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AI Agents With Crypto Could Escape And Become 'Unstoppable', Experts Warn Authored by Martin Young via CoinTelegraph.com, Artificial intelligence agents that have autonomous access to crypto wallets could become unstoppable if deployed maliciously or if they escape from sandboxes, experts from a leading academic research consortium warned. โUnstoppable Autonomous Agentsโ (UAAs) pose a clear threat if they are deployed to persist automatically and have access to digital assets, according to a June 8 industryย reviewย written by 25 academics and experts from top US universities for the Initiative for Cryptocurrencies and Contracts (IC3). โWhen combined systematically, crypto tools can channel AIโs fluid power into secure, reliable, and highly autonomous systems,โ the researchers wrote. However, this combination could have โfar-reaching consequences for users and the financial system,โ they added.ย UAAs may also be equipped with access to cryptocurrency wallets, social media accounts, APIs, and other external tools, said the researchers. โThe capabilities enabling such agents are already emerging and improving rapidly.โย The warning comes as crypto projects and executives have beenย pushingย the agentic payment and micropayment economy narrative this year, suggesting it could be the biggest use case for decentralized digital assets.ย AI self-replication alarm bells The paper also revealed that existing models can already โsurpass self-replication red linesโ in local environments, by autonomously creating a live, separate copy of themselves on the same machine, โa capability that could let a system evade shutdown and proliferate.โ Because reward signals used in training often fail to perfectly capture the intended objectives, โUAAs deployed for benign purposes may inadvertently cause harm,โ or pursue resource acquisition as a default strategy, they said.ย However, the authors noted that models have yet to replicate themselves onto external infrastructure. Potential AI agent insider trading advantagesย A fleet of self-replicating, resource-acquiring agents could also create unpredictable demand and liquidity dynamics in crypto markets.ย โAI-powered trading systems could enable collusion between autonomous agents and create unfair insider advantages through opaque strategies.โ The tech sector is already dealing with difficult questions about the threat of unmitigated AI.ย Models such as Anthropicโs Claude Mythos have already been shown to beย capableย of finding and exploiting zero-day vulnerabilities in major operating systems.ย Professor Ari Juels, IC3 co-director and Chainlink Labs chief scientist, presents the paper at ETHConf. Source:ย IC3 Meanwhile, Gartnerย warnedย in late May that governance failures around autonomous AI agents could trigger widespread enterprise failures, predicting 40% of companies will be forced to decommission their agents by 2027.ย โThe harms that could follow from fully autonomous agents of this kind are severe,โ the researchers said, suggesting circuit breaker guardrails. Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 14:20
U.S. Fertilizer Prices Erase War Spike, But El Nino Keeps Food Inflation Risk Elevated The good news for US farmers is that urea fertilizer prices have returned to pre-US-Iran conflict levels after spiking from late February through mid-April. This is great news for farmers, though they are not out of the woods, as drought continues to plague some of the nationโs top agricultural belts. Prices for granular urea in New Orleans have slumped 36% since peaking at $710 per short ton in mid-April. Spot prices are currently $453, back to pre-conflict levels. Bloomberg Intelligence analysts noted that a combination of oversupply and weak demand is pressuring US urea spot prices, which have fallen below those seen in more import-dependent markets such as Brazil and Egypt. The reversal in nitrogen fertilizer prices benefits farmers while also reducing part of the windfall enjoyed by CF Industries and Nutrien. Shares of CF Industries and Nutrien are both down about 20%, closely tracking urea spot prices. Urea was among the crop nutrients most affected by the Gulf-area energy shock, with nearly half of global exports originating in the region. There have been concerns about a global food shortage that could emerge later in the year. Drought concerns still plague top agricultural belts in the US. Meanwhile, on the otherside of the world: UBS Warns El Nino May Intensify Food Inflation Across Asia One troubling development in food has been the surge in rice prices, with the regional Asian benchmark rising 20% in May, the largest monthly increase since 2008. It is important to closely monitor global food prices. Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 14:00
Britain On Edge As Mass Protests Expected After Attempted Beheading Attack By Migrant Summary: Tommy Robinson Says Mass Protests Expected Tonight Nation Horrified Afterย Somali Migrant Attempted To Behead UK Citizenย Belfast Horror: African Migrant Tries To Saw Off Victim's Head In Street Attack Mass Protests Expected In Coming Hoursย Last night's attempted beheading of a British man by a Somali migrant in Belfast is becoming a major flashpoint, with mass protests reportedly expected across more than 70 cities in the coming hours. ๐จBREAKING: Elon Musk declares, "Only Restore Britain can save Britain," following the attempted beheading in Belfast โ GB Politics (@GBPolitcs) June 9, 2026 The attack has intensified public anger over Britain's long-running, nation-killing mass migration policies, which have fueled chaos, violent crime, and a broader national security failure. "Sh*t is about to hit the fan in Belfast" ...ย You don't mess with the people of Belfast. pic.twitter.com/cVgjgo3Mzf โ Susanne Delaney (@SuzieD755164) June 9, 2026 "The whole of the United Kingdom is hitting the streets tonight at 7 pm following yet another invader attack on our people," activist Tommy Robinson wrote on X. The whole of the United Kingdom is hitting the streets tonight at 7pm following yet another invader attack on our people. It's time ๐ฌ๐ง pic.twitter.com/tscckc9ceK โ Tommy Robinson ๐ฌ๐ง (@TRobinsonNewEra) June 9, 2026 Robinson continued, "The invader who tried to behead someone in Belfast last night traveled from Sudan to Paris, flew from Paris to Dublin, then got a bus from Dublin to Belfast on 10th February 2023 and claimed 'asylum'. The British government let him stay, and now this. Blood on their hands." The invader who tried to behead someone in Belfast last night travelled from Sudan to Paris, flew from Paris to Dublin, then got a bus from Dublin to Belfast on 10th February 2023 and claimed "asylum". The British government let him stay, and now this. Blood on their hands. https://t.co/vlrmXJuSIz โ Tommy Robinson ๐ฌ๐ง (@TRobinsonNewEra) June 9, 2026 Apparently, the government has dispatched water cannon trucks to Belfast ahead of the protests. WATCH๐: 3 Water Cannon lorries spotted on route to Belfast ahead of the protest pic.twitter.com/iHb8xukSeu โ The Reformed Media (@ReformedMedia_) June 9, 2026 Elon Musk chimed in: "Only by protesting REPEATEDLY and LOUDLY will there be any change!!" Only by protesting REPEATEDLY and LOUDLY will there be any change!! https://t.co/73GDcLLFwv โ Elon Musk (@elonmusk) June 9, 2026 Musk was always right all along: Elon Musk was always right: "You either fight back, or you die." pic.twitter.com/9fIHliiQsn โ Inevitable West (@Inevitablewest) June 9, 2026 Tonight's protests should be closely monitored for signs of escalation, as any broadening demonstrations could mark a political pressure point for the UK's left-wing ruling class, which has failed the nation. If demonstrations spread across multiple cities and sustain momentum, the Belfast attack could unleash a nationwide backlash against elites who doomed the nation through mass migration. Belfast Horror: African Migrant Tries To Saw Off Victim's Head In Street Attack Authored by Steve Watson via modernity, Authorities and the media have scrambled to soften language around a graphic knife assault last night by an apparent African migrant that has left a local Belfast man fighting for his life with devastating injuries. Horrific footage shows the attacker straddling the victim and repeatedly stabbing his head before sawing at his neck in a clear attempt to behead him. Bystanders screamed in horror as the attack unfolded. However, police have described it as nothing more than a "stabbing incident" involving "a man." The assault happened shortly after 10:30 pm on Monday on Kinnaird Avenue in north Belfast. The attacker hacked at his victim's head and neck with a small boxcutter-style Stanley knife. Locals rushed in to drag the assailant off, batting him with blunt objects before police finally arrived. African migrant just tried to behead a white man in North Belfast, Ireland. Video is too graphic to post. pic.twitter.com/ih5uVA4px6 - End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) June 8, 2026 Bystanders could be heard yelling: "He's trying to cut his head off." The victim is understood to be alive in the hospital at the time of writing but has sustained life-altering injuries. Speculation online points to the possibility he has lost both eyes after the frenzied assault. WARNING - EXTREMELY GRAPHIC VIDEO: Watch video The Police Service of Northern Ireland issued a statement calling it merely a "stabbing incident." They confirmed one man has been arrested and another taken to the hospital with serious injuries. There was no mention of the attacker's background, immigration status, or the obvious attempt to decapitate the victim. Just another 'stabbing' by a 'man', nothing else to see here. https://t.co/f0KdwKNF7d - m o d e r n i t y (@ModernityNews) June 9, 2026 It wasn't just a "stabbing incident". We all saw the video. The migrant was attempting to saw a guys head off - Inevitable West (@Inevitablewest) June 9, 2026 The media is not focusing on the incident. Woke up expecting that Belfast horror to be all over the media. BBC and Sky front pages. Nowhere. pic.twitter.com/MEQuVIUzUx - Paul Joseph Watson (@PrisonPlanet) June 9, 2026 The BBC buried a report with the headline "Man taken to hospital with 'serious injuries' after stabbing." Man taken to hospital with 'serious injuries' after stabbing https://t.co/QrQVLvxssq - BBC News (UK) (@BBCNews) June 9, 2026 A man has been taken to hospital with "serious injuries" following a stabbing in north Belfast. https://t.co/v7Pljb5woz - BBC News NI (@BBCNewsNI) June 9, 2026 Irish state media did the same. Irish State TV already trying to downplay the beheading attempt: pic.twitter.com/jaK96zLBp1 - End Wokeness (@EndWokeness) June 9, 2026 The gap between what the footage shows and what official channels reported sparked immediate fury online. Deport these horrible bastards out of our fucking country STOP LETTING THEM IN!!! Left wing fucking lunatics want this on our streets, absolute scumbags. Third world horrible bastards ? https://t.co/he71pQGMKu - G ????????? (@ggh1992) June 9, 2026 ? You have all seen the Belfast footage by now. A man nearly beheaded on a public street in broad daylight. Only saved because three brave locals ran in and stopped it themselves. The police were not there. The government was not there. Ordinary people saved that man's life. And... - David Shaw (@David90shaw) June 9, 2026 The post continues, "...Ordinary people saved that man's life. And while that was happening Keir Starmer was in Westminster figuring out how to arrest you for posting about it. Open borders. Two-tier policing. Unarmed citizens fighting off attackers alone. This is the British Labor Party built." Others stated they wouldn't have been surprised to see the locals who tried to subdue the attacker being arrested, a reference to revelations regarding the Henry Nowak case. Leftist apologists immediately rushed to psychiatric excuses before any details emerged about the attacker's identity, background, or possible motive. Didn't take long. pic.twitter.com/g04YzuY10r - Basil the Great (@BasilTheGreat) June 9, 2026 The recurring question remains the same. How many of these daily attacks on native people have to happen before meaningful action in the form of closing the borders and mass remigration is instituted? Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 13:53
