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Fri, 06 Mar 2026 13:46:23 +0000 US Retail Sales Dropped In January As Weather, Weak Gas Prices Weigh
US Retail Sales Dropped In January As Weather, Weak Gas Prices Weigh
This morning's retail sales data is for January (still lagging due to the govt shutdown) and is expected to be a decline (BofA's omniscient analysts see a worse th
Read more.....
US Retail Sales Dropped In January As Weather, Weak Gas Prices Weigh
This morning's retail sales data is for January (still lagging due to the govt shutdown) and is expected to be a decline (BofA's omniscient analysts see a worse than consensus drop MoM, due in large part to weather disruptions).
The actual print was a decline but slightly better than expected at -0.2% MoM. Despite two months of no increase, sales rose 3.2% YoY in January (increased from December)
Source: Bloomberg
The decline was driven by a decline in sales at gas stations (lower gas prices) and Health Personal Care Stores. Motor Vehicles sales also dropped MoM . Non-store (online) retailers saw sales surge MoM...
Even though December's seasonally-adjusted move was disappointing, it was a record high on a non-seasonally adjusted basis and January saw the usual big post-Xmas hangover plunge...
Source: Bloomberg
A lengthy winter storm that included significant snowfall and ice across the central and eastern US likely impeded shoppers during the weather event. The Arctic blast triggered the most flight cancellations since the pandemic and left more than 1 million homes and businesses without power.
Receipts at restaurants and bars, the only service-sector category in the retail report, declined 0.2% in January. Restaurants including Sweetgreen Inc. and Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. said that sub-freezing temperatures and winter storms hindered sales.
The report showed a 0.3% increase in so-called control-group sales - which feed into the government’s calculation of goods spending for gross domestic product. The measure excludes food services, auto dealers, building materials stores and gasoline stations.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 03/06/2026 - 08:46 Close
Fri, 06 Mar 2026 13:35:00 +0000 Tehran Rocked By Heaviest US Bombardment Yet As Iranian Missiles On Israel Slow; Pezeshkian Says Countries Offering Mediation
Tehran Rocked By Heaviest US Bombardment Yet As Iranian Missiles On Israel Slow; Pezeshkian Says Countries Offering Mediation
The war has entered its seventh day, but there could be a glimmer of hope for some kind of diplomatic-led
Read more.....
Tehran Rocked By Heaviest US Bombardment Yet As Iranian Missiles On Israel Slow; Pezeshkian Says Countries Offering Mediation
The war has entered its seventh day, but there could be a glimmer of hope for some kind of diplomatic-led offramp as Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian indicated Friday that several countries have begun mediation efforts to end the war with the United States and Israel , but insists negotiations must confront those who started the conflict. "Some countries have begun mediation efforts. Let’s be clear: we are committed to lasting peace in the region, yet we have no hesitation in defending our nation’s dignity and sovereignty," Pezeshkian wrote on X.
"Mediation should address those who underestimated the Iranian people and ignited this conflict ," he added. The mood over at the White House seems one of trying to get the unanticipated after-effects and especially the ongoing fierce Iranian retaliation on Gulf targets under control. Tehran overnight and into Friday saw the heaviest bombardment yet of the Iranian capital .
CENTCOM image
Massive explosions rocked residential neighborhoods and areas near Tehran University, as US and Israeli strikes targeted sites linked to Iran’s military and political leadership, with Al Jazeera's correspondent reporting that the intensity of the bombardment exceeded anything seen earlier in the war . "I can say that compared to previous days, we saw heavier bombardment overnight, at least in the capital," the report said. CNN also now belatedly has a war correspondent on the ground in Iran.
Notably, some of the latest strikes hit areas near Pasteur Street, a heavily secured district that houses key government institutions and where Iran's supreme leader and several family members were killed in the opening hours of the conflict. Israel is vowing attacks marked a "new phase" of the war .
According to the Israeli military, about 50 fighter jets struck an "underground bunker" in Tehran that had been constructed for the late supreme leader, which allegedly extended beneath entire streets in central Tehran and contained meeting facilities used by senior officials even after the leader's death.
Iranian FM and IRGC defiant ...
Israeli officials further claim the campaign is beginning to expose fractures inside Iran's military chain of command; however, some reports have said various units could be acting autonomously under emergency orders to unleash full retaliation.
The United States has also made clear it is escalating its operations, with B-2 bombers having dropped dozens of bunker-busting "penetrator" bombs on deeply buried ballistic-missile launch sites across Iran. War Secretary Pete Hegseth has warned that the air campaign is "about to surge dramatically" - with President Trump also not showing signs of backing down, describing that the military operation is advancing faster than expected.
Iran is being demolished "ahead of schedule and at levels people have never seen before," Trump asserted, claiming the country now has "no air force, no air defense" and that its air power is "gone."
Since last Saturday at least 1,332 Iranians have been killed, but the death toll could be much higher amid ongoing rescue efforts of people under the rubble in heavily hit areas. Iranian media has reported that missiles struck two schools in the town of Parand southwest of Tehran, in the latest.
But Iran does continue to retaliate across the region. In Israel, by all appearances the number of inbound ballistic missiles has slowed significantly compared with the opening days of the war . Israeli officials say roughly 90 missiles were fired on the first day, about 60 the following day, and around 20 per day since Monday. In total, Iranian media claim roughly 500 ballistic missiles have been launched during the conflict - possibly most of them intercepted, but a significant amount making impact and causing severe damage.
Late Thursday night Tel Aviv came under combined missile and drone attacks, though medics reported no injuries following the latest barrage in southern Israel. Still, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) says its "new-generation missiles struck American bases in Gulf countries" and Israeli targets including “Ben Gurion Airport, Haifa and Tel Aviv.”
Iranian forces also claim to have attacked a "US-owned" oil tanker off the coast of Kuwait, leaving the vessel on fire, according to Iranian state radio. Iranian state television reported that large numbers of drones launched by the army targeted American military bases in Kuwait .
"These attacks will continue in the coming hours," the military said. Iranian drones have targeted countries across the Gulf from the United Arab Emirates to Qatar and Bahrain. Azerbaijani officials said Iranian drones crossed their border and injured four people in the Nakhchivan exclave, prompting Baku to withdraw diplomatic staff from Iran for safety.
In Lebanon, Israeli airstrikes pounded towns in the south and east of the country as well as Beirut’s southern suburbs after the Israeli military issued mass evacuation orders for large sections of the capital. The United Nations says nearly 100,000 people have been displaced in Lebanon and thousands of Syrian refugees have fled back across the border.
The conflict is further drawing in outside powers, with the most significant development being The Washington Post reporting that Russia has been providing Iran with intelligence on the locations of US military assets in the Middle East , including warships and aircraft. US officials described the effort as "a pretty comprehensive effort" by Moscow, though the accuracy of the intelligence remains unclear .
This is also when the 'fog of war' and propaganda is very heavy - and so such allegations especially from an ultra-heart-of-the-establishment D.C. beltway publication should be treated with caution and skepticism. However, it would make perfect sense that Russia is helping its Mideast ally, given that Russia and Iran signed a strategic partnership agreement earlier this year expanding military and defense cooperation. Despite that, Hegseth said earlier in the week that Russia is "not really a factor" in the conflict .
Meanwhile in the ultimate irony of ironies, Financial Times is reporting US officials are discussing the purchase of Ukrainian-made drone interceptors to counter Iranian drones , which some analysts say have proven harder to stop than expected. Patriot missile interceptors used by US allies cost more than $4 million each , while the Ukrainian systems are significantly cheaper and designed to defeat the same Shahed-type drones used by Russia.
Back in Iran, 'Pro-regime' sentiment making itself known, with across the country large crowds gathering for the first Friday prayers since the war began . Tens of thousands of worshippers carrying portraits of the slain supreme leader chanted anti-US and anti-Israel slogans despite the ongoing bombardment. There have also been "death to the Shah" type chants heard, amid reports that Trump wants to have a hand in directly choosing a puppet leader for Iranians.
First Friday prayers since massive attacks started:
Meanwhile the conflict continues disrupting global energy flows. But as we've been highlighting, that means: "We are seeing a significant increase in demand for Russian energy resources in connection with the war in Iran," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said. Russia remains "a reliable supplier of oil and gas," he added.
Western MSM has tended not to show the large pro-government demonstrations which had been on and off since January, in tandem with the anti-Tehran protests and clashes:
International Energy Agency director Fatih Birol says global markets still have ample supply. "We have no oil shortage … there is a huge surplus," he said. But Qatar's energy minister Saad al-Kaabi offered a far more pessimistic outlook, warning it could take "weeks to months" for energy exports to normalize even if the war stopped immediately.
"Everybody’s energy price is going to go higher," he said. "There will be shortages of some products and there will be a chain reaction of factories that cannot supply."
On the airspace closure and travel front, the widening war is also triggering evacuations and security concerns far beyond the battlefield, with thousands of travelers still stranded across the region as airlines cancel flights, though Emirates says it transported roughly 30,000 passengers out of Dubai in a single day and expects to restore its full flight network soon. Limited commercial flights have resumed from Israel .
