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Thu, 16 Jul 2026 12:38:09 +0000 Despite Slumping Sentiment & Lower Gas Prices, The American Consumer Is Still Spending Strongly
Despite Slumping Sentiment & Lower Gas Prices, The American Consumer Is Still Spending Strongly
While headline spend at gas stations is expected to decline (due to tumbling pump prices), BofA's almost omniscient analysts forecast a
Read more.....
Despite Slumping Sentiment & Lower Gas Prices, The American Consumer Is Still Spending Strongly
While headline spend at gas stations is expected to decline (due to tumbling pump prices), BofA's almost omniscient analysts forecast a stronger than consensus print for today's US Retail Sales data.
After a big jump in May (revised up), June's Headline retail sales rose 0.2% MoM (as expected), with sales up 6.7% YoY (down modestly)...
Gasoline Stations sales saw the biggest decline (along with small drops in Health Personal Care and Food and Beverage). Nonstore Retailers saw the biggest jump in spend along with Motor Vehicle and Parts Dealers...
That was the biggest monthly drop in gasoline station sales since Dec 2022...
Nonstore Retailers, Gasoline Station, & Motor Vehicle sales are the biggest drivers of annual (NSA) growth...
Core (Ex-Autos) fell 0.2% MoM and Ex-Autos and Gas rose 0.4% MoM (so declining gas spend was notable), but annual growth in spend remains strong...
Most notably, the Control Group - which feeds directly into the GDP calc - jumped 0.5% MoM (as expected)
Interestingly, 'real' retail sales (admittedly crudely adjusted via CPI) continue to rebound from a negative print in December to its highest since March 2022...
Finally, the American consumer appears to still be spending despite survey-based catastrophic slump in sentiment...
Admittedly, lower-income households have indeed felt the pinch of the gas shock more: they’ve seen a larger increase in necessary spending, which has led to a widening of the “K” in discretionary outlays.
Will that start to ease now that gas prices are starting to tumble? (although rising in recent days).
Tyler Durden
Thu, 07/16/2026 - 08:38 Close
Thu, 16 Jul 2026 12:25:43 +0000 Futures Slide After Another Korea Rout, TSMA Results Revive AI Fears
Futures Slide After Another Korea Rout, TSMA Results Revive AI Fears
Futures are lower, erasing much of yesterday's gain with both Nasdaq and Rusell lagging SPX, following a continued rollercoaster in Korea where stocks tumbled afte
Read more.....
Futures Slide After Another Korea Rout, TSMA Results Revive AI Fears
Futures are lower, erasing much of yesterday's gain with both Nasdaq and Rusell lagging SPX, following a continued rollercoaster in Korea where stocks tumbled after the BOK hired rates for the first time in 3 years. As of 8:15am ET, S&P futures dropped 0.3%, while Nasdaq 100 contracts dropped 0.8%. In premarket trading, semis are weaker again while Mag7 is stronger (AMZN, GOOG, META, and MSFT all up are least 1.2%) with the market having "a defensive tilt as the AI theme is poised to move lower" per JPM. A strong earnings beat and raised sales outlook from TSMC failed to trigger fresh gains for the sector that has fueled most of this year’s stock market gains. Europe’s Stoxx 600 was down 0.6%. WTI trading in a tighter range into Trump’s speech, AI / Semis are driving mkts with TSM ADRs indicated -3.5% their print may not be enough to buoy the group. Korea moves to tighten rules around levered ETFs, so more near-term downside may ensue. US to set 25% tariff for Brazil on July 22, ex-beef / coffee / ethanol products. Pre-mkt, bond yields are +2bp with USD flat. Commodities are lower across all 3 complexes though base metals are bid. Today’s macro data focus is on Retail Sales where a stronger print may pull some inflows into consumer-related segments, which still have light positioning.
In premarket trading, Mag 7 stocks are mixed (Alphabet +1.3%, Microsoft +1.3%, Amazon +0.7%, Meta +0.3%, Apple +0.4%, Tesla -0.2%, Nvidia -1.5%)
AtaiBeckley (ATAI) leaps 34% as Eli Lilly is in talks to acquire the psychedelic drugmaker, according people familiar with the matter. Analysts are positive about the psychedelic sector; RBC singles out GH Research (GHRS +18%) for a direct read-across.
GE Aerospace (GE) declines 4% after the world’s largest jet-engine manufacturer posted second quarter results and provided an updated forecast.
United Airlines (UAL) falls 3% after the airline’s updated full-year adjusted EPS forecast trailed the average analyst estimate.
UnitedHealth Group (UNH) is up 7% after the health conglomerate raised its outlook for the year and reported quarterly profit well ahead of Wall Street’s views, helping to solidify the company’s earnings recovery after a historic collapse. Shares of peer insurers are up on the news: Humana (HUM) +5%, Centene (CNC) +3%.
In other corporate news Hyundai Motor is moving to acquire SoftBank’s remaining stake in Boston Dynamics, securing full ownership of the robotics pioneer at a steep discount. ABB agreed to buy British industrial components company Rotork for an enterprise value of around $5.5 billion to expand its electrification and automation businesses. Japan is planning to buy 27,500 next-generation Rubin chips from Nvidia to build a homegrown foundational AI model for robots. Jensen Huang said Nvidia’s next-generation AI accelerator systems were in production and on track for delivery. The AI frenzy is showing up in Asia airlines’ cargo bays helping to mitigate the surge in jet fuel costs.
TSMC hiked sales and spending projections for the year, signaling its confidence in the demand for chips and data centers holding up through 2027 and beyond. However, American depositary receipts for the firm are down 4.6% during premarket trading, while peers like Micron, Marvell and Nvidia also declined. With TSMC’s results, concern around AI — and the capital spending behind it — has been brought back to the forefront. Traders have become more critical over AI this year, rotating out of stocks linked to the technology on the basis that the spending has failed to produce meaningful returns.
Chipmakers’ leading role in this year’s equity advances is increasingly coming under strain as traders grapple with lofty stock valuations and whether AI hyperscalers are building more capacity than they will need. Investors are also looking for opportunities to rotate to other sectors within the AI trade that will benefit from the global buildout at more attractive prices.
The latest rout in Korean stocks (full discussion in a subsequent post ), sparked selling in tech names, even after Taiwan chip giant TSMC raised its spending and revenue projections for the year, reflecting its confidence that torrid growth in demand for chips and data centers will extend into 2027. TSMC also plans to spend an additional $100 billion to expand US chipmaking capacity. Still, such strong earnings alone aren’t sustaining the momentum trade, signaling that investors are reducing risk. Indeed, as Goldman noted yesterday, we have now seen the worst monthly plunge in high beta momentum since the Global Financial Crisis.
With signs of memory capacity expansion, and Chinese competition ramping - investors might begin to look through perceived low P/E multiples and focus on a more cyclical measure of price/book, which paints a contrasting picture.
Korea’s Kospi was hit particularly hard, down 6.4%, as its two main heavyweights, Samsung and SK Hynix both fell more than 10%. Korean authorities moved to curb volatility, announcing a temporary halt on new listings of single-stock leveraged exchange-traded products tied to the chipmakers.
“There’s been a lot of concentration in the market and that means there’s little room for error,” said Richard Flynn, managing director at Charles Schwab UK. “Global geopolitical risk is elevated and so there’s a relative tone of caution fundamentally looking at the macro outlook.”
“There’s been a lot of rotation within the AI trade, and a small rotation more broadly,” said Toni Meadows, head of investments at BRI Wealth Management. “It’s probably a healthy thing to have consolidation. The further things go, the more stretched they get and then the reaction is bigger.”
After two days in which softer-than-expected inflation data saw traders dial back their expectations for Federal Reserve interest rate hikes this year, June retail sales numbers will put the spotlight on the strength of American consumers.
In geopolitics, the IEA boss warned the global economy is in peril if the Hormuz crisis persists . US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer offered praise for Switzerland’s stance in trade negotiations and its investments in the US, a positive sign for the European nation as it looks to secure a 15% tariff and avoid further confrontation with Trump. The US will begin charging a 25% tariff on imports of certain goods from Brazil following an investigation alleging that the country engaged in unfair trade practices.
In hedge fund news, King Street Capital Management told clients it’s significantly restricting withdrawals from its main hedge fund, moving investors who want to exit to a separate vehicle that will sell off the assets over time.
