CMR is the leading provider
of funding and management
support for small to
medium-sized businesses and
entrepreneurs
Established 1984 C MR
is the leading venture
capital, management
support and business
services provider for
small to medium-sized
businesses - linking
excellent management
skills with the
substantial financial
resources of a global bank
of private investors.
CMR has over 450 senior
executives, operating
in the UK, USA, Europe, Asia,
Australasia and
globally,
providing both funding and
specialist help for
entrepreneurial
businesses .
For Businesses
CMR provides excellent
resources:
CMR FundEX Business Exchange - gives all companies & entrepreneurs direct access to CMR's global investor base.
CMR Catalyst Group
Programme -
transform
profitability through
merging.
CMR Company Sales Division helps owners to exit
at the best price.
CMR Corporate Recovery
Division -
experts in rescue and
turnaround.
CMR Technology Licensing
Division -
commercialising
innovation.
CMR Executive
Professionals - management support
and consultancy.
CMR Executives-on-Demandâ„¢ Fully experienced
senior executives
available quickly and
cost effectively.
We always welcome
contact with new
business clients- please get in touch
- we will do our
best to match
your needs and exceed
your expectations.
For Investors
Preferential access to new opportunities for investment and/or acquisition
P re-vets
propositions and
provides a
personalised service
to our investors
Syndication service
enabling investors to
link together as desired
Executive and
management support for
investments as needed
CMR's services to
our investors are not
only fast & efficient
but also free
W e
always appreciate new
members- you are welcome
to join as an investor
or as a CMR Executive.
When you
join us as a Senior
Executive:
CMR's strength is in the
skills and experience of
our executive members -
all senior, director level
people with years of
successfully running and
managing companies.
Because the demand for
CMR's support and services
is ever-increasing,
especially as we enter
recessionary times, we
have a growing need for
more high calibre
executives to join us from
every industry and
discipline.
You will be using your
considerable experience to
help smaller businesses
and entrepreneurs to grow
profitably.
We offer full training
and mentoring support to
help maximise potential.
We are
always keen to find more
high calibre senior
executives in all areas-
skills and location.
Make contact with us today
and maximise your
opportunities.
HEAD
OFFICE
124 City Road
London EC1 2NX
Tel: +44 (0)207-636-1744
Fax:+44 (0)207-636-5639
Email: cmr@cmruk.com
Registered Office:
124 City Road ,
London EC1 2NX
Also Glasgow,
Dublin, Switzerland, Europe, USA/Canada
Privacy Statement: CMR only
retains personal details
supplied directly by executives
joining CMR themselves either as
Full Executive Members or
Interim Management Members or
Investors. Those details are
only used within CMR and not
disclosed to any third parties
without that person’s
agreement. We will keep that
data until requested by the
person to be removed – at that
point it will be deleted.
Personal data is never sold or
used for purposes outside of
CMR’s normal operations. Any
correspondence should be
directed to the Managing
Director, CMR,
Kemp House,
152-160 City Road, London EC1V
2N
Senior Executives
CMR is a worldwide network of senior executives. Join us to expand your career and business horizons.
Business Entrepreneurs
CMR has a complete range of resources & services provided by experts to help all businesses to grow and prosper.
Investors & Venturers
CMR has a continuous stream of business and funding propositions, which are matched to investor preferences. Join us - it's FREE!
FundEX
FundEX is CMR's worldwide stock market for small to medium sized companies and entrepreneurs to raise new capital.
Interim & Permanent Management
Many of CMR's executives can be recruited on an interim, permanent or NED basis.
Login
Main CMR Intranet members only
Regional Intranets
Thu, 26 Feb 2026 16:40:00 +0000 Biden-Appointed Judge Rules Illegal Immigrants Can Dispute Third Country Deportations
Biden-Appointed Judge Rules Illegal Immigrants Can Dispute Third Country Deportations
Biden-Appointed Judge Rules Illegal Immigrants Can Dispute Third Country Deportations
Authored by Stacy Robinson via The Epoch Times,
A federal judge ruled on Feb. 25 that the government cannot deport illegal immigrants to so-called third countries without giving them “meaningful notice” and an opportunity to dispute their removal.
In Wednesday’s ruling, Massachusetts District Judge Brian Murphy (nominated by President Biden on March 21, 2024 ) declared unlawful two policy memos, one by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and another by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Those memos said that if the U.S. had received credible diplomatic assurances from a third country that deportees would not face persecution or torture, they could be sent there without any extra procedures.
“[DHS] has adopted a policy whereby it may take people and drop them off in parts unknown ... and, ‘as long as the Department doesn’t already know that there’s someone standing there waiting to shoot ... that’s fine,’” he wrote .
“It is not fine, nor is it legal.”
Murphy ruled that federal regulations required that illegal immigrants be deported to either their home country, or another country as designated by an immigration judge.
They also have the right to “raise a country-specific claim” against being deported to a third country, he wrote.
The case started last March, when four plaintiffs filed a class-action suit after the government tried to deport them to countries other than their home nation, without notice or opportunity to object to their destination.
In April, the judge expanded the class of plaintiffs to include anyone with a final removal order to a third country after Feb. 18, 2025.
Murphy blocked those removals on April 18, but on May 21 he found the government had violated his order by removing six individuals to South Sudan in Africa. He ordered the government to provide them with lawyers and hearings on whether they were afraid to live in that country.
In the meantime, the federal government appealed to the Supreme Court, which stayed Murphy’s order in June.
In its stay application , the government said the lower court proceedings were “usurping the Executive’s authority over immigration policy,” and “ wreaking havoc on the third country removal process.” It characterized some of the deportees as “criminal aliens who had been in the country for years or decades after receiving final orders of removal, despite having committed horrific crimes,” including sexual assault and murder.
The same day the Supreme Court stayed his April ruling, Murphy issued an order saying his May directive was still in effect, since the government had not included it in their petition. The justices had to issue a follow-up clarification saying it had intended to invalidate both of the judge’s rulings.
In a brief, unsigned order, the majority said Murphy was attempting to use his May directive—granting the deportees lawyers and hearings—to enforce the ruling from April, which he could not do.
Justice Elena Kagan, in a short opinion, noted that she didn’t want to halt Murphy’s decision from last April.
“But a majority of this Court saw things differently, and I do not see how a district court can compel compliance with an order that this Court has stayed.”
Murphy has suspended his own Feb. 25 ruling for 15 days, giving the government time to ask an appeals court to halt it for a longer period. He wrote that he didn’t think the government’s legal argument was strong, but noted that the Supreme Court had stayed his previous, temporary block on the DHS policy.
“Ultimately, this Court could be missing something in the final analysis,” he wrote.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 02/26/2026 - 11:40 Close
Thu, 26 Feb 2026 16:31:20 +0000 PayPal Slides After Report Says Stripe Not In Takeover Talks
PayPal Slides After Report Says Stripe Not In Takeover Talks
Bloomberg's multi-day storytelling began late Monday morning with a report that a " Read more.....
PayPal Slides After Report Says Stripe Not In Takeover Talks
Bloomberg's multi-day storytelling began late Monday morning with a report that a "large rival suitor " and other firms were circling PayPal in a potential takeover bid. By late Tuesday in the cash session, the outlet reported that payment processor Stripe had expressed interest in the platform.
Now, just moments ago, Semafor reports "PayPal isn't currently in talks to sell itself — to Stripe or anyone else — and has been working for months with bankers to prepare for a potential activist campaign or unwanted takeover bid ."
Semafor's report, like Bloomberg's, was based on people familiar with the matter, which makes the gap between the two reports very notable.
Here's more from Semafor:
The process followed a steep decline in PayPal shares that executives worried could leave the company vulnerable, the people said. Bankers began working with PayPal under former CEO Alex Chriss, who was ousted earlier this year. Bloomberg reported that Stripe is considering an acquisition of all or parts of PayPal this week. PayPal declined to comment. Incoming CEO Enrique Lores officially starts next week.
Bloomberg's reporting sent PayPal shares in New York up nearly 19% in the first half of the week. However, those gains are beginning to be eroded by the Semafor report, with the stock down about 4% as of 11:25 ET.
