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Thu, 28 May 2026 12:00:00 +0000 Iran Targets US Base In Kuwait With Missile & Drones - Gulf Allies Denounce 'Terrorist Attacks'
Iran Targets US Base In Kuwait With Missile & Drones - Gulf Allies Denounce 'Terrorist Attacks'
The government of Kuwait on Thursday has made clear it retains all rights to take measures to preserve its security, following a overnig
Read more.....
Iran Targets US Base In Kuwait With Missile & Drones - Gulf Allies Denounce 'Terrorist Attacks'
The government of Kuwait on Thursday has made clear it retains all rights to take measures to preserve its security, following a overnight Iranian missile strike. Kuwait's Foreign Ministry further condemned the fresh missile ?and drone ?attacks on its territory as ?a serious escalation and "blatant violation of sovereignty and ?security."
The Iranian launch, which Tehran says targeted a US base in Kuwait , came in response to US bombardment of an Iranian drone base near the southern city of Bandar Abbas which occurred just prior.
via Associated Press
In a new statement, US Central Command (CENTCOM) confirms that "At 10:17 p.m. ET on May 27, Iran launched a ballistic missile toward Kuwait that was successfully intercepted by Kuwaiti forces ."
"This egregious ceasefire violation by the Iranian regime occurred hours after Iranian forces launched five one-way attack drones that posed a clear threat in and near the Strait of Hormuz," the US military statement continued.
"All drones were successfully intercepted by U.S. forces which also prevented a sixth drone launch from an Iranian ground control site in Bandar Abbas," it added. "U.S. Central Command and regional partners remain vigilant and measured as we continue to defend our forces and interests from unjustified Iranian aggression."
Additionally, the Gulf stated strongly condemned the fresh Iranian attack, with the head of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), Jasem Mohamed Al-Budaiwi, denouncing it as follows : "The secretary-general pointed out that the continuation of these treacherous attacks is a flagrant violation of the principles of international law, the Charter of the United Nations, and the principles of good neighborliness."
"His excellency affirmed the GCC countries’ full support for the state of Kuwait in all measures it takes to preserve its security and stability, and the safety of its citizens and residents," the GCC statement added.
A separate Gulf statement further condemned the act of 'terrorism' - per Al Aljazeera :
The United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Saudi Arabia have condemned a missile attack on a US airbase in Kuwait with only the UAE expressly naming Iran as responsible for the “terrorist attacks” .
In statements shared on social media, the foreign ministries of the UAE, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia said they consider the attack “a flagrant violation” of Kuwait’s sovereignty, and expressed their countries’ “full solidarity” with Kuwait and “support for all measures” it takes to preserve its sovereignty, security and stability.
This marks the second live-fire attack flare-up this week, after earlier Wednesday Iran fired drones on American and other foreign commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz.
"American F/A-18, F-16 and F-35 jet fighters shot down the drones, then the F/A-18s hit the ground-control unit before it could launch a fifth drone, one of the officials said," The Wall Street Journal summarizes of that first incident.
It seems that Iran is asserting some red lines through single, sporadic attacks, when it perceives a US military violation of its sovereignty. WSJ cites the following :
The spokesman for the National Security Commission in Iran’s parliament said Trump’s unwillingness to acknowledge that the U.S. and Tehran were still at war was a sign of his weak negotiating position. "Diplomats should not let go of the enemy’s weak point and should impose maximum demands on them," the spokesman said.
Currently, negotiations are still primarily stuck on the nuclear issue. President Trump has vowed not to let off sanctions pressure until Tehran agrees to dismantle its nuclear program by handing over highly enriched uranium to be transferred off its territory. Iranian officials say this simply will not happen, and that it would be tantamount to handing over the country's sovereignty.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 05/28/2026 - 08:00 Close
Thu, 28 May 2026 11:45:00 +0000 UK Targets Kremlin-Linked Crypto Network In Latest Sanctions Round
UK Targets Kremlin-Linked Crypto Network In Latest Sanctions Round
UK Targets Kremlin-Linked Crypto Network In Latest Sanctions Round
Authored by Micah Zimmerman via BitcoinMagazine.com,
The United Kingdom has unveiled a fresh package of sanctions against Russian financial structures that use crypto and offshore payment routes to sidestep restrictions imposed after the invasion of Ukraine.
The measures focus on the Kremlin-backed A7 network, a ruble-based settlement system, and a cluster of exchanges and firms that route payments through Kyrgyzstan and Georgia.
Announced by Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper, the package covers 18 new designations that target what London describes as the backbone of Russia’s illicit finance channels.
Officials say the list includes a Kyrgyz bank suspected of handling A7 flows, a major global cryptocurrency exchange that has sent more than 1.5 billion dollars to entities close to the Kremlin, and three Georgian companies that run Russia-focused trading platforms.
The A7 network has emerged as a central hub in Russia’s attempts to blunt the impact of Western sanctions on its war economy. Investigations by independent researchers describe A7 as a cross-border settlement platform that uses a ruble-backed token, branded A7A5, and links to Promsvyazbank, a state lender that supports the Russian defense sector.
According to the UK government, A7 claims to have moved more than 90 billion dollars during the past year, a sum that officials say approaches half of Russia’s annual military spending.
Separate journalistic probes have found that A7-connected wallets and entities handle a significant share of cross-border transfers for sanctioned oligarchs and state-linked businesses.
The crackdown lands at a moment when Russia’s own forecasts show a weaker outlook for growth under sanctions pressure. This month the Economy Ministry cut its 2026 growth projection to 0.4 percent from 1.3 percent and reduced the estimate for 2027 from 2.8 percent to 1.4 percent, an admission that extended war spending and trade limits weigh on expansion.