In Britain, counterterrorism police arrested four men on allegedly suspicion of spying on the Jewish community for Iran. The Metropolitan Police said the suspects - one Iranian national and three dual British-Iranian citizens - were detained early Friday morning in Barnet and Watford. Meanwhile, international pressure continues mounting over civilian casualties - while at the Pentagon there has not been any new casualty update since six American troops were confirmed killed in the opening days of Operation Epic Fury.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 03/06/2026 - 08:35 Close
Fri, 06 Mar 2026 13:28:48 +0000 Futures, Global Markets Tumble As Oil Soars Amid Fears Of Lenghty Energy Crisis
Futures, Global Markets Tumble As Oil Soars Amid Fears Of Lenghty Energy Crisis
Seven days into the war on Iran and markets are getting increasingly shaky. US equity futures tumbled ahead of the February jobs report, and are Read more.....
Futures, Global Markets Tumble As Oil Soars Amid Fears Of Lenghty Energy Crisis
Seven days into the war on Iran and markets are getting increasingly shaky. US equity futures tumbled ahead of the February jobs report, and are on pace to close the worst week for global markets since 2020 deep in the red as the selloff in global bonds deepened after another jump in oil prices fanned fears that the war in the Middle East is fueling inflation. As of 8:00am ET, S&P 500 futures were 0.7% lower while contracts on the Nasdaq 100 fell 0.9% with all Mag7 names lower in premarket trading (NVDA -0.9%, GOOGL -0.6%). The yield on 10-year Treasuries climbed four basis points to 4.18%, on course for its biggest weekly advance since April as global government bonds tumble amid upside risks to inflation from higher energy prices. The dollar gained 0.2% while gold approached $5,100 an ounce. Commodities are mostly higher: Oil added another 6% with WTI now at $86.25; Oil prices are set for their strongest week since 2022, with the war in the Middle East effectively closing the Strait of Hormuz to shipping. Precious metals are mixed (gold down, silver +0.8%); base metals are lower. Overnight, the biggest catalysts was another escalation in Middle East with some articles pointing to potential shutdown in energy exports from Gulf states. Today's US economic data slate includes February jobs report, January retail sales (8:30am), December business inventories (10am) and January consumer credit (3pm). Fed speaker slate includes Waller (7:30am), Daly (8:30am, 10:15am), Goolsbee (9:50am), Paulson (10:15am), Miran (11:30am), Collins (1:20pm) and Hammack (1:30pm, 3:10pm).
In premarket trading, Magnificent Seven are lowe (Microsoft -0.3%, Meta -0.5%, Tesla -0.6%, Alphabet -0.9%, Apple -0.7%, Amazon -1%, Nvidia -1.3%)
Energy stocks are rising and airline stocks are declining as oil prices hit their highest level since 2024 and gas prices gained as the Iran conflict disrupted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, limiting oil supply.
Gap Inc. (GAP) falls 8% after reporting fourth-quarter sales and profit that came in slightly below expectations, as two of its apparel chains underperformed. Old Navy, the company’s biggest brand, and Athleta, its smallest, missed comparable-sales estimates.
Guidewire Software (GWRE) rises 3% after the company reported second-quarter results that were much stronger than expected. It also raised its full-year forecast.
Marvell Technology (MRVL) rallies 11% after the chipmaker said its year-over-year revenue growth rate will accelerate each quarter throughout fiscal 2027, a bullish target that shows soaring demand from data center-related applications.
Nutex Health Inc. (NUTX) plunges 28% after the health-focused application software firm reported revenue for the fourth quarter that missed the average analyst estimate.
Samsara (IOT) climbs 11% after the technology firm reported fourth-quarter adjusted earnings per share that topped the average analyst estimate.
Trade Desk (TTD) slips 1% after Wedbush downgraded the advertising technology company to underperform — a sell equivalent — from neutral, saying the impact of an OpenAI partnership is “overestimated.”
In corporate news, Anthropic vowed to legally contest a Pentagon decision to declare it a threat to the US supply chain under an authority normally reserved for foreign adversaries, escalating a showdown with the Trump administration over AI safeguards.
The Iran war has entered its seventh day, with Iran firing a barrage of missiles and drones across the Persian Gulf and Israel renewing its airstrikes. Qatar’s energy minister sparked a powerful spike in energy price after he warned that war in the region could “bring down the economies of the world” and predicted that all Gulf energy exporters would shutter production within weeks, in an interview with the Financial Times. This is precisely what we warned about yesterday in "JPMorgan's New Hormuz Closure Math: Just 3 Days Until Commodity Chaos. "
In the latest developments in the Middle East, Iran fired a barrage of missiles and drones targeting countries across the Persian Gulf overnight, while Israel renewed airstrikes on the Islamic Republic in a war that’s entered a seventh day with no end in sight. Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Bahrain were among those came under renewed attack from the Islamic Republic, while Israeli airstrikes hit Tehran and Beirut.
Trump told NBC News that he wants Iran’s leadership structure fully removed, and that he has some names in mind for a “good leader.” The financial and logistical troubles the Iran war is causing for the global aviation industry are compounding by the day, with the number of canceled flights to Middle East hubs surpassing 27,000 since fighting began even as carriers look to resume some operations.
Still, US stocks are set to outperform global peers in a week that saw Middle East conflict drive fears of energy-driven price pressures, as traders awaited US jobs and retail sales data for insight into the Federal Reserve’s appetite for rate cuts.
That's the good news for Trump, the bad news is that retail gasoline hit $3.32 a gallon on Thursday as the Iran conflict disrupts energy supplies from the Middle East. At the same time, the selloff in global bonds deepened on concern the shock to energy markets could broaden and drive inflation higher.
Friday’s market moves are capping a week of sharp swings in which investors repeatedly recalibrated their outlook on the impact of the US-Israeli war against Iran. Fears that a near-complete halt in traffic through the Strait of Hormuz could trigger a new inflation spike have led investors to scale back bets on Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts.
“This is an anxiety not only about how long the conflict goes on, but what kind of effect it’s going to have on the mix between growth and inflation, ” Peter Oppenheimer, chief global equity strategist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., told Bloomberg TV. “The issue really is 20% of world supplies are going through that channel, it’s obviously very, very significant.”
Today’s jobs report may offer more insight on the Fed’s rate path. Headline NFP print estimate is currently 55k, down from 130k last month with unemployment rate expected unchanged at 4.3%. Bloomberg whisper number for headline print is currently 55k (our full preview is here ).
“The market would likely interpret robust job creation as evidence that the US economy remains on solid footing,” said Florian Ielpo, head of macro research at Lombard Odier Investment Managers. “This would accelerate the current rapid return to US equities and further fuel the reverse rotation we’ve observed over the past two weeks.”
Anna Wong, Chief US Economist at Bloomberg Economics, expects a tepid job report, largely reflecting temporary disruptions.She forecasts the US economy to have added just 13,000 jobs in February, down from 130,000 in January. The consensus among analysts is for 55,000, and the “whisper” is for 65,000.
“For this print, the stronger the better given the increase in inflation expectations due to energy prices,” the JPMorgan Market Intelligence desk led by Andrew Tyler says. “A weaker number will increase rate cut expectations, but the risk is stagflation in the near-term given the expected increase in inflation.”
Bond yields are ticking higher heading into the print, and the dollar is muted, with markets pricing in less than 40 basis points of rate cuts for the rest of this year. In another sign of risk aversion, gold remains on track for its first weekly decline in over a month, pressured by a stronger dollar and inflationary risks tied to the Middle East conflict.
Traders slashed bets on Bank of England rate cuts for 2026, pricing just about a 50% chance of a quarter-point move. The yield on two-year gilts surged 13 basis points to 3.93%. Money markets are also fully pricing in that the European Central Bank will raise borrowing costs this year, a turnaround from a week ago when a cut was viewed more likely.
European stocks are now in the red after opening higher. Energy is up, while media, construction and technology sectors fall. Here are some of the biggest movers on Friday:
Lufthansa shares climb as much as 4% after Europe’s largest carrier reported strong results and said it sees “significant” improvement in earnings in 2026.
SFS rises as much as 6.1%, recovering some of this week’s losses, after the maker of components for the construction and automotive industries delivered better-than-expected results, according to analysts.
ITV shares climb as much as 8.1% after Kepler Cheuvreux analyst Conor O’Shea raised his recommendation on the stock to buy from hold as he sees the weakness in advertising demand dissipating.
Engineer IMI shares rise as much as 4.6% after the company delivered results ahead of expectations and announced a new £500 million buyback, supported by solid cash conversion.
Zealand Pharma shares sink as much as 33%, the most on record, after mid-stage trial results for its experimental obesity shot being developed with Roche fell short of expectations.
BE Semiconductor Industries shares fall as much as 12% as traders point to an article in Korean media on high-bandwidth memory.
Infineon shares fall as much as 4% after UBS cut the recommendation on the chipmaker to neutral from buy, seeing limited upside to the firm’s margins and 2027 AI outlook, and growing inventory risk from a slowdown in China.
Comet shares drop as much as 13% after the supplier of radio-frequency tools reported Ebitda for the full year that missed the average analyst estimate.
Spie shares slide as much as 5.5% after the technical services provider delivered softer fourth-quarter organic growth across the majority of divisions, while consensus had already anticipated the improved mid-term margin goal, according to analysts at Jefferies.
UCB drops as much as 2.9% after Morgan Stanley downgrades the stock to equal-weight from overweight, citing increasing concerns around the Belgian biopharmaceutical company’s growth story
In FX, the greenback advances with the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rising 0.2%.