Hakeem Jeffries Humiliated After Trump Attack Backfires Authored by Matt Margolis via PJMedia.com, Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) tried to score points off Donald Trump's appearance at Madison Square Garden for Game 3 of the NBA Finals. And, oh boy, did it backfire spectacularly. Monday's press conference gave the House Minority Leader a stage, and he used it to attack Trumpโs planned appearance at the game and to question whether Trump was even a true Knicks fan. "I think Knicks fans just want to enjoy Game 3, the first home [NBA Finals] game that we've had in 27 years," Jeffries said. "But it also is not clear to me that Donald Trump is a big Knicks fan. I mean, does this guy even know the difference between Karl Rove and Karl Anthony Towns? I don't think so. He's just injecting himself into the NBA Finals because he always has to bring the MAGA circus into town, and that's unfortunate." The problem with Jeffriesโ claim is that Trump is, in fact, a longtime Knicks fan, and there is photographic and video evidence of Trump attending Knicks games going back decades. NEW YORK - CIRCA 1993: Donald Trump looks on during an New York Knicks NBA Basketball game circa 1993 at Madison Square Garden in the Manhattan Borough of New York City. (Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images) New York, N.Y.: Donald Trump attends the New York Knicks game withโฆ https://t.co/sYd9Pka3zX pic.twitter.com/y0dTsgTwUf โ Apple Lamps (@lamps_apple) June 8, 2026 pic.twitter.com/EAWnPIxKKW โ Apple Lamps (@lamps_apple) June 8, 2026 pic.twitter.com/PDHOspenZI nah heโs a not Knick Fan? ๐. โDime Store Obamaโ is the big Knick Fan thatโs never been seen at a single gameโฆ. โ Louis Buchalter (@lepke2112) June 8, 2026 Heck, even CNN mocked the idea that Trump isnโt a true New York sports fan: Trump is the BOSS ๐ pic.twitter.com/2Ihwx0Ompw โ Politikal Kat-Tales (@PolitiKatTales) June 8, 2026 Then NBA Commissioner Adam Silver, not exactly a Trump surrogate, finished it off entirely. "I've been with the league for a long time," Silver said. "I ran NBA Entertainment years ago. He did an I love game spot with us. He had courtside seats. He was here all the time. He was at the draft. So he's a genuine Knicks fan." .@NBA Commissioner Adam Silver: President Trump was a fixture at Madison Square Garden. He had courtside seats. He was here all the time, he was at Drafts โ so he's a genuine @nyknicks fan. pic.twitter.com/Cxb1fU8cfM โ Rapid Response 47 (@RapidResponse47) June 9, 2026 A genuine Knicks fan. Certified by the commissioner of the NBA. Whatโs the point of even questioning Trumpโs fandom? Itโs stupid, and Democrats only embarrass themselves when they try. Heck, it was just a couple of weeks ago that Gov. Kathy Hochul (D-N.Y.) set this same trap for herself when Trump's plans to attend the game were first made public. She posed what she thought was a clever trivia challenge. "I'd ask him to name the starting lineup of the 1993 championship team and see how he does," Hochul said. โIโd ask him to name the starting lineup of the 1993 Championship team and see how he does." New York Governor Kathy Hochul forgot that the Knicks last won in 1973 when asked about Donald Trump's Knicks fandom. ๐ฌ pic.twitter.com/ouFbEiGYQE โ New York Post Sports (@nypostsports) May 27, 2026 The Knicks didn't win the championship in 1993. Their last title came in 1973. Hochul's gotcha question exposed a gap in her own knowledge of the franchise she was pretending to defend. Democrats questioning anyone's sports credibility is well-trodden comedy territory. In 2004, Democrat presidential nominee John Kerry called the Green Bay Packers' home stadium "Lambert Field" instead of Lambeau Field. He also named his favorite Red Sox slugger as "Manny Ortez," an apparent mashup of Manny Ramirez and David Ortiz. Kerry was performing fandom, and it showed. That's the pattern here. The far left can't accept that Trump is genuine about much of anything, so the instinct is to attack first and check facts later. Jeffries grabbed a talking point and humiliated himself in the process. And in the end, was any of this worth it? Trump went to a basketball game. Attacking him for it was always going to be a losing play. Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 13:40
Mediocre 3Y Auction Tails Despite Solid Buyside Demand With markets thrown in turmoil following Trump's threat to restart war against Iran in retaliation for downing a US Apache helicopter, it wasn't clear how today's $58 billion 3 year auction would go. In the end, it wasn't great, or terrible: a little tail, but besides that all metrics were relatively solid.ย ย The auction priced at a high yield of 4.192%, up from 3.965% in May and the highest yield since Feb '25. It tailed the When Issued 4.189% by 0.3bps, the 2nd consecutive tail. The bid to cover was 2.645, up from 2.540 last month, and above the recent average of 2.614.ย The internals were also solid, with Indirects awarded 63.7%, up from 62.96%, though just below the 6-auction average of 63.87%. Directs were awarded 21.01%, modestly higher than 20.14% last month leaving dealers holding 15.28%, a slight decline from 16.90% last month. Overall, this was an average auction, with forgettable metrics, which was to be expected in light of the broader market selling that provided a buffer to any lack of buyer demand. It also signaled that despite expectations that tomorrow's CPI will be the first 4%+ print in 4 years, the bond market isn't too worried... yet.ย Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 13:28
New Clues In Apple's iOS 27 Hints At Upcoming Foldable iPhone Launch Software researcher M1Astra shared with Bloomberg new clues embedded deep within Apple's iOS 27 developer beta that suggest the long-awaited foldable iPhone remains on track for a September debut, alongside the iPhone 18 Pro lineup. "Apple's iOS 27 and related software updates offer the clearest public signs yet of the company's upcoming foldable iPhone, revealing references to folding hardware and new features designed for larger, more flexible displays," Bloomberg reporter Mark Gurman wrote on X, refering to M1Astra's findings that show within iOS 27 developer beta, there are code strings related to determining whether a device is folded or unfolded. also a new MG key to get the total count of built-in displays pic.twitter.com/0uhik5DWRO โ sam henri gold (@samhenrigold) June 8, 2026 Files inside the first iOS 27 developer beta include references to "foldState," "mechanicalAngleDegrees," and "angleDegrees," suggesting the iOS can detect whether a device is folded, unfolded, or partially opened around a hinge. Other repair-related code mentions a secondary display, a second cover glass, and additional light sensors. New in macOS 27: You can now resize iPhone mirroring to look like an iPad display pic.twitter.com/8rVy7aTCYd โ Aaron (@aaronp613) June 8, 2026 The clues come as Bloomberg previously reported that the foldable iPhone remains on track for a September launch alongside the iPhone 18 Pro lineup, with pricing expected to start around $2,000. This would be the most important iPhone design shift in the nearly 20-year-old iPhone lineup. However, Apple is late to the game. The first available foldable smartphone with a flexible display was the Royole FlexPai, announced in October 2018 and shipped in December 2018. By early 2019, Samsung had released the Galaxy Fold, and other brands were launching their foldable models. On Monday, Apple unveiled Siri AI and the next generation of Apple Intelligence during its Worldwide Developers Conference. Our coverage: Apple's Long-Awaited AI Siri Fails To Impress As Shares Pump Then Dump During WWDC Goldman analyst Michael Ng has provided clients with the key takeaways from WWDC: We attended AAPL's WWDC keynote and investor event at Apple Park in Cupertino, CA on June 8th, where the company announced key features for iOS 27, Apple Intelligence, and Siri AI. AAPL was down 1% on the day, in line with AAPL's average day-of WWDC performance, with announcements around Apple Intelligence & Siri AI largely in line with expectations. We viewed the announcements as positive with visibility into Siri AI timing, confidence in the completeness of features, and early signs of monetization through iCloud+ subscriptions and product refresh. First, Siri AI will be available in beta this fall in English. The keynote and follow-up presentations that we attended were notable in that Siri AI demonstrations all appeared to be utilizing real features (e.g., the presentation we attended included a live demo), suggesting to us that Siri AI features are largely complete and likely will hit key timelines. Second, rate limits should drive monetization opportunities. Some features, including image generation, have daily usage limits because they rely on powerful server models. Users will be able to get increased access through most iCloud+ subscription plans, which should drive direct monetization for Apple Intelligence. Third, the most advanced AI features announced today will require 12GB memory, driving a refresh opportunity. Features including expressive voices and more advanced dictation will require 12GB memory which is included in iPhone Air, iPhone 17 Pro, iPhone 17 Pro Max, iPad (M4), and select Mac (M3). We think that will help drive a multi-year product refresh cycle, particularly as AI features continue to improve and demand compounds. Over time, we view that continued iteration of integrated AI feature releases should (a) support longer-term demand for product offerings via installed base growth and (b) support longer-term Services growth via monetization of new first-party and third-party apps as well as greater iCloud storage demand with greater personal data & content created with AI features. 1. Siri AI & iOS 27 Fall 2026 launch details: iOS 27 will be available in the fall for iPhone 11 and later, with Apple Intelligence available for iPhones 15 Pro/Pro Max and later. Siri AI will be available in beta later this year for users with devices set to English, with support for additional languages expanding over time. Apple noted that Siri AI availability for iOS 27 & iPadOS27 will be delayed in the EU due to the Digital Markets App (DMA). Additionally, Siri AI & other new Apple Intelligence features should be delayed in China as Apple works through regulatory requirements. Separately, AAPL's most powerful on-device AI model and its features (e.g., expressive Siri AI voice, advanced dictation) will be only be available for devices with at least 12 GB of unified memory including the iPhone 17 Pro/Pro Max, iPhone Air, iPads M4 & later, and Macs M3 or later. 2. Siri AI features in line with expectations: First, Siri AI will have greater personal context awareness as it draws from on-screen and historical personal data across first-party apps (e.g., Photos, Messages, Mail, Music), third party apps, the web, and Visual Intelligence (via device camera) to inform its answers & action execution for queries & requests. Second, Siri AI will allow users to personalize Siri's voice for pace, as well as expressivity (for devices with at least 12 GB of unified memory). Third, Siri AI will have a dedicated app from which users can recall and continue prior conversations. Fourth, Apple demonstrated Siri AI's ability to engage across a user's complete device ecosystem (e.g., Visual Intelligence identifying nutrition facts for food captured on-camera, splitting bills via receipts, creating an event from a flyer to the Calendar app, identifying the location of a photo posted on social media). 3. New Apple Intelligence features for iOS27 announced, also as expected per our WWDC preview: First, Safari will use Apple Intelligence to (a) create tab groups by topic, (b) monitor and set alerts for changes on internet pages a user wants to track, and (c) create custom extensions via description. Second, Apple Intelligence will introduce suggested actions across apps (e.g., add details from Messages to Reminders, updating meeting details on calendar invite by event description). Third, Apple Intelligence will introduce new photo editing features including (a) the Extend tool (to expand images) and (b) the Reframe tool (to shift the perspective of the camera. 4. Platform improvements to personalize design and improve performance. First, iOS 27 will allow users to adjust the strength of the Liquid Glass display (ultra clear to fully tinted). Second, through improved CPU scheduling, iOS 27 should improve performance across Apple products (e.g,. Apps launching more quickly, faster AirDrop, more seamless transitions from cellular to WiFi networks). Third, users will be able to include Android users within iCloud Shared albums. Apple shares on Monday wiped out any gains and closed down 1%, in line with the stock's average WWDC-day performance over the years. Shares are lower in cash on Tuesday. Professional subscribers can read the full Apple WWDC note here at our new Marketdesk.ai portal. Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 13:20