Who to believe: Bloomberg or Semafor?
Tyler Durden
Thu, 02/26/2026 - 11:31 Close
Thu, 26 Feb 2026 16:20:00 +0000 "Gold For Me Is A Savings Product": Rick Rule On Debt, Oil Cycles, & Uranium's Political Reversal
"Gold For Me Is A Savings Product": Rick Rule On Debt, Oil Cycles, & Uranium's Political Reversal
Last night’s discussion featuring Rick Rule , Bill Fleckenstein , and Erik Townsend c
Read more.....
"Gold For Me Is A Savings Product": Rick Rule On Debt, Oil Cycles, & Uranium's Political Reversal
Last night’s discussion featuring Rick Rule , Bill Fleckenstein , and Erik Townsend covered the macro landscape from hard assets to energy markets and nuclear policy.
Below are highlights from Rule’s remarks. (We recommend readers listen to Fleckenstein and Townsend’s full comments in the complete debate, linked at the bottom.)
Gold: “I Have No Interest In Selling”
Rule made clear he views gold not as a trade, but as monetary insurance.
Nominal yields on Treasuries offer little protection if purchasing power continues to erode.
“Owning the U.S. 10-year Treasury getting paid 4.1%, 4.2% in a currency where I think the real deterioration of the purchasing power is limping along to some number more like eight doesn’t make me feel comfortable.”
Rule pointed to structural fiscal imbalances, debt, deficits, and what he estimates at roughly $120 trillion in unfunded entitlement liabilities as the core risk. Policymakers can either default in real terms or inflate away the burden .
“I think they take door two.”
Until he sees a credible political resolution to debt and entitlement obligations and what he considers genuinely positive real yields on fiat savings products, Rule said he has “no interest in selling” his gold.
“Gold for me is a savings product.”
Oil: Short-Term Oversupply, Long-Term Capital Shortage
On oil, Rule was nuanced.
“I believe in the very, very near term that oil is ahead of itself,” he said, citing geopolitical headlines and “news traders in the market.” For the next year to 18 months, he sees a “plurality of supply over demand,” reflecting a softer global economy.
But beneath that near-term slack, he sees a longer-term issue: underinvestment .
Rule estimates global underfunding of sustaining capital in the oil industry exceeds “a billion dollars a day.” In U.S. shale, where “75, 80% of the net present value of the well is 18 months,” reduced reinvestment eventually constrains output.
Ccapital responses are delayed but cyclical. The post-COVID rebound saw oil shoot from $20 oil to $90 after investment froze. Rule suggested that if today’s capital discipline persists, the industry could face a production problem by 2028–2029 .
While “nowhere near as bullish” as he was previously, he added: “I still feel quite good about the sector for the five-year time frame.”
Uranium: From “Wanted Poster” To Subsidies
“Five years ago in the uranium industry, I expected to see a picture of myself in a post office wall with a caption wanted . Now the same morons want to subsidize me. ”
Tthe key development is not futuristic reactor technology but politics. Even conventional reactor builds, if pursued at scale, can lower costs through repetition, as demonstrated by China’s serial construction model.
While Rule cautioned that demand growth 10–15 years out does little for present net asset value calculations, he emphasized that the policy turn itself is meaningful. It is the primary catalyst and one that will likely lead to a faster pace of reactor construction… which should reward uranium mining investors or anyone that uses electricity.
“Reliable, abundant, baseload power that doesn’t generate carbon… talk about the well-being of humankind.”
For the full exchange, including commentary from Bill Fleckenstein and Erik Townsend, listen to the complete debate below.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 02/26/2026 - 11:20 Close
Thu, 26 Feb 2026 15:40:00 +0000 US Demands Iran Dismantle Its 3 Main Nuclear Sites In Hours-Long Talks
US Demands Iran Dismantle Its 3 Main Nuclear Sites In Hours-Long Talks
US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner held more than three hours of negotiations with Iranian Foreign Minister
Read more.....
US Demands Iran Dismantle Its 3 Main Nuclear Sites In Hours-Long Talks
US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner held more than three hours of negotiations with Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi in Geneva on Thursday in a push to secure a breakthrough on a nuclear deal, with the Omani foreign minister saying the talks will resume later after a pause.
It's being reported that the message Kushner and Witkoff deliver to Trump after the meeting will shape the president's decision on whether the launch a military attack on Tehran or refrain for implementation of a permanent deal. While Trump declared in Tuesday's State of the Union that he prefers diplomacy, he also presented a direct case for war - something which remains deeply unpopular among the American people .
via X
In these and other indirect talks, Omani Foreign Minister Badr al-Busaidi relayed messages between the sides, and then another format has involved direct discussions between US and Iranian negotiators.
Iran presented its long-awaited draft proposal for a nuclear agreement, though not much in the way of details have been revealed. International Atomic Energy Agency Director General Raphael Grossi was among those who participated in the negotiations.
Omani Foreign Minister Badr al-Busaidi, the main mediator, said of the Thursday talks that "we've been exchanging creative and positive ideas" and "hope to make more progress."
Meanwhile, a former head of the IAEA has warned that all wars, "including 'wars of choice' have horrific costs " as fears of major conflict between the US and Iran escalate.
Reports that Thursday talks stalled after US side demanded zero enrichment ...
"The US is intensifying the drumbeat of war against Iran, with zero explanation of the non-existent legal authority to use force and zero evidence of an ‘imminent threat’ other than hypothetical scenarios based on possible future intentions ," Mohamed ElBaradei wrote on X.
"That is the reason for the restraints and limitations established by international norms… This is Iraq redux … it seems we never learn," he emphasized.
Fresh reporting in The Wall Street Journal has laid out the main US sticking points :
In the talks, now under way in Geneva, the U.S. negotiators were expected to make clear Iran must dismantle its three main nuclear sites —at Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan —and deliver all of its remaining enriched uranium to the U.S., officials said.
They were also expected to insist that any nuclear deal must last forever and not sunset —the way restrictions rolled off over time under a nuclear pact negotiated under the Obama administration that Republicans have long said was too weak. Trump pulled out of that deal, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, in his first term, reimposing tough sanctions on Iran.
These are the very nuclear sites that the US said time and again it "obliterated" during the June war. This comes off Vice President J.D. Vance just the day prior stating that the White House "has seen evidence" that Iran is attempting to build a nuclear weapon .
So Washington is going from proclaiming Iran's nuclear sites were obliterated to now saying there's evidence of the Iranians trying to clandestinely build a nuclear warhead. Of course, no evidence or so much as a reference to some kind of intelligence report has been presented to the world.
There are indeed mounting concerns that history is about to repeat itself, but this time there's possibly many more American troops in harm's way, given the significant reach and capabilities of Iran's ballistic missiles and long-range drones.
* * *
And, well, which is it?
Tyler Durden
Thu, 02/26/2026 - 10:40 Close
Thu, 26 Feb 2026 15:20:00 +0000 One Battle After Another
One Battle After Another
By Michael Every of Rabobank
One Battle After Another
US and Iranian negotiators meet in Geneva today to hear Tehran’s final offer but reports of what they have to s
Read more.....
One Battle After Another
By Michael Every of Rabobank
One Battle After Another
US and Iranian negotiators meet in Geneva today to hear Tehran’s final offer but reports of what they have to say suggests we should prepare for the worst even if Iran sees a “good outlook” for today’s talks. The Kan news agency claims it will only agree to lower uranium enrichment from 60% to 3.67% for seven years, won’t hand over previously enriched material, dismantle the ballistic missile program President Trump just stated can already hit Europe and will soon be able to reach the US, and won’t stop its support for regional terror proxies.
US negotiator Witkoff, seen by critics as a soft touch, says a nuclear deal should last indefinitely while the above is a rehash of the JCPOA Trump spent years deriding (and whose backers often fail to note coincided with Iran processing uranium far beyond the agreed limits in secret underground bunkers). Indeed, VP Vance claimed there’s evidence Iran is trying to rebuild its nuclear program, which provides a US casus belli. It’s already imposed new sanctions on it.