European equities edged lower on Thursday with the Stoxx 600 down 0.4%, as utilities and telecommunications shares led declines, while the biggest outperformers are media and banking stocks. Here are the biggest movers Thursday
Indutrade shares surge as much as 14% after the Swedish flow control equipment firm’s second-quarter results beat estimates. Analysts at SB1 Markets said the company is poised to win consensus upgrades
Diploma shares rise as much as 5.4%, the most in nearly two months, as the equipment supplier upgrades full-year guidance again
Publicis shares rise as much as 4% after the advertising agency raised the low-end of its organic revenue growth guidance, saying new business wins are contributing about 2 percentage points of extra growth on FY basis
De’Longhi rises as much as 4.9% in Milan, the most since May, after Goldman Sachs initiated coverage with a buy rating, citing the household appliance maker’s exposure to the growing espresso coffee market
Dunelm shares rise as much as 5.6%, hitting a four-month high, after the homeware retailer reported better sales growth in the fourth quarter compared to the exit rate coming out of the third
Telenor shares fall as much as 13%, the steepest drop since October 2008, after the Nordic telecom operator reported second-quarter results that missed estimates and lowered its full-year guidance
ABB falls as much as 4.1%, erasing an initial gain of 1%, after the industrial group reported second-quarter results with focus on the company’s announcement that it would buy Rotork for $5.5 billion
Partners Group shares fall as much as 8.2%, the most in six weeks, after the Swiss alternative asset manager’s first-half net inflows disappointed analysts
Experian shares fell as much as 7.1%, as the credit checking company’s first-quarter organic revenue growth moderates. Analysts say the results were largely expected
Frasers shares drop as much as 5.9%, underperforming the FTSE 250 Index on Thursday morning, after the UK retailer reported weaker-than-expected adjusted pretax profit for the year
Ocado shares slide as much as 17%, to the lowest price since 2013, after the online grocery firm confirmed further delays to multiple customer fulfillment centers
Asian stocks slumped as investors accelerated semiconductor selling, dragging down sector-heavy markets and souring broader sentiment. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index slid as much as 2% before paring some losses, as the stock markets in South Korea, Japan and mainland China registered losses. Korea’s Kospi was hit particularly hard, down 6.4%, as its two main heavyweights, Samsung and SK Hynix both fell more than 10%. Korean authorities moved to curb volatility, announcing a temporary halt on new listings of single-stock leveraged exchange-traded products tied to the chipmakers. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index bucked the trend to gain 1.3%, as investors rotated into the Chinese internet giants such as Alibaba and Tencent. Most Southeast Asian markets, such as Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia, also traded higher.
Korea, Taiwan and Japan have been among the global leaders this year, but face mounting scrutiny as investors question whether the AI rally can last. A gauge of Asian chipmakers fell as much as 4.6%. Still, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. provided more signs of sustained AI demand, when it raised its spending and revenue projections for the year. With leading Korean chip names down, investors are rotating out of the country, said Yi Ping Liao, portfolio manager at Franklin Templeton. “But interestingly it doesn’t look like a broad based rotation out of tech as Taiwan tech and China tech remain well supported.”
“Now that selling momentum builds in the Korean semis, investors are returning to China where valuations are depressed,” Vey-Sern Ling, managing director at Union Bancaire Privee, said, adding China’s tech performance has been inversely correlated with high-flying Korean memory names recently.
In FX, the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index is near flat with muted moves across the G-10 complex.
In rates, treasuries fall despite a pullback in oil prices that correlations suggest should be accompanied by gains for bonds. That’s not been the case however with US 10-year yields rising 2 bps to 4.57%. UK and German government bonds are nursing similar sized declines. Long-end yields cheaper by around 3bp and the curve slightly steeper, amid similar moves in European bonds. The price action unwinds a portion of the sharp rally over the past two days spurred by soft CPI and PPI prints. Treasury yields are 2bp-3bp cheaper across the curve with 5s30s spread steeper by around 1bp, adding to its sharp widening since Tuesday. 10-year is around 4.57% with bunds and gilts similarly cheaper. IG dollar issuance slate includes a couple of deals. JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley headlined a $23.6 billion slate Wednesday with $9 billion offerings. Issuers paid an average of about two basis points in new issue concessions on deals that were 4.1 times covered. Focal points of US session include June retail sales data and several Fed speakers.
In commodities, Brent crude futures fall 0.8% to around $84.30 a barrel even after the US struck Iran for a fifth straight day. European natural gas futures are down 1%. Bitcoin falls over 1% while precious metals are also in the red.
US economic data calendar includes July New York Fed services activity, weekly jobless claims, July Philadelphia Fed business outlook index, and June retail sales (8:30am), July NAHB housing market index, May business inventories and June pending home sales (10am). Fed calendar includes Dallas Fed’s Logan (12:30pm), Kansas City Fed’s Schmid (1:25pm) and Vice Chair Jefferson (7pm)
Market Snapshot
Top Overnight News
The US struck Iran for a fifth straight day overnight and hit a sanctioned oil tanker near the country’s main export terminal. Iran fired at US bases in Kuwait and Jordan. BBG
Iran allowed an American citizen to go free after preventing her from leaving the country for a year and a half, a move President Trump called a “gesture of good will” amid a deepening standoff between the two foes. WSJ
The Trump administration said on Wednesday that it would impose a new 25 percent tariff on Brazil next week, arguing that the country had adopted a range of unfair trade practices against the United States. The tariff will apply to thousands of Brazilian products, but will exempt several major categories of exports, including oil and gas, beef, coffee, oranges, and aircraft parts. The tariff will apply to Brazilian ethanol, and take effect next Wednesday. NYT
South Korea’s central bank raised interest rates for the first time in over three years, joining its global peers to tighten policy in the face of inflation fueled by the U.S.-Iran conflict. Bank of Korea Gov. Shin Hyun-song said that the bank would tighten policy further in coming months, citing stronger-than-expected economic growth and inflation. WSJ
South Korea’s top financial regulator unveiled measures to curb risks from single-stock leveraged exchange-traded funds, seeking to stabilize a local stock market that has seen wild swings, as individual investors use debt to chase profits amid artificial-intelligence-related jitters. The Financial Services Commission said Thursday that it would suspend new listings of single-stock leveraged ETFs, ban securities firms and asset managers from advertising or marketing such products. WSJ
Baidu plans to pursue a dual primary listing in the US and Hong Kong, a move that will allow it to tap mainland Chinese investors. BBG
UK economic data for May was mixed, with modestly better GDP and manufacturing production while industrial production fell slightly short . BBG
Smoke blanketed parts of the Northeast, Midwest and Great Lakes as hundreds of wildfires burned across Canada. New Yorkers face unhealthy air again today and are advised to stay indoors, according to state data. BBG
The dip in SpaceX's shares below its blockbuster IPO price of $135 a share is an ominous sign ?for Elon Musk's internet and rocket company as it faces more potential volatility in early August, when the number of shares available for trading on the Nasdaq stands to increase significantly from the lockup expiration. Reuters
The market has priced a large US growth upgrade and more hawkish policy views versus before the war. Goldman
BofA week-to-July 11th total card spending +4.5% (prev. 4.8%); spending growth slowed but remains solid.
A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk
APAC stocks were ultimately mixed, albeit with a mostly negative bias in the major indices, as risk sentiment was dampened by a sell-off in semiconductor stocks. ASX 200 was subdued with the index pressured by losses in miners after BHP reported lower output. Nikkei 225 slid below 67,000 with chip-related stocks over-represented in the list of worst performers. KOSPI triggered sidecars as Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix slumped alongside the semiconductor sell-off, while the BoK also raised its key rate by 25bps to 2.75%, as expected, and signalled further action. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were mixed with the mainland in the red following disappointing loans and financing data, while the Hong Kong benchmark rallied amid strength in hyperscalers following reports that US companies were increasingly adopting open-weight Chinese AI models and that Alibaba's Qwen AI would be integrated into Apple Intelligence in China.
Top Asian News
South Korea Financial Regulator said they are to revise rules on single-stock leveraged ETFs to temporarily halt new single leveraged products from listing. The minimum required investor deposit is to be raised to KRW 30mln from KRW 10mln.
Japanese Finance Minister Katayama reiterated they will take appropriate action on FX anytime as needed, although she won't comment on specific FX levels, and stated they will monitor market developments and economic indicators to achieve fiscal sustainability.