Crypto is replacing bank links for Russia
Western authorities and crypto analytics firms have flagged crypto as a key tool in Russia’s effort to replace severed bank links. Research into related platforms such as A7A5 and exchanges that serve Russian users has traced billions of dollars in stablecoin and token flows that bypass traditional banking checks, much of it through venues in Central Asia and the Caucasus.
Cooper framed the new sanctions as part of a broader drive to hit the financial lifelines of Moscow’s war machine and close off safe havens for enablers of the invasion . She said the UK would keep working with allies to expose, disrupt and dismantle the structures that move money and goods for Russian forces.
Since the start of the full-scale invasion in 2022, Britain has sanctioned more than 3,300 individuals, companies and vessels linked to the Kremlin, from banks and energy giants to defense suppliers.
The government estimates that international sanctions have stripped more than 450 billion dollars from Russia’s economy, a loss equal to an estimated two years of funding for its war against Ukraine.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 05/28/2026 - 07:45 Close
Thu, 28 May 2026 11:20:00 +0000 Drone Stocks Erupt After Report Of Pentagon Funding Deals
Drone Stocks Erupt After Report Of Pentagon Funding Deals
President Trump's war economy is accelerating, with a new report indicating that the Department of War is set to unleash funding deals across a handful of drone companies. Th
Read more.....
Drone Stocks Erupt After Report Of Pentagon Funding Deals
President Trump's war economy is accelerating, with a new report indicating that the Department of War is set to unleash funding deals across a handful of drone companies. The effort comes as the DoW's procurement program now favors startups, and there has been an emphasis within the department on ramping up America's drone manufacturing base, as hyper-innovation from the war in Ukraine has brought forward 2030s-era war technology .
The Wall Street Journal reports that the DoW has been in talks with a group of drone startups and suppliers, including Performance Drone Works, Unusual Machines, and Neros Technologies, about potential funding packages that could include debt, conditional loans, and possible equity stakes.
The financing would not be used to purchase batches of suicide drones directly. Instead, the plan is to expand domestic manufacturing capacity, lower unit costs, and help these war-unicorn startups ramp up production ahead of a major stockpiling effort by the DoW .
The DoW's $1.1 billion Drone Dominance initiative aims to stockpile 300,000 low-cost attack drones by the end of 2027 at a unit price of less than $5,000.
The WSJ's report sent drone-related firms soaring in premarket trading, with Unusual Machines soaring 33%, Red Cat up 13%, AeroVironment up 8%, Kratos Defense & Security Solutions up 8.4%, and Airo Group up 2.9%.
None of this should be surprising to readers, as we've detailed the Trump team's playbook with the DoW to reset procurement programs, funneling funding into defense startups while building out production lines for low-cost war machines, such as drones and robots.
We identified Axon , which plans to import Ukrainian war tech into the US to build up US stockpiles faster.
Meanwhile, Ukraine is becoming a drone manufacturing hub for allied forces that stretch across Eurasia.
Let's remind readers of our forward-looking theme published in January. 31:
Then, after a couple of data centers in the Gulf area were hit by Iranian attack drones, we note:
Beyond one-way attack drones and interceptor drones, we suspect counter-drone threat systems, such as passive acoustic detection , will become popular in the US because there is a missing layer of air defense around critical infrastructure, from power grids to data centers.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 05/28/2026 - 07:20 Close
Thu, 28 May 2026 10:55:00 +0000 Home Refi Activity Plummets As Mortgage Rates Hit 9-Month Highs
Home Refi Activity Plummets As Mortgage Rates Hit 9-Month Highs
Refinancing activity in the U.S. housing market plummeted last week as mortgage rates hit their highest level in nine months, new industry data released on May
Read more.....
Home Refi Activity Plummets As Mortgage Rates Hit 9-Month Highs
Refinancing activity in the U.S. housing market plummeted last week as mortgage rates hit their highest level in nine months, new industry data released on May 27 show.
Refinancing decreased by 18 percent for the week ending May 22 and is up by 19 percent from the same time a year ago, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
“Many borrowers understandably backed away from refinancing last week,” Joel Kan, the firm’s vice president and deputy chief economist, said in a statement.
The decline was largely driven by the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rising by 30 basis points over the past five weeks to 6.65 percent - the highest level since August 2025.
As Andrew Moran reports for The Epoch Times , activity to refinance home loans was spread across the board. Conventional refinance applications fell by 14 percent, Federal Housing Agency applications dropped 18 percent, and Veterans’ Affairs applications tumbled 34 percent.
Overall, refinance loans accounted for 38 percent of all mortgage applications, the smallest share in nearly a year.
But purchase applications also slipped from the previous week, sliding by almost 9 percent.
“Purchase applications were slightly lower across all loan types but still ran at a stronger pace than last year’s pace,” Kan said.
“The average loan size for a purchase application reached another survey high at $473,600 , as borrowers with smaller loan sizes were less active given the higher rate environment and its negative impact on their purchasing power.”
Meanwhile, the Federal Housing Finance Agency reported on May 26 that single-family home prices backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac rose by 0.1 percent in March, up from a downwardly revised 0.1 percent drop in February.
‘Sensitive to Headlines’
Mortgage rates, which generally track long-dated U.S. Treasury yields, have accelerated since the war in Iran began in late February, driven by renewed war-driven inflation risks.