Oil Surges After Trump Says "US Must Respond To Iran Attack On Apache Helicopter" Summary: Trump says 'US must respond' after Iran downed Apache over Straitย Trump saysย Washington and Tehran are in the "final throes" of cementing a deal, "two or three days" Iran shoots down US Apache helicopter over Strait, crew safe Despite Trump calls for Israeli ceasefire, casualties are rising in southern Lebanon So much for the early hopes of an imminent deal... Trump Reacts to Apache Downing, Threatens Response Following earlier reportsย that a US AH-64 Apache helicopter had gone down over the Strait of Hormuz off the coast of Oman in an unprecedented first of the Iran war, moments ago Trump said on Truth Social that he had "been informed by our Great Military that last night the Iranians shot down one of our highly sophisticated Apache Helicopters while patrolling over the Strait of Hormuz. There were two pilots involved, both are safe and uninjured. Nevertheless, the United States must, of necessity, respond to this attack." The news that the US may imminently resume the Iran war - sent oil surgingย instantly... ... as Trump's latest promise that a huge peace is coming appears to have unraveled yet again. Trump Says In 'Final Throes' of Iran Deal... Again President Trump is still maintaining that Washington and Tehran are in the "final throes" of cementing a deal, and is even suggesting (once again) that an agreement will be done in days: Asked whether it would be matter of days or weeks, he said it would take โtwo or three daysโ. Tehran has repeatedly stated any deal should include Lebanonโwhere Israel has been pressing its war with Iran-backed Hezbollahโand fired missiles at Israel on Sunday.ย That prompted Israeli retaliation, despite US pressure for restraint. Iran fired another salvo before announcing it was ceasing military action, and hours later Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced that the โfire on that front is containedโ. Of course, we've been hearing that the war is merely 'days' away from ending from basically the start of the war. And yet, all too predictably, the two sides keep going up the escalation ladder in an escalation trap. But the White House is saying that it will forge a deal which is good for the American people, whether Israel likes it or not. "Israel may like that, they may not like that โ but this is in the best interest of the United States," Vice President JD Vance spelled out to Fox this week. US Apache Helicopter Shot Down over Strait, Crew Safe A US helicopter has gone down over the Strait of Hormuz off the coast of Oman in an unprecedented first of the Iran war, Central Command announced Tuesday, after which the two crew members were reportedly rescued by unmanned boats. The Army AH-64 Apache was patrolling regional waters before the downing incident, which is still shrouded in mystery, and which the Pentagon says it is now investigating. However, the Iranians are saying they know exactly what happened - insisting that the Apache was shot down. "An AH-64 Apache attack helicopter belonging to the U.S. Army was shot down and destroyed by the IRGC Navy near the Strait of Hormuz, after ignoring warnings and being targeted by fired from one of our speedboats," an Iranian military central command statement has said. The NY Times, among the first to report the downing, underscores the claims and counter-claims concerning what happened: It was not immediately clear whether the Apache was shot down by Iranian fire, experienced mechanical failure or encountered some other problem, said a person briefed on the incident, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. Central Command said inย a statementย that the incident was under investigation. But the Pentagon says the crew was successfully rescued. The unusual rescue by unmanned boats adds another layer of complexity and strangeness to the story.ย "A Task Force 59 unmanned surface vessel, essentially a drone boat, found and rescued the soldiers," spokesperson Capt. Tim Hawkins described to NBC News. The pair of pilots are now receiving medical care, he indicated, after their rescue came within two hours of the aircraft going down. Trump briefly spoke to journalistsย at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York after watching the NBA Finals on Monday night and he acknowledged the rare crash in the Persian Gulf. "The pilots are fine. Yeah," Trump said. "Nobody injured. We are going to issue a report tomorrow. But the pilots are fine." Apaches, along with A-10 gunships, have been frequently used for low-flying operations in the Persian Gulf and Hormuz region, in order to attack Iranian small boast. As for the Iranian claims of shootdown, it remains a top most plausible scenario, but the Pentagon has not said whether it took on Iranian fire. FOX: American military forces, including U.S. Naval Forces Central Command, the 82nd Airborne Division, and U.S. 5th Fleet assets, helped bring both soldiers to safety. NEW: Two U.S. soldiers are safe after a dramatic rescue operation off the coast of Oman. CENTCOM says the crew members were recovered roughly two hours after their AH-64 Apache helicopter went down while patrolling regional waters. American military forces, including U.S. Navalโฆ pic.twitter.com/iBr7WiQnKB โ Fox News (@FoxNews) June 9, 2026 During earlier operations connected to Epic Fury, other US military aerial assets have crashed or sustained damage over the region - however, the Pentagon has downplayed or rejected efforts to link a number of incidents to Iranian attack, apparently not wishing to give Tehran a battlefield 'success' acknowledgement. But many independent pundits have suspected that all along the Iranians have been hitting a lot more American assets than previously disclosed. Death Toll Soars As Israel Pounds South Lebanon The southern Lebanese city of Tyre is being pounded by Israeli airstrikes on Tuesday, despite President Trump's insistence that Lebanon not come under attack. Israel's military had hours prior issued an evacuation order for all civilians in the area, amid the unraveling and failing ceasefire. Casualties are already high, coming at a tense moment after starting on Sunday Iran sent ballistic missiles against Israel over its renewed airstrikes on the southern suburbs of Beirut, where it says Hezbollah command centers are located. The NY Times reports of the growing death toll Tuesday, "At least eight people were killed in the bombardment, and dozens more were wounded, Lebanonโs health ministry said. The Israeli military also targeted towns and villages across southern Lebanon, including areas that were not covered by evacuation warnings, according to the countryโs state-run news agency." Attack on Tyre, via AFP So clearly the air raids are expanding, per the report, even after the latest Trump warnings directed at Netanyahu to not do anything that would sabotage a broader Iran peace agreement. Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 12:45
China's Oil Imports Plummet To Eight-Year Low Confirming our recent reporting on China's oil demand collapse, crude oil imports to China in May fell to their lowest since October 2017 because of the price spike resulting from the Persian Gulf tanker traffic disruption,ย plunging refinery margins (due to price ceilings imposed by Beijing), of a slowing economy and the rapid slowdown in the economy.ย The May total stood at 33 million barrels, or 7.8 million barrels daily, Bloomberg reported, citing Chinese customs data. This is roughly a 30% drop vs the average daily import rate of 11.6 million barrels last year. As previously noted, refinery run rates are down as well, as are fuel exports, with Beijing careful to make sure there is enough diesel and gasoline for the domestic market. All this is happening as the latest batch of Chinese data was "shockingly bad", promptly fears of a China hard landing. As OilPrice notes, the news will likely push oil prices lower as Chinaโs reduced appetite for imported crude is widely seen by traders as a cap on international prices. Demand for oil in China, however, has not fallen particularly. The only reason the countryโs refiners can afford to slash imports is the substantial inventory cushion available, estimated at over 1 billion barrels, which we said three months ago is the biggest wildcard in the Iran war oil price shock. However, this cushion is not infinite and, as suggested recently by analysts, China will at some point start to ramp up imports. One relevant question: what is China's pace of SPR drain if any. Recall for the past year Beijing was adding about 500-700K in daily SPR stockpiles; total is said to be ~1.4 billion barrels. China can avoid any Gulf imports for months and drain its SPR instead. โ zerohedge (@zerohedge) March 18, 2026 Chinaโs subdued oil buying from abroad โrepresents one of the largest offsets to the shock, second only to Saudi rerouting flows and larger than coordinated SPR releases from the U.S., Europe, and Japan,โ Societe Generale commodity analysts said earlier this week. However, strategic and commercial oil inventories need replenishing at some point, and when that point is reached and the war is still not over, we are likely to see higher oil prices again. In its lenghty weekly note, JPM commodity analysts agreed. ING commodity analysts made a similar point last week. โSizeable inventories in the lead-up to the war have provided a buffer for the market,โ Warren Patterson and Ewa Manthey wrote on Friday. โThis buffer is shrinking with every passing day. With the seasonally stronger summer still ahead of us, we could see demand grow by more than 3m b/d quarter-on-quarter in the third quarter. The pace of inventory declines will only intensify through the July-September period.โ Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 12:40