European bourses (STOXX 600 -0.3%) begin Thursday’s trade entirely in the red, with underperformance in the SMI (-0.9%) after earnings from Partners Group and ABB. On the data front, UK GDP M/M printed 0.1% M/M, in line with expectations, while the 3M ticked down to 0.7%, from 0.8%, but beat the 0.5% consensus; no reaction seen in the FTSE 100. Sectors highlight the negative bias, with Media (+0.6%) the only sector printing modest gains after earnings from Publicis (+2.1%), raising its FY revenue guidance. Underperformance is seen in Utilities (-1.1%), followed by Industrial Goods & Services (-1.0%) and Financial Services (-1.1%). US equity futures follow their European peers, trading entirely in the red, despite strong TSMC earnings and an Nvidia announcement. For TSMC, the Co. reported Q2 metrics that beat estimates and raised its Q3 revenue guidance. Additionally, the Co. is to add another USD 100bln of US investment. For Nvidia, the Co. announced that Japan, through Noetra, will buy 27,500 Rubin chips to build AI models for robots.
Top European News
Italy PM Meloni’s electoral reform has been approved by Italy’s lower house in a vote.
FX
G10s lack direction against the Buck in light newsflow. GBP, CHF and NOK all lower after recent gains.
DXY is marginally firmer, but USD gains are mixed against other G10 peers. Today’s calendar sees a few Fed speakers, Logan, Schmid and Jefferson, and the data slate features Retail Sales and weekly jobless claims.
NOK and CHF are the worst performers against the Greenback, which attempts to retrace lost ground with energy prices weighing on NOK, and USD/CHF garnering support around 0.8050.
Not too much was learned from the UK GDP reading for May, which rose but fell short of expectations. On Wednesday, GBP rallied after a number of outlets reported that Mahmood was set for the Chancellor role. Currently, GBP/USD is holding onto gains just above the 1.35 mark.
EUR is flat against the USD and slightly firmer against GBP, with bloc-specific newsflow light. For now, EUR trades within a narrow 1.1460-74 range. EZ calendar light with ECB on its quiet period ahead of its policy meeting next week.
Fixed Income
Global fixed income benchmarks are modestly softer across the board, with a lack of clear drivers, and as US-Iran strikes continue to stoke fears of prolonged inflation.
Gilts (-15 ticks) trade at the lower end of its 87.15-87.60 range, giving back some of Wednesday’s gains. This morning, UK GDP printed 0.1% M/M, in line with expectations, while the three-month gauge ticked down to 0.7% (from 0.8%), but still beat the 0.5% consensus. Politics remain front and centre: reports on Wednesday suggest that incoming PM Andy Burnham is likely to appoint Home Secretary Mahmood as the next Chancellor. Markets have taken this as a positive as she is seen as fiscally conservative, though many still seek clarity on her broader positions. Polymarket gives Mahmood a 63% chance vs Miliband's 9% to become the next Chancellor. The UK had a decent auction, however demand did fall from the prior auction
OATs (-22 ticks) follow their European peers lower. Politics remains in focus; recently, RN's Le Pen was found guilty of embezzlement by the Paris court, but given the timing of the first round of the Presidential Election, she is eligible to run for President. Since then, she announced she would appeal the court's decision and has launched her Presidential campaign. Polls show that Le Pen has extended her lead, with support rising to above 35% from 33% before she announced her bid. Today’s auctions came broadly in line with priors, with demand holding near 3x.
USTs (-7 ticks) look ahead for more Fedspeak, with Logan, Schmid and Jefferson all set to speak on the economy and economic outlook today (note: Jefferson is after hours). On the data front, initial jobless claims and retail sales are the highlights.
The UK sells GBP 4.25bln 4.875% 2036 Treasury Gilt: b/c 3.13x (prev. 3.46x), average yield 5.040% (prev. 4.858%), tail 0.1bps (prev. 0.1bps).
France sells EUR 13.999bln vs exp. EUR 12-14bln 2.40% 2029, 1.50% 2031, 3.25% 2032 and 3.50% 2033 OAT.
Spain sells EUR 5.974bln vs exp. EUR 5-6bln 2.35% 2029, 3.55% 2033 and 3.95% 2056 Bono.
Commodities
The situation between the US and Iran remains volatile. Overnight, the US completed another round of strikes on various parts of Iran, targeting military capabilities. Tehran responded with its own attacks on Kuwait and Jordan.
The path to peace currently remains uncertain. President Trump said that strikes would expand next week; a recent report via the WSJ suggested that Trump is leaning toward expanding US military operations in Iran after days of briefings from top aides. If this proves to be the case, then the risk is that Iran responds with a harsher response against its regional peers. Thus far, Iran has generally avoided energy infrastructure across Gulf nations, but a US expansion could see Iran begin to target Gulf energy facilities, posing risks for oil supply. In the immediate term, the Strait remains shut and near-term flows have been slowed; longer-term, severe facility damage could see halts to production for several months/years, analysts say.
Despite these risks, crude benchmarks are trading lower this morning; Brent Sep’26 (-0.5%) trades within a USD 84.30-85.55/bbl range. Price action was lacklustre overnight and into the European morning. However, some modest upticks (c. USD 0.30/bbl) were seen after an Iranian Top Military Commander stated that the Strait of Hormuz is a red line and added that all infrastructure in the region will be "crushed" if the US continues its interference.
Spot gold (-0.6%) moved lower throughout the APAC session. The subdued action filtered through into London hours; currently holding at session lows of USD 4,024/oz (vs peak of USD 4,064/oz). Action, which is a bit of a paring back from the gains seen in the past couple of sessions. Elsewhere, base metals hold a modest positive bias. 3M LME Copper (+0.3%) holds within a USD 13,541-13,648/t range.
Crude oil flows were suspended at all Iraqi oil loading terminals following a drone crash into an oil tanker at Iraq’s Basra terminal; no damage or fires were reported, security sources said.
Trade/Tariffs
The US is to set a 25% tariff on some Brazil goods from July 22nd, with coffee and beef exempted.
USTR Greer said that Canada offers no concessions and that Mexico is pragmatic in USMCA talks.
Central Banks
BoK raised its 7-day Repo Rate by 25bps to 2.75%, as expected. BoK said the rate decision was unanimous and growth rate this year is expected to considerably surpass the May forecast of 2.6%. Will assess timing of further increase in inflation pressure, improvement trend in the economy and financial stability.
BoE's Breeden said it is important firms are stress testing AI valuations. The Iran war shock is less likely to become embedded and lead to inflationary dynamics that members might need to lean against.
NBP's Zarzecki said the base case is for rates to remain unchanged until the turn of 2026/27, with rates likely to rise in 2027.
SNB Minutes (Jun): Although inflation risks have increased in recent months and stronger second-round effects are possible, there is no immediate need for action.
Geopolitics
US President Trump posted that Iran allowed a US citizen who was wrongly detained in December 2024 to leave the country. Trump added that the citizen is now safely outside of Iran and in good condition, while he stated that the US appreciates the gesture of goodwill by Iran.
US VP Vance said Israel is more effective than most at influencing the US, and that some people in the Israeli government want war indefinitely. Furthermore, Vance said they are not going to send ground troops for regime change and that the US will not simply engage in endless bombing of Iran.
US CENTCOM said forces conducted operations for a second wave of strikes on Wednesday against Iran and that US forces disabled a non-compliant vessel in the Arabian Gulf, while it denied Iranian claims that US forces struck a civilian wheat storage facility in Hoveyzeh on July 14th and described the reports as false.
Explosions were heard in Iran's Khorramabad, and US air strikes targeted areas in Tehran. Explosions were also heard in Iran's Qeshm and Bandar Abbas, while US projectiles hit near Sirik.
Iran attacked economic interests and US facilities in Kuwait, while at least 10 explosions were heard at the US Navy's Fifth Fleet Headquarters in Bahrain, and Iran also targeted Jordan.
Kuwait said its armed forces intercepted four cruise missiles and 21 drones from Iran on Wednesday, while Iranian aggression targeted a number of vital facilities, resulting in material damage, although no injuries were reported.
Iran's Top Joint Military Command said the Strait of Hormuz is a red line and added that all infrastructure in the region will be "crushed" if the US continues its interference.
Houthis were reportedly laying the groundwork and quietly extending their reach to the Horn of Africa, according to the Telegraph citing sources in Yemen, with Houthi rebels reportedly preparing to shut the Bab el-Mandeb Strait on behalf of Iran. Furthermore, sources said the effort was a deliberate Iranian attempt to control "the other side of the Red Sea" and create a situation similar to its grip on the Strait of Hormuz.
