * Order by midnight! Tyler Durden Sun, 03/29/2026 - 11:05