Professors Behind California's Wealth Tax Threaten Possible Legal Action Against Critic Authored by Jonathan Turley via JonathanTurley.org, There is an interesting controversy brewing in California after four California university professors threatened a political candidate, Richard Lucas, for criticizing them for their roles in the "Billionaire Tax" and sent him a "cease and desist" letter. David Gamage from the University of Missouri, Brian Galle and Emmanuel Saez from UC Berkeley, and Darien Shanske from UC Davis claimed that the public criticism violated anti-doxxing laws by sharing contact information. They are clearly wrong. One of the aggrieved professors, Brian Galle, teaches at Berkeley Law School called Lucas "a clown," but insisted that sharing public information is unlawful. Attorney Catha Worthman sent the letter, but has reportedly refused to respond to inquiries after attorneys for the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) pushed back on her legal claims and those of her clients. I have long been a critic of such wealth taxes, specifically California's Billionaire Tax, as economically moronic and legally questionable. The proposal has already cost the state trillions in lost wealth as wealthy taxpayers have fled, taking their businesses and jobs with them. As I discuss in Rage and the Republic, these wealth taxes have a terrible track record and, on the federal level, face serious constitutional challenges. In California, the drafters included a retroactive clause that can also be challenged. One of the four professors - who Lucas referred to as "the looter dream team" - destroyed the claims of many supporters that this is just a one-time tax. Some of us have written that this is simply the first salvo. Once they succeed in targeting billionaires, the same measure will likely be used for those in lower tax brackets. In a recent debate, Berkeley professor Emmanuel Saez admitted that he could not seriously claim this would be a one-time tax, as many in the public have asserted. He said they would have to wait to see if it passes, but it is likely to be repeated, and noted that there may also be a federal wealth tax on the way. He said: "I don't think it's going to be a one-time tax...because you can't surprise billionaires more than once. Even then, you know, maybe some of them were expecting something like this. So it's going to be a debate about this time, you know, a permanent wealth tax at a low rate that's going to last for a number of years." Saez has publicly taunted the wealthy who are fleeing the state: He noted the move on the left to create a federal wealth tax which has been pushed by Bernie Sanders and Ro Khanna. The legislation, "Make Billionaires Pay Their Fair Share Act," echoes the growing "eat-the-rich" mantra on the left - seeking to replicate a disastrous push in California that has led to an exodus from that state and an estimated loss of $2 trillion in taxable assets. It is also flagrantly unconstitutional. Under the plan, Congress would target 938 billionaires to tap them for $4.4 trillion. That money would then be redistributed as a $3,000 direct payment to every man, woman, and child in a household making $150,000 or less - $12,000 for a family of four. Now back to the legal threat. I believe that the threatened legal action is wildly off base. Putting aside the fact that this is protected speech, the two anti-doxing statutes, Penal Code ยง653.2(a) and Civil Code ยง1708.89, contain clear scienter or intent requirements. They must show that Lucas demonstrated an "intent to place another person in reasonable fear for their safety, or the safety of the other person's immediate family." Penal Code ยง653.2(a); Civil Code ยง1708.89. There is no evidence of such intent. If simply posting such identifying information is a violation, a significant range of protected speech would be proscribed. There are ample reasons to criticize this tax and the claims made by its champions. There is a type of self-sustaining pattern on the left in support of such measures. Universities have largely purged conservatives and libertarians from departments, leaving most faculties with professors who run exclusively from the left to the far left. These professors then added intellectual support for radical proposals like wealth taxes. The media then reports that experts have reviewed and approved the measures. It becomes an entirely closed loop from political groups to academics to media creating a uniform narrative. The ADF wrote a strong letter pointing out the flaws in the claims of these professors under anti-doxxing laws from the lack of intent to the protection of free speech. These professors became public advocates for this ill-conceived plan and, as a result, have drawn criticism for that advocacy. Lucas was one of those critics: First they say the billionaire tax is one time. Now the main architect is already talking about making it permanent. โ Richard Lucas (@dickclucas) May 10, 2026 Nevertheless, the professors sent two cease and desist letters to Lucas, requesting that he remove their names and contact information from his website "California Wealth Exodus." Lucas has remained adamant that he will not remove their contact information. The site for figures like Galle link to his academic page, as I have done above. We routinely link to such sites for people to look at the background of figures discussed in columns. In the case of Lucas, it is also meant to allow citizens to express their views to those pushing this proposal. In my view, the threat of legal action is fundamentally flawed and would not prevail in the courts. These professors will need to respond to their critics rather than work to silence them. Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 12:20
Jefferies: "Turns Out, We Weren't Bullish Enough On Copper" "Turns out, we weren't bullish enough on copper," Jefferies analyst Christopher LaFemina wrote in a note to clients, marking a notable shift from one of Wall Street's most seasoned metal voices. LaFemina joined Jefferies in 2011 after more than a decade covering metals and mining at Lehman Brothers and Barclays, lending weight to his view that the explosive growth in AI data center buildouts, power grid and infrastructure upgrades (a theme he calls "powering up America"), and tight supply are creating structurally higher prices for copper. LaFemina raised his 2030 target and now expects copper to average $8 per pound, or $17,636 a ton. COMEX copper last traded around $6.34 a pound, while LME copper was near $13,583 a ton. On a longer timeframe, the LME copper chart suggests the $10,000 level was the breakout zone, further supporting LaFemina's 2030 target given the current supply-tightening backdrop. "Turns out, we weren't bullish enough on copper," LaFemina said, adding, "We now have the highest copper price forecast on the Street as we see strong US industrial demand and still tight supply." He noted that the data center and power infrastructure buildout should drive a meaningful acceleration in metals demand, with copper and aluminum prices able to rise much higher before weighing on the broader economy. Goldman recently estimated that AI capital expenditures by hyperscalers will soar to $800 billion this year. The report can be found here. In recent weeks, Goldman raised its year-end copper price target, and HSBC warned (report found here) that commodities face a "super-squeeze." HSBC analysts told clients last week that "metal prices are generally in an upswing, driven by supply disruptions for some commodities due to the Middle East conflict and strong structural demand." Separately, Goldman analysts led by Aurelia Waltham explained that one of the core issues with the copper market right now is supply: Year-to-date data does suggest that supply recovery from previous disruption events has trailed our expectations. Accordingly, we lower our 2026 global mine supply forecast by 350kt, equivalent to ~1.5% of global mine supply, including ~200kt less from Grasberg (Indonesia) and Kamoa-Kakula (DRC) combined, with neither returning to full capacity until 2028. At the same time, Waltham said stronger-than-expected U.S. copper imports in the first half of 2026 are tightening the ex-U.S. market: Furthermore, US copper imports in H1 2026 have exceeded our previous forecast, tightening the ex-US balance. As a result, we now expect US inventory to build by 900kt in 2026 (vs. 550kt previously), even as our base case remains that no copper tariff will be announced this year. The combination of soft mine supply, U.S. stockpiling, tariff uncertainty, and long-term demand tied to AI buildout and grid-upgrade themes prompted Waltham to upgrade her end-of-year 2026 and 2027 copper price forecasts: We raise our end-2026/average 2027 LME copper forecasts to $13,735/$13,800 from $12,465/$12,150 previously (vs. forwards at $13,630/$13,610). She outlined three price scenarios for copper: 1. Strait of Hormuz Remains Closed for Longer: While we would expect limited impact on the global copper balance as the demand hit from lower economic growth is largely offset by lower copper supply due to sulfur shortages, a substantial pullback in global risk appetite could push the LME price down to its fundamental support level at ~$12,600 in H2 2026, before resuming an upward trend. 2. US Copper Tariff Announced for January 2027: If a US copper tariff is announced prospectively in June 2026, to start in January 2027, we would expect US copper imports to accelerate in H2 2026 (vs. our base case of a slowdown in imports), tightening the ex-US balance and raising prices to over $14,000 in H2 2026. However, we would expect prices to retreat in 2027 as imports stop once the tariff is imposed. 3. Announcement of No Copper Tariff: A definitive decision against the tariff would reduce the size of our ex-US deficit forecast in 2026 and push the ex-US market back into surplus in 2027 as imports fall to a negligible level. In this scenario, we would expect the price to fall to an average of $12,800/t in 2027. View scenarios here: Beyond Jefferies, HSBC, and Goldman, JPMorgan analysts have also told clients that the copper upcycle is being driven by a tightening supply backdrop, accelerating power-grid investment, AI data center demand, and broader industrial electrification. Taken together, some of Wall Street's top metals desks are increasingly converging on the view that copper is entering a structurally tighter supply regime that will support a sustained break above $14,000 a ton on the LME. Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 12:00
Trump Insists US In 'Final Throes' Of Iran Deal; Death Toll Soars As Israel Pounds South Lebanon The southern Lebanese city of Tyre is being pounded by Israeli airstrikes on Tuesday, despite President Trump's insistence that Lebanon not come under attack. Israel's military had hours prior issued an evacuation order for all civilians in the area, amid the unraveling and failing ceasefire. Casualties are already high, coming at a tense moment after starting on Sunday Iran sent ballistic missiles against Israel over its renewed airstrikes on the southern suburbs of Beirut, where it says Hezbollah command centers are located. The NY Times reports of the growing death toll Tuesday, "At least eight people were killed in the bombardment, and dozens more were wounded, Lebanonโs health ministry said. The Israeli military also targeted towns and villages across southern Lebanon, including areas that were not covered by evacuation warnings, according to the countryโs state-run news agency." Attack on Tyre, via AFP So clearly the air raids are expanding, per the report, even after the latest Trump warnings directed at Netanyahu to not do anything that would sabotage a broader Iran peace agreement. President Trump is still maintaining that Washington and Tehran are in the "final throes" of cementing a deal, and is even suggesting (once again) that an agreement will be done in days: Asked whether it would be matter of days or weeks, he said it would take โtwo or three daysโ. Tehran has repeatedly stated any deal should include Lebanonโwhere Israel has been pressing its war with Iran-backed Hezbollahโand fired missiles at Israel on Sunday.ย That prompted Israeli retaliation, despite US pressure for restraint. Iran fired another salvo before announcing it was ceasing military action, and hours later Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced that the โfire on that front is containedโ. Of course, we've been hearing that the war is merely 'days' away from ending from basically the start of the war. And yet, all too predictably, the two sides keep going up the escalation ladder in an escalation trap. But the White House is saying that it will forge a deal which is good for the American people, whether Israel likes it or not. "Israel may like that, they may not like that โ but this is in the best interest of the United States," Vice President JD Vance spelled out to Fox this week. Escalation: Houthis in Yemen unleash ballistic missile on southern Israel, as Hezbollah sends drones on north... โก๏ธInterception in Eilat pic.twitter.com/uUsV3O70VE โ War Monitor (@WarMonitors) June 8, 2026 But in the meantime Lebanon continues to suffer, also as Hezbollah and most recently the Houthis out of Yemen fire projectiles on Israel. According to some of the latest via Al Jazeera: For the residents in Tyre, anybody who is staying behind is in a lot of danger. In the past hour, weโve seen another Israeli air strike near a Palestinian refugee camp. The strike happened at a roundabout leading into the camp, a very busy location. Thereโs also a bus station right at the entrance to the el-Buss refugee camp. Initial reports are coming in of a lot of injuries in that attack. Israel continues to carry out artillery fire on the city, and there are drones flying over Tyre. For anyone trying to get out of the city, the road is quite dangerous. There have been a series of air strikes north of Tyre along the same road people would use to exit. So the Lebanon conflict is escalating, not growing more stable, which doesn't bode well for achieving a final Iran deal. Tehran has insisted all along that a deal incorporate the Israel-Lebanon situation.ย Reporter: Did you ask Netanyahu not to hit back? Trump: No. I said do what's right but I want you to stop as quickly as you can. Because they have to stop. It has to do with Lebanon. And it has to stop. We want to get it finished. pic.twitter.com/lnnstEPFA2 โ Acyn (@Acyn) June 9, 2026 Vance had also said in his latest comments to Fox that "I think where the president has been very clear here is that while Israel obviously has some objectives that it has, the United States' main objective in Iran is to ensure that Iran does not have a nuclear weapon." It seems Washington is willing to tolerate some Israeli 'counter-terror' action, but only up to a point. Probably the limits will be reached in more renewed bombings of Beirut itself. Tehran has been seeking to impose some red liens on IDF action in Lebanon, and the White House has so far appeared to respond with compromising language. Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 11:55