In terms of the framing, Politico claims White House officials believe “the politics are a lot better” if Israel strikes Iran first, which would allow the admin to sell a defensive action in support of an ally. That’s unlikely to be an obstacle to action as soon as Indian PM Modi, who yesterday addressed the Knesset to stand firmly behind Israel “at this moment and beyond”, is wheels up to home later today . Also note the US Navy fleet in Bahrain has taken to sea to avoid a potential Pearl Harbor scenario, and another 12 F-22s are about to leave the UK heading east, joining 11 already there. Pay additional attention to Iran’s threat to escalate if attacked, breaking precedent not to do so regionally beyond Israel and/or token efforts: this is not the same playbook as the past.
This week also saw reported concerns an attack could involve US casualties and deplete munition stockpiles needed against contingencies in Asia . It would be a shocking error if either thought wasn’t front of mind before military pressure began: that points to underlying confidence in what the US has in store, and Iran doesn’t, or a gamble. Yet at this point the US cannot retreat without losing crucial global deterrence power : Iran is a military minnow compared to the States and any stand down would see supplies of Chinese weapons to Tehran step up so a repeat US exercise in years to come would be far more risky and/or unlikely.
In short, the US may be hoping to flip Iran into its camp via regime change. That would be a stunning geopolitical coup . Yet things could go wrong on multiple fronts, which could prove the coup de grace for much of what Trump is trying to achieve on them all.
One other thing needs to be underlined: US success would entrench Trumpism and demolish planned global alternatives; yet failure would do nothing to return ‘rules-based order’ or a benign free-trade backdrop for under-armed and over-dependent ‘middle powers ’. It would instead open a Pandora’s Box of instability and volatility across geographies and sectors. As just one example, the IMEC (India-Middle East-Europe Economic Corridor) Modi fulsomely backed in Israel --which will initially involve Cyprus, Greece, and likely Italy, Bulgaria, and Romania-- can hardly thrive with a destabilised or antagonised Iran at its centre. There’s a lot more for markets to think about than oil and gas, important and volatile as they are (as the Saudis boost oil output and exports for an Iran attack contingency, and Iran has ramped up oil tanker loadings for the same reason).
US-Ukraine discussions will also continue in Geneva today: it’s unclear if we will see any breakthrough there either given Russia also needs to sign off – and again note talks are happening in Europe, without Europe . Markets don’t seem to be focusing on that dynamic vs the so-called ‘Sell US’ trend, but in the long run it matters. Also note Hungary’s Orbán has deployed troops to guard energy sites over an alleged Ukraine threat to them.
It's hardly quiet elsewhere: Cuba sunk a US vessel that had strayed into its waters, killing four Americans ; Afghanistan threatened Pakistan and accused the latter of supporting ISIS; and UK PM Starmer’s controversial Chagos deal descended into chaos, with a minister telling MPs the process has been paused, then No 10 and the Foreign Office saying it’s still proceeding.
In geoeconomics, the USTR underlined that the US aims to keep China tariffs steady in a 35-50% range ahead of the Xi-Trump meeting , while the universal tariff will be hiked from 10% to 15% “where appropriate.” The USTR also underlined the US wants a deal with Canada where it imposes some sectoral tariffs --as Canada long has on the US-- and Ottawa agrees to prevent transshipment from China and Vietnam, etc.; that’s as the Chinese press suggest threatening Canada with a USMCA exit may push it into Beijing’s arms “as a hedge .” Which would then threaten North American geopolitics/economics being dragged through a hedge backwards. Chancellor Merz called for rebalancing Germany’s “unhealthy” trade ties with China. ‘How?’ is the question, as some note that many of the German CEOs travelling with him are still keen on shifting their domestic manufacturing to China and exporting it home from there.
Crucially, Zimbabwe imposed a ban on all exports of all raw minerals and lithium concentrate, as it wants crucial midstream processing to be done domestically to help it move up the value-added ladder in our new resource-centric global great game. Who will respond to that faster – China or the US? (Europe is not yet being mentioned in the mix.) Unrelated, the CME had to halt trading on its flagship metals market for more than an hour again yesterday due to “technical” issues. That does speak to how what we once thought was the global architecture is rapidly breaking down.
In AI space, the Pentagon reportedly took its first step toward blacklisting Anthropic ; China’s DeepSeek is to withhold its latest AI model from US chipmakers including Nvidia, an interesting reversal ; Canada told OpenAI to boost safety measures or be forced to by the government; and further upstream, France and Sweden are pushing to kill the mechanism to pay for massive EU grid upgrades needed to run AI at scale, among other things.
In the background, higher defence spending helped lift global debt to a record $348 trillion in 2025 , according to the IIF --what could go wrong there on either defence or debt?-- as the IMF urged Trump to change course on economic policy and stop cutting government jobs. Do these two agencies talk much? And against that backdrop, the Australian financial press today reports: ‘‘Astounding’: No affordable houses for first home buyers in any city ’. Let’s just say some of us aren’t astounded by it at all.
Let’s finish with some related Fed-speak. Outgoing Atlanta Fed President Bostic yesterday published his farewell essay, in which he noted, “…the legal and rhetorical battles raging around the central bank right now have caused people across a wide cross-section of our population to begin to doubt the Fed’s independence. This is a major concern…. I won’t be part of the Fed when we see resolutions of these battles. I will be watching closely and hoping that wisdom grounded in the profound success of the US economy over many years prevails.”
Indeed, may wisdom --and good luck -- prevail on multiple fronts. I fear we are going to need it.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 02/26/2026 - 10:20 Close
Thu, 26 Feb 2026 15:00:00 +0000 World Economic Forum Boss Borge Brende Quits As Epstein Fallout Deepens
World Economic Forum Boss Borge Brende Quits As Epstein Fallout Deepens
The Jeffrey Epstein fallout continues to spread across the corporate and political worlds, with new headlines daily. Bill Gates told foundation staff earlier t
Read more.....
World Economic Forum Boss Borge Brende Quits As Epstein Fallout Deepens
The Jeffrey Epstein fallout continues to spread across the corporate and political worlds, with new headlines daily. Bill Gates told foundation staff earlier this week, "I did nothing illicit ." Goldman Sachs' top lawyer, Kathy Ruemmler , stepped down last week over her ties, and former Prince Andrew was arrested on suspicion of misconduct related to sending Epstein trade documents.
Now, the World Economic Forum chief executive, Børge Brende, is stepping down following an investigation by the organization into his connections with the convicted sex offender.
WEF released a statement on its website announcing that Brende has decided to step down, and that Alois Zwinggi will serve as Interim President and CEO.
"After careful consideration, I have decided to step down as President and CEO of the World Economic Forum," Brende wrote in a statement.
He said, "I am grateful for the incredible collaboration with my colleagues, partners, and constituents, and I believe now is the right moment for the Forum to continue its important work without distractions."
The WEF launched a probe into Brende earlier this month, or at least publicly announced one, over his connections to Epstein, including attending at least three "business dinners" and exchanging emails and text messages with the sex offender.
Brende and Epstein communicated over email between 2018 and 2019 about meeting at the sex offender's New York mansion for dinner.
And this.
In April 2018, Brende wrote , "Missing you, Sir. Borge."
In a previous statement, Brende said he was "completely unaware of Epstein's past and criminal activities."
Perhaps Brende's assistant should have run a background check on Epstein, or at the very least, a very simple Google search. Epstein was first arrested by Palm Beach, Florida, authorities in 2006. In 2008, he pleaded guilty to two prostitution-related charges, one involving a victim under 18. He was arrested again in 2019 on federal sex-trafficking charges.
This is yet more negative press for the WEF cult, which has a unified vision in which people own nothing, eat bugs, and are told to be happy about it. That left-wing globalist agenda is fundamentally at odds with an America First worldview. Perhaps the Trump administration should host its own rival gathering next year - an "American Economic Forum."
Tyler Durden
Thu, 02/26/2026 - 10:00 Close
Thu, 26 Feb 2026 14:25:00 +0000 Biden's FBI Secretly Obtained Kash Patel And Susie Wiles' Phone Records, But NYT Says It's Cool
Biden's FBI Secretly Obtained Kash Patel And Susie Wiles' Phone Records, But NYT Says It's Cool
When Special Counsel Jack Smith was investigating Donald Trump and people in his orbit, he ended up surveilling then-pr
Read more.....
