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Tue, 29 Jul 2025 11:59:12 +0000 Futures Rise Ahead Of Data Deluge, S&P Set For 7th Straight Record High
Futures Rise Ahead Of Data Deluge, S&P Set For 7th Straight Record High
US equity futures are up again, and set for a 7th consecutive record high into a heavy earnings day and ahead of tomorrow's Fed decision as attention turns from
Read more.....
Futures Rise Ahead Of Data Deluge, S&P Set For 7th Straight Record High
US equity futures are up again, and set for a 7th consecutive record high into a heavy earnings day and ahead of tomorrow's Fed decision as attention turns from trade deals to company results and economic data to justify nosebleed valuations. As of 8:00am, S&P futures are 0.2% higher after the index hit its latest record high on Monday; tech is outperforming again and Nasdaq 100 contracts up 0.5%. In pre-market trading, Mag7, Semis, and Cyclicals are outperforming. Bond yields are lower (10Y yield at 4.3919%, down 2bps) as the USD rally is poised to continue after the dollar climbed to its strongest level in more than five weeks on speculation a slew of readings on the economy will show the tariff impact is contained. Commodities are mixed with energy leading on US / RU geopolitics. The macro data focus today includes JOLTS, Housing Prices, regional Fed activity indicators, trade data, inventories, and consumer confidence.
In premarket trading, Mag 7 stocks are mostly higher ahead of the coming earnings deluge (Nvidia +1.5%, Amazon +0.4%, Meta +0.4%, Tesla +0.3%, Microsoft +0.2%, Apple little changed, Alphabet -0.2%). Here are some other notable premarket movers:
Amkor Technology (AMKR) jumps 9% after the company gave an upbeat sales forecast for 3Q that predicted a boost from the production of iPhone sockets.
Cadence Design (CDNS) is up 7.6% after boosting its outlook for the year even as the maker of chip-design tools also pleaded guilty to charges accusing the company of violating US export controls.
Chart Industries (GTLS) is up 17% after the Financial Times reported that Baker Hughes is nearing a $13.6 billion cash deal to buy the equipment maker, gatecrashing an earlier agreement to merge with rival Flowserve.
Exelixis (EXEL) falls 13% after reporting lower-than-expected quarterly sales of its cancer drug Cabometyx.
Philips ADRs (PHG) jump 9.5% after the Dutch medical-technology firm reported better-than-expected results for the second quarter and increased its profitability outlook for the year.
Stellantis’ US shares (STLA) fall 3.5% after the carmaker updated its estimate of 2025 net tariff impact to about €1.5 billion ($1.73 billion), of which €300 million was incurred in 1H 2025.
UnitedHealth (UNH) is down 3.7% after forecasting adjusted earnings per share for the full year of at least $16; the average analyst estimate sat at $20.40.
UPS (UPS) is down 3.8% after the courier declined to provide earnings guidance as it struggles to get a handle on volatility in the market, underscoring the challenges for its effort to reconfigure its network and revitalize its business.
Whirlpool (WHR) shares slump 15% after the appliance maker cut its full-year forecast for ongoing earnings per share. The updated outlook of no more than $8 missed the average analyst estimate of $8.78.
In corporate news, India overtook China to become the top source of smartphones sold in the US after Apple shifted more assembly of its iPhones there. Sarepta Therapeutics shares are soaring in premarket trading after US regulators recommended patients who can walk are allowed to take its gene therapy Elevidys again. Procter & Gamble promoted its chief operating officer to CEO. Whirlpool shares slumped in premarket trading after the appliance maker cut its full-year forecast. Cadence Design rose after boosting its outlook.
Investor attention is turning from recent US tariff deals with the European Union and Japan to key indicators spanning jobs and inflation to broader economic activity. The Federal Reserve is forecast to keep interest rates unchanged Wednesday, while investors will be tracking earnings from four megacap tech companies this week. The market is putting the chance of a 25-basis point cut this time around at just about 3%. while traders continue to lean toward a quarter-point cut at the Fed’s meeting in mid-September, with around 100 bps of easing seen over the next 12 months. Pressure from the White House for immediate rate cuts has the potential to sow dissent as Chair Jerome Powell and his colleagues begin a two-day meeting. Fidelity reckons gold could hit $4,000 an ounce by the end of next year as the Fed cuts rates, the dollar drops, and central banks keep adding holdings.
“President Trump continues to call for much lower interest rates,” Gabriele Foà, portfolio manager at Algebris Investments, wrote in a note. “With inflation not surging and the labor market softening, maintaining real rates at their current elevated levels will be increasingly difficult.”