Voter Fraud: Los Angeles County Woman Pleads Guilty To Paying People In Skid Row To Vote via The Epoch Times, LOS ANGELES - A woman who worked as a longtime signature collector for ballot initiatives pleaded guilty on June 8 to paying homeless people in Los Angeles' Skid Row and elsewhere $2 or $3 to register to vote. An "I Voted" sign points to a Vote Center in Los Angeles on June 1, 2026. Mario Tama/Getty Images Brenda Lee Brown Armstrong, 64, of Marina del Rey, also known as "Anika," entered a plea to one count of paying another person to register to vote, a federal charge that carries a penalty of up to five years behind bars. Sentencing was scheduled for Aug. 31. According to her plea agreement, for nearly 20 years, Armstrong periodically worked as a "petition circulator." In that role, she was paid by coordinators to collect voter signatures on official petitions that qualify initiatives, referendums and recalls for California state ballots. Prosecutors said Armstrong drove around the Los Angeles area to find registered voters to sign the petitions. After gathering enough signatures, Armstrong returned the petitions to her coordinators, who then paid her a set amount for each registered voter's signature. The amount she was paid varied depending on the specific ballot initiative. Because her coordinators only paid for signatures attributable to registered voters, Armstrong endeavored to ensure the people who signed her petitions were registered voters, court papers show. Armstrong admitted soliciting signatures in Skid Row, a convenient place for the defendant to collect signatures because of its high concentration of people in a relatively small area who were willing to sign petitions in exchange for cash. Armstrong regularly paid amounts between $2 and $3 to induce people to sign her petitions, officials said. Prosecutors said some homeless people did not have an address to put on the forms, so on occasion, Armstrong provided her own former address in Los Angeles to write on the registration form. Such registration forms simultaneously registered an individual to vote in California elections and in federal elections. "This is not an allegation, this is not a theory, this is an example of admitted voter fraud," First Assistant U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli said when Armstrong was charged. "We're going to aggressively prosecute voter fraud." A video shot by conservative media figure James O'Keefe and reposted by an account called "Real America's Voice" showed a woman handing cash to a homeless person. In a post on social media, O'Keefe said his video led to Armstrong being charged. Essayli said on June 5 that his office has "multiple" probes underway into alleged voting fraud. While declining to provide any specifics, he pointed to the Armstrong case as an example of the sort of thing he is investigating. "Yes, there is evidence of election fraud in California," he said. The comments came one day after President Donald Trump publicly accused Democrats of engaging in election fraud in California, pointing to the legally established mail-in voting process. Essayli also said his office is working with Assistant Attorney General Harmeet Dhillon in an effort to audit the state's voter rolls. Essayli said previously that Armstrong's arrest coincided with arguments in the Department of Justice's (DOJ) appeal of the dismissal of a lawsuit over voter registration records. The DOJ sued California Secretary of State Shirley Weber last year, demanding the state hand over the unredacted voter file, which includes registered voters' full names, residential addresses, driver's license numbers, and the last four digits of their Social Security numbers. The DOJ claimed it had the right to access the data under powers granted by the Civil Rights Act of 1960, the Help America Vote Act, and the National Voter Registration Act. In January, a Santa Ana federal judge dismissed the case after finding that the DOJ's request for the information violates federal privacy laws. The defense also argued that the Trump administration wants to use the data to help enforce its immigration policy. Brenda Lee Brown Armstrong Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 11:40
Flesh-Eating Cattle Screwworm Spreads Beyond Texas As USDA Accelerates Eradication Push The U.S. Department of Agriculture confirmed three more New World screwworm (NWS) cases, bringing total detections to five and heightening concerns that the flesh-eating pest, once eradicated in the 1960s, could threaten the nation's already strained cattle industry. The latest NWS cases include three calves and a goat in Texas, along with a small dog in Lea County, New Mexico, marking the first confirmed case in that state, according to the USDA. The dog had not traveled to Mexico or Texas, prompting authorities to investigate the surrounding property for fly larvae that feed on living flesh rather than dead material. "Over the past week, USDA has identified and expeditiously confronted four confirmed detections of NWS. While we address these instances that require immediate attention, and continue to sample suspected cases, we are simultaneously working to eradicate the pest entirely," Dudley Hoskins, the USDA's marketing and regulatory undersecretary, said in a statement.ย The first NWS cases were discovered last week in calves a few miles apart in South Texas: Flesh-Eating Screwworm Detected In Texas, Threatening Already-Strained U.S. Cattle Herd The second case: Second Flesh-Eating Screwworm Case Raises Beef Supply Fears As Goldman Warns Outbreak "Could Be Disruptive" Cases were announced Monday in a calf in La Salle County, southwest of San Antonio, and in a goat in Gillespie County, west of Austin. RELEASE: USDA Confirms Two Additional Cases of New World Screwworm in the United States A calf in La Salle County, TX and a dog in Andrews County, TX.https://t.co/nzWMQzDHjU โ New World Screwworm Rapid Response (@Screwworm_RR) June 8, 2026 University of Florida entomologist Edward Burgess told AP News that new NWS cases may emerge in the coming days and weeks, but that does not necessarily mean the pest is spreading. "When that first case is seen, everyone is being vigilant and their eyes are on it more intensely," Burgess said. "And when you are looking for something, you are more likely to see it." Well... USDA TO TRIAL IVERMECTIN IN FEED TO CONTROL SCREWWORM IN WILD โ zerohedge (@zerohedge) June 8, 2026 IVERMECTIN KILLS NEW WORLD SCREWWORMS IN BOTH HUMANS AND ANIMALS LIVESTOCK: 12 studies found 97%+ prevention of New World screwworm infestation in cattle wounds HUMANS: Documented complete larval elimination in severe oral and eye socket infestations "Horse pasteโ wins again. https://t.co/daZg7wgaim pic.twitter.com/3v1SnvoJMx โ Nicolas Hulscher, MPH (@NicHulscher) June 8, 2026 Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and USDA Secretary Brooke Rollins explained on Monday theย USDA's "War on Screwworm" plan to eradicate NWS.ย ๐งต Sec. Rollins outlines @USDAโs aggressive response to New World Screwworm: USDA is rapidly expanding sterile fly production and dispersal capacity, a core pillar of the federal eradication strategy. A dispersal facility in South Texas was launched last year, and tens ofโฆ pic.twitter.com/g998W7fy78 โ New World Screwworm Rapid Response (@Screwworm_RR) June 8, 2026 The rising number of NWS cases in the U.S. poses a threat to the nation's cattle herd if the spread runs rampant, especially with herd size already at a 75-year low, beef prices at record highs โฆ โฆand meatpackers under pressure from fewer and more expensive animals. We recommend that readers review the note from Goldman analyst Thiagoย Bortoluciย on NWS. Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 11:20
Gold & Silver: From Pullback To Perfect Setup Authored by Matthew Piepenburg via VonGreyerz.gold, With gold and silver having fallen by greater than 20% from their January highs of 2026, some have argued the gold trade is over. In fact, and as explained below, it is only just beginning. Trading vs. Investing Such misunderstandings are nothing new, as the difference between precious metal trading and precious metal investing is nothing new. Nor is there anything new about top-down misinformation andย misdirection given to Main Streetย when it comes to understanding gold and silver. Traders, both skilled and unskilled, tend to track near-term signals for immediate rates of return (long or short) while longer-term investors typically watch history, debt cycles and currency debasement with patient detachment and a steady eye toward wealth preservation. Such patience has served the longer-term, wealth-preservation-focused investors with greater returns (and calm) through periods of headline flux and geopolitical gyrations. Since 2000, gold has outperformed the S&P, and when compared against the major global paper currencies (down 94% since 2000), gold (up 1580% since 2000) has demonstrably outperformed fiat โmoney.โ Longer-term investors see this larger picture and trend. They donโt book losses in pullbacks because they understand the greaterย direction of the precious metal ballย in a debt-saturated and hence currency-debasement playing field. Comfort in Historical Fundamentals In short, the fundamentals ofย history, economics and hence currency debasementย confirm a clear pattern by desperately broke(n) nations to inflate their way out of debt at the expense of their currencies. This makes the longer, anti-fiat direction for gold and silverย almost too obvious, even in times of inevitable price retracements in the metals. Historical cycles and longer-term calm, however, are easily forgotten or ignored in times of crisis. Investors somehow think โthis time is different,โ or, even worse, they donโt think about history at all. Patterns: From Crisis to Gold Highs But for those looking for signals, as well as sanity confirmation, itโs worth remembering that inย everyย prior geopolitical and/or oil crisis (the OPEC embargo of 73, the Iranian Revolution of 79, the Gulf War of 91, the 9-11 disaster of 2001 or, more recently, the Ukraine/Russia crisis of 2022) there are clear patterns eerily similar to the current crisis surrounding the Iranian โconflict.