Biden's FBI Secretly Obtained Kash Patel And Susie Wiles' Phone Records, But NYT Says It's Cool
When Special Counsel Jack Smith was investigating Donald Trump and people in his orbit, he ended up surveilling then-private-citizen Kash Patel, and Trump Chief of Staff Susie Wiles during 2022 and 2003.
Patel, now head of the FBI, told Reuters on Wednesday that he found out about this, and the FBI buried the files in a "Prohibited" category deep within the bureau's computer system so they would be extremely difficult to find.
Getting down to it - the subpoenas targeted metadata showing who called whom and when - called 'toll records,' as well as a recorded a call between Susie Wiles and her lawyer - which her lawyer knew about and didn't tell her, according to Fox News . Technically, under federal law, the government can obtain toll records with just a subpoena and no warrant . Investigators insist they routinely pull toll records from prominent figures to establish timelines and verify involvement. Smith himself testified to Congress that records seized from Republican senators during the January 6 probe helped confirm the timeline of events, that no content was captured, and that his office followed all legal requirements.
Hours after Kash told Reuters his side of the story, insiders on team blue ran to the NY Times to let them know that Patel has sacked 'about 10 FBI employees, some veteran agents' as part of a "rolling revenge" tour on members of Smith's team.
The boys jumped into action:
The firings are part of a rolling barrage of retribution aimed at those who worked on the two federal prosecutions of Mr. Trump after his first term in office. They came hours after Kash Patel, the F.B.I. director, told Reuters that as part of the documents inquiry, the bureau had subpoenaed phone metadata for himself and Susie Wiles, currently the White House chief of staff. -NYT
To summarize:
Team Trump: The Biden FBI surveilled Kash and Susie, then tried to hide it.
Team NYT leakers: That was perfectly normal, Kash is drunk on power and getting revenge.
And of course, the NYT assures us:
Requests for phone records are common in complex criminal investigations to establish timelines and provide proof of communication. It remains unclear if the F.B.I.’s Trump-appointed leaders have accused employees of wrongdoing. In the past, they have not. In some cases, firings have violated procedural safeguards created to protect agents from politically motivated dismissal, according to agents and their lawyers.
But, wait a sec - the Reuters story had the 'prohibited' category aspect front and center...
And yet, NYT:
Which is odd, because the 'prohibited' designation made them deliberately difficult to locate and effectively shielded them from oversight. He says he discovered the records only after taking over as FBI director and has since eliminated the bureau's ability to classify files that way.
The seizure of the phone records was essentially covered up, which is not something you tend to do if it was all above board.
"It is outrageous and deeply alarming that the previous FBI leadership secretly subpoenaed my own phone records - along with those of now White House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles — using flimsy pretexts and burying the entire process in prohibited case files designed to evade all oversight," Patel said.
Smith’s spokesperson declined to comment on Wednesday about Patel's specific allegations. Neither Joe Biden, former Attorney General Merrick Garland, nor former FBI Director Christopher Wray offered any comment for the story.
Nevertheless, the timeline raises its own questions.
Patel was called before a grand jury in 2022 after receiving limited immunity , during which he told prosecutors that Trump had declassified the documents taken to Mar-a-Lago. Wiles, for her part, became a close Trump adviser after his 2021 departure from office and eventually co-managed his 2024 presidential campaign. The record collection stretched into that campaign period.
Reuters could not independently establish what records the FBI obtained or who approved the subpoenas. The news agency also couldn’t ascertain if Patel or Wiles themselves were under investigation and, if so, why. Both were close to Trump during this period, as he built toward and ultimately launched his campaign to reclaim the presidency in 2024.
Both Patel and Wiles were known to have been interviewed by investigators as part of Smith’s investigation into Trump’s retention of classified documents following his first term.
In 2023, the FBI recorded a phone call between Wiles and her attorney, according to two FBI officials. Wiles' attorney was aware that the call was being recorded, and consented to it, but Susie Wiles was not.
Smith was appointed special counsel in November 2022 to lead two federal probes: one into Trump's handling of classified documents at Mar-a-Lago, and another into alleged efforts to “overturn” the 2020 election. He charged Trump with felonies in 2023 on both fronts. A federal judge dismissed the case involving the documents. Smith dropped the election interference appeal after Trump won the November 2024 election.
This latest bombshell comes in the wake of another stunning disclosure : internal FBI emails from around the time of the August 2022 raid on Mar-a-Lago , which appear to directly contradict the Biden administration’s insistence that then-President Joe Biden had no prior knowledge of the search of President Donald Trump’s home. The records also revealed just how hard the Justice Department leaned into the push for a search of Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate—despite concerns within the FBI about whether the evidence actually justified such an aggressive move.
Patel says he doesn't know why investigators wanted his and Wiles' records. That's notable for someone who now sits atop the FBI. The bureau collected phone metadata on two of Trump's closest allies — one of whom would go on to run his presidential campaign — and filed it away where it couldn't easily be found.
Fox News reports that at least 10 FBI employees were fired on Wednesday in connection with this latest disclosure.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 02/26/2026 - 09:25 Close
Thu, 26 Feb 2026 14:05:00 +0000 Hindenburg Alarm: Another Rotation Or Worse?
Hindenburg Alarm: Another Rotation Or Worse?
Hindenburg Alarm: Another Rotation Or Worse?
Via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,
In early November, we sounded the alarm about a recent Hindenburg Omen. Per the Commentary’s summary:
Bottom line: market breadth is horrendous and will likely lead to a rotation favoring out-of-favor sectors and stocks .
Thus, it’s not surprising that the Hindenburg Omen was triggered. If we continue to see more of these Omens, the threat of a drawdown grows.
At the time, Mega-Cap stocks were grossly outperforming the market, while many sectors lagged the market.
Since that Hindenburg Alarm, our expectations have come to fruition. We have, in fact, seen a “rotation favoring out-of-favor sectors and stocks .”
The graphic below, courtesy of SimpleVisor , shows the significant change in fortunes between sectors.
The first column shows each sector’s excess returns (vs. the S&P 500) since the Hindenburg Omen on October 29th.
The second column shows the excess returns over the 50-day period preceding the alarm.
The Hindenburg Omen has sent 6 alarms over the last month.
The last batch of Hindenburg alarms signaled drawdowns in the leaders and strong performance in the laggards.
Is this Hindenburg Alarm signaling a rotation back to large-cap growth?
Or might it be more ominous for the entire market?
The last time this technical indicator triggered six times in a month was preceding the Pandemic crash of 2020 .
Tyler Durden
Thu, 02/26/2026 - 09:05 Close
Thu, 26 Feb 2026 13:40:35 +0000 Futures Flat Despite Blowout Nvidia Earnings
Futures Flat Despite Blowout Nvidia Earnings
US equity futures managed to erase overnight losses and were trading flat after Nvidia and Salesforce failed to assuage fears about an overheated AI economy while traders awaited color fr
Read more.....
Futures Flat Despite Blowout Nvidia Earnings
US equity futures managed to erase overnight losses and were trading flat after Nvidia and Salesforce failed to assuage fears about an overheated AI economy while traders awaited color from today's round of US / Iran talks. As of 8:00am S&P futures were unchanged and nasdaq futures were down 0.1%, with NVDA up 1% premarket but well off overnight highs after its earnings report and guidance smashed expectations while CEO Jensen Huang talked about “exponentially” growing computing demand and “skyrocketing” adoption of AI agents. It wasn’t enough, especially as software companies Salesforce and Snowflake both provided lukewarm sales guidance to an already-nervous market. “Aside from fireworks, champagne and dancing robots, we are not quite sure what more Nvidia could have done on the 4Q call to get the market re-excited ,” said Jim Fontanelli, co-founder of Arete Research. Discretionary, Financials, and Industrials are outperforming with notable weakness in Energy and Materials. In premarket trading, Mag7 names were mostly weaker ex-NVDA though, as JPM says, bulls should not panic as we await Long Only demand once the market opens. AI-related plays are higher pre-mkt. Bond yields are flat, the USD is flat; in commodities lithium prices surged after Zimbabwe, one of the world’s top producers, suspended concentrate exports. Brent crude edged lower as nuclear talks take place between the US and Iran while silver stalled as it reached nearly $90/oz. Today’s macro data focus is on jobless claims, KC Fed, and several Fed speakers.