We’re in the thick of earnings, with Boeing, Procter & Gamble, UPS and Starbucks all reporting on Tuesday. So far, the season has been one of “big beats but snail’s pace growth,” Bloomberg Intel's Gina Martin Adams and Wendy Soong said, adding that preseason forecasts were too low. Magnificent 7 members Apple, Amazon, Microsoft and Meta Platforms are all due to report numbers in the coming days. Robust corporate earnings have bolstered investor confidence in US stocks, as companies head for their highest share of beats since the second quarter of 2021.
Also in focus will be the Treasury Department’s update of debt-sales plans, due Wednesday. Traders expect issuance of Treasury bills to expand as the government tackles the financing of large deficits over the next quarter and into 2026.
In the latest tariff news, Commerce Secretary Lutnick said a 90-day extension of a trade truce with China was a likely outcome with negotiations between the two countries underway in Stockholm. Higher tariffs are threatening to add to the burden already weighing on the US economy. Only Mexico among major economies is forecast to see a bigger dropoff in GDP growth than the US over 2025 and 2026, according to Bloomberg Economics.
Meanwhile, US and Chinese officials finished the first of two days of talks aimed at extending their tariff truce beyond a mid-August deadline and hashing out ways to maintain trade ties while safeguarding economic security. The EU dodged an imminent trade war with the US, but markets and a growing chorus of critics have dispelled early hopes that the deal will bring a sense of stability back to transatlantic relations. The EU and US will seek to clinch a non-legally binding joint statement by Aug. 1 that will expand on some of the elements negotiated over the weekend, according to a senior EU official. One advantage to a trade deal that benefits the US more than Europe, for stock investors at least, is a weaker euro that makes European exports more competitive. The euro extended its slide to the weakest level in more than a month amid concern over the economic impact of the EU’s deal with the US.
“There is one positive, and it’s not the trade deal,” said Andrea Gabellone, equity strategist at KBC Securities in Brussels. “The positive is what happened yesterday on the FX market when finally the dollar caught a bid and the euro had a healthy correction.”
Taking a look at technicals, long positioning on US equity futures keeps increasing, and is now getting stretched for US growth stocks, according to Citi strategists. Goldman’s Peter Oppenheimer said valuations are high enough that it’s prudent to keep diversifying into other markets. The impact of tariffs may hurt equity prices even after recent trade deals, he added.
US consumer confidence is expected to have shown an improvement in data due Tuesday, with JOLTS job openings statistics also on deck. Growth and inflation numbers out Wednesday are seen offering further signs of economic resilience.
In Europe, the Stoxx 600 rises 0.6%, led by industrials, banks and health care. Royal Philips soared as much as 14% after the Dutch medical-technology firm raised its profitability outlook, as the trade war impact was less severe than feared. Eyewear firm EssilorLuxottica gains after reassuring results. Amundi drops as analysts flag the firm’s higher flows are from lower-margin clients and products. Stellantis slips after giving an update on the tariff impact. Here are the biggest movers Tuesday:
Philips shares jump as much as 14%, the most in a year, after the Dutch medical-technology firm reported better-than-expected results for the second quarter and increased its profitability outlook for the year
EssilorLuxottica rises as much as 5.6%, hitting the highest since May 23, with analysts viewing the eye-wear maker’s results as reassuring. Jefferies highlights that margin in the first half “held up well”
Rexel climbs as much as 5.7% following 1H which is seen as in-line to very slightly ahead by analysts. The French electrical-equipment distributor’s performance in North America helped to offset a weaker period elsewhere
Games Workshop risesas much as 8.8%, rebounding from a two month low, as its annual results surpassed expectations following a strong year that saw the Warhammer games specialist deliver growth across all key geographies
TF1 shares rise as much as 5.1%, the most since April 10, lifted by what analysts described as reassuring operating profits for the second quarter which came slightly above expectations
Heidelberger Druckmaschinen shares rise as much as 24% after the German printing firm furthers its push into the booming defense industry by entering a strategic partnership with Vincorion Advanced Systems
Forterra rises as much as 12%, the most in three-and-a-half years, after the masonry products company beat expectations in the first half and improved its earnings guidance for the full year
Amundi shares dropped as much as 6.2%, the worst performer among financial services stocks in Europe, as analysts flagged the firm’s higher flows and assets under management are from lower margin clients and products
Stellantis shares fall as much as 4.8% after the carmaker updated its estimate of 2025 net tariff impact to about €1.5 billion ($1.73 billion), of which €300 million was incurred in 1H 2025
Sika shares fall as much as 4.6% after the building materials firm reported an Ebitda miss and lowered its top-line outlook for the full year. Morgan Stanley notes that while trends are bottoming, investors may need to wait more
Forbo shares plunge as much as 13%, the most in almost five months, after the Swiss linoleum maker reported results that missed estimates, including a big miss for margins, according to ZKB
Xvivo Perfusion falls as much as 12% to January 2023 lows, after the Swedish organ-transplant equipment maker announced that European CE certification for its key growth product will be delayed by between 6 and 12 months
Endesa fell as much as 7% to be the worst performing stock on Spain’s IBEX-35 after the utility reported net
income for the first half that missed estimates
Earlier in the session, Asian equities extended losses for a third consecutive session, poised for their longest losing streak in nearly two months, as investors awaited key monetary policy decisions from Japan and the US. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index drop 0.5%, with TSMC and Toyota among the biggest drags. Stocks fell in Tokyo, where attention is focused on the Bank of Japan’s policy announcement due Thursday. Losses were also notable in Hong Kong, Taiwan, and Vietnam. South Korean shares bucked the region’s losses Tuesday, gaining as the won weakened. Indonesian equities gained after the country pledged to use its fiscal and monetary firepower to ensure economic growth is maintained at 5% this year.