In rates, treasury futures continue to be pressured, sitting on session lows into the early US session as WTI futures extend their climb through $86 barrel, higher by another 6% on the day. US yields cheaper by 2bp to 5bp across the curve in a bear flattening move with 5s30s spread down around 2bp on the day. US 10-year yields trade close to highs of the day around 4.17%, with gilts leading the selloff in bonds with UK two-year yields up 11 bps as traders pare bets on easing by the BOE this year. In Europe, bonds underperform further with front-end gilts cheaper by 12bp on the day. US session focus includes February nonfarm payrolls at 8:30am New York. Fed cut premium continues to fade out of front-end swaps, which now price in around 32bp of rate cuts for the year and the first full 25bp move priced out to the October meeting. In Europe, a full rate hike is now priced by the end of the year. Treasury auctions resume next week with 3-, 10- and 30-year sales for a combined $119 billion.
This week’s spike in Treasury yields is a sharp reversal from last month when they notched their sharpest drop in a year. Swaps now price between one and two Fed cuts for 2026 compared to as many as three a week ago. The dollar, meanwhile, has reclaimed its status as the ultimate haven as it headed for its best week in more than three years.
“Unless there can be some real political breakthrough that leads to a ceasefire, the dollar won’t be ready to resume a decline anytime soon,” ING Bank strategist Chris Turner wrote in a note. “The story will remain one of governments trying to handle the fallout of high energy prices, a negative for bond markets around the world.”
In commodities, Brent crude futures climb to a fresh high this week above $88 a barrel while European natural gas futures also rise after Qatar’s energy minister told the Financial Times the Middle East conflict will likely force Persian Gulf countries to halt energy exports.
Today's US economic data slate includes February jobs report, January retail sales (8:30am), December business inventories (10am) and January consumer credit (3pm). Fed speaker slate includes Waller (7:30am), Daly (8:30am, 10:15am), Goolsbee (9:50am), Paulson (10:15am), Miran (11:30am), Collins (1:20pm) and Hammack (1:30pm, 3:10pm).
Market Snapshot
S&P 500 mini -0.6%
Nasdaq 100 mini -0.8%
Russell 2000 mini -0.5%
Stoxx Europe 600 -0.4%
DAX -0.2%
CAC 40 -0.3%
10-year Treasury yield +3 basis points at 4.17%
VIX +0.4 points at 24.19
Bloomberg Dollar Index +0.1% at 1205.77
euro -0.2% at $1.158
WTI crude +3.9% at $84.13/barrel
Top Overnight News
U.A.E. Explores Freezing Iranian Assets to Punish Tehran for Attacks: WSJ
Oil Soars as Iran War Threatens Long Energy Outage; WTI Crude Tops $85 a Barrel as War Paralyzes Hormuz Traffic: BBG
Israeli Military Moving to ‘Next Phase’ of Iran Campaign: WSJ
Iran barrage sweeps Mideast as Trump weighs in on succession: BBG
Iran says countries have begun mediation efforts: WSJ
Iran’s Attacks on the UAE Are Costing It Access to Vital Imports: BBG
Tehran Is Fighting With Jets That Date Back to the Vietnam War: WSJ
Trump on rising gas prices during Iran operation - 'If they rise, they rise': RTRS
SoftBank Seeks Record Loan of Up to $40 Billion for OpenAI Stake: BBG
Drone strike drives calls to end British military presence on Cyprus: RTRS
Trump Faces Criticism From UAE Business Community Over Iran War: BBG
Israel targets bunker beneath Khamenei's compound in new wave of attacks: RTRS
Israel's Hezbollah attacks are likely to continue beyond Iran war: RTRS
Turkey asks Britain's MI6 to step up protection of Syria's Sharaa: RTRS
Wealthy Moscow cuts investment, revealing Russia's deeper budget problems: RTRS
Axel Springer Strikes $770 Million Deal for U.K.’s Daily Telegraph: WSJ
Texas Republican Ends Re-Election Bid After Affair: AP
A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk
APAC stocks traded somewhat mixed following the risk-averse mood in the US as geopolitics continued to dominate headlines, and with participants also cautious heading into key US jobs data. ASX 200 was dragged lower as the heavy losses in miners, materials and resources sectors offset the gains in tech and telecoms, while recent higher energy prices stoke inflationary concerns and narrow the policy space for the RBA. Nikkei 225 traded indecisively and swung between gains and losses with very little fresh macro catalysts for Japan. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp trade higher, albeit to varying degrees, with the mainland rangebound, while Hong Kong outperforms amid tech strength and as participants reflected on recent earnings from the likes of JD.com and Bilibili.
Top Asian News
Japan's Finance Minister Katayama said Japan is ready to take timely steps against the economic impact from the Iran conflict, adds Japan is not fully out of deflation. Japan is ready to act on market volatility while consulting international authorities. Bank of Japan's monetary policy is focused on inflation and not on currency intervention. Wage gains are not BoJ's direct target but is key to price stability.
PBoC adviser Huang Yiping said China's push to shift its economy towards consumer spending will take a long time, according to Bloomberg. Investors should dampen expectations for “aggressive” stimulus as the government doesn’t view it as a “crisis time”.
European bourses (STOXX 600 -0.1%) initially traded mixed, but now hold a strong negative bias as the risk tone soured. Little driving the latest downturn, but with focus remaining on the geopolitical situation. European sectors were initially mixed, but now hold a negative bias. Energy takes the top spot, buoyed by strength in underlying energy prices, whilst Industrials is lifted by Defence names. To the downside, Media lags, hampered by post-earning losses in UMG (-5.5%).
Top European News
EU GDP Growth Rate YoY 3rd Est (Q4) Y/Y 1.2% vs. Exp. 1.3% (Prev. 1.4%, Low. 1.3%, High. 1.3%)
EU Employment Change QoQ Final (Q4) Q/Q 0.2% vs. Exp. 0.2% (Prev. 0.2%)
UK Halifax House Price Index YoY (Feb) Y/Y 1.3% vs. Exp. 0.9% (Prev. 1.1%, Rev. From 1%, Low. 0.5%, High. 0.9%).
UK Halifax House Price Index MoM (Feb) M/M 0.3% vs. Exp. 0.3% (Prev. 0.8%, Rev. From 0.7%).
Norwegian Manufacturing Production MoM (Jan) M/M -0.3% (Prev. -0.1%).
FX
DXY is relatively flat with a mild upward bias after a session of gains on Thursday. Thursday's action was spurred by a haven bid, and as yields climbed on firmer oil prices, in addition to well-received data ahead of NFP.
EUR/USD returned below the 1.1600 handle after initially reclaiming the level in APAC trade, with downside exacerbated by the ongoing geopolitical and energy-related concerns, alongside the firming USD as traders flock to the haven. Little reaction to the rhetoric from ECB officials. Meanwhile, traders fully price in a 25bps ECB hike this year, Bloomberg reported. EUR/USD trades in a 1.1583-1.1621 range, within Thursday’s 1.1559-1.1647.
GBP/USD is subdued amid the recent USD strength but remains tucked within yesterday’s 1.3297-1.3387 range. News flow for the UK remains light, but recent headlines centre around UK PM Starmer's shift from initially refusing to assist US military operations against Iran to later granting access to British military bases for "limited" and "defensive" purposes.
USD/JPY is firmer with the JPY the underperforming G10 amid a rise in US yields and given Japan’s exposure to energy imports. The pair traded sideways for most of the APAC session, given the indecisive mood in Japan; although, it gradually edged higher as domestic sentiment stabilised.
Antipodeans are mixed, the AUD mildly outperforms amid gains in copper and gold prices and as recent inflationary concerns spurred some outside bets for a rate hike by the RBA this month. AUD/USD trimmed gains after hitting an intraday peak of 0.7047 (vs low 0.7015). NZD/USD hit a current low of 0.5881 (vs high 0.5916), with the 200 DMA (0.5876).
Central Banks
BoJ Deputy Governor Himino said Japan is seeing inflation in terms of rising consumer prices, adds BoJ is keeping monetary conditions accommodative and gradually adjusting degree of monetary accommodation. Will continue to scrutinise market moves and their impact on the economy and prices. Rising import costs from a weak yen may affect inflation trends. BoJ policy is not aimed at FX rates, yet FX shifts impact inflation and the economy.
ECB's Escriva said it is highly unlikely the ECB touches rates at its next meeting.
ECB's Sleijpen said the ECB policy is still in a good place and data dependent.
PBoC Governor said the central bank will flexibly use various monetary policy tools including interest rates and RRR cuts; PBoC said China has no intention to, not necessary to use FX rate to gain trade competitiveness.
Fixed Income
USTs are lower. US paper spent much of the overnight session trading sideways, alongside weakness across the crude complex. However, as energy prices turned positive – the benchmark also dipped off best levels in the European morning. The geopolitical situation remains unchanged, with missiles being launched from both sides – but updates related to the Strait of Hormuz helped to improve sentiment, including; a) China is in talks with Iran to allow safe oil and gas passage through Hormuz, b) US allowed India to purchase Russian oil for 30-days. USTs now trade at the lower end of a 112-03 to 112-14+ range.