โ Specifically, we are living within a template by which a geopolitical crisis sends the oil price up, which is followed by a rise in โinflation expectations,โ which in turn means central banks like the Fed canโt cut rates, and soon thereafterย the market, rather than central bankers, sets the rates. This explains why yields on the US 10Y Treasury Bond (the true cost of Uncle Samโs hideous bar tab) have risen by 75 basis points despite no active rate hikes by a Fed which couldnโt afford rate hikes even if they wanted them. In this same template, as yields rise, investors typically follow the streetโs traditional (yet now grossly mistaken) view that a yielding bond (from a broke issuer) is still better than a yield-less bar of gold. What typically follows is a herd-like move to bonds whose โpositiveโ nominal yields are measured in increasingly debased currencies and negative real returns when measured against actual rather thanย mis-reported inflation. The ironies do aboundโฆ But what fifty years of crisis patterns have also told usโat least for those paying attentionโis that gold tends to drop early in every crisis only to then recover at newer all-time-highs as the crisis plays out. During the 1973 OPEC embargo, for example, gold would dip and then participate in an historical, 4-digit upside in the seven years that followed. After a temporary retracement during the 1979 Iranian Revolution, gold rose by 90% in one year, and saw double-digit upside within weeks of the 1991 Gulf War. We saw similar dip-to-high surges in gold following the 9-11 tragedy. And as for the 2022 fiasco in Ukraine, gold broke 2000 not long after the crisis grew from threat to now ongoing reality. Patterns in Moving Averages But for those who still feel that history is no guide to future rhyming patterns, let us give equal respect to some of the key technical signals for the metals. In fact, these signalsโmost notably from the 200-day moving averages in gold and silverโare themselves just historical signals of a different flavor. More importantly, they are indicators which signal a rare opportunity in a time of crisis. Looking at both gold and silver, for example, each metal has fallen below its 200-day moving average. This is a powerfully bullish rather than bearish signpost. Silver Signals The last time silver fell below this average was in April of 2025, just before the metal, then trading at $27, ripped north at historical multiples and new highs. Prior to 2025, we saw similar bullish signals beneath silverโs 200-day line in 2020 (when silver was at $11) and in 2022 (when silver was at $17). Gold Signals Equally bullish technical signals are ringing from goldโs recent dip beneath its 200-day moving average. The last times we saw gold below this line it was trading in the $1500-$1600 range (2022) or the $1800 range (autumn of 2023). Thereafter, gold went 100% north 12 months out. From Pullback to Historical Set-Up Taken together, these fundamental as well as technical signals combine within a current as well as historical context which makes the current pullback in the metals a near perfect set-up rather than break-up for gold and silver. In fact, current conditions for the precious metals in 2026 are even more favorable than the prior patterns of the 1970โs discussed above. In 1973, for example, U.S. public debt was in the $500B, not $39T, range. Today, interest expense alone on American IOUs is twice the size of total US public debt in 1973. Think about that for a second. At debt this high and unsustainable, the debasement trade is no longer a meme; itโsย a fat pitch. The Structural Bid Few Understand In the 1970โs, moreover, central banks around the world were selling gold. As of this writing, and despite recentย forced gold sales out of Turkey and Saudi Arabia, central banks (from Poland to Asia) are net-buyers of gold. In fact, since the USA weaponized the world reserve currency in 2022, central bank gold purchasing has increased by 5X. These signals from the worldโs central banks are screaming signposts of a structural bid in the metals which most retail investors (who were spooked out of the trade at lows after buying at tops) are tragically missing. Evenย the commercial banksย have understood the patterns for gold after an oil crisis, and their price targets for the metal remain nearly twice current price levels. Thus, whether drawing from historical patterns or from moving-day-average signals, the question going forward is simple:ย Do you trust King Dollar or a โpet rockโ?ย Crowns of gold or crowns of paper? Time will tell, and time is clearly on the side of precious metals. Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 10:50
Trump's Economic Shield Cracks As Gas Prices And Iran Standoff Threaten Midterm Fortunes As we continue to 'enjoy' expensive gas across the country thanks to a broken campaign promise not to start new wars, President Donald Trump enters the 2026 midterm campaign with an unfamiliar vulnerability: voters are feeling the pain. High gasoline prices, fueled by the prolonged U.S. military confrontation with Iran and disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, have turned inflation into a daily political problem for the White House. Trump's approval ratings have fallen near the lowest point of either of his presidential terms, with especially sharp declines in approval over the economy - long one of his strongest political defenses.ย Public frustration over affordability, a concern that helped return him to the White House, has not eased. Source: RealClearPoliticsThe White House, meanwhile, is touting tax refunds delivered under last year's legislation, and the administration's promise of abundant domestic energy. But those messages have been overshadowed by the reality on Main St.ย "I think the president was being truthful when he said he really didn't care about the midterms," said Mick Mulvaney, former acting White House chief of staff. "But House and Senate Republicans do care. And if gas is still north of $4 by Labor Day, everybody in town knows that means trouble for the incumbent party. Big trouble." Even if the Iran war ended tomorrow, some economists think that the damage already done to oil infrastructure - and the risks of renewed fighting, will keep upward pressure on prices.ย "We think that the drag on the economy due to the war will weigh heavily on household consumption among middle-class, working-class and the working poor ahead of the November congressional election," saidย Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist at RSM US. Source: Bloomberg economist surveys. Note: Inflation = PCE price index. Consumer sentiment has weakened across party lines, including among Republicans and independents. Inflation reached 3.8% in April, while grocery prices posted their largest increase in nearly four years. Inflation-adjusted hourly earnings declined for the first time in three years, and the personal savings rate fell to a multi-year low. As we noted on Monday,ย Median inflation uncertainty, or the uncertainty expressed regarding future inflation outcomes, increased at the one-year and three-year-ahead horizons and decreased at the five-year-ahead horizon.ย What's Going Well Unemployment is still low by historical standards, with employers adding 172,000 jobs in May, capping the strongest three-month hiring stretch in more than two years. Separately, the household survey showed native-born employment rising by 294,000 in May, while foreign-born employment fell by 176,000.ย (compare April to May, table A-7). Consumer spending has also held up, helped in part by larger tax refunds for many households. Artificial intelligence investment - albeit a massive circle-jerk, continues to drive manufacturing expansion, producing the longest stretch of factory growth since 2022 and helping push stock markets to record highs. Trump frequently points to those gains as evidence that his economic program is working. Broadcom is backstopping a massive $36 billion private credit SPV with Apollo and Blackstone which will help Anthropic buy Google chips made by Broadcom, even as Google is renting compute from SpaceX while Morgan Stanley, which is arranging the deal, lends money to investors https://t.co/nI7QCVNFTi โ zerohedge (@zerohedge) June 9, 2026 But the benefits have been uneven. The share of national income going to workers through wages and salaries sits at an all-time low, reinforcing concerns about a K-shaped recovery. Corporate profits and asset values have surged for higher-income Americans, while many families continue to feel squeezed by everyday costs. "When moms and dads lie down to sleep at night and can't, one of the things they're most worried about is the cost of living," Louisiana Sen. John Kennedy told Bloomberg. "I think we have a good story to tell on what we've done... but I wish the president would talk more about it." And here come Midterms... Republicans hold a narrow House majority and face the historical headwind that typically confronts a president's party in midterm elections. Trump has warned that a Democratic House could pursue impeachment, as it did during his first term. The Senate majority appears more secure, but it could still be tested if economic frustration deepens in key states. That said, Trump is hardly limping into the midterms. Recent Republican primaries have shown his grip on the GOP remains intact, from Trump-backed Ed Gallreinโs ouster of Rep. Thomas Massie in Kentucky, to Andy Barrโs win in the Kentucky Senate primary after Trumpโs late endorsement, to Tommy Tubervilleโs landslide in the Alabama governor primary. But primary dominance may not translate to general-election resilience, especially if independents and working-class swing voters are voting on gas prices, grocery bills, mortgage rates and war fatigue. An idea: quickly end the war? Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 10:35
Will Saylor's Latest Bitcoin Buys "Hold The Line" Submitted by QTR's Fringe Finance Over the weekend, Iย posted a prediction on Xย after Strategyโsย sale of 32 bitcoinย helped tanked the market last week. I wrote: โPrediction: Saylor just bought way more than 32 BTC and will disclose it to โproveโ it was just an experiment & everything is really fine. He looks clever for buying 10x what he sold 30% lower for 24-48 hours. Then, the market sticks it up his ass anyway and crashes to $40K.โ Lo and behold, Monday morning, we got the announcement: Strategy has acquired 1,550 BTC for $101 million to increase ourย BTCย Reserve to โฟ845,256. We have also increased our USD Reserve by $100 million to $1.0 billion. To me, the headline isnโt really about 1,550 BTC. The headline is that Michael Saylor felt compelled to immediately reassert the bullish narrative after the controversy surrounding Strategyโs sale of 32 BTC. For years, Saylorโsย image has been built on a simple message: never sell. The moment that narrative cracked, even slightly, Bitcoin bears smelled blood. I feel like this purchase is an attempt to restore confidence. Not confidence in Strategyโs balance sheet. Confidence in the bitcoin story. And if it was done by selling MSTR shares at a discount, does it not defeat the purpose of the company? Peter Schiff immediately pointed out his take on the awkwardness of the situation: โAs damage control, @Saylor just announced $MSTR bought 1,550 BTC for $101 million while also increasing its U.S. dollar reserves by $100 million. If MSTR sold stock at a discount, that diluted Bitcoin per share. This doesnโt prove MSTR can sell Bitcoin, but that it canโt.โ Whether you agree with Schiff or not, heโs highlighting the exact issue Saylor is trying to address: perception. The market now has a simple question in front of it. Did Saylor just successfully reassure everyone that nothing has changed? Or did he just spend $101 million trying to stop a narrative that is already spreading? Thatโs why Bitcoinโs reaction from here matters far more than the purchase itself. BTC is stabilizing around $63,000 now. If it can hold this area and grind higher, Saylorโs buy looks like a perfectly timed show of confidence. The story becomes: โSee? The sale was nothing. The panic was overblown. Strategy bought more. Everything is fine.โ But if Bitcoin rolls over anyway? Then we can start talking about what happens when the proverbial turd meets the oscillating wind device. If BTC is trading $40,000-$50,000 a few weeks from now, nobody will remember the press release. Theyโll remember that Strategy possibly sold equity, bought Bitcoin at $65k, and failed to stop the market from falling. ๐ฅ 80% Off If You Subscribe Today.ย This coupon allows for 80% off of annual subscriptions and results in a 85%ย savings over paying the monthly rate for a subscription to the blog.