The main benchmark 10-year yield reached a one-year high of 4.66 percent last week. The 30-year climbed to 5.18 percent, its highest level since the global financial crisis.
Modest relief could be on the way amid increasing optimism that the United States and Iran are inching closer to establishing a peace deal.
Yields have eased by approximately 20 basis points over the past week, translating into lower rates for homeowners and prospective homebuyers.
As of May 27, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage dipped to 6.61 percent, but the gap between current rates and the effective (aggregate) rates that Americans are currently carrying on their homes remains vast...
How long this trend lasts depends on what happens between Washington and Tehran, says Jeff DerGurahian, head economist at loanDepot.
“But with geopolitical tensions still front and center and inflation expectations starting to pick back up, the outlook remains uncertain,” DerGurahian said in a note emailed to The Epoch Times.
“Until there’s more clarity, rates are likely to stay sensitive to headlines, with the direction from here tied closely to how events unfold overseas.”
Inflation data could also play a role in both the broader financial markets and monetary policy.
A de-escalation in the three-month-old Middle East conflict could help mitigate medium- and long-term inflation pressures. But the length of persistent inflation could hang over the Federal Reserve.
Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh at the White House in Washington on May 22, 2026. Madalina Kilroy/The Epoch Times
Traders have recently made an interest rate hike over the next year their base case scenario.
The 2-year yield, which follows expectations for Fed policy, remains above 4 percent. Futures market data suggest a quarter-point increase in March.
Market watchers, however, say the criteria for following through on a rate hike are high.
“From a policy standpoint, the expectation is that the Fed will likely stay on hold for a while,” DerGurahian said.
“The bigger question is how inflation plays out over the next few months, especially if higher energy prices start to show up more broadly across the economy.”
May’s annual consumer inflation rate is expected to reach 4.2 percent, according to the Cleveland Fed Nowcasting Model. If accurate, it would be the highest level of inflation since May 2023.
Ignoring Interest Rates
Despite President Donald Trump’s calls for lower interest rates to support his economic agenda, the data suggest the economy has been indifferent to elevated rates.
Recent growth has been fueled by consumer spending and business investment, mainly artificial intelligence-driven capital expenditures.
Even with markets pricing in higher rates, capex spending plans continue to be adjusted higher.
“It doesn’t matter what the Fed does. There is FOMO [fear of missing out] among hyperscalers, and AI spending is not sensitive to higher interest rates,” Torsten Slok, chief economist at Apollo Global Management, said in an emailed note to The Epoch Times.
“In fact, despite the move higher in rates in recent months, the consensus forecast for capex in 2027 continues to rise.”
If Fed officials tighten policy, it might combat inflation but do little to harm the growth prospects.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 05/28/2026 - 06:55 Close
Thu, 28 May 2026 10:30:00 +0000 The Fragile Balance Between Compassion And Civilization
The Fragile Balance Between Compassion And Civilization
The Fragile Balance Between Compassion And Civilization
Authored by Armstrong Williams via The Epoch Times,
What is unfolding across parts of Europe, particularly in the UK under Prime Minister Keir Starmer, should serve as a warning to every Western democracy wrestling with questions of immigration, national identity, social cohesion, and the limits of political tolerance.
A nation can be compassionate without becoming careless. It can welcome newcomers while still expecting assimilation, civic responsibility, and respect for the laws and traditions that hold a society together. But when governments become so consumed with appearing morally virtuous that they neglect order, border enforcement, public safety, and cultural confidence, the social fabric eventually begins to fray.
Across Europe, many citizens increasingly feel that they are watching this happen in real time.
Businesses struggle under layers of regulation and insecurity. Historic neighborhoods in cities such as London, Paris, Brussels, and parts of Germany face growing tensions between communities living side by side but not necessarily living together. In too many places, political leaders have become hesitant to speak honestly about integration failures for fear of being labeled intolerant or divisive. Yet avoiding difficult conversations does not eliminate problems; it merely delays them until frustration hardens into anger.
This is why political movements once considered fringe are now gaining traction throughout Europe. Voters are not simply reacting to economics. They are reacting to a deeper fear that their nations are losing coherence, confidence, and cultural continuity. People want safe streets. They want functioning schools. They want borders that mean something. They want governments willing to defend the rule of law consistently and unapologetically.
And Americans should understand clearly why this debate resonates so strongly at home.
Many believe that the United States would have headed down a similar path had Vice President Kamala Harris been elected president and continued the policies of the previous administration. Whether one agrees with that assessment or not, the concern itself reflects a growing anxiety felt across the Western world: that governments have become more focused on symbolic compassion than sustainable governance.
But this conversation must be approached with moral clarity and balance.
Immigration itself is not the enemy. In fact, immigration has been one of the great strengths of both America and many European nations for centuries. The United States remains history’s greatest example of people from vastly different backgrounds building a common national identity rooted in shared civic values rather than bloodlines or ethnicity.
However, the key word is assimilation.
Successful societies require more than diversity. They require unity of purpose. They require a shared language of civic responsibility, mutual respect, constitutional order, and national loyalty. People can absolutely preserve the beauty of their cultural traditions, religious practices, cuisine, music, and family customs while still embracing the values and identity of the country they are joining.
America succeeded for generations because millions of immigrants came not merely seeking economic opportunity but seeking to become Americans.
That distinction matters enormously.
Previous generations of immigrants often viewed assimilation as a source of pride rather than oppression. Italian, Irish, Jewish, Korean, Indian, Vietnamese, Nigerian, Cuban, and countless other communities maintained elements of their heritage while simultaneously embracing the broader American civic culture. Their children attended U.S. schools, learned English, served in the military, opened businesses, participated in civic life, and gradually became woven into the national fabric.