In premarket trading Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) rises 1.3% after its latest sales forecast drew a muted response from investors. Other Magnificent Seven stocks are mixed (Amazon -0.1%, Apple -0.04%, Microsoft -0.06%, Alphabet -0.06%, Tesla -0.6%, Meta -0.6%)
Array (ARRY) drops 22% after the renewable energy company’s 2026 adjusted Ebitda guidance missed the average analyst estimate.
C3.ai (AI) slumps 25% after the AI company cut its revenue guidance for the full year, missing the average analyst estimate.
Celsius Holdings (CELH) rises 12% after posting sales which more than doubled from a year earlier following its acquisition of Alani Nu, allaying concerns that a change in distribution channels would disrupt sales.
FTAI Aviation (FTAI) falls 4% after the aerospace company reported total revenue for the fourth quarter that missed the average analyst estimate.
GoodRx Holdings (GDRX) falls 15% after the health-care platform forecast revenue for 2026 that fell short of Wall Street’s expectations. It also gave an estimate for the lower bound of 2026 Ebitda that would be below expectations. Multiple analysts said they were surprised by the scale of margin deterioration implied by the profit outlook.
IonQ (IONQ) rises 13% after the quantum computing company reported fourth-quarter results that beat expectations.
Janus Henderson Group (JHG) climbs 6% after Victory Capital offered to acquire the company for $57.04 per share.
Krispy Kreme Inc. (DNUT) climbs 15% as the company expects leverage to decline further this year as it advances its turnaround plan following the end of its US partnership with McDonald’s Corp.
Nubank (NU) slips 2% after the lender reported higher costs and provisions that analysts say offset net income increase in the fourth quarter.
Nutanix (NTNX) rises 18% after Advanced Micro Devices said it will buy $150 million in the software company’s stock as part of a new partnership. The news was seen as overshadowing a reduced full-year forecast.
Papa John’s (PZZA) falls 5% after the pizza chain reported weaker-than-expected sales results, which reflect a “weak consumer backdrop and elevated promotional environment.”
PROCEPT BioRobotics (PRCT) sinks 24% after the medical equipment maker forecast revenue for 2026 that fell short of Wall Street’s expectations. The firm also posted results for the fourth quarter that Leerink Partners called a “painful miss.”
Salesforce Inc. (CRM) falls 3% after the company gave a lukewarm outlook for sales growth in the new fiscal year, fueling investors’ worries that the software giant will lose out to new competitors in the age of AI.
Synopsys (SNPS) falls 3% after the electronic design automation software company’s Design IP revenue came in below expectations. The company also forecast weaker-than-expected free cash flow for the full-year.
Trade Desk (TTD) declines 14% after the advertising technology company gave a first-quarter forecast that was weaker than expected. The report is adding to concerns about competition from Amazon and AI-related disruption.
In corporate news, Apollo and BNP Paribas are said to be nearing a deal to partner up in Europe’s private credit market. Apple is in discussions with key Indian banks and global card networks in preparation to start Apple Pay in the world’s most populous country. American Airlines will invest $1 billion in a concourse expansion at Miami International Airport to bolster its position at its top international gateway.
Despite Nvidia's estimate-busting guidance, and CEO Jensen Huang talking about “exponentially” growing computing demand and “skyrocketing” adoption of AI agents, it wasn’t enough, especially as software companies Salesforce and Snowflake both provided lukewarm sales guidance to an already-nervous market. Yet there is one group of winners: memory chipmakers Samsung and SK Hynix jumped in Asian trading. A huge jump in supply-related commitments by Nvidia “likely reflects a deliberate effort by Nvidia to tie up valuable components,” according to Vital Knowledge analyst Adam Crisafulli.
Nvidia’s shares “not doing much was quite instructive, especially within the context of one of the other companies that reported — Salesforce,” said Gary Paulin, chief investment strategist at Northern Trust Asset Management. “The concern is that the more success Nvidia has, the more concern there is in the market that there is more disruption.”
For Mohit Kumar, chief strategist for Europe at Jefferies, markets are being “too sanguine” about risks of a limited strike by the US on Iran and an increase in short-term tensions. While a long-drawn war is unlikely, the issue could weigh on markets over the coming days.
“We have reduced our risk profile into the weekend,” Kumar wrote. “Our medium-term view remains bullish and we would be looking to add at better levels.”
Private credit continues to be rattled by the software selloff, with Marathon AM Chairman Bruce Richards saying the asset class is way too exposed to the sector, though he sees little risk of contagion to the wider market. The Fed’s Bowman, meanwhile, said banks need “flexibility” to compete with non-bank financial institutions, which continue to increase their share of the total lending market.
In tariffs, the US vowed to maintain high duties on China hours after Beijing warned against any future hikes. Canadian PM Mark Carney’s visit to India this week will cement a diplomatic reset and unlock a wave of new trade opportunities, including in nuclear power, oil and critical minerals, India’s top diplomat to Canada said.
In earnings, out of the 453 S&P 500 companies that have reported so far in the earnings season, 74% have managed to beat analyst forecasts, while 21% have missed. Royal Bank of Canada, Vistra and Warner Bros. Discovery are among companies expected to report results before the market open. Bloomberg Intelligence expect to see continuing wealth growth and sustained profitability in capital markets at RBC, offsetting muted personal and commercial loan growth. Earnings from Dell, Intuit and Monster Beverage follow later.
In Europe, the Stoxx 600 inches higher and is on course for a record close. Financial services stocks outperform while miners and construction shares lag. Here are the biggest movers Thursday
Rolls-Royce shares rise as much as 8.4%, hitting a record high, after the UK-based engine maker said it was planning a major share buyback and raised its mid-term earnings targets
Engie shares rose as much as 7.6% after it agreed to buy the UK’s largest power-distribution network for £10.5 billion ($14.2 billion) from Hong Kong billionaire Victor Li’s CK Group
Indra shares soar as much as 20%, to its highest intraday level on record, after the Spanish defense company’s fourth-quarter results “beat across the board,” according to Morgan Stanley
Howden Joinery shares surge as much as 11%, the most since July, on what Panmure Liberum analysts call “impressive” full-year results by the kitchen seller that beat the average analyst estimate for profit
Puma gains as much as 9.1% after the German sporting goods and apparel retailer posted results that showed early signs of a long-awaited recovery, particularly driven by a strong performance in its Asian market
Syensqo fell by a record after the chemicals maker reported fourth-quarter earnings that missed estimates with an outlook for this year that points to more struggles
Hikma Pharmaceuticals sinks as much as 18%, the most since February 2016, after the drugmaker’s 2026 core operating profit guidance came in below expectations
Freenet drops as much as 12%, most since May, after its fourth-quarter results missed expectations. Citi said this can be attributed to impact from a single mobile network operator agreement in which the firm fell short of a gross profit commitment
Scout24 drops as much as 7.8% amid disappointment over a lack of earnings upgrades as fears of AI-driven displacement continue to weigh
Asian stocks extended gains to a fourth-straight day as South Korean chipmakers extended their rally, offsetting investor caution in the wake of Nvidia’s results. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index climbed as much as 1.1%, on course to close at another record, with Samsung and SK Hynix among the biggest boosts. South Korea’s Kospi index jumped as much as 3.8% closing at an all-time high, buoyed by the chip heavyweights. Japan’s Topix and Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 also climbed, while benchmarks fell in Hong Kong and Singapore. Nvidia’s results and outlook failed to impress investors amid concerns about an overheated AI economy, and some analysts also flagged concerns over competition. While the Korean memory makers gained, most Asian chip-related stocks slipped. Beyond tech, Asian markets largely shrugged off a US threat to raise global tariffs to 15% “where appropriate” in the coming days. The region’s stocks have been resilient this year, with the key MSCI APAC index up about 15%, far outpacing global peers.