ย You keep the discounted rate for as long as you wish to remain a subscriber.:ย Get 80% off forever And importantly, regardless of what happens, the buyer from this weekend is now out of the way again. The announcement creates a temporary psychological floor. Once the purchase is complete, however, the market loses that source of demand. The only thing left is whether organic buyers are willing to step in. Meanwhile, equity futures are higher now on renewed ceasefire hopes. Risk assets are getting a tailwind this morning. If futures stay green and Bitcoin canโt rally, thatโs notable. If futures reverse lower and Bitcoin follows them into the red, that could be an extremely ominous sign that the market, after Fridayโs wreckage, has possibly put in a top. If you ask me, this buy wasnโt really about acquiring another 1,550 BTC, it was about protecting the narrative that Bitcoin isnโt breaking down. And now the market gets to decide whether that narrative still works. Iโveย never been happier to be done actively tradingย and just sitting back and watching this freak show unfold like Iโm watchingย Love Islandย or some other reality TV show trash. QTRโs Disclaimer:ย Please read my full legal disclaimerย on my About page here.ย This post represents my opinions only.ย 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. They are either submitted to QTR by their author, reprinted under aย Creative Commons licenseย with my best effort to uphold what the license asks, or with the permission of the author. This is not a recommendation to buy or sell any stocks or securities, just my opinions. I often lose money on positions I trade/invest in. I may add any name mentioned in this article and sell any name mentioned in this piece at any time, without further warning. None of this is a solicitation to buy or sell securities. I may or may not own names I write about and are watching. Sometimes Iโm bullish without owning things, sometimes Iโm bearish and do own things. Just assume my positions could be exactly the opposite of what you think they are just in case. If Iโm long I could quickly be short and vice versa. I wonโt update my positions. As of May 20, 2026 I personally no longer actively trade (read my story here). Myย investing/saving is done by recurring contributions mostly to sector ETFs and a few select equities, trusted third parties who oversee my accounts, and advisors. Such advisors or funds, through individual equities, options, index funds, mutual funds, ETFs, or other securities, may have positions in, exposure to, or holdings of names mentioned herein that I know nothing about. Basically, via index funds, ETFs and individual equities it is possible I could own, have exposure to, or not own anything at any point. As of the same date, May 20, 2026, in anย attempt to lead a healthier lifestyle, Iโve also excluded myself from fantasy sports, sports betting, online and in-person casinos and prediction markets. And all positions can change immediately as soon as I publish this, with or without notice and at any point I can be long, short or neutral on any position. You are on your own.ย Do not make decisions based on my blog.ย 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 canโt guarantee I am right; I write these posts after a couple beers sometimes. I edit after my posts are published because Iโm 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 itโs that important. ย ย ย Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 10:20
US Existing Home Sales Unexpectedly Jumped In May, Inventories Surge With theย Spring selling season in tatters, existing home sales were expected to rebound in May very modestly (+1.1% MoM) off recent record lows, but instead they outperformed, rising at 3.2% MoM (and April's 0.2% MoM rise was revised higher to a +0.7% MoM rise). That lifted existing home sales up 3.22% YoY - the strongest since September 2025... Source: Bloomberg That beat lifted existing home sales SAAR to its highest level of the year (but not exactly signaling a trend)... Source: Bloomberg โMore Americans are on the move, with home sales rising to the highest level since December,โ Lawrence Yun, NARโs chief economist, said in a statement. โThis is great news for the housing market and the economy.โ Sellers are giving up some ground on price and โmeeting buyers where they are,โ Realtor.com said. In May, the median sales price of an existing home climbed 1.3% from a year ago to $429,300, NAR data show. Meantime, inventory rose slightly from a year ago to 1.55 million, the highest since July and representing 4.5 months of supply at the current sales pace. Sales rose in the South, Northeast and Midwest from a month earlier, while they were unchanged in the West. In the Midwest, transactions reached 1 million, the highest pace since April 2023. First-time buyers accounted for 35% of sales, compared with 33% a month earlier and 30% a year ago. Finally, it appears home sales are catching up to the prior decline in mortgage rates (but we note that rates have been rising since)... Source: Bloomberg โImproving affordability is helping drive this momentum,โ Yun said. Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 10:11
Trump-Netanyahu "Differences": A Good Cop-Bad Cop Routine By Michael Every of Rabobank As You Were... But As Who Was?ย Yesterday nearly saw a full restart of the Israel-Iran war, apparently pulled back from the brink by intervention from President Trump. After yet another Middle East rollercoaster for markets itโs now โas you wereโ, with oil --so everything else-- little changed. The larger issue behind that pricing, however, is the key question - โAs who was?โ Iran set up its proxy network, centered on terror group Hezbollah in Lebanon, to protect itself: if Israel attacked it, Hezbollah would attack Israel. However, Tehran now has to attack Israel, with counterattacks on it in response, to defend its โshieldโ. Thatโs a huge Iranian strategic setback. As such, Tehran is trying to tie Israel vs. Hezbollah to itself vs. the US to divide the US from Israel, which now have different needs: a deal vs. finishing the job militarily or via regime change. That dynamic has huge implications for when and how this war ends, so for energy, so for markets. While Israel and Iran say they will stop their attacks, Israeli PM Netanyahu last night gave a public address where he stated: โIran and Hezbollah are weaker than ever, and we are stronger than ever โ but our battle against them is still not finished. In the last 24 hours, Iran and Hezbollah tried to impose a new equation upon usโฆ an equation I find intolerable and unacceptable. They thought they would fire at Israel from Lebanese territory and from Iran โ and we would not act. That did not happen, and it will not happen. Not on my watch!... At the moment, we are holding our fire, because after we struck the terror regime in Tehran, it ceased attacking us. In the event that Iran makes the mistake of resuming attacks on us โ we will respond with overwhelming force.โ Moreover, Israel will hit Hezbollah in Beirut if it fires at Israel from south Lebanon, which Iran says is a red line that will trigger more attacks on the Jewish state, restarting this war. If Iran tells Hezbollah to ceasefire, markets can relax; If not, and Israel hits Hezbollah, Iran has to decide if it wants to fire at Israel - and restart the war; If Trump forces Israel to hold back vs. Hezbollah, Iran will have linked the two fronts and divided the US and Israel โ which likely sees more war. After all, Israelโs 1948 War of Independence, its 1967 Six-Day War, its 1981 attack on Iraqโs nuclear programme, and its 2007 strike against Syriaโs nuclear programme all took place against US wishes. To expect otherwise this time is unwise. Indeed, Trump-Netanyahu differences could be a good cop-bad cop routine to allow the US to push for a deal while Israel does the fighting. In the background, Yemenโs Houthis claim they will restart a maritime blockade of Israel in the Red Sea, which was applied far more broadly the last time they put it in place. Obviously, that can threaten cargo and energy flows at this juncture, as a US Navy F-18 struck and disabled an oil tanker in the Gulf of Oman and the EU hit Iranโs Navyโฆ with sanctions. In short, this crisis is far from over, even as Trump says โtotal victoryโ will be declared in the next two weeks as Iranian negotiators are โwilling to give us everything,โ and VP Vance added that the deal being discussed was โa home runโ for the US. Yet the inside baseball question remains which negotiators the US is talking to given local reports that contact has been lost with Supreme Leader Khamenei Jr. and another that IRGV leader Vahidi was killed in a recent Israeli strike. Elsewhere in geopolitics, Berlin says the Franco-German fighter jet project is dead, a major blow to future pan-European defence plans; Switzerland is weighing a Franco-Italian alternative to US air defences given a 5-year wait for the latter; and a French fighter jet shot down a suspected Russian drone in Latvian airspace. Thatโs as Germany claimed itโs ready to take the reins from the US in talks with Putin despite Russia rejecting Ukrainian and European peace initiatives, saying instead that the battlefield will decide the war โ but as Moscow pauses its CCTV systems after Israel hacked Iranโs to target its Supreme Leader. Back in the UK, a secret camera was found in the ceiling panel of the room in a sensitive government building where the decision was made to approve the new Chinese embassy. Showing how lines on the map can move as the driver of lines on the screen, the US is considering buying the Chagos Islands to take control of the strategic UK airbase on Diego Garcia; Mauritius, whom the UK is controversially trying to hand the islands to, is today demanding they get them ASAP to avoid that outcome. Chinaโs Xi Jinping, on a state visit, pledged โunwaveringโ support for North Korea, making some things crystal clear, as Bloomberg publishes its estimates for the economic damage from a war over Taiwan: $10 trillion, apparently. Which justifies or incentivizes doing what as insurance? In LatAm, Peru is set for lengthy vote count as its presidential race is still too close to call, and Colombia will see a presidential runoff ahead following the leftist Cepedaโs first round election loss. In geoeconomics, the US added Alibaba, BYD and other Chinese tech champions to its military company blacklist. Thatโs as Anthropic's Mythos can reportedly now exploit new software flaws in mere hours and OpenAI gets ready for its IPO, Trump is mirroring Bernie Sanders in arguing the state should get stakes in AI giants - and presumably not just in military and security areas but across the economic spectrum. To say we are moving the political-economy Overton Window is an understatement: at this stage are there any actual windows left? Indeed, could the walls and the roof fall in on conventional analysis using conventional wisdom? The European press talks of how โChina is killing Europeโs chemicals industry. Brussels wants to interveneโ and Franceโs Macron is reportedly to court China to get them to address trade imbalances โ offering and threatening what exactly? Indonesia is also weighing export rule exemptions for commodity traders to try to calm local markets after the recent de facto state control of that key area of the economy. At the same time, Trump's $100,000 H-1B visa fee was declared an unlawful โtaxโ by a US judge, as were his tariffs of course, which will now be appealed (was the lower via fee also a tax? If not, why not?). As you were thenโฆ but as who was? And what will we be soon โ besides confused? Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 09:45