And importantly, this process continues to endure successfully in many places today.
One can look across countless immigrant communities throughout the United States where assimilation and cultural pride coexist beautifully. Indian American families dominating medicine, engineering, and entrepreneurship while maintaining strong family traditions. Nigerian immigrants excelling academically and professionally while contributing deeply to churches, local businesses, and civic institutions. Hispanic immigrants serving in law enforcement, the armed forces, and small-business ownership while maintaining rich linguistic and cultural traditions. Asian American communities revitalizing neighborhoods, building thriving schools, and producing some of the highest educational outcomes in the country.
These examples remind us that assimilation does not require cultural erasure. It requires civic alignment.
The problem emerges when political leaders encourage fragmentation over integration when multiculturalism evolves into parallel societies separated by language, values, expectations, and allegiance. A nation cannot endure indefinitely if large groups increasingly identify more with grievance, tribalism, or foreign conflicts than with the country they now call home.
Europe is confronting this tension directly.
In parts of the UK, France, Belgium, and Sweden, leaders are now facing difficult questions about whether integration policies failed to create a strong enough shared national identity. Rising crime, anti-Semitism, extremist ideologies, gang violence, and social unrest have intensified concerns among ordinary citizens who feel dismissed whenever they raise legitimate worries about assimilation, public safety, or cultural cohesion.
Yet this issue must never become an excuse for hatred or blanket condemnation of immigrants themselves. That would betray the very values Western civilization claims to defend. The overwhelming majority of immigrants come seeking peace, opportunity, safety, and dignity for their families. Most are hardworking, law-abiding, and deeply patriotic toward the nations that welcomed them.
But nations also have the right—indeed, the obligation—to expect those entering legally to respect the law, contribute productively, learn the culture, and embrace the civic values of their adopted homeland.
Without that expectation, societies eventually lose the trust and shared identity necessary for democracy itself to function.
History repeatedly teaches the same lesson. Civilizations rarely collapse overnight from external invasion alone. More often, they weaken gradually from within through cultural uncertainty, institutional decay, leadership paralysis, declining civic confidence, and an unwillingness to defend the principles that created stability in the first place.
The challenge facing the West today is not whether immigration should exist. Immigration will always exist. The real question is whether leaders still possess the wisdom and courage to preserve social cohesion while remaining humane, lawful, and fair.
Because compassion without order eventually produces chaos.
And order without compassion eventually produces cruelty.
Great nations require the discipline and maturity to uphold both simultaneously.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 05/28/2026 - 06:30 Close
Thu, 28 May 2026 09:45:00 +0000 Solar Stocks Flash Major Technical Breakout As Tariff Talk Escalates
Solar Stocks Flash Major Technical Breakout As Tariff Talk Escalates
Solar stocks are showing a clear technical shift , breaking above a well-defined downtrend after more than five years of sustained pressure.
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Read more.....
Solar Stocks Flash Major Technical Breakout As Tariff Talk Escalates
Solar stocks are showing a clear technical shift , breaking above a well-defined downtrend after more than five years of sustained pressure.
UBS analyst Catherine Gordon is attributing the surge in solar stocks to falling yields and renewed policy momentum. A potential Section 232 tariff announcement in mid-to-late June is adding fuel to the rally, with First Solar leading the charge.
The UBS Solar basket (UBXXSOL) is now up 40% year-to-date.
Gordon provided more context on what's powering UBXXSOL higher:
Clean tech names are outperforming again on Tuesday, with solar leading higher alongside more speculative growth baskets as yields move lower. The backdrop has been broadly supportive, with the UBS Solar basket (UBXXSOL) now up 33% MTD.
First Solar is the standout mover, with the stock trading around $268 and continuing to rally in anticipation of a potential Section 232 tariff announcement in the near term . Earlier today, Windham hosted Toyo Solar on a call, where the company indicated that mid- to late-June could be the timing for Section 232, with measures potentially including a minimum import price alongside tariffs. There is also scope for domestic manufacturing investments to be used as an offset to tariff liability.
The prevailing dynamic has been "buy the rumor and buy the news ," with momentum building into the expected policy update. Beyond S232, the next key catalyst for First Solar (FSLR) is likely to be order commentary on 2Q earnings calls.
Elsewhere, sentiment remains constructive across parts of the solar complex, with Nextracker (NXT) still viewed as a core holding. On the residential side, there have been questions around the sharp moves in SolarEdge (SEDG) and Enphase Energy (ENPH). Enphase's recent announcement around a solid-state transformer appears to have driven a short squeeze. However, this is not viewed as a differentiated development, with multiple electrical equipment players — including Schneider Electric and ABB — already pursuing similar technologies. Against that backdrop, the residential rally looks vulnerable to fading.
Last month, Goldman analyst Brian Lee told clients that "Utility-scale demand remains resilient amid pricing volatility, while residential stays challenged but with cleaner channel conditions ." Professional subscribers can read the full GS note here at our new Marketdesk.ai portal.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 05/28/2026 - 05:45 Close
Thu, 28 May 2026 09:00:00 +0000 NATO 3.0: Report Details 'Fundamental Restructuring' Of US Commitments
NATO 3.0: Report Details 'Fundamental Restructuring' Of US Commitments
NATO 3.0: Report Details 'Fundamental Restructuring' Of US Commitments
Via The Cradle
The US is moving forward with a "fundamental restructuring" of its commitments to European security , transitioning from the traditional "burden sharing" strategy to that of "burden shifting," according to a Der Spiegel report published on May 26.