Bunds follow peers, for the same reasons as above, and currently towards the bottom end of a 126.96 to 127.32 range. European newsflow has seen a few ECB speakers take to the wires, to generally touch on the Iran situation, whilst Escriva said it is “highly unlikely” that the ECB touches rates at it next meeting. From a yield perspective, the 10yr yield now trades at 2.868% (vs YTD high at 2.909%). Thereafter, 2.938%, a peak spurred by the mini-banking crisis surrounding the collapse of First Brands.
Gilts underperform, lower by around 75 ticks and trades at the bottom end of a 90.43 to 91.25 range. Underperformance which can be explained by, a) net-importer of energy, b) BoE rate cut expectations entirely priced out for the year; pre-war pricing indicated a cut in either March or April. A lot of focus has been on the front-end Gilt situation, with the 2yr yield now surging beyond 3.90%, to now approach the 4% mark from mid-October 2025 – back where traders were increasingly sceptical of Chancellor Reeves and her Autumn Budget.
Commodities
Crude benchmarks remain firmer, though are off their best levels seen yesterday, which saw Brent firmer by 4.9%, marking the highest close since the conflict between the US, Israel, and Iran began. As the conflict reaches its seventh day, there’s been little sign of a reprieve following comments by the Iranian Foreign Minister via NBC News that Iran is ready for a US ground invasion of the country, with further comments this morning via Al Arabiya where the FM said that Iran has no choice but to continue fighting. WTI and Brent are trading in the upper end of USD 78.24-82.93/bbl and 83.16-86.35/bbl, ranges respectively.
In the precious metals space, spot gold briefly reclaimed the USD 5,100/oz level after facing pressure yesterday, when reports indicated the NBP is considering gold sales for defence funding, which saw the yellow metal fall below the USD 5000/oz mark. A slightly softer dollar and the Iranian conflict boosted haven appeal for gold during the APAC session. However, as the European session gets underway, the yellow metal has slipped below USD 5100/oz due to recent USD strength as the USD continues to be the preferred haven amid ongoing geopolitical tensions. XAU and XAG are trading within the upper end of USD 5066.93-5143.84/oz and 81.80-84.76/oz, ranges respectively.
Base metals have rebounded from the prior day's trough, largely underpinned by firmer APAC stocks. However, copper prices have seen slight pressure since the European session began, tracking headwind in European equities, thus weighing down the red metal. 3M LME copper trades within the lower end of a USD 12.87-12.91k/t range.
US-sanctioned gas tanker reportedly transited the Strait of Hormuz this morning, according to Bloomberg; The Danuta I, sailed under the flag of Palau.
US has issued a temporary 30-day waiver to allow sale of Russian oil currently stranded at sea to India, according to a report citing two officials. Officials say general licence only authorises transactions involving Russian oil already stranded at sea, unlikely to provide significant financial benefit to Russia.
Trump admin reportedly rules out deploying Treasury Department to trade oil futures for now amid belief that it will have a limited meaningful effect, Bloomberg sources report.
Japan is reportedly considering a release from its national oil stockpile, even without coordinated international action, Kyodo reported.
Gold is being sold at a discount of as much as USD 30/oz in Dubai, Bloomberg reported citing sources; due to elevated shipping and insurance costs.
Qatar Energy Minister al-Kaabi cautions that the Middle East conflict could cause all Gulf energy producers to have to shut production within weeks, increasing oil to USD 150/bbl, FT reported.
India has asked all its refiners to ?maximise ?production of liquefied petroleum gas and make the fuel available only to three state-run ?companies - Indian Oil (IOCL IS), HPCL (HPCL IS) and BPCL (BPCL IS), a ?government cited by ET order showed.
Reliance (REL IS) is looking to buy Russian oil after the US granted India a licence to temporarily buy cargoes, Bloomberg reported citing sources.
Geopolitics
US President Trump said oil appears to have pretty much stabilised, and further action to reduce pressure on oil is coming, also said Iran wants to ‘make a deal’ to end the conflict.
Iran reportedly targeted US bases in Kuwait with drones, according to Iranian State Media; Iran’s army says drone attacks against US bases in Kuwait to continue in the coming hours.
Iran to use newer missiles in the coming days, Fars News reported.
US Secretary of War Hegseth said US has just begun to fight in Iran and that Iran is wrong in its calculations if it thinks we can't continue the war. Firepower used in Iran is to increase significantly.
Maersk (MAERSKB DC) said it has decided to temporarily suspend services connecting the Middle East to the far East and Europe; decision has been taken as a precautionary measure.
Iranian Foreign Minister said Iran has no choice but to continue fighting, Al Arabiya reported.
US and Israel have increased airstrikes on Iran’s border with Iraq as US President Trump called on the Kurdish minority there to rise up against Iran's government, according to Washington Post.
Satellite imagery taken Tuesday shows extensive damage to Iran’s Khojir missile production site, according to Washington Post.
US Central Command Commander said our operation against Iran is going well and we are moving at a fast pace. said:. Ballistic missile attacks by Iran have decreased by 90% since day one. As we transition to the next phase of the operation, we will dismantle Iran's missile production capability.
US House votes 219-212 to reject the war powers resolution on Iran.
Foreign ministers of Arab League member states will hold an emergency meeting on Sunday to discuss Iran’s attacks on several countries in the region, WSJ reported. The meeting will be held via video conference, was requested by Saudi Arabia, according to Arab sources.
Israeli PM's aide said "so far the operation is proceeding as planned; we are seeing the first cracks in the regime, but patience is needed"; adds that US President Trump and Israeli President Netanyahu speak daily.
Republicans are preparing to confront a huge price tag for the Middle East war following closed-door briefings which detailed the fast consumption of munitions and lack of any firm deadline for the campaign, Politico reported citing sources. Senior Republicans expect the administration to request tens of billions of dollars, with some lawmakers hearing estimates that the Pentagon is spending as much as USD 2bln/day.
US Event Calendar
8:30 am: United States Jan Retail Sales Advance MoM, est. -0.3%, prior 0%
8:30 am: United States Jan Retail Sales Ex Auto MoM, est. 0%, prior 0%
8:30 am: United States Feb Change in Nonfarm Payrolls, est. 55k, prior 130k
8:30 am: United States Feb Change in Manufact. Payrolls, est. -1.5k, prior 5k
8:30 am: United States Feb Unemployment Rate, est. 4.3%, prior 4.3%
7:30 am: United States Fed’s Waller on Bloomberg TV
8:30 am: United States Fed’s Daly on CNBC
9:50 am: United States Fed’s Goolsbee on Bloomberg TV
10:15 am: United States Fed’s Daly & Paulson Participate in Panel Discussion
11:30 am: United States Fed’s Schmid Speaks on Policy and Outlook
11:30 am: United States Fed’s Miran on CNBC
1:20 pm: United States Fed’s Collins Delivers Keynote Address
1:30 pm: United States Fed’s Hammack Speaks at Monetary Policy Forum
3:10 pm: United States Fed’s Hammack Appears on Bloomberg TV
Main Rating Changes:
DB's Jim Reid concldues the overnight wrap
There's not much synchronisation in markets at the moment as we welcome in another payrolls Friday today. This one will be obviously overshadowed by events in the Middle East. Indeed, the market selloff resumed over the last 24 hours, with equities and bonds posting fresh declines as the war in the Middle East showed no sign of ending. That’s raising fears about a more protracted conflict, with investors increasingly alarmed that the oil price spike will become entrenched, pushing up inflation around the world. Indeed, Brent crude was up another +4.93% yesterday to $85.41/bbl, closing at its highest level since mid-2024. And in turn, that’s meant investors have kept pricing out the chance of further rate cuts, leading to another spike in bond yields on both sides of the Atlantic. Indeed, 10yr bund yields (+9.0bps) posted their biggest daily jump in exactly a year, back when the debt brake reforms were announced. There has been some respite in the Asia session as there are some hopes that the US is looking at options to address the energy price spike.
The reality is though that we continue to trade competing headlines, with risk appetite swinging back and forth over the past 24 hours. At the outset yesterday, there was actually some optimism after Iran’s IRNA reported that the deputy foreign minister said they were ready to get rid of their uranium stockpile in the US talks, “provided we get something good in return”. However, any optimism that some kind of negotiated settlement could be enroute faded as the session went on, with signs that, if anything, the conflict was spreading. In fact, Azerbaijan was the latest country to be hit by Iranian drones, and their Defense Ministry said that “These acts of aggression will not go unanswered”. And elsewhere across the region, a refinery was struck in Bahrain and the US evacuated its embassy in Kuwait, while the UAE told Abu Dhabi residents to seek immediate shelter. Around the same time Trump suggested he wanted a say in the Iran leadership succession which potentially complicates prospects of a diplomatic resolution. And Iran’s Foreign Minister said that it currently saw no reason to engage in talks with the US.
We did see some improvement in market sentiment late in the US session, as Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said that the administration is looking at options to address the spike in oil and gasoline prices, with Reuters reporting that this could include potential action involving the oil futures market. Later in the evening the US issued a 30-day waiver for Indian purchases of Russian oil. According to Treasury Secretary Bessent, the measure is aimed at Russian oil that is already stranded at sea, so should be viewed as more of a short-term relief for Asian refiners. Coupled with Burgum’s comments, this has supported some reversal in oil price gains overnight, with Brent down -0.94% to $84.61/bbl as I type. S&P 500 futures (+0.22%) are a touch higher, while the dollar index is down -0.37% after yesterday’s +0.55% gain.