Emerging-market stocks continued their outperformance, with MSCI’s gauge of EM equities up 15% in dollar terms this year. Rallies in memory chipmakers such as Samsung Electronics Co. and SK Hynix Inc. fueled gains on Thursday, pushing South Korea’s Kospi index up more than 50% in dollar terms so far in 2026.
A report from Citigroup Inc. found that money managers had added to long positions in emerging markets across Asia, Latin America, as well as Europe, the Middle East and Africa. They also favor emerging currencies against the dollar.
In FX, the yen is the best-performing G-10 currency, rising 0.2% against the greenback after some hawkish BOJ remarks.
In rates, treasuries are steady, with US 10-year yields near flat at 4.05% as US trading day begins, after plying narrow ranges during Asia session and European morning. US 10-year yield is near 4.05% with curve spreads likewise little changed. Gilts outperform as the pound weakens, with UK yields 1bp-2bp richer across maturities. This week’s Treasury auctions conclude with $44 billion 7-year notes at 1pm New York time; Wednesday’s 5-year sale tailed by 0.7bp
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index is little changed.
In commodities, US crude futures fall 1.6% to their lowest level this week as the US and Iran start a third round of nuclear talks in Geneva. Some major Middle Eastern producers have also been boosting exports, as concerns about a potential conflict in the region create uncertainty about future supply. Precious metals are mixed with silver down nearly 2% while gold is slightly higher. Lithium prices surged after Zimbabwe, one of the world’s top producers, suspended concentrate exports. Brent crude edged lower as nuclear talks take place between the US and Iran. Bitcoin falls 1%.
US economic data slate includes weekly jobless claims (8:30am) and February Kansas City Fed manufacturing activity (11am). Fed speakers scheduled for the session include Miran (8:45am), Bowman (10am) and Goolsbee (2:30pm)
Market Snapshot
S&P 500 mini little changed
Nasdaq 100 mini little changed
Russell 2000 mini +0.2%
Stoxx Europe 600 little changed
DAX +0.1%, CAC 40 +0.8%
10-year Treasury yield little changed at 4.05%
VIX +0.1 points at 18.01
Bloomberg Dollar Index little changed at 1187.55
euro -0.1% at $1.1796
WTI crude -1.3% at $64.55/barrel
Top Overnight News
The US and Iran kicked off nuclear talks in Geneva with days to go until Donald Trump’s deadline for a deal. Satellite images show Iran is already rebuilding nuclear facilities damaged by American and Israeli attacks last June. BBG
The Pentagon asked two major defense contractors on Wednesday to provide an assessment of their reliance on Anthropic's AI model, Claude — a first step toward a potential designation of Anthropic as a "supply chain risk": Axios
Iran’s atomic program hasn’t advanced significantly since the U.S. and Israel struck its three main nuclear sites last June, according to experts and diplomats, despite Washington’s top negotiator saying Tehran could make fissile material for a bomb within days. WSJ
Pentagon officials and Hill lawmakers are increasingly warning that prolonged Iran strikes could stress U.S. military stockpiles to the brink and make the country more vulnerable. Politico
The US will maintain high tariffs on China, at a range of 35% to 50%, according to USTR Jamieson Greer. Beijing warned it would take “all necessary measures” if new levies are imposed. BBG
Suppliers to U.S. aerospace and semiconductor firms face worsening rare earth shortages, with two turning away some clients, industry insiders said, weeks before U.S. President Donald Trump is expected to meet his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping for a summit in Beijing. RTRS
With deflation now firmly in the rearview mirror, the path is clear for the Bank of Japan to raise interest rates sooner rather than later, said policy board member Hajime Takata. WSJ
Christine Lagarde repeated that the ECB has succeeded in taming consumer prices, while cautioning that policymakers must watch elevated perceptions of inflation. BBG
The UK’s top banks are resisting a regulatory initiative to boost lending by lowering their capital levels, people familiar said. BBG
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said Wednesday markets have miscalculated the AI threat to software companies, hours after the chip behemoth issued an upbeat sales forecast on strong AI demand. Instead, he expects a broad swath of software firms to use agentic AI to develop their software and boost efficiency. CNBC
Trade/Tariffs
German Chancellor Merz on his conversation with Chinese President Xi, said there are many challenges to overcome; Economic Minister will conduct a follow up visit.
India's Trade Minister after hosting US Commerce Secretary Lutnick, said both parties engaged in "very fruitful" discussions to expand trade and economic partnership
A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk
APAC stocks are mostly positive as the majority of the region took its cue from gains on Wall Street, where tech led the advances and NVIDIA posted stronger-than-expected earnings after hours. ASX 200 mildly gained as the outperformance in tech, telecoms and healthcare offset the losses in energy and industrials, while better-than-expected private capex data also provided some encouragement. Nikkei 225 initially rallied to a fresh all-time high north of the 59,000 level but then pulled back from record levels as the yen gradually strengthened and after BoJ hawkish dissenter Takata called for gradually hiking rates. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were ultimately mixed with the Hong Kong benchmark the laggard amid weakness in tech, consumer discretionary and insurers, while the mainland was indecisive as price action was contained with very little in the way of fresh catalysts.
Top Asian News
Japanese Coincident Index Final (Dec) 114.3 (Prev. 114.9).
Japanese Leading Economic Index Final (Dec) 111 vs. Exp. 110.2 (Prev. 109.9).
Australian Private Capital Expenditure for 2025-26 (AUD)(Estimate 5) 199.3B (Prev. 191.3B).
Australian Private Capital Expenditure for 2026-27 (AUD)(Estimate 1) 158.4B.
Australian Private Capital Expenditure QoQ (Q4) Q/Q 0.4% vs. Exp. 0.0% (Prev. 6.4%).
New Zealand ANZ Activity Outlook (Feb) 52.6 (Prev. 51.6).
New Zealand ANZ Business Confidence (Feb) 59.2 (Prev. 64.1).
European bourses (STOXX 600 +0.1%) are mixed, with France's CAC 40 (+0.4%) leading its peers while the IBEX 35 (-0.3%) lags. European sectors do not offer any additional bias. Financial Services (+1.3%) and Retail (+1.0%) top the sector list, while Basic Resources (-2.0%) suffer as silver prices fall. LSEG (+6.7%) supports the Financial sector, as the Co. unveiled a new GBP 3bln share buyback programme. For Retailing, Howden Joinery (+7.5%) released a positive FY report, with pretax profit rising annually. However, the boost in the Co.'s shares comes from the announcement of a GBP 100mln share buyback.
Top European News
EU Consumer Confidence Final (Feb) -12.2 vs. Exp. -12.2 (Prev. -12.4).
EU Consumer Inflation Expectations (Feb) 25.8 (Prev. 24.2, Rev. From 24.1).
EU Economic Sentiment (Feb) 98.3 vs. Exp. 99.8 (Prev. 99.3, Rev. From 99.4, Low. 98.5, High. 100).
EU Selling Price Expectations (Feb) 11.5 (Prev. 10.0).
EU Services Sentiment (Feb) 5.0 vs. Exp. 7.5 (Prev. 7.2, Low. 6.8, High. 7.9).
Italian Consumer Confidence (Feb) 97.4 vs. Exp. 97.2 (Prev. 96.8).
Italian Business Confidence (Feb) 88.5 (Prev. 89.2).
Swiss Non Farm Payrolls (Q4) 5.544 (Prev. 5.532).
Swedish Consumer Confidence (Feb) 96.3 (Prev. 95.3).
FX
DXY is modestly firmer after finding support around the 97.50 mark overnight before attempting to recoup some of yesterday's losses, with macro newsflow on the lighter side as US-Iran nuclear talks get underway. So far, Omani Foreign Minister said Iran and the US have welcomed proposals in the Geneva talks. On the data front, the Chicago Fed will release its labour market indicators; weekly jobless claims are seen at 215k from 206k; continuing claims (which coincide with the traditional BLS survey window for the February jobs report) are seen at 1.86mln from 1.869mln. DXY currently trades within a 97.49-97.72 range, vs Wednesday's 97.62-98.00 parameter.