Under the new vision dubbed "NATO 3.0," Washington expects European allies to assume responsibility for the continent’s entire conventional defense.
Source: Dunya
In this new framework, the US will primarily provide a nuclear deterrent rather than the broad military support it has historically guaranteed.
This transition, which the report notes has blindsided European officials, involves drastic reductions in US military assets previously committed to the "NATO Force Model."
Alexander Velez-Green, an envoy to US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, recently informed allies that Washington intends to cut its contribution of fighter jets by one-third and significantly reduce the number of strategic bombers, navy destroyers, and aerial refueling aircraft .
The report notes that the US plans to stop providing submarines to the NATO pool entirely and expects Europeans to supply their own reconnaissance and armed drones.
The primary driver for this withdrawal is the US military’s pivot toward the Asia-Pacific, though officials also cited the need for flexibility to commit assets to military campaigns in West Asia and the Western Hemisphere.
Washington reportedly seeks to prepare for a potential "two-front conflict," noting that US intelligence identifies 2027 as the "key date" when China may be capable of launching an offensive against Taiwan.
Given the possibility, the US no longer wishes to have its key assets “tied up” by fixed NATO commitments.
The report highlights an intensely fast-paced transition, with the US demanding that European allies present specific offers to fill these newly created military gaps by early June, aiming to formalize the new model at the July summit in Ankara .
While NATO leadership officially portrays the move as a way to reduce “over-dependence” on the US, European diplomats find the requirements far more severe than anticipated, with European leaders reportedly stunned by the scale and speed of the requirements. In secret meetings, some representatives even interpreted the US insistence on rapid compliance as an "indirect threat" toward those who fail to act quickly .
In line with the new “burden shifting,” US President Donald Trump announced on May 22 that he would send an additional 5,000 troops to Poland – a move reportedly driven by his personal relationship with and endorsement of Polish President Karol Nawrocki .
This decision has "stirred confusion" within the Pentagon , as it contradicts earlier orders to reduce the US military presence in Europe, such as the planned withdrawal of over 5,000 soldiers from Germany.
While Polish leadership welcomed the surge, US defense officials and diplomats have criticized the shift as impulsive, noting that it creates a sense of strategic inconsistency just as the US prepares to brief NATO allies on its future military footprint.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 05/28/2026 - 05:00 Close
Thu, 28 May 2026 08:15:00 +0000 The Gen Z Workforce In The UK Is Demanding Less Alcohol At Company Socials
The Gen Z Workforce In The UK Is Demanding Less Alcohol At Company Socials
For years, workplace culture has revolved around one thing: drinks after work. But Gen Z in the UK is starting to push back — and companies are beginning to
Read more.....
The Gen Z Workforce In The UK Is Demanding Less Alcohol At Company Socials
For years, workplace culture has revolved around one thing: drinks after work. But Gen Z in the UK is starting to push back — and companies are beginning to notice, according to a new study from Diamond Interiors .
The study says that a growing number of younger employees say they would rather skip alcohol-focused work socials altogether. In a recent survey of Gen Z office workers, half said they preferred social events that don’t centre around drinking. It’s a small detail on the surface, but it reflects a much wider shift in how the next generation views work and workplace culture.
Don't tell the banking industry in London, that's for sure...
For previous generations, bonding with colleagues often meant pub trips, networking over cocktails, or team nights out that stretched late into the evening. Gen Z workers, however, are drinking less overall and are more likely to prioritise wellness, mental health, fitness, and financial stability. For many, alcohol simply isn’t as central to social life as it once was.
There’s also a stronger focus on inclusivity. Younger workers are more aware that not everyone wants — or can afford — to participate in drinking culture. A work social built around alcohol can feel limiting rather than welcoming.
That doesn’t mean Gen Z is rejecting workplace friendships. In fact, many still value strong team relationships. They just prefer different environments: coffee catchups, team lunches, fitness classes, volunteering events, or activities that don’t come with pressure to drink.
The change fits into a broader pattern across the workforce. Gen Z employees are questioning long-standing workplace norms, from strict office hours to rigid management styles. Many are less interested in “office culture” for the sake of appearances and more focused on balance, comfort, and genuine connection.
For employers, the message is clear. The old model of workplace bonding won’t disappear overnight, but it no longer works for everyone. Companies that rethink social culture — and offer more flexible, inclusive ways for employees to connect — may find it easier to attract and keep younger talent.
In other words, Gen Z isn’t ending workplace socializing in the UK. They’re just redefining what it looks like.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 05/28/2026 - 04:15 Close
Thu, 28 May 2026 07:30:00 +0000 EU Emissions Trading Expansion And The Pressure On German Aviation Industry
EU Emissions Trading Expansion And The Pressure On German Aviation Industry
Submitted by Thomas Kolbe
Germany’s leading airline Lufthansa is closing its regional subsidiary Read more.....
EU Emissions Trading Expansion And The Pressure On German Aviation Industry
Submitted by Thomas Kolbe
Germany’s leading airline Lufthansa is closing its regional subsidiary CityLine , while low-cost carrier Ryanair is scaling back its Germany operations. Airport locations are under increasing pressure, with tens of thousands of jobs at stake. And how does politics respond to this veritable crisis? Naturally, with further levies.
In this case, it was the EU Commission that came forward with the proposal to extend the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) to international flights departing from Europe . Another new charge, wonderful. And this in the midst of the most severe recession since the post-war period.