Israeli Defence Minister said US operations against Iran was discussed in the phone call with the US Secretary of State Rubio, and said Israel will remain in security zones in Syria, Gaza and Lebanon.
Ukraine's security service said it struck two Russian shadow fleet tankers in the Black sea and hit six more tankers and two tug boats in the Sea of Azov and Black sea.
US and Iraq to announce USD 60bln in commercial deals as Trump pivots US-Iraq ties towards commerce over military, according to Semafor.
US Event Calendar
8:30 am: Jul Philadelphia Fed Business Outlook, est. 12.5, prior 10.3
8:30 am: Jun Retail Sales Advance MoM, est. 0.2%, prior 0.9%
8:30 am: Jul 11 Initial Jobless Claims, est. 217k, prior 215k
8:30 am: Jun Retail Sales Ex Auto MoM, est. -0.1%, prior 0.8%
8:30 am: Jul 4 Continuing Claims, est. 1817.5k, prior 1814k
10:00 am: Jun Pending Home Sales MoM, est. -0.5%, prior 3.8%
Central Bank speakers
12:30 pm: Fed’s Logan Speaks on the Economy and Monetary Policy
1:25 pm: Fed’s Schmid Speaks at Kansas City Fed Economic Forum
7:00 pm: Fed’s Jefferson Speaks on Economy and Monetary Policy
DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap
As hearts were broken in England, markets continued to shrug off the recent escalations in the Middle East and have mostly had a positive last 24 hours. Admittedly, there’s been some weakness among chip stocks in Asia this morning, but otherwise, markets benefited from a soft US PPI print which continued to drive a dovish repricing. Indeed, the probability of a Fed rate hike in a couple of weeks’ time now stands at just 10% this morning, the lowest it’s been since the Fed’s last meeting that led to the imminent hike speculation in the first place. Moreover, oil prices finally stabilised after their jump earlier this week, with Brent crude (+0.26%) up only marginally yesterday, and they’ve since fallen back -0.22% overnight to $84.76/bbl. Meanwhile, risk appetite also remained resilient, with the S&P 500 (+0.38%) closing just half a percent from its record high last month, and futures for the index are up another +0.13% this morning.
As on Tuesday, that US inflation print really cemented investor confidence in the dovish narrative this week. Notably, headline PPI was down -0.3% in June (vs. unch expected), but we also had a big downward revision to the May reading, which fell half a point to +0.6%. So the recent inflation picture was softer than originally thought, with the year-on-year PPI reading down to +5.5% (vs. +6.2% expected). And significantly for investors, there wasn’t any obvious alarm either from the components that feed into PCE inflation (the Fed’s target measure). See our US economists’ inflation recap here.
That backdrop meant investors continued to dial back the chances of a Fed hike, with US Treasury yields coming down across the curve. For instance, the 2yr yield (-5.9bps) was down to 4.14%, whilst the 10yr yield (-4.2bps) fell to 4.55%. We also heard from Fed Chair Warsh once again, who was appearing before the Senate Banking Committee. The new Chair said he “repeatedly” told Trump that he would be independent, but there were no major policy headlines from his session and little to point towards an imminent hike. Separately, Fed Governor Cook maintained a hawkish-leaning tone, saying that the FOMC can take its time to observe more data but that “If we do not see signs of disinflation soon, I am prepared to act”.
As all that was happening, oil prices fluctuated amidst the competing headlines out of the Middle East, but they ultimately stabilised after their sharp jump earlier in the week. In terms of the latest developments, oil prices initially eased back yesterday but then edged higher as US forces conducted new strikes overnight and the WSJ reported that Trump was leaning towards expanding military operations against Iran. But overall, Brent crude has been broadly flat, with a modest +0.26% increase yesterday to $84.95/bbl, and overnight it’s since fallen back -0.22% to $84.76/bbl.
For US equities there was another decent performance as well yesterday, aided by the dovish repricing. Moreover, the latest earnings results added further support, with BlackRock (+6.63%) as the second-best performer in the S&P 500 yesterday after its results beat expectations. So that helped the S&P 500 (+0.38%) to post a second daily increase, despite a drag from chip stocks, as the Philly semiconductor index fell -2.08%. But other tech stocks fared better, with the NASDAQ up +0.62%. Moreover, the Mag-7 rallied +2.31%, led by Apple (+4.01%) after it received government approval to roll out Apple Intelligence in China.
Those themes have continued overnight, with weakness among chip stocks dragging down some of the major indices in Asia. For instance, it’s been another volatile day for the KOSPI (-6.55%), which is currently on track for a two-month low as it stands, having shed over -25% since its peak less than a month ago. And we’ve seen weakness in Japan as well overnight, with the Nikkei down -2.48%, and in mainland China the CSI 300 (-0.91%) and the Shanghai Comp (-0.82%) have also fallen. The one exception to that is the Hang Seng, which is up +1.93% this morning.
In other news overnight, the Bank of Korea delivered their first rate hike since 2023, with a 25bp hike that took the policy rate to 2.75%. The move was in line with consensus, and their statement said that “inflation is expected to remain above the target level for a considerable time”, and they said that growth this year “is expected to considerably exceed the May forecast of 2.6%.” Meanwhile, they also signalled further hikes ahead, saying that “it is judged that it will be necessary to continue a policy stance consistent with further rate hikes”.
Staying on central banks, we also heard from the Bank of Canada yesterday, who kept rates unchanged as the consensus expected. There was some optimism however, as their statement said that the economy was “showing signs of improvement”. But the market reaction was pretty muted, and the decline in 10yr Canadian bond yields (-4.3bps) was almost exactly in line with that for 10yr US Treasuries.
Earlier in Europe, there was also a weaker performance yesterday, with yields moving higher as concern grew on the inflation side. The problem was that even as oil prices fell back, natural gas prices continued to tick higher, with European futures hitting a fresh 3-month high yesterday of €54.35/MWh. So that backdrop saw yields on 10yr bunds (+0.7bps), OATs (+1.8bps) and BTPs (+2.6bps) all move higher, although the STOXX 600 (+0.10%) managed to eke out a modest gain, even as the DAX (-0.59%) and FTSE-MIB (-0.85%) saw larger declines.
Finally, with Andy Burnham set to become UK Prime Minister next week, the FT reported that the next Chancellor of the Exchequer was likely to be Shabana Mahmood, the current home secretary. This had been a key focus for UK markets in recent days, and the pound strengthened on the headlines, ending the day up +1.12% against the US dollar at $1.3540. Moreover, gilts also extended their outperformance after the news, with the 10y yield (-3.8bps) down to 4.94%, the opposite direction to yields in continental Europe.
Looking at the day ahead, US data releases include retail sales and pending home sales for June, the NAHB’s housing market index and the Philadelphia Fed’s business outlook survey for July, and the weekly initial jobless claims. Meanwhile in the UK, we’ll get the monthly GDP print for May. Otherwise, central bank speakers include the Fed’s Logan and Schmid. Finally, today’s earnings releases include Netflix, Morgan Stanley and Johnson & Johnson.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 07/16/2026 - 08:25 Close
Thu, 16 Jul 2026 12:05:00 +0000 The Big Pharma Psychedelic Buyout Spree Has Begun
The Big Pharma Psychedelic Buyout Spree Has Begun
The Big Pharma Psychedelic Buyout Spree Has Begun
Submitted by QTR's Fringe Finance
Massive validation for psychedelics…not as drugs, but as investments could be moments away. Just months after I argued for the millionth time that psychedelic drug developers were likely to become acquisition targets as the sector gained legitimacy, it looks like the first major domino may finally be falling.
According to a Bloomberg report published moments ago , Eli Lilly is in talks to acquire AtaiBeckley, one of the leading developers of next-generation psychedelic therapies. While nothing is finalized, Bloomberg reports a deal could be announced as soon as this week, with Lilly negotiating at a premium to AtaiBeckley’s roughly $2 billion market value.
If this transaction gets across the finish line, I don’t think it’ll be remembered as an isolated acquisition. I think it’ll be remembered as the moment Big Pharma officially entered the psychedelic arms race.
I’ve been writing for well over a year that investors were dramatically underestimating how this story would unfold. Most people focused exclusively on whether psychedelic drugs would work. I was far more interested in what would happen once they did.
Back in January when absolutely no one was talking about the sector, I officially hung my balls out there and name it my “Best Idea” sector for 2026 . I argued that these companies didn’t need everything to go right. They simply needed legitimacy. Once regulators, clinicians and large pharmaceutical companies accepted these therapies as real medicine instead of fringe science, today’s tiny clinical-stage companies could quickly become strategic assets.