But net net, it’s been only a partial offset from yesterday’s news flow that saw Brent crude (+4.93%) rise to $85.41/bbl, whilst WTI (+8.51%) rose to $81.01/bbl, its biggest increase since May 2020. What’s been notable is that investors are increasingly pricing in an extended conflict, and we can see that from energy futures further out the curve. For instance, the Brent crude oil future for 12 months’ time was up another +1.58% yesterday to $69.90/bbl, which is their biggest increase so far this week. So in other words, there’s growing doubt that this is going to be over quickly.
With oil prices continuing to rise, investors grew more doubtful about central bank rate cuts this year, with the prospect of hikes even coming into view. That was particularly clear for the ECB, where a hike by December moved up to a 63% chance by the close, which is the first time in 2026 that it’s been above 50%. A 55% probability of a cut was priced in as recently as last Friday. So that contributed to a sharp selloff for European sovereign bonds, with yields on 10yr bunds (+9.0bps), OATs (+11.7bps) and BTPs (+13.2bps) all moving higher. Meanwhile, ECB officials struck a watchful tone over the situation, with Banque de France Governor Villeroy saying he didn’t see any reason today to raise rates, while ECB Vice President de Guindos said an extended war could raise inflation expectations and prompt a change in the policy stance.
It was a similar story in the US, where markets are now pricing in just 40bps of Fed cuts by December, the fewest so far this year. That came as Fed officials acknowledged the potential for inflation to rise, with Richmond Fed President Barkin saying “Gas prices, obviously, if they’re up, that is inflationary”. And remember that core PCE was already 3.0% before this latest shock, so investors have become increasingly sceptical that the Fed will be able to deliver rapid rate cuts under a new Chair. In addition, the latest weekly initial jobless claims were slightly beneath expectations, at 213k in the week ending Feb 28 (vs. 215k expected), so that added to the optimism ahead of today's jobs report. And we saw more positive comments on the labour market from Fed Vice Chair Bowman, who said it showed more “signs of stabilizing”. So collectively, that data and the latest rise in oil prices pushed Treasury yields higher, with the 2yr yield (+3.1bps) up to 3.58%, whilst the 10yr yield (+3.9bps) moved up to 4.14%.
The US labour market will remain in the spotlight today, as we’ll also be getting the latest jobs report for February. In terms of what to expect, our US economists think that payrolls will be up +30k, coming down from the 13-month high of +130k in January. Then for unemployment, they see that remaining at 4.3%, but they note that carries elevated risks in both directions given that the BLS will implement their annual population controls. For more details, click here for their preview.
For equities, it was another rough day as fears mounted about a sustained oil shock. So the S&P 500 (-0.56%) moved back into negative territory for 2026, though it did recover from an intra-day low of -1.44% after the news that the US could intervene in energy markets. Interestingly, software and services stocks were the standout outperformer (+1.84%), with that component of the index hitting a one-month high. This included a +1.59% gain for Oracle as Bloomberg reported that it is planning a round of job cuts. By contrast the Philadelphia semiconductor index fell -1.17% as Bloomberg reported that US officials were mulling regulations that would require approval for exports of AI chips to anywhere in the world. And it was a rough session more broadly, with consumer staples (-2.27%) and materials (-2.43%) stocks leading on the downside in the S&P amid the concern over energy costs. There were even bigger declines in Europe given their greater exposure to any energy shock. So the STOXX 600 (-1.29%) fell back, alongside declines for the DAX (-1.61%), the CAC 40 (-1.49%) and the FTSE 100 (-1.45%).
In Asia, the Nikkei (+0.51%) is recovering from initial losses but is still on course for a weekly decline exceeding -5.5%. Meanwhile, Chinese related stocks are making gains, with the Hang Seng (+1.85%) leading the way as it benefits from a rally in recently weakened technology shares, while the CSI (+0.20%) and the Shanghai Composite (+0.25%) are also experiencing modest increases. The KOSPI has recovered from earlier larger losses and is -0.15%, but still heading towards a weekly drop of more than -10%, and the S&P/ASX 200 (-1.03%) is trading notably lower, on track for a weekly loss of approximately -4.0%.
Finally, this weekend, there’s a German state election taking place in Baden-Württemberg, which will be the first of five regional elections this year. Our economists in Germany have a preview of the votes (link here), where they outline why the election outcomes matter for the stability of the Merz government. They point out that victories for the governing parties might positively impact reform momentum at the federal level over the spring/early summer. But they also point out that heavy losses have been a catalyst in the past for early federal elections, as seen in 2005 (after the SPD lost the key state of North-Rhine Westphalia) and in 2024 (after a series of electoral losses for the FDP).
Looking at the day ahead, the main data highlight will be the US jobs report for February, but we’ll also get US retail sales for January and German factory orders for January. From central banks, we’ll hear from the Fed’s Daly, Paulson, Collins and Hammack, long with the ECB’s Cipollone and Schnabel.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 03/06/2026 - 08:28 Close
Fri, 06 Mar 2026 13:05:00 +0000 Senate Democrats Introduce Bill To Break Up Major Meatpacking Companies
Senate Democrats Introduce Bill To Break Up Major Meatpacking Companies
Senate Democrats Introduce Bill To Break Up Major Meatpacking Companies
Authored by Chase Smith via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),
Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and 12 other senators introduced legislation on March 5 that would force the nation’s largest meatpackers to break up their operations across beef, pork, and poultry, in the latest push in the Democratic affordability agenda heading into the 2026 midterm elections.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) speaks at a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington on Jan. 14, 2025. Madalina Kilroy/The Epoch Times
The Family Grocery and Farmer Relief Act would make it illegal for a major meatpacking company to control more than one type of meat, impose concentration caps on beef markets, and give the Federal Trade Commission authority to order divestitures of plants and facilities.
The bill would also bar foreign-controlled meatpacking companies, including Brazil-based JBS, from operating in the United States.
Schumer framed the legislation as a direct response to rising grocery costs, citing federal data showing a 16 percent increase in beef prices over the past year.
“The pernicious stranglehold of the meatpacking monopoly has weakened our supply chains and price gouged consumers at the grocery store, ” Schumer said in a statement.
“Democrats are going to do what [President] Donald Trump refuses to do: put the affordability crisis front and center, every day, all year long.”
The bill is cosponsored by Sens. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), Peter Welch (D-Vt.), Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Rubén Gallego (D-Ariz.), Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii), Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Ed Markey (D-Mass.), Andy Kim (D-N.J.), Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.). No Republican senators have signed on.
The Epoch Times reached out to the Senate Agriculture Committee to ask whether there is Republican support for the legislation but did not receive a response by publication time.
Currently, four companies control roughly 85 percent of the U.S. beef market, 67 percent of the pork market, and more than 60 percent of the chicken processing market, according to data cited in the legislation and by the White House in its own criticism of the industry. Four decades ago, the top four beef packers controlled about 36 percent of the market, according to the bill’s text.
The concentration of the meatpacking industry has drawn scrutiny from both parties. In November 2025, President Donald Trump directed the Department of Justice to investigate the Big Four meatpackers for potential collusion and price fixing, saying that “action must be taken immediately to protect consumers, combat illegal monopolies.”
Under the proposed legislation, the Federal Trade Commission would develop divestiture plans within 120 days.
A separate provision would require foreign-controlled meatpacking companies to divest their U.S. operations. It specifically names JBS, whose parent company paid more than $280 million in 2020 to settle Justice Department charges related to bribery of foreign government officials. The bill also calls for a study of other foreign-owned processors, including Chinese-owned Smithfield Foods.
The Small Business Administration would be authorized to provide loans and technical assistance to farmers’ cooperatives and small businesses looking to acquire divested facilities.
At a roundtable hosted by Senate Democrats last week, several farming and advocacy groups voiced support for antitrust action in the sector.
“Unpredictable trade policies and corporate consolidation are squeezing family farmers on one end and consumers on the other,” said Rob Larew, president of the National Farmers Union.
Joe Maxwell, president of the Farm Action Fund, said, “When the same handful of firms dominate beef, pork, and chicken, competition breaks down, leaving farmers with too few buyers and families paying more.”
Mike Callicrate, a rancher and member of Ranchers-Cattlemen Action Legal Fund United Stockgrowers of America, a cattle producers’ trade association, said it is “past time to enforce anti-trust laws and break up the meat monopolies like Congress did in the 1920s.”
The meat industry pushed back sharply. The Meat Institute, a trade association representing companies that process the majority of red meat and turkey in the United States, called the bill “absurd” and said it would raise costs, not lower them.
“If the Senator is trying to make meat and poultry more affordable for consumers, this is the wrong approach,“ said Julie Anna Potts, president and CEO of the Meat Institute. ”It will have the opposite effect.”
Potts said the bill ignores market realities, noting that the U.S. cattle herd is at its smallest level in 75 years and that beef packers have recently experienced record losses of more than $350 per head. She also questioned the feasibility of forced divestitures, asking who would have the capital and expertise to buy and operate the facilities.
“The ensuing chaos and likely significant drop in meat production will upset delicate supply and demand forces, ultimately forcing retail and food service to hike consumer prices, ” Potts said.
“It comes at exactly the wrong time, when food prices are already too high for many American families.”
She said the bill “incentivizes beef and pork packing to leave the U.S. for foreign countries.”