The regulation could take effect from 1 January 2027, should the relevant institutions and national legislators adopt it. The motivation to push this process forward efficiently and with minimal bureaucracy is clearly present, as at least €11 billion, and possibly up to €13 billion, in tax revenue is at stake. What is rarely discussed: a small portion of this additional revenue is expected to remain in Brussels – another covert step by the EU Commission under Ursula von der Leyen toward fiscal autonomy.
From the perspective of Brussels and Berlin policymakers, there is a positive side effect: alongside the fiscal dimension, they would also move closer to their ideological goal of gradually immobilising European citizens – a key component of the economic “death agenda” of the Green Deal.
As a European taxpayer, one has become accustomed to absorbing such measures. Few now expect anything other than new taxes and increasingly granular regulation from the labyrinthine EU apparatus. Brussels no longer makes any secret of its shift toward implementing degrowth ideology through an unprecedented tax drive. This occurs at a time when hundreds of thousands in Germany alone lose their jobs every year – while politicians beyond the so-called firewall are thriving on taxation policy.
So far, media camouflage has worked: politics floods the public sphere with a pseudo-debate about relief for citizens, only to simultaneously increase the tax burden elsewhere. The best example is the so-called fuel discount – a temporary reduction of a levy financed by permanent increases elsewhere, as it is often phrased. It is perverse: politics now treats taxpayers’ money as self-evident, as mere disposable mass for the political class. This smells of feudalism and has little to do with the idea of the sovereign citizen.
Consequently, travel itself is increasingly seen in these circles as objectionable, as an act of presumptuous freedom. The citizen’s scope for action must be restricted, their existence in an eco-dystopia effectively managed. It is therefore logical that travel is to become significantly more expensive. An extension of the CO2 regime to international flight tickets would increase prices by up to 15 percent in the first year. Combined with annual price increases due to the shrinking supply of CO2 certificates, foreign travel would soon become a luxury.
Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary is one of the few well-known executives openly resisting European degrowth policy . His company has reduced its presence in Germany by around 40–50 percent in recent years and cut numerous routes – affecting airports such as Frankfurt-Hahn, Weeze, Berlin, and Hamburg. Too expensive, too heavily regulated, and increasingly hostile to business – O’Leary is saying what virtually every company leader, CEO, and SME operator not dependent on green subsidies would say daily.
German policy in particular extracts a significant share of domestic air travel costs, up to around 60 percent of ticket prices. Whether VAT, CO2 charges, or airport fees – operations are becoming increasingly unprofitable, and passengers are being pushed toward rail as an alternative. This policy has consequences: since the lockdown shock six years ago, domestic air traffic has not recovered and remains about 50 percent below 2019 levels. Numerous airport locations have come under pressure and thousands of jobs have been cut.
It is difficult to estimate precisely, but direct and indirect job losses in Germany’s aviation sector since 2019 likely amount to up to 50,000 positions. Lufthansa alone has cut more than 10,000, Airbus over 5,000 jobs in Germany.
The campaign by German policymakers against successful airlines like Ryanair, which are being systematically pushed abroad, fits into the broader pattern of the current governing coalition. A hostile, ideologically charged regulatory and tax policy is a continuation of the strategy of the “traffic light” coalition, intensified by the economic hammer of CO2 taxation, increasingly used to eliminate undesirable industrial sectors.
We should not fool ourselves: the relentless struggle of eco-socialists against the free economy – and thus above all against industry, which must be understood as the indispensable productive foundation of our society – is now becoming visible, as EU climate policy becomes increasingly isolated globally.
Ironically, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) itself has dismantled the apocalyptic narrative of a burning planet that was persistently constructed over decades. This renders Brussels’ and Berlin’s nihilistic climate policy absurd – a fact largely drowned out in the overheated media noise. In the “Gaulish village” of German world-savers, an intellectual and ideological ice age still prevails.
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About the author: Thomas Kolbe, a German graduate economist, has worked for over 25 years as a journalist and media producer for clients from various industries and business associations. As a publicist, he focuses on economic processes and observes geopolitical events from the perspective of the capital markets. His publications follow a philosophy that focuses on the individual and their right to self-determination.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 05/28/2026 - 03:30 Close
Thu, 28 May 2026 07:24:00 +0000 Futures, Bonds Tumble, Oil Surges After Middle East Attacks Resume
Futures, Bonds Tumble, Oil Surges After Middle East Attacks Resume
Summary
Equity Futures Tumble, Oil Surges On Fresh Middle East Strikes
US forces carried out airstrik
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Futures, Bonds Tumble, Oil Surges After Middle East Attacks Resume
Summary
Equity Futures Tumble, Oil Surges On Fresh Middle East Strikes
US forces carried out airstrikes on an Iranian military site and imposed new sanctions to prevent Tehran from profiting from vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz. In response, Iran targeted the American airbase from which the attack originated, according to a Tasnim report , which cited the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps. Kuwait also said it’s responding to hostile missile and drone threats
New US strikes in Iran reported, after Iranian drone intercepts in Hormuz area.
Trump red line (PBS): "No, no, not at all. Not sanctions relief, no" - unless Iran gives up its enriched uranium. "Iran negotiating on fumes ," Trump says in cabinet meeting.
White House rejects 'complete fabrication' of Iranian TV reporting on MOU and draft deal status.
IRGC keeping up the rhetoric: warns that Iran would "turn the area from Chabahar to Mahshahr into a graveyard for aggressors " if the ceasefire collapses.
CENTCOM: "Clearly the Iranians are trying to hedge their bets here and put more pressure on the US ."
Iranian president: "The main battleground today is the economic war ."