That thesis suddenly looks a lot less theoretical. According to Bloomberg, Lilly has been quietly evaluating the psychedelic space for some time. The acquisition target makes perfect sense.
While the company has become synonymous with obesity drugs over the last several years, many investors forget Lilly built one of the most successful antidepressants in history with Prozac and has continued investing heavily in neuroscience, Alzheimer’s disease and non-opioid pain therapies. Psychedelics are simply the logical next frontier…and I’ve constantly argued they could be a threat to antidepressants.
None of this should come as a surprise to longtime readers.
Just weeks ago, one of my “26 Stocks to Watch for 2026,” Definium Therapeutics, exploded higher after reporting successful Phase 3 results for its LSD-based treatment for major depressive disorder .
The stock surged more than 60% in one session and roughly tripled from where it began the year. When I wrote about those results in June, I reminded readers that my bullish thesis on psychedelics had never been based solely on clinical efficacy. It was based on legitimacy.
I’ve been pounding the table on psychedelic companies since early 2025 because I believed the science was continuing to improve while Washington’s posture toward the sector was quietly changing underneath the surface.
I was writing about these stocks 18 months ago, first in January 2025, calling the psychedelic names “stocks to watch” for the year. Then, in July 2025, urging patience in these positions: Being Early—And Patient—In Psychedelics
Earlier this year I argued that Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Department of Health and Human Services would likely help accelerate institutional acceptance of these therapies, particularly for veterans suffering from PTSD, addiction and depression.
In April, after the administration’s executive order supporting psychedelic research, I reiterated my bullish stance and argued that we were moving from the phase where these therapies were ignored into the phase where institutions would be forced to engage with them seriously. That transition appears to be underway.
The administration has publicly supported psychedelic research, federal agencies appear increasingly willing to engage with the field, states continue building regulatory frameworks around treatment programs and the stigma surrounding these compounds has steadily eroded.
Back in January, I wrote that the market was dramatically underpricing one simple reality. These weren’t speculative science projects anymore…they were organized, capitalized pharmaceutical development programs.
As I wrote earlier this year, these companies don’t necessarily need dozens of approvals. They need legitimacy. Once legitimacy arrives, capital follows.
Today we’re beginning to see exactly what that looks like.
I've also remained a believer that the AdvisorShares Psychedelics ETF (PSIL) is one of the best ways to gain diversified exposure to the theme . Earlier this year, I even reiterated what many people thought was a ridiculous prediction when I first made it: that PSIL could eventually trade north of $100 if psychedelic medicine evolves into a mainstream investment theme.
That isn't a forecast for next month and it certainly isn't a guarantee. It's simply a reflection of what can happen when an entire sector goes from being dismissed and ignored to becoming institutionally accepted. Markets have a long history of dramatically underpricing paradigm shifts before ultimately overshooting in the opposite direction. If psychedelics follow a similar path, I still believe the long-term upside for the broader sector could be substantially larger than most investors currently imagine.
Importantly, I don’t think Lilly will be the last major pharmaceutical company knocking on these doors.
If psychedelic therapies continue producing successful Phase 3 data, larger drugmakers will increasingly face a choice. Either spend years and billions attempting to build internal psychedelic programs...
...or simply acquire companies that have already done the difficult clinical work.
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History suggests acquisitions usually become the preferred option.
Large pharmaceutical companies routinely buy innovation rather than inventing everything themselves. Oncology, gene therapy, obesity drugs and biotechnology more broadly have all gone through similar acquisition waves as promising clinical data accumulated.
There’s little reason to believe psychedelics will prove different.
In fact, the economics may become even more compelling. Many of these companies still carry relatively modest market capitalizations despite owning potentially valuable intellectual property and late-stage assets. For a pharmaceutical company generating tens of billions in annual revenue, paying several billion dollars for a differentiated neuroscience platform may ultimately prove inexpensive if these treatments become standard of care.
That’s exactly why I’ve been saying for more than a year that investors shouldn’t think only about FDA approvals. They should think about strategic value.
Clinical success doesn’t just create future revenue, it creates scarcity. And scarcity is exactly what fuels acquisition premiums. I’ve long believed the market was dramatically underestimating this possibility.
Today’s Lilly-AtaiBeckley news doesn’t prove the entire thesis. But it certainly looks like the first major piece of evidence that the industry’s next phase has arrived.
If anything, I think the acquisition race is only beginning. As more late-stage trial results emerge, more regulatory milestones are reached and institutional acceptance continues expanding, I expect the list of potential buyers to grow rather than shrink.
For years, psychedelic investing has been on the fence. Lilly just legitimized it. And my readers we were at the party first.
---
QTR’s Disclaimer : Please read my full legal disclaimer on my About page here . This post represents my opinions only. In addition, please understand I am an idiot and often get things wrong and lose money. I may own or transact in any names mentioned in this piece at any time without warning. Contributor posts and aggregated posts have been hand selected by me, have not been fact checked and are the opinions of their authors. They are either submitted to QTR by their author, reprinted under a Creative Commons license with my best effort to uphold what the license asks, or with the permission of the author.
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As of May 20, 2026 I personally no longer actively trade (read my story here ). My investing/saving is done by recurring contributions mostly to sector ETFs and a few select equities, trusted third parties who oversee my accounts, and advisors . Such advisors or funds, through individual equities, options, index funds, mutual funds, ETFs, or other securities, may have positions in, exposure to, or holdings of names mentioned herein that I know nothing about. Basically, via index funds, ETFs and individual equities it is possible I could own, have exposure to, or not own anything at any point. As of the same date, May 20, 2026, in an attempt to lead a healthier lifestyle , I’ve also excluded myself from fantasy sports, sports betting, online and in-person casinos and prediction markets.
And all positions can change immediately as soon as I publish this, with or without notice and at any point I can be long, short or neutral on any position. You are on your own. Do not make decisions based on my blog. I exist on the fringe. If you see numbers and calculations of any sort, assume they are wrong and double check them. I failed Algebra in 8th grade and topped off my high school math accolades by getting a D- in remedial Calculus my senior year, before becoming an English major in college so I could bullshit my way through things easier.
The publisher does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information provided in this page. These are not the opinions of any of my employers, partners, or associates. I did my best to be honest about my disclosures but can’t guarantee I am right; I write these posts after a couple beers sometimes. I edit after my posts are published because I’m impatient and lazy, so if you see a typo, check back in a half hour. Also, I just straight up get shit wrong a lot. I mention it twice because it’s that important.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 07/16/2026 - 08:05 Close
Thu, 16 Jul 2026 11:45:00 +0000 New Poll Shows American Voters Overwhelmingly Reject Communism, Dealing A Blow To DSA
New Poll Shows American Voters Overwhelmingly Reject Communism, Dealing A Blow To DSA
The Democratic Socialists of America are intensifying their Read more.....
New Poll Shows American Voters Overwhelmingly Reject Communism, Dealing A Blow To DSA
The Democratic Socialists of America are intensifying their consolidation of power within the Democratic Party , winning low-turnout local elections as establishment Democrats struggle to contain the spread of socialism and Marxism within their DEI kingdom.
DSA leaders and politicians have openly embraced anti-American rhetoric centered on dismantling capitalism and calling for revolution, while their unofficial spokesperson, Hasan Piker, has amplified inflammatory calls to "kill capitalists ."
The larger question is whether mainstream America is prepared to follow DSA revolutionaries toward a violent revolution from within the nation to sow chaos, as federal investigations grow over the group's alleged links to foreign subversion networks connected to Cuba and China.
Convincing average voters to embrace a far-left agenda, especially one wrapped in revolution and anti-capitalist rhetoric, will be an extraordinarily difficult sell to folks who just want to live life and own property.
Washington, DC-based research and polling firm Echelon Insights has captured a new sentiment snapshot of voters from a poll last week that showed just how unpopular DSA, socialism, and communism are...