Tyler Durden
Fri, 03/06/2026 - 08:05 Close
Fri, 06 Mar 2026 12:45:00 +0000 First A China-Linked Ship, Now A US-Sanctioned Gas Tanker Transits Hormuz Chokepoint
First A China-Linked Ship, Now A US-Sanctioned Gas Tanker Transits Hormuz Chokepoint
A US-sanctioned tanker carrying Iranian LPG, the Danuta I, transited the Strait of Hormuz on Friday without incident, shortly after a Read more.....
First A China-Linked Ship, Now A US-Sanctioned Gas Tanker Transits Hormuz Chokepoint
A US-sanctioned tanker carrying Iranian LPG, the Danuta I, transited the Strait of Hormuz on Friday without incident, shortly after a China-linked bulk carrier also exited the world's most critical energy chokepoint, suggesting IRGC forces may, for now, be allowing Iranian- and Chinese-linked vessels to pass. That said, the strait remains paralyzed for broader commercial traffic, risking energy shocks across Asia that, if prolonged, could spill over into financial markets.
Bloomberg reports the very large gas carrier, sailing under the flag of Palau, transited the strait in the early hours of Friday morning local time without incident. The ship picked up cargo from within the Persian Gulf, which Bloomberg journalists said was "seen from a draft increase."
"The Strait of Hormuz is currently too risky for legitimate shipowners to cross from a commercial standpoint as well as for safety of crew, which explains the dozens of tankers stuck waiting within the Gulf and unable to exit," Charlie Brown, an advisor to United Against Nuclear Iran, told the financial outlet.
Brown said, "Dark fleet or sanctioned tankers may take a calculated risk to sail through, possibly after communication with Iranian forces in the area."
Late Wednesday, the Chinese-linked bulk carrier Iron Maiden transited the narrow waterway without incident, after reports circulated that Tehran would permit Chinese vessels to transit.
Vessel traffic data through Hormuz has all but collapsed, down 90%, according to ship-tracking website MarineTraffic.
The collapse in vessel traffic through the maritime chokepoint suggests, based on commentary and data we've diligently compiled from top institutional desks and energy experts, that any extended disruption of the waterway is setting the stage for an energy shock in Asia. If prolonged, it could also affect other parts of the world (Europe) and morph into a financial crisis.
Professional subscribers can read much more about the Middle East, the Strait of Hormuz, and energy markets at our new Marketdesk.ai portal.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 03/06/2026 - 07:45 Close
Fri, 06 Mar 2026 12:15:00 +0000 "This Will Bring Down Global Economy": Qatar's Energy Minister Offers Dire Warning About Hormuz Chokepoint Chaos
"This Will Bring Down Global Economy": Qatar's Energy Minister Offers Dire Warning About Hormuz Chokepoint Chaos
Brent crude futures are on track for their biggest weekly gain since the early days of Covid, with the move now exceedi
Read more.....
"This Will Bring Down Global Economy": Qatar's Energy Minister Offers Dire Warning About Hormuz Chokepoint Chaos
Brent crude futures are on track for their biggest weekly gain since the early days of Covid, with the move now exceeding the 20% weekly spike at the start of the Russia-Ukraine war, as the U.S.-Israeli air campaign against Iran, Operation Epic Fury, has tipped the Gulf into an energy crisis, freezing commercial traffic through the Strait of Hormuz and pushing some regional oil and gas production offline.
On Friday, Qatar's energy minister, Saad al-Kaabi, told the Financial Times that the Gulf conflict could trigger a global economic shock, warning that continued fighting would force all Gulf energy exporters to halt output and could send Brent crude prices north of $150 a barrel.
"Everybody who has not called for force majeure we expect will do so in the next few days if this continues. All exporters in the Gulf region will have to call force majeure," Kaabi explained. "If they don't, they are at some point going to pay the liability for that legally, and that's their choice ."
Qatar is the world's second-largest producer of LNG and was forced to declare force majeure earlier this week after IRGC drone strikes on its Ras Laffan plant.
"This will bring down the economies of the world," he warned. "If this war continues for a few weeks, GDP growth around the world will be impacted. Everybody's energy price is going to go higher. There will be shortages of some products and there will be a chain reaction of factories that cannot supply ."
Kaabi continued, "We don't yet know the extent of the damage, as it is currently still being assessed. It is not yet clear how long repairs will take."
On Tuesday, we provided readers with the number of days of disruption needed in the Gulf area (the Strait of Hormuz chokepoint) to trigger actual panic, that is 25. Read the full report here .
And for Zerohedge Premium and Pro subs. JPMorgan crunched the math on Hormuz and revealed just how many days until chaos (report here ).
Then, on Thursday, energy economist Anas Alhajji spoke with top UBS analysts on a webinar that also provided a timeline for energy market chaos and the risks of an impending economic shock.
"Our main scenario is that if this lasts four weeks, things will be completely out of control. And when I say out of control, I mean that even if China starts releasing oil from its inventories, the problem is that my guess is China would also restrict exports, which means that oil would remain in China. We were counting on that oil being in the market, and now it is not going to be in the market," Alhajji said.
Alhajji outlined critical questions:
Is the war about Iran's nuclear program, or is something much larger at play, with Iran serving more as a trigger or for broader strategic objectives?
The distinction matters significantly because the medium- and long-term outcomes would look very different.
Should attention be focused narrowly on Iran's nuclear program and regime change, or should the situation be analyzed within the much wider context of China, trade wars & tariffs, AI competition, Panama Canal, Red Sea, Venezuela, Syria, & Greenland?
Are we observing "conflicts" within a larger "CONFLICT," where some groups are opportunistically exploiting the situation to pursue their own "local" objectives?
As well as the problem:
The problem now is attacks that spark panic buying while Saudi Arabia cannot react. Thus, U.S. SPR release is limited, and China might ban exports. Prices would go above $100 easily, but fear would contain demand growth, limiting the increase in oil prices. The impact on LNG and NGLs is higher than on oil.
We cannot go back quickly to normal. It will take at least 2 months if the war stops tomorrow. (logistics and technical issues)
Lack of international cooperation (Every country for itself)
In energy markets, Brent crude futures are up 21%, exceeding the 20% spike at the start of the Ukraine-Russia war, and are on track for their largest weekly gain since the first week of May 2020.
Back to 2024 highs.
There are no signs, at the moment, that the conflict is nearing an end. In fact, there are reports that IRGC forces just hit a US-owned oil tanker near Kuwait.
Goldman analysts earlier this week warned about $100/bbl crude oil prices. Disruptions across the Gulf have already sent diesel futures up 40% this week, while central banks are warning of a possible inflation spike.
Asia's exposure to Gulf oil is concerning, but China's exposure is even more alarming. This suggests that if the conflict persists, Beijing could be facing an incoming shock that risks morphing into a financial crisis
Tyler Durden
Fri, 03/06/2026 - 07:15 Close
Fri, 06 Mar 2026 12:00:00 +0000 Berkshire CEO Greg Abel Commits Salary To Buying Company Stock
Berkshire CEO Greg Abel Commits Salary To Buying Company Stock
Greg Abel said he plans to put all of his after-tax compensation into shares of Berkshire Hathaway for as long as he runs the company, according to Read more.....
Berkshire CEO Greg Abel Commits Salary To Buying Company Stock
Greg Abel said he plans to put all of his after-tax compensation into shares of Berkshire Hathaway for as long as he runs the company, according to Yahoo Finance/Bloomberg .
He recently followed through by buying about $15.3 million of Berkshire stock, according to a regulatory filing. Abel said repeating the purchase each year after the company reports results could total “hundreds of millions” of dollars over time.
“Absolute alignment with our shareholders, our partners, our owners is critical,” Abel said in an interview with CNBC on Thursday. “I already have some shares, but the goal was to continue to demonstrate alignment with them.”
Bloomberg writes that the conglomerate also restarted its share repurchase program on Wednesday after leadership concluded the company’s “intrinsic value” exceeded its trading price. Following the announcement, the stock rose as much as 2% in early trading in New York on Thursday.
Earlier in the week, Berkshire shares declined after the firm reported fourth-quarter results showing operating profit fell 30%, largely due to a 54% drop in insurance underwriting income.
Investors had been looking for clues on Abel’s buyback strategy, particularly since Berkshire had gone six consecutive quarters without repurchasing shares. In his first annual shareholder letter last week, Abel reiterated the company’s long-standing approach to returning capital and signaled that a dividend remains unlikely.
“We’ve maintained that we will retain a dollar if we see the opportunity to create more than a dollar for our shareholders —and that’s been the test,” Abel said. “So if we didn’t meet that test, we’d do a dividend.”
Abel added that repurchasing stock won’t prevent Berkshire from deploying its roughly $373 billion cash reserve elsewhere.
“There’s also ‘Do we acquire stock?’ And when we’re looking at companies: ‘Do we acquire whole companies also?’ And then there’s the ‘Do we acquire equities?’” Abel said. “Each of those, with the amount of capital we have, can be done independently. So when we’re purchasing our shares, it’s not taking away from any of the other decisions.”
Tyler Durden
Fri, 03/06/2026 - 07:00 Close
Fri, 06 Mar 2026 11:58:00 +0000 In Major Win For Putin, US Grants Russia License To Sell Oil To India While Strait Of Hormuz Is Blocked
In Major Win For Putin, US Grants Russia License To Sell Oil To India While Strait Of Hormuz Is Blocked
The world desperately needs oil, but can't get it as 20% of it is literally stuck behind the blockaded Straits of Hormuz. Putin
Read more.....