In FX, the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index is little changed after earlier rising to a five-week high. The euro, which had been one of the weakest majors, is now nearly flat. The Swedish krona is the biggest G-10 decliner, down 0.3% against the greenback.
In rates, treasuries edge higher in early US trading after erasing small declines. Yields are lower across maturities by as much as 2bp with most curve spreads slightly flatter; 10-year is lower by 1.6bp near 4.39%. Price action is similarly muted in core European bond markets. US session features last of this week’s three coupon auctions and a heavy slate of economic data including June JOLTS job openings. Major events later this week include Wednesday’s Fed rate decision and Friday’s July employment report. Bunds underperform, with German 10-year yields rising nearly one basis point to 2.69%. This week’s compressed coupon auction concludes with $44 billion 7-year note sale at 1pm, the last coupon auction of the May-July financing quarter; quarterly refunding announcement for August-to-October is on Wednesday at 8:30am New York time
In commodities, spot gold climbs $11 to around $3,325/oz. WTI rises 0.7% to around $67 a barrel. Bitcoin rises 0.7% toward $119,000.
Taking a look at today's macro data, Wholesale inventories for June are due at 8.30 am ET, followed half an hour later by the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s house price index for May. JOLTS job data for June and the Conference Board’s reading of consumer confidence for July are both due at 10 am. Earnings highlights include Visa, Procter & Gamble, UnitedHealth, L'Oréal, and AstraZeneca. On the auction front, the US will issue $30bn in 2-year FRNs and $44bn in 7-year notes.
Market Snapshot
S&P 500 mini +0.3%
Nasdaq 100 mini +0.4%
Russell 2000 mini +0.4%
Stoxx Europe 600 +0.6%
DAX +1.1%, CAC 40 +1.2%
10-year Treasury yield +1 basis point at 4.42%
VIX -0.3 points at 14.73
Bloomberg Dollar Index little changed at 1209.18
euro -0.1% at $1.1577
WTI crude +0.8% at $67.26/barrel
Top Overnight News
Trump has pushed US tariffs on foreign goods to the highest level since before WWII as he enacts his sweeping protectionist agenda. The wall of levies since he took office in January has now taken the country’s effective tariff level to an estimated 17.3%. FT
Germany and France hit out at the long-awaited EU-US trade deal on Monday, warning it would wound the bloc’s economy as the euro slid against the dollar. German Chancellor Merz said the agreement would cause “considerable damage” to his country, Europe, and the US itself. “Not only will there be a higher inflation rate, but it will also affect transatlantic trade overall.” FT
A 90-day extension of the US-China trade truce is possible, Howard Lutnick said. Taiwan’s president appeared to cancel a trip next week after the Trump administration denied his US stopover on concerns it may jeopardize trade talks with Beijing. BBG
Trump denied seeking a summit with Xi Jinping, saying he’d visit China only if invited — an invitation he says has been extended. BBG
In a potential sign from Trump to keep the China relationship on a positive trajectory, the White House has denied a request from Taiwan’s president to stop in NYC next week as part of a trip to Central America. FT
Japan’s two-year bond auction saw the strongest demand since October, as yields neared their highest levels since 2008. BBG
India overtook China to become the biggest shipper of smartphones to the US in the June quarter. The country now accounts for 44% of the American market. BBG
UnitedHealth (UNH) set a new earnings target below The Street’s estimates for the year. Stock is -4.8% in the premkt, sees FY25 adj EPS of at least $16.00, we think buyside expectations were for $18.00. Mgmt said Medical costs in the quarter “significantly exceeded pricing trends.” BBG
Healthcare prices are set to shift higher for a variety of reasons, and Trump’s 15% tariff on the Eurozone pharma industry, a massive supplier of drugs into the US, is just one more factor that will drive costs higher. NYT
Trade/Tariffs
Japan's Economy Minister Akazawa, says his understanding is that if a third country reaches an agreement with the US on lower sectoral tariffs, such as chips and pharma, the same rate would apply to Japan.