JPY is the current outperformer as USD/JPY continued to pull back overnight after climbing to its best levels in over two weeks, on Wednesday, following the Takaichi government's reflationist picks for the BoJ board. The pair was not helped by the lack of fresh drivers and the absence of tier-1 data from Japan, while there were comments from BoJ Governor Ueda, who reiterated the hiking bias, and hawkish dissenter Takata also stated that they must conduct further rate hikes in a gradual manner.
GBP takes a breather after advancing in tandem with high-beta FX. Newsflow for the UK has been on the lighter side, with price action fitting with the subdued/cautious tone. UK focus will likely be on the Gorton and Denton by-election: analysts suggest that a heavy defeat for the ruling Labour Party could trigger volatility in Sterling. Some suggest a loss in what has been a safe Labour seat for nearly 100 years could re-ignite speculation regarding UK PM Starmer's leadership.
Antipodeans are subdued following the recent outperformance that was facilitated by their high-beta statuses. Overnight, quarterly capex data from Australia topped forecasts, which feeds into next week's GDP release.
Central Banks
ECB's Lagarde said we continue to expect inflation to stabilise at the 2% target in the medium term, will continue to follow data-dependent and meeting-by-meeting approach.
BoJ's Governor Ueda said basic stance is to continue hiking interest rates if the likelihood of our economic, price forecasts materialising heightens, according to Yomiuri. Underlying inflation has not yet fully reached 2% and policy will be guided to get underlying inflation to around 2%, while avoiding it exceeding 2% on a sustained basis.
BoJ's Takata said no preset pace for rate hikes and future moves depend on economic environment and data.
BoJ Board Member Takata said fears of Japan's economy returning to deflation have been dispelled and believes it's necessary to move the BoJ's focus more to upswing in prices. Proposed a rate hike in January on the view that BoJ must continue adjusting real interest rates, which remain significantly lower than the rates seen overseas.
Bank of Korea keeps base rate unchanged at 2.50%, as expected. Raises 2026 GDP growth forecast to 2.0% from 1.8% sees 2027 growth at 1.8%. Raises 2026 CPI forecast to 2.2% from 2.1% and sees 2027 CPI at 2%.
BoK said rate decision was unanimous and median projections show base rate is seen at 2.5% in six months. Said the Bank will make policy decisions supporting a recovery in economic growth. Growth momentum is to remain favourable. Strong chip exports supporting growth.
BoK Governor Rhee said no board member expects rates to be increased in three months time, also noted that US tariff ruling is to have a limited impact on exports for now.
Fixed Income
USTs are flat and currently holding within a 113-04+ to 113-09 range. Really not much driving things for US paper this morning, and this has been reflected by the lacklustre price action. After-market on Wednesday, saw the release of stronger-than-expected NVIDIA earnings, with the name a touch firmer pre-market – but had little follow through from a sentiment perspective. On the data front, the Chicago Fed will release its labour market indicators; weekly jobless claims are seen at 215k from 206k; continuing claims (which coincide with the traditional BLS survey window for the Feb jobs report) are seen at 1.86mln from 1.869mln. From a geopolitical perspective, US-Iran talks have reportedly begun in Geneva. A breakdown in talks could spur some haven inflows in USTs, given the increased likelihood of a US strike on Iran.
Bunds follow the sideways action across global peers, and hold within a 129.57 to 129.69 range. Lack of catalysts for German paper this morning, with commentary from ECB President Lagarde also failing to spur action. She reiterated the usual data-dependent and meeting-by-meeting approach.
Gilts ditto peers. Currently flat and within a narrow 92.82-92.90 range. Markets were expecting some remarks via BoE’s Lombardelli, though nothing thus far. UK focus will likely be on the Gorton and Denton by-election, with some analysts suggesting that a Labour loss, in what has been a safe seat for nearly 100 years, could re-ignite speculation regarding UK PM Starmer's leadership. Hence, this could weigh on Gilts in the short-term.
Italy sells EUR 6.5bln vs exp. EUR 5.5-6.5bln 2.85% 2031 and 3.45% 2036 BTP & EUR 2.5bln vs exp. EUR 2.0-2.5bln 1.468% 2035 CCTeu.
Abu Dhabi is set to issue two benchmark USD bonds, Bloomberg reported. 5-year note offered at a spread +50bps over USTs. 10-year note offered at a spread +55bps over USTs.
UK government debt sales are anticipated to decline for the first time in four years as large banks forecast GBP 247bln of gilt issuances in the approaching fiscal year amid Chancellor Reeves seeks to rein in borrowing, according to FT.
Commodities
Crude benchmarks traded lower on the commencement of the US-Iran talks in Geneva. As updates from that meeting got announce, WTI and Brent dipped to fresh session lows and now trade off by around 1.5% and 1.3% respectively. Two main takeaways from the meeting, including the Omani Foreign Minister suggesting that Iran and the US have welcomed proposals in the Geneva talks. Elsewhere, Al Jazeera reported that the “Iranian negotiating delegation meets IAEA director” – this would be necessary for a market-friendly sustainable deal. Brent May’26 is now shy of USD 70.00/bbl, with the low currently a moving a target at the time of writing.
Precious metals are trading mixed this morning, with spot gold trading firmer and silver lower. XAU and XAG trades within a narrow range of USD 5155.59-5205.58/oz and USD 86.33-90.34/oz, respectively.
Base metals are lower this morning, tracking headwind from its largest buyer, China, which saw mixed to weak sentiment, pinning down price action for base metals. Sentiment in Europe has done little to shake off sentiment in the base metal complex, with European equities trading mixed this morning. 3M LME copper trades within the lower range of USD 13.23-13.35k/t.
Nordic countries investigate a threat to the region's energy infrastructure, according to TV4 citing sources. “According to the threat, the actor may strike in the near future,” says an informant.
Geopolitics: Middle East
Omani Foreign Minister says Iran and the US have welcomed proposals in the Geneva talks.
"Iranian negotiating delegation meets IAEA director at the headquarters of the negotiations in Geneva", via Al Jazeera.
Omani mediator in Geneva said that US and Iran are open to new and creative ideas, AFP reported.
Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesperson said the country will move to the nuclear negotiation site in half an hour, our negotiating team has reasonable amount of flexibility in the US nuclear talks in Geneva.
"Reported in Iran that the Omani foreign minister, who is in Geneva, conveyed to the American side the Iranian proposal for an agreement.", according to journalist Kais.
White House officials reportedly argue it would be best if Israel makes the first move regarding striking Iran, according to POLITICO.
US Secretary of State Rubio said Iran poses a grave threat and seeks nuclear capability, adds talks on Thursday will focus on the nuclear programme and that Iran also poses a conventional weapons threat designed to target the US.
US VP Vance said we see evidence that Iran is trying to build a nuclear weapon.
Geopolitics: Ukraine
Russian Foreign Minister says they do not have a deadline for reaching a Ukraine settlement, but does confirm they are working to resolving them.
Geopolitics: Other
South Korea's presidential office states it will continue working towards peaceful coexistence with North Korea, according to News1.
US Secretary of State Rubio said the US will investigate a deadly speedboat shooting off Cuba after the Cuban Interior Ministry reported its forces killed four people who allegedly opened fire from a Florida-tagged vessel.
US Event Calendar
8:30 am: United States Feb 21 Initial Jobless Claims, est. 216k, prior 206k
8:30 am: United States Feb 14 Continuing Claims, est. 1858k, prior 1869k
8:45 am: United States Fed’s Miran on Fox Business
10:00 am: United States Fed’s Bowman Testifies Before Senate Banking on Regulation
2:30 pm: United States Fed’s Goolsbee Appears on Fox News
DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap
After 4 months of non-stop rain, we had a mini heatwave in London yesterday. I hope you've survived the highs of 16 degrees Celsius if you were in the UK and parts of Europe. Even before this "heatwave", I've been on maximum strength hay fever tablets for weeks now as it's unfortunately that time of year for me again. There were no streaming eyes for the markets yesterday though as we saw another decent session, with the S&P 500 (+0.81%) closing within half a percent of its record high last month, whilst the STOXX 600 (+0.69%) hit a new all-time high. That was primarily driven by easing fears around AI, which meant that software and other tech stocks continued their rebound from Monday’s sell-off. Indeed, software stocks in the S&P were up +3.05% on the day, and the VIX index (-1.62pts) fell to a two-week low of 17.93pts. But the recovery in risk appetite was clear more broadly, with Bitcoin (+7.65%) bouncing back to $68,945, whilst US IG and HY spreads tightened back in from their YTD highs.