In Major Win For Putin, US Grants Russia License To Sell Oil To India While Strait Of Hormuz Is Blocked
The world desperately needs oil, but can't get it as 20% of it is literally stuck behind the blockaded Straits of Hormuz. Putin has tons of oil because sales are metaphorically stuck by US sanctions. If the world does not get access to oil soon enough, there will be a global recession or worse, and every day the price of oil rises by 5%.
What to do?
Lightbulb moment: why, remove Russia's sanctions to one of the countries most in need - India - and bring the excess oil to those who have the most urgent need for it, allowing the price to fall and removing much of the leverage Iran has by keeping prices sky high.
That's what happened late on Thursday, when the US issued a general license to allow for some Russian oil sales to India, giving the nation more options to purchase fuel as an escalating conflict in the Persian Gulf cuts off a major producing region.
The license lasts a month (which hints at how long the operation against Iran will likely last according to the Admin) and covers transactions related to the sale of Russian crude oil and petroleum products loaded onto vessels before March 5, so long as it’s delivered to India and purchased by an Indian firm. The measure expires April 4 at 12:01 a.m. Washington time.
The move is another U-turn, and comes months after President Donald Trump slapped tariffs on Indian goods in a bid to pressure Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government to abandon energy purchases from Russia, which India never did.
"To enable oil to keep flowing into the global market, the Treasury Department is issuing a temporary 30-day waiver to allow Indian refiners to purchase Russian oil, ” US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a post on X. “This deliberately short-term measure will not provide significant financial benefit to the Russian government as it only authorizes transactions involving oil already stranded at sea.”
Which reminds us: just a few days ago we pointed out that there are hundreds of millions of barrels of oil stuck at sea on various embargoed tankers, and that whoever managed to deliver those to a final destination would make an absolute killing...
We now wait to see if Vitol indeed becomes the merchant bank of choice for the next month's (with unlimited extensions) Russia-to-India transfers.
According to Bloomberg, Indian state refiners and government officials met earlier this week to consider contingency measures including turning to Russian cargoes loitering near its waters. The oil ministry had pushed for diplomats to seek some room for maneuver from Washington.As we pointed out recently, after China, India is the second country most reliant on gulf oil.
India became the single most important buyer of Moscow’s seaborne crude after the invasion of Ukraine, but the country has pretended to cut back in response to US pressure, particularly after a US trade deal struck last month that rolled back punitive tariffs. The reality is that India still continues to buy copious amounts of Russian oil and today's decree will only make it official.
Meanwhile, in other market moving news, Reuters reported that China - both Iran and the Gulf's biggest energy client - is in talks with Iran to allow crude oil and Qatari liquefied natural gas vessels safe passage through the Strait of Hormuz. As we discussed yesterday, China, which has friendly ?relations with Iran, has funded and armed the regime, and relies heavily on Middle Eastern supplies, is unhappy about the ?Islamic Republic's move to paralyze shipping through the Strait and is pressing Tehran ?to allow safe passage for the vessels.
Since China gets ?about 45% of its oil from the Strait, should Iran agree to allowing Chinese ships through, and should Russia be able to fully supply India's needs, and if Saudi Arabia can reroute as much as 7 million bbl/d from the gulf to Yangbu via the East-West pipeline, as we touched upon earlier ...
... and suddenly the Hormuz blockade will seem far less ominous, as most of the oil blocked finds alternative ways to continue on its way to its final destination.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 03/06/2026 - 06:58 Close
Fri, 06 Mar 2026 11:44:07 +0000 February Payrolls Preview: "For This Print, The Stronger The Better"
February Payrolls Preview: "For This Print, The Stronger The Better"
The February jobs report is expected to show 55k jobs added to the US economy in the month, a sharp drop from 130k in January but slightly above the Fed's 50k brea
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February Payrolls Preview: "For This Print, The Stronger The Better"
The February jobs report is expected to show 55k jobs added to the US economy in the month, a sharp drop from 130k in January but slightly above the Fed's 50k breakeven estimate. Private payrolls are expected to rise by 60k versus the prior 172k. The unemployment rate is expected to remain unchanged at 4.3%, while wages are seen rising 0.3% M/M and 3.7% Y/Y. According toi Newsquawk, the data will be used to gauge Fed rate cut expectations, while some on the FOMC, including Waller, will use it to decide whether to vote for a rate cut or hold in March, although the Fed is expected to keep rates on hold barring any drastic change in the current situation or outlook.
Recent proxies have been mixed: the ADP report was strong, while the ISM PMI employment sub-components showed improvement in both manufacturing and services, though manufacturing remained in contractionary territory. Initial jobless claims for the reference week were steady over comparable periods, while continuing claims rose slightly. The Conference Board reported a modest improvement in labor market perceptions. The Chicago Fed unemployment model expects the unemployment rate to remain at 4.3%.Earlier today, RevelioLabs reported 16.7k jobs lost in February versus a 13.3k gain in January. Challenger layoffs fell notably.
Expectations:
Headline NFP is expected to show 55k jobs added in February, cooling from January's 130k increase. Analyst forecasts range between -9k and +113k.
Private payrolls are expected to rise by 65k from the prior 172k, with forecasts ranging between +25k and +110k.
The Fed's current estimate of the breakeven rate is around 50k.
Goldman estimates payrolls rose by 45k in February, below consensus. On the negative side, the bank expects a 31k drag from newly striking workers and a modest headwind from poor winter weather after it likely boosted January payroll growth. The bank expects unchanged government payrolls, reflecting a 5k decline in federal government payrolls that is offset by a 5k increase in state and local government payrolls.
The unemployment rate is expected to remain at 4.3%, with the range of forecasts between 4.2-4.4%.
Wages are expected to rise 0.3% M/M, easing from the prior 0.4%, with forecasts ranging between 0.1-0.4%.
Average earnings growth Y/Y is seen at 3.7%, matching the prior rate, with forecasts between 3.5-3.7%.
Proxies:
The February ADP data showed jobs rising by 63k, beating expectations of 50k and up from the prior 11k, which was revised down from 22k. The 63k print is the highest since November 2025.
In the ISM PMI reports, manufacturing employment edged up to 48.8 from 48.1, while 45% of respondents still said managing headcount rather than hiring was the norm at their companies. The services employment PMI rose to 51.8 from 50.3. Respondent comments included: “we are expecting activity to increase from 2026 to 2030, so we are hiring” and “ICE activity has caused some staff to not come into work.” There is also growing focus on AI-related job cuts, following Block's decision to lay off 40% of its staff, around 4,000 people, raising concerns over how quickly companies may turn to AI instead of human employees. Some view this decision as premature, but it bears monitoring in the months and years ahead to see whether the pace of AI-driven replacement accelerates.
The Chicago Fed's February labor market indicators are tracking unemployment at 4.27%, little changed from 4.28% into the January jobs report.
Weekly initial jobless claims were steady over the comparable survey periods (208k versus 210k), while continuing claims rose slightly (1.833mln versus 1.819mln).
The Conference Board reported a modest improvement in labor market perceptions, with the labor market differential increasing; some 28.0% of consumers said jobs were “plentiful”, up from 25.8% in January. Meanwhile, 20.6% said jobs were “hard to get”, up from 19.0%.
RevelioLabs reported 16.7k jobs lost in February, while Challenger layoffs eased to 48k from 108k. January
Iran: Given recent developments in the Middle East, it is still too early to assess the impact on the US economy, though it could have implications for prices and, by extension, monetary policy. The Fed generally prefers to look through one-off energy-related price increases. However, if the war is prolonged and disruption persists in the Strait of Hormuz, there is a risk this could delay the resumption of rate cuts, which are currently expected in the summer. A sharp deterioration in the labor market would likely offset these concerns, but the situation keeps the Fed in a difficult position. The US has offered to assist shippers and tankers transiting the Strait by paying for insurance and providing US Navy escorts. This is a new announcement and its effectiveness remains to be seen, but if successful it could help shield the global economy by keeping supply chains and oil flows open. Market-based inflation expectations remain anchored. As of 4th March, the 5-year breakeven rate stood at 2.46%, up from 2.40% on 27th February, while the 10-year rate is at 2.29% versus 2.25% at the end of last-week
Arguing for a weaker-than-expected report:
Strikes. The BLS’s strike report noted that newly striking workers will exert a 31kdrag on February job growth.
Government hiring. Goldman expects unchanged government payrolls, reflecting a 5k decline in federal government payrolls offset by a 5k increase in state and local government payrolls. The bank expects the ongoing federal government hiring freeze to continue to weigh on federal government payrolls.
Winter weather. Winter storm Fern likely formed too late to meaningfully impact January job growth—the impact of weather actually likely boosted job growth in January after greater-than-usual snowfall likely weighed on December job growth—but lingering snow coverage and colder-than-usual weather in the February reference period are likely to exert a modest drag on job growth in weather-sensitive industries. We assume a 5k decline in construction employment
Arguing for a stronger-than-expected report:
Layoffs. Initial jobless claims increased to 220k on average in the February payroll month from 206k in January but remained low. Announced layoffs reported by Challenger, Gray & Christmas declined by 60k (or 72% year-over-year) in February to 48k (NSA), following a 72k increase in January.