US President Trump posted "I’m in Scotland now after having just completed the EU Deal, and numerous others. The United States is doing GREAT, to put it mildly!!!"
US Commerce Secretary Lutnick said President Trump will mull a few deals this week and set tariff rates on other nations by the end of the week, while he added the table is set with nations that have offered access and "Next week, we're off".
US President Trump's administration reportedly hears competing proposals on Myanmar policy shift with the Trump team reviewing policy ideas on Myanmar, focused on trade, critical minerals, and China competition, according to Reuters sources.
South Korea's Finance Minister said they will do their best to derive the best trade agreement and will discuss shipbuilding, as well as other areas for longer-term cooperation with the US.
Chinese trade negotiations team arrives at the venue for a second day of talks with the US. 29th July 2025
A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk
APAC stocks traded mixed with a mostly negative bias after a similar performance among global peers as participants digested trade developments and as risk events loom. ASX 200 marginally declined with weakness in telecoms and the top-weighted financial sector leading the descent, while there were few catalysts to provide an uplift. Nikkei 225 continued to give back previous trade-related spoils despite recent currency weakness. Japanese PM Ishiba remained defiant and noted there is no change in his intention to stay in office despite many reportedly calling for PM Ishiba's resignation at Monday's LDP meeting. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were pressured albeit to varying degrees with little information so far from the US-China talks in Sweden which are set to enter a second day
Top Asian News
US President Trump posted "The Fake News is reporting that I am SEEKING a “Summit” with President Xi of China. This is not correct, I am not SEEKING anything! I may go to China, but it would only be at the invitation of President Xi, which has been extended. Otherwise, no interest!"
Japan's ruling LDP is said to hold a decision-making plenary meeting, according to FNN. It was separately reported that Japanese Finance Minister Kato said sales tax is vital for the social security system in Japan and it is inappropriate to lower the consumption tax rate.
China is to ‘tighten oversight’ in crowded manufacturing sectors such as EVs and solar power, according to SCMP citing a Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) meeting on Monday.
Toyota (7203 JT) is to reportedly start EV production in Europe as early as 2028, according to Nikkei.
European bourses (STOXX 600 +0.5%) opened mostly higher and continued to trade with an upward bias throughout the morning. Upside which follows a mostly higher session on Wall Street, but in contrast to mixed price action across the APAC region. European sectors hold a positive bias, with only a handful of industries residing in the red. Industrials take the top spot, lifted by significant post-earning strength in Philips (+13%). Basic Resources is found at the foot of the pile, with downside today driven by broadly lower metals prices.
Top European News
ECB staff accused ECB President Lagarde of running an 'unaccountable legal fortress' with members of its own staff accusing the central bank of behaving in an "anti-democratic" way in the latest escalation of tensions between the ECB and its employees, according to FT.
ECB Consumer Expectations Survey (Jun) - 1-year CPI 2.6% (prev. 2.8%), 3-year 2.8% (prev. 2.8%), 5-year 2.1% (prev. 2.1%).
Deutsche Bank no longer expects the ECB to deliver rate cuts; now sees next policy move to be a rate hike at the end of 2026.
FX
After a steady start to the session, DXY is once again on the front foot with the index mechanically boosted by the weakening EUR. That being said, there are some reasons to be positive surrounding the US, mainly on the trade front with the US continuing to grind out deals with trading partners and facing no retaliation in doing so. Furthermore, markets are also anticipating a 90-day extension of the current 90-day US-China truce. Today, attention will turn towards the data slate with JOLTS and Consumer Confidence due on deck. DXY briefly made its way onto a 99 handle with a session peak at 99.05.