Tabriz International Airport in northwestern Iran - which sustained heavy damage from airstrikes during the peak of the aerial bombings - is officially operational again, bringing restored airports to 20 reopened .
US x Iran permanent peace deal by June 30, 2026?
Yes 50% · No 51%View full market & trade on Polymarket
Equity Futures Tumble, Oil Surges On Fresh Middle East Strikes
Stocks and bonds fell while oil surged after fresh attacks in the Middle East returned amid conflicting signals from the US and Iran on a deal to end the war. The MSCI All Country World Index, the broadest measure of global equities, retreated from a record high and dropped 0.4%. A gauge of Asian shares slumped 1.7%. Futures for the S&P 500 slumped 0.5%, and the Nasdaq 100 retreated 0.8%, while contracts for European stocks also pointed to a weaker open. Brent surged to $98 while WTI also traded almost $3 higher above $92 on the news.
The escalation started after US forces carried out airstrikes on an Iranian military site and imposed new sanctions to prevent Tehran from profiting from vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz.
In response, Iran targeted the American airbase from which the attack originated, according to a Tasnim report , which cited the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
Adding to the tensions, Kuwait said it was responding to hostile missile and drone threats. The nation’s army said in a social media post that “any explosions that may be heard are the result of air defense systems intercepting hostile targets.”
An American official described the attacks as defensive, saying the US intends to maintain the ceasefire that began last month. The official said US Central Command forces had shot down a quartet of one-way Iranian attack drones that were fired at a commercial ship and also struck another Iranian drone-launching unit in Bandar Abbas, near the strait.
The dollar strengthened for a third consecutive day, while gold fell 1.5% to below $4,400 an ounce. Treasuries dropped as higher oil prices stoked inflation concerns, with the yield on the benchmark 10-year climbing four basis points to about 4.53%.
Earlier, the US Treasury said it took action against Iran’s Persian Gulf Strait Authority, accusing it of launching a new attempt “to monetize its campaign of state-sponsored terror by extorting vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz.”
* * *
Fresh US Strikes on Iran amid Deal Stalemate
There are reports of new late night/early morning (local time) military strikes by the US over Iran . The US military carried out new strikes inside Iran after intercepting multiple Iranian drones, according to Reuters. An American official said the targeted Iranian military site was assessed to pose a threat to both American forces and commercial shipping operating near the Strait of Hormuz.
Reuters further reported that the intercepted drones had been launched from Iran , marking another escalation in tensions as Washington moves to counter perceived threats to regional maritime traffic and its military presence.
Just prior to this confirmation, CNN described mystery explosions along Iran's coast :
Three explosions were heard to the east of Bandar Abbas , a strategic Iranian port city and naval base near the Strait of Hormuz, Iran’s semi-official Fars News Agency reported in the early hours of Thursday.
The blasts were reported at around 1:30 a.m. local time and caused the air defense systems of Bandar Abbas to be briefly activated, according to Fars, a media outlet with links to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
This suggests things could return to full-blown military conflict once again, though the rhetoric from either side has been restrained, and at times even optimistic that a final deal could still be achieved.
More from Trump Cabinet Meeting
The president has said that under a framework deal, the Straight of Hormuz would open immediately; however, the Iranians are now insisting the IRGC has control of the vital oil transit waterway. Below is a short round-up of some of the more interesting latest statements from Trump, during a televised cabinet meeting at the White House.
TRUMP: STRAIT OF HORMUZ WILL BE OPEN TO EVERYBODY
TRUMP: WE'LL WATCH OVER STRAIT OF HORMUZ
TRUMP: OMAN WILL BEHAVE OR WE'LL HAVE TO BLOW THEM UP
TRUMP ON IRAN: WHEN THEY BEHAVE WE'LL LET THEM HAVE THEIR MONEY
Trump Red Line
President Trump has reasserted his 'red line' for negotiations, centered on enriched uranium and the nuclear issue :
President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that Iran would not get sanctions relief in exchange for giving up their highly enriched uranium. His comments come as the United States and Iran try to strike a deal to end the conflict that has engulfed the Middle East for the last three months.
"No, no, not at all. Not sanctions relief, no," Trump told PBS News during a short phone call when asked if the current deal would mean that Iran would give up their highly enriched uranium in exchange for sanctions relief.
Trump also in a televised Wednesday afternoon cabinet meeting said Iran is "intent on a deal" but that "Iran is negotiating on fumes ."
White House Rejects 'Complete Fabrication' Of Iran TV MOU Contents
The Trump administration has denied the morning Iranian state media reports on the contents of a current 'Memorandum of Understanding' (MOU) - which curiously had left out any reference whatsoever to the fate of Iran's enriched uranium...
WHITE HOUSE: NOBODY SHOULD BELIEVE IRAN STATE MEDIA REPORTING
WHITE HOUSE CALLS REPORTED IRAN MOU A 'COMPLETE FABRICATION'
An official underscored that it is a "complete fabrication" - and so it seems we are yet again back at square one, as Tehran has also said it is only engaged in 'indirect' contact with Washington at this point. There are further reports in US media that the Pentagon has drawn up a new target list, and has acknowledged that the Iranians have been able to better hide their missile launch sites.
Also emerging are ambiguous reports of some kind of potential explosion incident at a petrochemical complex at Asaluyeh, in Iran's Bushehr province.
US side denounces Iranian state media reporting on current MOU draft and status:
Oil Dumps on MOU Headlines
As for the status of talks, the below headlines present the latest (and noticeably absent is the enriched uranium question, or release of Iranian funds ). Bloomberg summarizes: "An unofficial draft of a US-Iran interim peace deal says maritime traffic through the Strait of Hormuz can return to normal within a month of the agreement being finalized , according to Iranian state television.