The tech mood did fade a bit after the US close though even as Nvidia’s results delivered a stronger-than-expected revenue guidance for the current quarter ($78bn s $72.8bn est.). The initially positive reaction faded as the company’s conference call offered limited detail on the revenue outlook, leaving the chipmaker’s shares little changed by the end of extended trading. So perhaps a sign of investors’ increased anxiety over AI valuations, even as the world’s most valuable company delivered a remarkable 73% year-over-year revenue growth with 75% gross margins. Meanwhile, we saw mediocre results from Salesforce, whose guidance for $46bn of revenue in the current year just about met analysts’ expectations but failed to assuage lingering worries over the outlook for software revenues. The company’s shares fell by about -4.5 % in extended trading. This has left futures on the NASDAQ down -0.34% overnight, with those on the S&P 500 a more modest -0.20% lower.
Ahead of those results, it had been a decent session on both sides of the Atlantic, with Nvidia (+1.41%) itself up to a 3-month high. That came alongside a broader recovery in the tech space, with the NASDAQ (+1.26%) and the Magnificent 7 (+1.53%) both advancing, alongside Europe’s STOXX Technology index (+1.48%). There wasn’t a single headline driving that, but the rebound came amidst growing scepticism about the scenario painted by Citrini Research, which outlined a situation where US unemployment reached double digits by mid-2028. Indeed, as Adrian and I outlined in our Tuesday note (link here), even our own AI tool said it was “a work of persuasive, emotional rhetoric”, with a reliance on emotional framing to create a sense of alarm.
Yesterday’s equity gains were also helped by some of the other names that had slumped following the Citrini paper, such as Doordash (+5.28%) and Capital One (+4.70%). Blue Owl (+5.78%) recovered for a second day from Monday’s two-and-a-half year low, with an improved credit market mood also seeing US IG and HY credit spreads narrow by -1bp and -4bps from YTD highs. However, the breadth of equity gains was narrower than on Tuesday, with the equal-weighted S&P essentially unchanged (+0.03%). The S&P homebuilder index (-3.69%) was a notable laggard, weighed on by underwhelming earnings from home improvement retailer Lowe’s (-5.59%) and the absence of new housing measures in President Trump’s State of the Union address the previous evening.
Still, the growing optimism on the near-term outlook (and diminishing fears of mass unemployment) led to a clear risk-on move for several asset classes. A notable feature yesterday was that investors kept dialling back the likelihood of an H1 rate cut. The odds of a cut by the June meeting (the first with a new Chair) fell beneath 50% for the first time this year to end the day at 48%, suggesting more doubt about an immediate rate cut by Kevin Warsh, particularly now core PCE is back to 3.0%. And with investors pricing out rate cuts, that meant US Treasuries struggled across the curve. So the 2yr yield (+0.9bps) was up to 3.47%, whilst the 10yr yield (+2.3bps) rose to 4.05%. The moves in the belly and at the long-end also weren’t helped by a soft 5yr auction that saw $70bn of bonds issued +0.7bps above the pre-sale yield, with primary dealer take up rising to its highest since last March. So some signs of a softening in Treasury demand after the recent rally, with a 7yr auction today the next test. Having said that, yields have edged back down just shy of a basis point this morning across the curve.
Earlier in Europe, sovereign bonds had put in a stronger performance, with a fresh tightening in sovereign bond spreads too. So yields on 10yr Italian BTPs (-0.6bps) hit their lowest since December 2024, and those on French OATs (-1.2bps) fell to their lowest since July. By contrast, 10yr bund yields (+0.1bps) were steady, but that also meant France’s 10yr spread over Germany fell to just 55bps, the tightest since Macron called the snap legislative election back in June 2024.
Looking forward, UK politics will be back in the spotlight today, as a by-election is taking place in the Greater Manchester seat of Gorton and Denton. That’s a significant one, because the governing Labour Party won it convincingly at the general election in 2024 but opinion polls suggest they could lose it today, which would put Prime Minister Starmer’s position under growing pressure. That matters for gilt markets because of concerns about a new PM easing the fiscal rules and borrowing more. So there’s been a clear pattern of gilt sell-offs when questions around Starmer’s survival have resurfaced, and today’s vote represents another moment where that could happen.
Asian equity markets continue to rise overnight with the KOSPI (+3.11%) again leading the way, and again achieving another record high, primarily driven by chipmakers Samsung and SK Hynix. It's just over a percentage point shy of +50% YTD before the end of February! Elsewhere, Japanese stocks are also at fresh record highs, with the Nikkei (+0.10%) and the Topix (+0.94%) continuing to build on gains from the previous session as investors have adjusted their expectations regarding further interest rate increases by the Bank of Japan. The S&P/ASX 200 (+0.50%) is also performing well, reaching a record high due to ongoing strength in mining and banking shares. Conversely, mainland Chinese equities are experiencing slight declines, with the CSI (-0.17%) and the Shanghai Composite (-0.08%) both dipping marginally, taking a moment to consolidate after significant rallies in the last two sessions. The Hang Seng (-0.81%) is also in negative territory as local technology stocks have retreated after gains earlier this week.
In monetary policy action, the Bank of Korea (BOK) kept its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 2.50% while signalling that policy would stay unchanged for the next six months as a chip boom in exports and steady inflation allow policymakers more time to assess financial stability risks. Meanwhile, the central bank raised its growth forecast for 2026 to 2.0% from a previous estimate of 1.8% citing stronger-than-expected chip exports. Following the decision, yields on the policy-sensitive 3yr government bonds fell -4.6bps to trade at 3.12% as we go to print.
Over on the tariff front, there hasn’t been much in the way of concrete news, but we did get a few comments from US Trade Representative Greer on the path forward yesterday. He said that President Trump would raise the current 10% rate to 15% “where appropriate”, and when it came to the deals already agreed, he said they wanted “to give continuity and be able to be in a position where we can honor the deals”. So that suggested that a country like the UK, which agreed a 10% tariff deal with the US last year, might not be affected by a rise in the global rate to 15%. That had been a concern earlier in the week, as the new global rate had raised fears of fresh retaliation, with the EU already having paused ratification of the deal they agreed with the US last year.
Looking at the day ahead now, data releases include the US weekly initial jobless claims, the Euro Area M3 money supply for January, and the European Commission’s economic sentiment indicator for the Euro Area in February. From central banks, we’ll hear from ECB President Lagarde and the ECB’s Dolenc, along with the Fed’s Bowman and the BoE’s Lombardelli. Finally in the UK, there’s a parliamentary by-election in Gorton and Denton.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 02/26/2026 - 08:40 Close
Thu, 26 Feb 2026 13:37:52 +0000 Jobless Claims Continue To Show No Signs Of Labor Market Stress
Jobless Claims Continue To Show No Signs Of Labor Market Stress
Initial jobless claims continue to hover near multi-decade lows, refusing to show any signs of labor market stress.
Last week saw 212k American file for jobless
Read more.....
Jobless Claims Continue To Show No Signs Of Labor Market Stress
Initial jobless claims continue to hover near multi-decade lows, refusing to show any signs of labor market stress.
Last week saw 212k American file for jobless benefits for the first time (below the 216k expected). Unadjusted claims tumbled to the lowest since September...
Source: Bloomberg
Michigan and New York saw the largest drop in initial jobless claims last week while Rhode Island and Oklahoma saw the bigger rise in claims...
The number of Americans filing for continuing jobless claims also dropped last week to 1.833 million (well below the 1.9mm Maginot Line)...
Source: Bloomberg
It seem the 'no fire' side of the 'no fire-no hire' economy continues to support trend growth.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 02/26/2026 - 08:37 Close