The clearest takeaway is that voters strongly prefer market-oriented ideas:
Free-market economy: 53% favorable, 12% unfavorable, a +41 net rating
Capitalism: 49% favorable, 29% unfavorable, +20
MAHA: 39% favorable, 33% unfavorable, +6
Social democracy: 36% favorable, 31% unfavorable, +5
Most political parties, figures, and left-wing movements are underwater, with socialism and communism ranking the worst:
Democratic Party: 43% favorable, 52% unfavorable, -9
JD Vance: 39% favorable, 53% unfavorable, -14
Republican Party: 40% favorable, 56% unfavorable, -16
Democratic Socialists of America: 25% favorable, 46% unfavorable, -21
Donald Trump: 38% favorable, 61% unfavorable, -23
MAGA: 32% favorable, 57% unfavorable, -25
Socialism: 23% favorable, 52% unfavorable, -29
Communism: 5% favorable, 78% unfavorable, -73
The survey suggests that Americans remain strongly supportive of free markets and very negative toward socialism and communism, even as both major political parties and many top political figures suffer from plunging ratings.
Nate Silver's January 2026 ratings gave Echelon an A- score, with its predictive score indicating that the polling firm is expected to outperform the average pollster. Echelon also performed well during the 2024 election cycle, recording an average polling error of roughly 2 percentage points.
The polling data help explain why establishment Democrats have become increasingly alarmed by the rise of DSA, which they view as derailing the party in future elections because revolution is just not popular with the average voter.
Even a former Bill Clinton adviser wrote in a Wall Street Journal op-ed last week calling for investigations into DSA for possible foreign influence and subversion networks.
Ultimately, DSA is making a massive political gamble that it can persuade enough Americans and migrants to embrace class struggle and pursue a revolution. The problem is that such a move risks provoking a federal response, particularly as U.S. officials increasingly examine whether elements of DSA's revolutionary movement are intertwined with foreign influence and subversion networks.
After all, DSA has admitted that it is a "partner" of the sanctioned ICAP…
Perhaps that helps explain why the group is so eager to pursue Marxist revolution.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 07/16/2026 - 07:45 Close
Thu, 16 Jul 2026 10:55:00 +0000 UBS: TSMC's 'Surprise CapEx Hike' Reinforces Confidence In AI Supply Chain
UBS: TSMC's 'Surprise CapEx Hike' Reinforces Confidence In AI Supply Chain
TSMC, or Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., the world's largest contract chipmaker, raised its 2026 spending and revenue outlook on Thursday morning, a
Read more.....
UBS: TSMC's 'Surprise CapEx Hike' Reinforces Confidence In AI Supply Chain
TSMC, or Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., the world's largest contract chipmaker, raised its 2026 spending and revenue outlook on Thursday morning, a move UBS analysts said "boosts confidence in the AI supply chain ."
TSMC manufactures chips designed by companies such as Nvidia, Apple, AMD, Qualcomm and Broadcom. It is a major supplier of Nvidia chips used in AI data centers. The company now expects 2026 capital expenditures of $60 billion to $64 billion, up from its previous forecast of $52 billion to $56 billion, while projecting dollar-denominated revenue growth of slightly more than 40%.
Here are second quarter results (courtesy of Bloomberg):
Net income NT$706.6 billion, estimate NT$623.73 billion
Gross margin 67.7%, estimate 67.1%
Operating profit NT$766.6 billion, estimate NT$742.75 billion
Operating margin 60.3%, estimate 58.6%
Sales NT$1.27 trillion, estimate NT$1.27 trillion
Third quarter forecast:
Sees sales $44.6 billion to $45.8 billion, estimate $43.11 billion (Bloomberg Consensus)
Sees gross margin 65% to 67%, estimate 65.9%
Sees operating margin 56% to 58%, estimate 57.7%
"AI-related demand continues to be extremely robust ," TSMC Chairman C.C. Wei told analysts on a post-earnings call.
TSMC also plans to invest another $100 billion in Arizona, lifting that total commitment to $265 billion. The expansion will include additional 2-nanometer chip plants and advanced packaging facilities to meet multi-year demand across the Americas.
Wei added, "This is to build several or more semiconductor logical wafer fab for two nanometer MP [mass production] technologies, as well as advanced packaging fabs to support the strong multi-year demand from our leading U.S. customers."
CFO Wendell Huang said, "Our conviction in the AI megatrend is very strong.The capex in the next three years will be even more, significantly higher than in the past three years ."
UBS analyst Crystal Hsu told clients earlier that "TSMC's Surprise Capex Hike Boosts Confidence In AI Supply Chain ."
Hsu continued:
Despite TSMC's relatively conservative gross margin outlook for Q2 and Q3, investors generally believe the company prioritizes customer relationships and may smooth margin trends through the second half of the year.
The increase in capex guidance to USD 60–64 bn came as a positive surprise, as TSMC rarely raises capex guidance in Q2 and the magnitude of the revision exceeded 10%. Investors expect a positive read-through for the semiconductor production equipment (SPE) space.
More importantly, TSMC's constructive commentary could help restore market confidence , as many investors see little change in the underlying fundamentals despite the market pullback over the past month , which appears to have been driven largely by positioning and sentiment rather than by a deterioration in fundamentals.
Shares of TSMC were marginally higher in Asia, closing up a little more than 1%. The stock has gained 59% this year as the AI boom propels chipmakers to new highs. But in recent weeks, the AI trade has hit a brick wall as Goldman warns of rising hyperscaler bond issuance and mounting stress in credit markets.
TSMC's accelerating expansion comes a day after ASML Holding delivered strong earnings and raised its full-year guidance. ASML produces lithography machines, the equipment that chipmakers such as TSMC use to manufacture advanced semiconductors.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 07/16/2026 - 06:55 Close
Thu, 16 Jul 2026 10:30:00 +0000 Ukraine Intensifies Attacks On Russian Tankers In The Black Sea
Ukraine Intensifies Attacks On Russian Tankers In The Black Sea
Ukraine Intensifies Attacks On Russian Tankers In The Black Sea
By Charles Kennedy of OilPrice.com
After striking 116 vessels linked to Russia’s shadow fleet in the Sea of Azov in recent weeks, Ukraine’s military is turning its sights on ships in the Black Sea, hitting in drone attacks as many as 20 vessels overnight on Wednesday.
Ukrainian forces struck 17 Russia-linked oil tankers, 2 gas carriers, and one tugboat early on July 15 , drone unit commander Robert Brovdi said on Telegram today, adding that an official report with video evidence would follow later in the day.
“The first round of the naval battle is over,” the commander wrote, referring to the Sea of Azov, where Ukraine had focused its drone attack efforts in the past few weeks, alongside targeting refineries deep into Russian territory.
“Now, the Black Sea,” Brovdi said, hinting that Ukraine’s campaign to strike oil and gas vessels is expanding to the Black Sea, a key export route for crude and fuels from the south of Russia.
Ukraine has ramped up drone attacks against Russian shipping in the Sea of Azov and Taganrog Bay. Ukrainian officials reported striking 15 vessels in a single overnight operation on July 14, bringing their total to over 105 targeted ships within an eight-day window. These strikes have been targeting tankers and cargo ships suspected of belonging to Russia’s "shadow fleet" or transporting looted Ukrainian grain and fuel supplies.
Russia has also attacked commercial vessels near Odesa. A Tuesday attack killed five seafarers and injured 12 others in one of the deadliest single strikes on commercial shipping since the start of the war. According to Odesa authorities, a Russian drone struck a Togo-flagged general cargo ship while it was unloading fertilizer, sparking a major fire, while the Russian defense ministry claims the strikes were targeting military cargo.
The ramp-up of the naval strikes comes alongside a months-long Ukrainian campaign to hit Russian refineries to cripple fuel supply and deepen the fuel crisis in Russia.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 07/16/2026 - 06:30 Close
Thu, 16 Jul 2026 09:45:00 +0000 Trump: Iran Has Freed Detained American Woman In 'Goodwill' Gesture, After Days Of Bombing
Trump: Iran Has Freed Detained American Woman In 'Goodwill' Gesture, After Days Of Bombing
Summary
Detained American woman freed by Iran ; Trump: "appreciates this gesture of Goodwill by Iran!"
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Read more.....
Trump: Iran Has Freed Detained American Woman In 'Goodwill' Gesture, After Days Of Bombing
Summary
Detained American woman freed by Iran ; Trump: "appreciates this gesture of Goodwill by Iran!"
Pentagon announces second wave of strikes later Wednesday, the after initial 90-minute attack to start the day.
Trump threatens wider strikes unless Iran returns to talks - says attacks to 'expand' next week.
Wednesday saw 5th strait day of US bombardment on chiefly Iranian coastal sites.
Iran hits US-Gulf bases and warns on regional oil exports, says it is in 'control' of Hormuz Strait.