It’s unclear how recent the draft, reported by IRIB News, is or whether the US has agreed to the terms."
Iran's state TV says it has a draft of the initial unofficial framework for MOU with US
According to draft MOU US military forces will withdraw from vicinity of Iran and lift naval blockade
Iran's state TV says in return, Iran has committed to restoring the number of commercial transit ships through Hormuz Strait to pre-war levels within one month
Iran's state TV says military vessels are not included in this draft agreement
Iran's state TV: A final agreement will be approved as a binding UN Security Council resolution if reached in 60 days.
The Islamabad memorandum framework is still in progress, stating no action will be taken by Iran without "tangible verification."
If a final deal is reached within 60 days, this agreement will be approved in the form of a binding UN Security Council resolution.
The management and route of ship traffic through Strait of Hormuz will be handled by Iran in cooperation with Oman.
Oil dumping on the headlines:
As usual, there remains a basis for skepticism:
Iran Vows 'Graveyard For Aggressors' amid 'Indirect' US Contacts
Tehran is keeping the war rhetoric cranked to a maximum, but is also conceding that a return to full-scale war with the United States and Israel is 'unlikely' at this stage. The Islamic Republic says at this moment only 'indirect' contact with Washington is happening, as cited in Bloomberg.
The IRGC is seeking to dismantle any assumption that Iran is entering peace talks from a position of tactical submission. Speaking to the semi-official Tasnim news agency, Mohammad Akbarzadeh - the political deputy of the IRGC Navy - warned that any resumption of US kinetic activity would result in catastrophic casualties for Western forces.
Akbarzadeh touted that the armed forces remain at a level of total readiness, threatening that Iran would "turn the area from Chabahar to Mahshahr into a graveyard for aggressors " if the ceasefire collapses. "Our fighters today carry in their chests the urge for hand-to-hand battle with the enemy," Akbarzadeh declared, writing off the prospect of a renewed Western assault due to what he assessed as the "weakness" of the American-led coalition.
Pentagon: Iran 'Hedging its Bets' in Hormuz Strait
The Pentagon has acknowledged that Iran is 'hedging its bets' amid Hormuz tensions :
Former CENTCOM Commander Gen. Joseph Votel said Iran’s reported effort to lay mines in the Strait of Hormuz suggests Tehran is “hedging its bets” and attempting to ramp up pressure on the U.S. amid ongoing negotiations.
“Clearly the Iranians are trying to hedge their bets here and put more pressure on the U.S. , and what we saw here was CENTCOM detecting that and then taking military action to address it very, very quickly,” Votel said during a Tuesday appearance on Fox News' “America Reports.”
Iranian source to DropSite:
“If the U.S. cannot give the money that belongs to Iran back to Iran, and the U.S. cannot put a leash on Netanyahu and stop him from going on a rampage in Lebanon, then it shows that this conflict has not ended,” Izadi says. “This is a test for Iran to see what’s going on with the other side.”
Enriched Uranium Not on the Agenda
And all the while Iranian leaders have continued to make clear they will not bow to the central Trump administration demand of transferring Iran's highly enriched uranium out of the country - though there were prior unconfirmed reports that China could be an acceptable destination for some Iranian officials.
Speaking from the sidelines of an international security conference in Moscow, Ali Bagheri Kani, deputy secretary of the Supreme National Security Council, bluntly told Fars news agency: "This issue is not on the agenda of the negotiations."
Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian in fresh remarks is signaling that the conflict has simply migrated from an air and sea war to the global financial system.
Pezeshkian: Main Battleground Now the Economic War
Meeting with the Tehran Chamber of Commerce on Wednesday, Pezeshkian urged a structural overhaul of the country's domestic market, calling for an immediate expansion of the private sector to act as an economic shield.
"The main battleground today is the economic war," Pezeshkian stated , according to Tasnim. "We believe the more capable, agile, and active the private sector is, the stronger the country’s economic foundation will become, and the greater our national power will be in the face of external pressures and threats."
Pezeshkian framed the Western shift toward sanctions and capital starvation as an admission of military failure by Washington and its Israeli ally. "After failing to achieve its objectives on the military front, the enemy has focused on damaging the country’s economic resilience and disrupting the livelihoods of the people ," the president added.
Indeed this is obviously what the US naval blockade on Iranian ports aims to accomplish, which Washington continuing to bet on some kind of mass anti-regime uprising, which has yet to materialize since the start of Operation Epic Fury.
20 Damaged Airports Across Country Reopened
To demonstrate its resolve and resiliency even while Washington tries to keep the economic chokehold on, Iranian civic workers continue to rebuild logistical infrastructure at rapid pace.
As the latest example, on Wednesday the Civil Aviation Organization announced that Tabriz International Airport in northwestern Iran- which sustained heavy damage from airstrikes during the peak of the aerial bombings - is officially operational again.
"The gateway to northwest Iran"...
According to public broadcaster IRIB, domestic technical teams managed to bypass supply chain bottlenecks to restore the facility to full service. "Tabriz Airport, which was attacked during the recent war, has now been restored to activity by Iranian specialists and will reopen on Wednesday," a spokesperson confirmed.
Tabriz joins a growing list of critical transit hubs rushing to normalize operations, according to Al Jazeera, while state media reports state that the total number of reopened airports across the country has now reached 20 .
Tyler Durden
Thu, 05/28/2026 - 03:24 Close