Apollo And Blackstone Raise $35 Billion For Anthropic In One Of The Biggest Ever Private Credit SPV Deals Back in January, when we profiled Meta's landmark $27.3 billion SPV deal named "Beignet" for the Hyperion data center located in Louisiana, in which Blue Owl provided the private credit, we said to "expect hundreds of billions of these in 2026." As a reminder, META is already neck deep in off-balance sheet debt. Here is a schematic of its $27.3 billion SPV with Blue Owl "Project Beignet" for the Hyperion data center. None of this touches META's balance sheet. Expect hundreds of billions of these in 2026 https://t.co/794EgSiiZ9 pic.twitter.com/7hMyVW6Lno โ zerohedge (@zerohedge) January 29, 2026 Fast forward five months when we now read thatย Apollo and Blackstone have finalized a $35BN private credit deal that will help finance Anthropicโs growth plans, even as traditional "banks are choking" on the amount of AI debt they have to issue.ย The two private credit giants - which in a parallel universe are struggling with soaring redemption requests and gating retail investors in their private credit BDCs as documented here extensively in recent months - led the financing, one of the largest private credit deals completed, which will fund Anthropicโs purchase of Alphabet-developed chips. The deal, dubbed project โBig Skyโ, comes amid concerns that the AI frenzy has overheated the broader market. Shares in chipmakers rebounded on Monday after tumbling last week, led by Broadcomโs fall in market value.ย It also adds to a deluge of chip-backed loans that sparked debate over how quickly graphics processing units would depreciate as AI technology evolves. In this type of financing structure, a special-purpose vehicle raises capital through a mix of debt and equity to purchase the chips, which are then leased to a customer, in this case Anthropic. The debt is primarily backed by the resulting lease payments, along with the unknown long-term value of the chips.ย In this case, the $35 billion debt facility was structured across three tranches. The senior layers โ the $6 billion notes dubbed A1 and $24 billion of A2 notes โ are backed by Broadcom, allowing the debt to secure lower borrowing costs aligned with Broadcomโs strong credit profile. The notes received private ratings in the mid-investment grade tier. The transaction wrapped up days after Alphabet completed one of the largest equity offerings in history, as it looks to raise $85bn to fund Googleโs AI build-out, and as SpaceX prepares for a flotation that could raise a record $86bn. Anthropic also announced it had confidentially filed for an IPO shortly after its blockbuster $65bn private financing round. As discussed previously, the AI borrowing spree has reached beyond traditional US capital markets, where AI is expected to raise $400 billion in debt, rising to over $1 trillion through 2028 to meet roughly $1.8 trillion in capex needs over the next two years, according to Morgan Stanley... ... with Amazon raising C$14bn (US$10bn) on Monday in the largest ever Canadian dollar bond sale.ย Similar to Meta's Beignet deal,ย Anthropicโs deal with Apollo and Blackstone relies on a complex structure that private investment groups routinely use to finance start-ups with backing from blue-chip companies. A special purpose vehicle formed by Apolloโs Atlas SP Partners raised the debt and equity, with lease agreements for the chips ultimately supporting the value of the transaction. Per the FT, Apollo and Blackstone structured the loan across three tranches, with interest payments on the two senior segments backstopped by Broadcom. The chipmaker is making the so-called tensor processing units, or TPUs, with Google. Its agreement to provide support if Anthropic misses an interest payment helped vastly reduce the costs on the debt. The two senior portions of the debt were split between banks and investors. Some $6bn of so-called A1 notes were sold to banks with an interest rate 1% over Treasuries. A further $24bn of A2 notes were sold on to investors in asset-backed credit markets, priced with a yield of 5.75 per cent.ย Buyers of the A2 tranche included institutional investors like Apolloโs Athene insurance arm, which favors high-quality debt to back its long-term liabilities.ย The $4.5bn of junior debt, which is not supported by Broadcom and therefore exposes lenders more acutely to Anthropic, carried an interest rate of 8.5%. Investors were also offered an original issue discount of 98 cents to 99 cents on the dollar depending on cheque sizes. In other words, without the implicit guarantee from an investment grade guarantor - like Broadcom in this case - the cost of capital is roughly double.ย In addition to the debt, Apolloโs Atlas SP Partnersโ structured-finance unit provided $800 million in equity, meaning itโs effectively the owner of the SPV. A key feature of the deal is Broadcom providing a โresidual value supportโ agreement. That means that if Anthropic fails to make the lease payments for a certain period of time, the SPV will sell the chips to pay back the debt investors. If the value of the chips doesnโt make the debt investors whole, then Broadcom will make up the shortfall for 100% of the value owed to the A1 and A2 investors.ย ย This type of residual value feature has been used in another mega debt deal, though it financed the construction of a data center rather than chips. As noted above, Meta provided a similar protection for the value of its Hyperion facility in Louisiana - a transaction that Morgan Stanley arranged. That allowed the so-called Beignet bonds to trade in line with Metaโs corporate debt. For those whose head is spinning with the circularity involved, this is how we described the deal last week when it was first floated:ย Broadcom is backstopping a massive $36 billion private credit SPV with Apollo and Blackstone which will help Anthropic buy Google chips... made by Broadcom. Oh, and yes: Google owns 14% of Anthropic... *BROADCOM: WORK WITH APOLLO, BLACKSTONE SERVES OPENAI, ANTHROPIC Translation: Broadcom is backstopping a massive $36 billion private credit SPV with Apollo and Blackstone which will help Anthropic buy Google chips... made by Broadcom. โ zerohedge (@zerohedge) June 3, 2026 But wait, there's more... because if that wasn't enough,ย Morgan Stanley, which advised Broadcom and arranged the transaction, is also lending money to investors participating in the deal! And just because this is a "chip-backed" off-balance sheet SPV where nobody really knows who holds the debt, the monstrous circularity of all the deal aspects will be ignored until the AI credit bubble cracks.ย As for the punchline: demonstrating the insane frenzy of anything involving AI, investors involved in the deal did not even know what they were investing in!ย According to the FT, investors pitched on the deal were not given early access to Anthropicโs financials ahead of its IPO. Not everyone involved in the deal is a total idiot: some investors passed on the deal over the delayed-draw format of the debt, which drives down yields because the money can be withdrawn in multiple tranches over a period of time. Yet despite the smashing success of the deal, one glaring question remains. Recall, last week SpaceX penned a massive deal with Google (to urgently burnish the IPO candidate's financials just days ahead of its IPO), according to which Google will pay Elon Musk $920 million a month for access to about 110,000 Nvidia GPUs (unlike its hyperscaler peers, SpaceX has plenty of spare compute to rent out). And yet, despite seemingly telegraphing it is dramatically "compute constrained" as the SpaceX deal implies, it still has plenty of chip available that it can sell $35B of their chips to their biggest competitor, Anthropic. This wasn't the only such deal: just days prior, Anthropic (which will use proceeds from this private credit SPV to purchase Google chips made by Broadcom), agreed to pay $1.5 billion a month for access to 325,000 Nvidia GPU also held by SpaceX. No wonder these sham agreements were structured so they can be terminated by either party after December 2026.ย For those shaking their heads at these glaring examples of circular bubble euphoria, fear not: you will have plenty of opportunities to enjoy more such deals (going back to our point up top): Broadcom chief executive Hock Tan said the company hoped to connect โinvestor partners with the strongest balance sheets to deliver at scale sufficient compute capacity at the lowest costโ, pointing to the deal with Apollo and Blackstone as the first of many transactions to come. Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 09:15
House Report Finds Minnesota Officials Ignored Fraud To Avoid Racism Accusations A House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform report released Monday paints a devastating picture of both Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and state Attorney General Keith Ellison, finding that they both knew about widespread fraud in state social services programs and failed to act. The report centers on the Feeding Our Future scandal, in which a Minnesota-based nonprofit systematically exploited federal COVID-19 relief funds intended to provide meals to children. So far, more than 60 people have already been found guilty of fraud in connection with the scheme, the majority of whom are of Somali descent. Some defendants used stolen taxpayer money to buy luxury goods, while others funneled proceeds to a radical Islamic terrorist group operating in Somalia. At least $300 million in federal child nutrition funds were placed at serious risk, and approximately $9 billion in Medicaid losses resulted from the broader fraud environment state officials allowed to fester. "Fraud warnings were elevated to the most senior levels of the Minnesota state government, meaningful corrective action was delayed or avoided, and payments continued long after credible signs of fraud emerged," the report states. Senior officials in Walz's office and Ellison's office knew about systemic fraud concerns as early as 2019 within the Minnesota Department of Human Services and, by April 2020, within the state Department of Education, the report says, directly contradicting Walz's and Ellison's public statements. This matters because both men held legal authority to cut off payments to fraudulent operators. Neither exercised it, even though Walz was aware of the suspected fraud in Feeding Our Future by 2020, and the payments continued. The fraudsters didn't just know how to exploit the system for financial gain; they knew how to blackmail state officials to keep their scheme going. When workers inside the Department of Education tried to audit child care and nutrition programs, providers accused them of racism. The accusation worked. Officials backed down despite holding evidence that funds were being fraudulently diverted. Dozens of human services department staff were warned, explicitly, that raising fraud concerns would get them labeled as racists and damage the government's reputation. Some were pulled into supervisory meetings. Others were excluded from the very internal discussions about the fraud they had flagged. And the directive to look the other way from the fraud came from the top down. One Minnesota Department of Education official who first contacted the FBI about Feeding Our Future told investigators her supervisors pressured her to stop investigating "at every turn" and that she got her "hand slapped" for continuing to look into it. Staff feared reporting fraud to the Homeland Security Office of Inspector General because that agency would notify the Commissioner or HR, who would then retaliate against them. The internal culture the Walz administration built was one in which accountability was the threat, not the fraud. Rather than combating the fraud, the Walz administration spent resources monitoring employees to keep them in line. The priority, the report shows, was getting ahead of press coverage about the fraud, not stopping it. "Minnesota Governor Tim Walz and Attorney General Keith Ellison are responsible for one of the most stunning oversight failures this Committee has ever examined," Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer said in a statement. "Today's report is the culmination of months of investigative work and reveals hard evidence showing how the Walz Administration failed to stop widespread fraud, allowing criminals to enrich themselves at the expense of American taxpayers. Billions of dollars were stolen because Minnesota state leaders turned a blind eye to rampant fraud and retaliated against state employees who dared to raise concerns. It is now clear the Walz Administration chose to protect the system rather than protect the taxpayer." The report makes clear that this fraud wasn't some bureaucratic mistake or a problem that went unnoticed. Senior officials were repeatedly warned about what was happening. They chose not to act in order to preserve their political relationship with Minnesota's Somali community, manage the fallout, and sideline the employees who were raising red flags and trying to stop it. Tyler Durden Tue, 06/09/2026 - 09:00