No evidence de-escalation: Tehran rejects talks and vows more retaliation.
Will the U.S. invade Iran before 2027?
Yes 17% · No 83%View full market & trade on Polymarket * * *
American Freed by Iranians, Trump Announces
In a sudden and very surprising Wednesday evening development, President Trump announced that Iran has released an American woman from prison who had been deemed wrongfully detained since December 2024.
"Iran has allowed an American Citizen, who was wrongfully detained in December of 2024 under the ‘presidency’ of Sleepy Joe Biden, to leave the Country. She is now safely outside of Iran, and in good condition," Trump said on Truth Social. And then most surprisingly: "The United States of America appreciates this gesture of Goodwill by Iran!" Trump added.
She's been identified in a breaking report from The Hill :
The American citizen was later identified as Dena Karari by her lawyer Jared Genser on the social media platform X . He said his client has been trapped in Iran since December 2024 “on bogus charges” and that “this would not have happened but for the extraordinary and relentless efforts” of President Trump .
“Dena is now safe and traveling back to the United States,” Genser concluded.
According to some scant details on Karari's case :
The New York Times reported last year that an Iranian American woman who was first imprisoned and prevented from leaving the country in December 2024, but released from custody, “works for an American technological company and runs a charity for underprivileged children in Iran”.
After the US joined Israel in bombing Iran in 2025, she was charged with espionage.
Trump has further confirmed, "She is now safely outside of Iran, and in good condition ."
There's a possibility the White House could use this as an 'opening' with Tehran, in order to get diplomacy back on track , after days of bombing - especially Trump just appeared to give a rare positive shoutout to the Iranians.
Pentagon Announces Another Wave of Strikes Later Wednesday
It is night time in Iran, and apparently the US 'break' is over, and bombing resumes: (CENTCOM) "At 3 p.m. ET, U.S. forces launched operations for a second wave of strikes today against Iran . The strikes are targeting Iranian military capabilities used to threaten vessels freely transiting through the Strait of Hormuz, an international waterway vital to global commerce. The U.S. military is holding Iran accountable at the Commander in Chief's direction."
Without doubt these attack waves are getting heavier, but so is Iran's 'retaliation'... from earlier: Kuwait Hit By Worst Iran Attacks in Weeks As War Escalates (Bloomberg).
Meanwhile an interestingly ambiguous admission from President Trump Wednesday afternoon:
US President Trump says oil price will yo-yo for a while; thinks inflation at year-end will be lower than now. Would like to see rates go down but better to pause than hike
Later into the night, the US military disabled an unladen oil tanker attempting to sail toward an Iranian port in the Arabian Gulf :
U.S. forces enforced naval blockade measures against Iran, July 15, by disabling an unladen oil tanker attempting to sail toward an Iranian port in the Arabian Gulf.
U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) forces observed Curacao-flagged M/T Belma transiting international waters toward Kharg Island. The commercial vessel ignored multiple warnings as it attempted to violate the U.S. blockade. A U.S. aircraft disabled the vessel after firing hellfire missiles into the ship’s smokestack. The ship is no longer transiting to Iran.
Trump: Strikes Will 'Expand'
Earlier in the day, within hours after the morning's 90-minutes salvo of latest US strikes on Iran was completed, President Trump once again claimed that Iran is desperately seeking diplomatic talks. However Iran was quick to respond that it has "no plans" for returning to the negotiating table .
With this, President Trump is ready to escalate militarily, telling FOX that strikes on the Islamic Republic will "expand" next week - though some are wondering why he is signaling the delay.
De-escalation seems nowhere on the horizon, also as the more 'hardline' influence within Iran seems ascendant, per Al Jazeera :
The Iranian government is releasing the statistic of the seven soldiers killed in US attacks “very deliberately” to solidify its popular support through the war, says Mehran Kamrava, professor of government at Georgetown University Qatar.
“What we have seen in Iran … is a resurgence of Iranian nationalism , and by highlighting the fact that Iranian soldiers are dying and giving their lives for defending the country, what the government is trying to do is to ensure that that popular support remains intact ,” Kamrava told Al Jazeera.
That support is important as there is little doubt the country is struggling with high inflation, unemployment, and $270bn in damages to the economy, he said. Meanwhile, the Iranians are aware that they cannot go “toe-to-toe militarily with the Americans, so they are turning the conflict from a military one into an economic one, hence the attacks on shipping,” Kamrava said.
Attack Waves Halted, For Now...
The Pentagon opened Wednesday morning (US time) by announcing yet another round of strikes on Iran, in what looks like sustained action - also increasingly expanding to include civil and energy infrastructure of the Islamic Republic.
"At 6 a.m. ET today, U.S. Central Command forces began launching a wave of strikes against Iran," Centcom announced . "The strikes are designed to further degrade military capabilities Iranian forces have used to attack commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz."
The US military further indicated it launched a "seven-hour wave" of strikes overnight - and followed during the next day (Wednesday) by a 90-minute wave . Also the evening prior, the US reimposed a naval blockade on Iranian ports and alongside launching its fourth consecutive night of strikes on the country, also as President Trump freshly warned that if Iran does not return to the negotiating table, "next week it gets really bad for them, because next week comes the power plants ."
"You better make a deal, or you're not going to have anything left," Trump has warned. "Ultimately, we'll hit energy targets in Iran. Next week comes the bridges. We're going to knock out all of their power plants. We'll knock out all of their bridges unless they get to the table and negotiate."
US Strike Hits Iranian Military Barracks
Iranian government spokesperson Fatemeh Mohajerani announced that at least 30 civilians have been killed across the country over 260 people wounded by American strikes of the last few days.
Airstrikes also reportedly took out an Iranian military barracks in southeastern Iran , leaving seven dead. The Associated Press details that "One strike targeted a barracks for Iran’s 388th Mechanized Infantry Brigade, which operates tanks and armored vehicles, in Sistan and Baluchestan province, Iranian state television reported."
"The report said the Americans fired at least 13 missiles in the attack and that the seven dead included conscripts and career soldiers," AP continues. "A number of troops were wounded."
Heavy bombardments have focused on the coastal areas, with US strikes reportedly having hit a civilian maritime control tower in Chabahar, southern Iran - location of country's only deep-water port outside the Strait of Hormuz, which allows Iran direct access to the Indian Ocean without passing through the Gulf.
IRGC Strikes Several US-Gulf Facilities
As expected, Iran's IRGC has continued launching a wave of retaliatory strikes targeting critical US military infrastructure across the Gulf and even reaching into Jordan.
The list of targets hit, according to an array of regional sources, include - Bahrain's Sheikh Isa Air Base, the US Navy's 5th Fleet support facility, Kuwait’s Ali Al-Salem and Camp Buehring, and Jordan’s Muwaffaq Salti Air Base .
Also, Emirati sources have reported strikes on the critical Fujairah Port, while Kuwait confirms one of its navy vessels was struck, leaving four crew members injured. Additionally, social media is awash with unverified footage showing Shahed kamikaze drones striking Kuwait , as well as massive plumes of black smoke rising from burning facilities in Kuwait. US 5th Fleet HQ locations in Bahrain also show signs of damage from inbound projectiles.
The IRGC has insisted that the "export of oil and gas from the region will be either for everyone or for no one."
The Iranians have continued to tout their nationalist defiance and have at no point shown signs of backing down as is hoped by Trump:
New Warning of Kharg Island Operation
President Trump continues facing pressure over what's next or what the ultimate objectives are. Related to this, he was pressed by Fox News Wednesday night about taking Kharg Island. Trump responded :
"We already hit Kharg Island, as you know, twice. Even three times. I said hit everything but just leave that little area from 25 yards out because I don't want that in terms of the world economy . As far as taking it is concerned, if we degrade them far enough and deep enough back, I would do that ."
But Iranian forces show no signs of backing down. Instead a message from its army command via state TV says that "a decisive response to this aggressive action by the American enemy" will keep coming.
Missile alert warnings have continued to sound in Bahrain and Kuwait early Wednesday amid the Iranian fire, which has at this point grown to a daily occurrence.
Meanwhile, strikes on nuclear plans return?
Overnight Developments
via Newsquawk...
US President Trump said in a pre-recorded Fox News interview that they are beating up Iran badly and Hormuz has to stay open, while he added that strikes will continue until he says it is enough, as well as stated they will save energy targets for last and will ultimately hit energy targets. Trump also said they will hit Iran hard on Wednesday night, and that next week will get really bad for Iran, in which they will hit Iran's power plants and bridges next week unless Iran comes to the negotiating table. Furthermore, he said US officials spoke to Iran on Tuesday and told Iran that it better make a deal.