Mixed/neutral factors:
Employer surveys. The Goldman manufacturing (-0.4pt to 48.6) and services (-0.4pt to 49.1) survey employment component trackers both edged lower in February and remained in contractionary territory. However, the signal from survey data has been less useful—and at times misleading—during the post-pandemic period and thus has little bearing on our payrolls forecast.
Big data. Alternative measures of employment growth were mixed in February: the indicators we track averaged +58k.
Updated Population Controls: Tomorrow's update will re-anchor the survey’s population estimate to the newly released Census population estimate, resulting in one-time adjustments to the levels of the labor force, employment, and other series in February. The household survey has likely overstated population and employment growth over the last year because the survey’s population assumptions quickly became outdated as immigration continued to fall sharply. We estimate that this will result in downward adjustments to the labor force and employment of 0.3-0.4mn (Chart below, left panel). The annual update will also likely have a tiny composition effect on ratios like the unemployment rate. That because recent immigrants are more likely to be young Hispanics and young Asians, who tend to have higher labor force participation and unemployment rates than the population average. As a result, a disproportionate decline in the population size of these groups will lower these rates. However, because the magnitude of the revision is relatively small, the participation rate and employment-population ratio will decline by only 1-2bp and the unemployment rate to be essentially unchanged (Chart below, right panel).
Fed: The Fed is currently on hold and views among FOMC participants remain mixed, with some officials objecting to further rate cuts while others would prefer the easing to continue. Overall, the outlook largely depends on incoming data and how far the Fed is from both sides of its mandate. The labor market has stabilized in recent months, while inflation remains above target, largely supporting the case for rates to remain at current levels. This report will be key in assessing whether January's labor market strength is sustained and whether the view that the labor market has stabilized still holds. Large downward revisions or a notably weak report would boost dovish rate expectations and strengthen the case among doves for cuts to resume sooner rather than later. Fed Governor Waller, a dovish dissenter, said he would support a cut in March if January's labour market strength is revised away or fades, though it may be appropriate to hold if downside labour market risks have diminished. Governor Miran, an uber dove, wants four 25bps cuts this year, sooner rather than later. New York Fed President Williams has said rate cuts will continue if inflation ebbs. Goolsbee (non-voter this year) is optimistic about more cuts this year but wants clear evidence inflation is returning to target first, specifically warning about persistently high core services inflation.The Fed's median dot plot pencils in one rate cut in 2026, taking the target range for the federal funds rate to 3.25-3.50% by year-end, though the Summary of Economic Projections will be updated at the next Fed decision on March 18th.
Market Reaction:
For options expiring on March 6, the market is pricing +/-1.14% move, as of market close on March.
JPM Market Intel: According to the JPM trading desk, the range of SPX outcomes is skewed lower given the uncertainty around the US / Iran war. The heightened oil market and general market vol is not bleeding into the NFP print, which may be muted given the expectations for a weaker Retail Sales number. For this print , the stronger the better given the increase in inflation expectations due to energy prices. A weaker number will increase rate cut expectations, but the risk is stagflation in the near-term given the expected increase in inflation. If the US / Iran war were to resolve overnight, the US economy is on solid footing with positive growth momentum, evidenced by the ISM prints. JPM remains of the view that reduced uncertainty on taxes and tariff rates that continue to trend lower benefits the economy and is likely to translate into improved hiring. If that comes to fruition then consumer will continue to drive the economy to above-trend growth, benefiting earnings and risk assets. The trade off is zero rate cuts this year.
Below JPM's trademark market reaction matrix:
Above 105k. SPX is up 50bp – 1.25%: odds 5%
Between 75k – 105k. SPX is flat to up 75bp: odds 25%
Between 45k – 75k. SPX loses 50bp to gains 50bp: odds 40%
Between 15k – 45. SPX loses 1% to gains 25bp: odds 25%
Below 15k. SPX is down 0.5% to 1.5%: odds 5%
Finally, some thoughts from traders around the Goldman trading desk:
Vickie Chang (Global Macro Research): Given the strikes in Iran and the shocks that has sent through markets, the payrolls print is not likely to be as important a focus as usual. Our economists’ forecasts for +45k on NFP and a tick up in the unemployment rate to 4.4% are not likely to awaken the recession tail or to lead the market to price faster cuts, especially given the uncertainty around the future path of energy prices. Absent a meaningful surprise, the market is likely to be driven more by the geopolitical situation and the distributional effects of those shocks. The risks around the jobs data look two-sided. On the one hand, the market is not priced for recession —our estimates suggest that the market is pricing growth at ~1.6% vs. our 4q-ahead forecast of 2.3%. So there is still room to worry about the growth picture on a properly bad report (and to pull forward cuts), though that would likely require a bigger jump in the unemployment rate. On the other hand, with the inflation and policy tightening shock that the market has priced in recent days, and amidst renewed worries that we could see higher energy prices and/or increased fiscal spending, a stronger report and lower unemployment rate could lead the market to worry about the cuts that it is still pricing through this year and next . But as with the robust services ISM, it could also provide reassurance that the economy was more resilient heading into the Iran shock.
Brandon Brown (Rates Trading): While AI fears, credit worries, and uncertainty around the effects of the war in Iran have led investors to reach for interest rate hedges and duration, recent economic data has been solid. This has allowed the front end to price somewhat fewer cuts in 2026, while some of the cut premium has extended into 2027. We think a 50k headline with a 4.4% unemployment rate is a report that will meet the market’s current pricing. Greater than 75k with a stable or falling unemployment rate will put pressure on the front end to cheapen further, while a 4.5% unemployment rate or below 25k headline will allow the front end to price more cut premium.
Joe Clyne (Index Vol Trading): It’s been an extremely choppy and volatile market over the last few days, but the result of all that chop has been an index that remains extremely rangebound. Skew remains extremely steep and continues to realize extremely well . Sitting at 6880 in SPX cash, we expect to see the straddle for payrolls go out at roughly 80 bps. We don’t think that NFP will be a major driver for index level movement, unless you see a complete whiff and a market pullback. We think the main drivers remain geopolitical fears, AI disruption narratives, and (at an implied volatility level) crowded positioning in short downside and long topside. We think it is hard to have a strong break through all time highs in SPX with a lot of dealer positioning set up long gamma around the 7k level in SPX. For those who are looking for convex hedges, we think VIX optionality looks relatively cheap as compared to the fixed strike downside options.
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Tyler Durden
Fri, 03/06/2026 - 06:44 Close
Fri, 06 Mar 2026 11:30:00 +0000 "Bruh, You Were Calling For War With Iran A Month Ago"
"Bruh, You Were Calling For War With Iran A Month Ago"
"Bruh, You Were Calling For War With Iran A Month Ago"
Authored by Steve Watson via modernity.news ,
In a stunning display of hypocrisy, neocon warmonger Bill Kristol is now trashing the Trump administration’s strikes on Iran—dubbed “Epic Fury”—despite agitating for military action against the regime for the past 25 years.
Kristol has spent years pushing to thwart Iran’s nuclear ambitions, and was even still doing so in January, only to pivot into full sabotage mode now that Trump has pulled the trigger.
Whether you’re for or against this military action, or waiting to see how it all pans out, we can all agree that Kristol is the most odious TDS-infected worm of a man.
Kristol’s recent outburst came in a tweet where he incredibly accused the administration of fabricating reasons for the conflict.
Responding to complaints about Americans stranded amid the chaos, Kristol wrote: “Maybe Rubio should stop inventing ‘imminent threats’ to justify the war his administration started and get to work doing his department’s job of helping Americans in the war zone they created.”
This criticism flies in the face of Kristol’s own record. Back in 2012, through his role at The Weekly Standard, Kristol declared it was time to say no to Iranian nukes. He positioned himself as a hawk on Iran, prioritizing prevention of their nuclear program above all.
Even before this as a part of the Project For A New American Century, Kristol backed regime change in Iran.
Fast forward to January 2026, and Kristol was still at it, slamming the administration’s focus on Greenland as a distraction while urging prioritization of Iran. As one observer noted in a tweet: “Bill Kristol claims the U.S. invented a reason to attack Iran. He is opposing the position that we needed to go into that country to liberate the citizens that was promoted by…Bill Kristol.”
The backlash to Kristol’s tweet was swift and brutal, with users on X dredging up his past calls for war to highlight the hypocrisy. One reply captured the sentiment perfectly: “Bruh you were calling for war with Iran a month ago.”
These responses underscore how Kristol’s flip has alienated even those who once shared his views, revealing his opposition as rooted in personal animus rather than policy.
This isn’t Kristol’s first rodeo in exposing his anti-Trump bias. He previously stated that he’d much rather see shadowy bureaucrats running things over the duly elected president, with one responder noting: “You’re saying you prefer not knowing who’s running the country just because you hate the person the American people chose as president?”
Others tied it to potential self-interest: “For you, the deep state is preferable because you are listed as the President of Defending Democracy (EIN 831567380) which is an indirect beneficiary of USAID through Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors. You are exposed.”
That deep state preference now aligns seamlessly with his Iran flip. Kristol’s pattern is clearly to undermine at all costs, even if it means contradicting his lifelong warmongering.
Kristol’s about-face exposes the rot in establishment conservatism, where hatred for Trump trumps national security.
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Tyler Durden
Fri, 03/06/2026 - 06:30 Close