US Central Command forces began launching an additional round of strikes against Iran at 15:00EDT/20:00BST on Tuesday, to continue degrading Iranian capabilities used to attack commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, while CENTCOM later announced the completion of strikes against Iran.
US struck Qeshm Island in southern Iran, and explosions were heard in the maritime area of eastern Hormozgan and Sirik, while explosions were heard in Bandar Abbas and Hengam Island. Explosions were also heard in Bampur and Chabahar in Iran, although Iran's semi-official news agency Tasnim noted officials denied reports of explosions in Chabahar, while explosions were reported in Iran's port city of Bandar Imam Khomeini, and a mineral water plant in Deloran was hit by three projectiles. Furthermore, reports noted that air defences around the Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant in Iran became active.
IRGC said it targeted enemy weapons and parts storage in Bahrain and Kuwait, while it targeted a drone ramp in Kuwait's Ali Al Salem air base and targeted US positions at Jordan's Azraq base, as well as the US Fifth Fleet Command HQ, fuel facilities and equipment in Bahrain. IRGC said as long as the US evil stays in the region, not a drop of oil and gas will be exported from the region, and that US aggression will have no result other than delaying the opening of the Strait of Hormuz.
Iran will respond to the US attacks, Tasnim reported.
Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Gharibabadi said the US is making a mistake if it thinks its military attacks and blockade will force them to request negotiations, but also commented that Iran's return to negotiations and tolerance regarding the Strait of Hormuz is possible. Furthermore, he said the MoU effectively no longer exists and that no country should expect Iran to continue implementing the terms of the memorandum.
Israeli PM Netanyahu is reportedly to travel to Washington on Saturday evening, aiming to meet with US President Trump, Yedioth reported.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 07/16/2026 - 05:45 Close
Thu, 16 Jul 2026 09:45:00 +0000 G7 Partners Have Low Confidence In President Trump
G7 Partners Have Low Confidence In President Trump
G7 Partners Have Low Confidence In President Trump
Confidence in U.S. leadership has fluctuated significantly over the past two decades , closely tracking changes in the occupant of the White House.
As Statista's Felix Richter shows in the following chart, based on data from past and present editions of Pew’s Global Attitudes Survey shows, confidence in President Donald Trump among key U.S. allies has mostly been low, although it has edged up slightly compared to the end of his first term.
You will find more infographics at Statista
Interestingly, Trump’s current ratings are broadly in line with those recorded for George W. Bush toward the end of his presidency.
Bush’s low standing in many Western European countries at the time was largely shaped by opposition to the Iraq War and broader concerns about U.S. foreign policy.
By contrast, confidence in U.S. leadership rebounded sharply under Barack Obama, who consistently received high approval ratings across G7 countries.
While views of Joe Biden were also relatively positive, they never reached Obama era highs and deteriorated gradually over time.
Overall, the data highlights how strongly international perceptions of the United States tend to shift with changes in leadership and foreign policy direction.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 07/16/2026 - 05:45 Close
Thu, 16 Jul 2026 09:00:00 +0000 Japan's Landmark Vote Reclassifies Bitcoin And Crypto As Financial Assets
Japan's Landmark Vote Reclassifies Bitcoin And Crypto As Financial Assets
Japan's Landmark Vote Reclassifies Bitcoin And Crypto As Financial Assets
Authored by Micah Zimmerman via The Epoch Times,
Japan’s parliament passed an amendment on Wednesday that reclassifies cryptocurrency as a “financial asset,” a shift that pulls bitcoin and other digital assets out of the country’s payments regime and into the framework that governs stocks, bonds, and investment trusts , according to a report from public broadcaster NHK.
The change strips crypto of its prior status under the Payment Services Act, where regulators treated it as a means of settlement, and folds it into the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act (FIEA), the same statute that oversees traditional securities.
The amendment moves bitcoin and other crypto under a single investor-protection standard. NHK reports the change takes effect within a year, with a target of fiscal 2027.
Japan’s new authority over bitcoin and the crypto asset class
Japan’s cabinet first approved this measure as a draft amendment in April 2026, but that step only sent the bill toward the Diet for debate. Wednesday’s vote marks the final enactment into law, alongside formal approval of a separate plan to cut the top tax rate on crypto gains from 55% to a flat 20% starting in 2028.
The move rewires how Japan supervises the asset class. As financial instruments, crypto assets now fall under insider-trading rules that bar issuers, exchange operators, and other parties with access to non-public information from trading ahead of events such as token listings, delistings, or major technical incidents.
Exchanges face new disclosure obligations. Platforms must publish data on each token’s issuer, blockchain design, and volatility profile, a standard that mirrors the reporting demands placed on securities firms. Regulators also gain broader market-surveillance authority over the sector, according to local reports.
Penalties climb under the new law. The maximum prison term for unregistered crypto operators rises from three years to 10, while the top fine increases from 3 million yen to 10 million yen, near $62,000. The tougher enforcement signals a move to treat crypto misconduct with the same severity as securities fraud.
A path to bitcoin ETFs and a tax cut
The reclassification carries two consequences that reach beyond compliance.
First, it opens a path for spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds. Because FIEA governs the products that funds can hold, moving crypto under its umbrella removes a structural barrier that kept Japanese asset managers from launching regulated bitcoin ETFs.
Second, it clears the way for a tax overhaul. Japan taxes crypto gains as miscellaneous income at rates that reach 55 percent, among the steepest treatment in any major market. Lawmakers approved a plan to cut the top rate to a flat 20 percent , a level that matches the tax on stock gains. The reduction, tied to the 2026 Tax Reform Outline, activates in 2028.
The reforms arrive as Japan accelerates a broader Web3 push and as regulators weigh reserve requirements for exchanges that resemble the buffers held by securities firms. User accounts on Japanese exchanges have grown, and domestic crypto firms are positioning for a wider base of retail investors.
For an industry that has long viewed Japan as an early and cautious mover, the vote marks a decisive turn toward legitimacy.
The country that once served as a template for crypto regulation is now aligning digital assets with its capital markets, a decision that could pressure other jurisdictions to follow.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 07/16/2026 - 05:00 Close
Thu, 16 Jul 2026 08:15:00 +0000 Baltic Leaders Claim Moscow Eyeing Wave Of Infrastructure Attacks In Europe
Baltic Leaders Claim Moscow Eyeing Wave Of Infrastructure Attacks In Europe
NATO's 'eastern flank' members are at it again, seeking to hype an imminent Russian threat which they now say will target their critical infrastruct
Read more.....
Baltic Leaders Claim Moscow Eyeing Wave Of Infrastructure Attacks In Europe
NATO's 'eastern flank' members are at it again, seeking to hype an imminent Russian threat which they now say will target their critical infrastructure .
The presidents of Poland, Lithuanian and Latvia have joined together and issued a dire warning over an impending plot on Wednesday, citing intelligence reports.
"We are talking about energy and transport infrastructure, facilities where damage could... disrupt the functioning of the entire energy system ," Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda said at a joint press conference in Vilnius, alongside his Latvian counterpart, Edgars Rinkevics.
"This planning is taking place at the highest level, effectively in Moscow," Nauseda stated.
And Rinkevics followed by asserting, "Even without a total Ukrainian victory, Russia may indirectly test Article 5 and response mechanisms at the alliance and European Union levels," he said.
via Latvian Presidency's office
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov quickly disputed the allegations that Russia is planning sabotage operations or some kind of invasion of Europe..
"This is just another fresh batch of scare stories designed to keep the brainwashing going and prepare the population for further militarization ," he said.
Baltic governments have especially been warning about a Russian 'invasion' in some form or the other going back years into the Ukraine war.
Even lower security officials have chimed in, for example back in 2025, Renatas Požéla, head of Lithuania’s fire and rescue service, warned :
"It is possible that we will see a massive army along the Baltic borders with the obvious goal of conquering all three countries within three days to a week."
In that prior instance he was talking about Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. Their leaders and officials have been among the most outspoken anti-Russia hawks throughout the Ukraine conflict.
Moscow has long insisted that it has no intention of invading any EU or NATO member state. Tensions have soared, however, due to somewhat frequent drone incursions into European territory. But the Kremlin has said these are chiefly Ukrainian drones spilling over.
Tyler Durden
Thu, 07/16/2026 - 04:15 Close