EUR/USD has very much picked up where it left off as the selling pressure in the pair continues following the EU-US trade agreement. Initially many desks were of the view that the removal of uncertainty would be deemed as a market positive. However, this narrative has since given way to negativity around the actual terms of the deal. This has been voiced by various national leaders such as German Chancellor Merz, who warned of the significant impact it will have on the German economy. Elsewhere, the June ECB Consumer Expectations Survey for June saw the 1-year inflation expectation decline to 2.6% from 2.8%. EUR/USD has taken out its 50DMA at 1.1570 with a current session low at 1.1527.
GBP is softer vs. the USD but to a lesser extent than most peers following the recent cross-related selling in EUR/GBP. ING writes that the recent moves appear to be driven more by positioning, "where opposing fiscal and monetary prospects between the eurozone and the UK had made long EUR/GBP one of the conviction trades this summer". Cable has hit a multi-month low at 1.3315 with not much in the way of support seen until the 1.33 mark.
JPY is the only of the majors firmer/flat vs. the USD as a run of three consecutive losses vs. the USD pauses for breath. The extent of the rebound is relatively limited at this stage and as such, it is probably not worth reading too much into the price action. Political uncertainty in Japan remains rife with ongoing speculation over whether PM Ishiba will be forced to step down from his position following the recent upper house elections. USD/JPY ventured as high as 148.74 before pulling back below Monday's 148.57 peak.
Antipodeans are on the backfoot today, swept away alongside the broadly firmer Dollar. Overnight, the Aussie and Kiwi were little changed and price action was fairly muted given the mixed risk appetite in the region.
Fixed Income
USTs are contained amid quiet newsflow. Had a slight upward bias in the early European morning but only a handful of ticks in magnitude at most. Marginal strength that faded as the morning progressed with the risk tone strong. For the US, the day’s main events include a number of data points such as JOLTS, Consumer Confidence, then Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow tracker before US 7yr supply. Today, direction will be drawn from the mentioned data points though it remains to be seen just how much the market will move into a packed second half of the week with the FOMC on Wednesday, PCE on Thursday and then NFP on Friday.
Bunds are directionally in-fitting with USTs, though trading heavier than their US counterpart so far. Pressure that is seemingly a function of the outperformance seen in Bunds yesterday with the benchmark ending the day near its 129.79 peak. Spent the early European morning contained near that peak and Monday’s 129.73 close. Thereafter, as outlined in USTs above, Bunds came under pressure to a 129.43 low with downside of 30 ticks at most as the risk tone picked up. No real move to the German Bobl auction which was in-line with its introduction.
Gilts have been in the red and while they have, like Bunds, been lower by 30 ticks at most, for the most part, they have been trading marginally better than their German peer. However, ahead of the morning’s DMO auction this flipped slightly as Bunds came marginally off lows, following a slight pullback in the equity risk tone and potentially as yields reacted to session highs in crude, while Gilts proved relatively unreactive and remained just off lows. Supply was strong, with Gilts lifting by a handful of ticks post-auction and now trade roughly in-line with Bunds. Leaving Gilts 10 ticks off the 91.16 low but some 20 from the initial 91.46 high.
Most recently, the complex has bounced a touch following the UK/German supply, albeit still within ranges and with the directional bias still at play.
UK sells GBP 5bln 4.375% 2028 Gilt: b/c 3.71x (prev. 3.46x), average yield 3.941% (prev. 3.847%) & tail 0.2bps (prev. 0.1bps).
Germany sells EUR 3.409bln vs exp. EUR 4.5bln 2.20% 2030 Bobl: b/c 1.50x (prev. 1.50x), average yield 2.28% (prev. 2.26%) & retention 24.24% (prev. 24.92%).
Commodities
WTI and Brent began the European session around the unchanged mark, taking a breather following the upside seen in the prior session - as a reminder, the complex was boosted after US President Trump cut his deadline for Russian President Putin to reach a peace deal with Ukraine. More recently, the complex has seen some upside, currently trading at session highs; nothing behind the strength, but potentially as traders position themselves ahead of another appearance from US President Trump later today and in-fitting with the positive risk tone seen in the equities complex. Brent Oct'25 currently trades towards the upper end of a USD 69.18-69.83/bbl range.
Mixed/flat trade across precious metals, taking a breather from Monday's price action in the absence of macro updates and in the run up to tomorrow's FOMC. Spot gold resides in a USD 3,308.16-3,330.10/oz range, and within Monday's USD 3,301.76-3,345.52/oz parameter.
Mostly lower trade across precious metals as upside is seemingly hampered by the stronger dollar. 3M LME copper resides in a USD 9,759.90-9,796.85/t range at the time of writing.
Kuwait Oil Minister says OPEC+ decisions are made based on market developments. Optimistic about oil market fundamentals, OPEC+ efforts target energy security and market balance.
US President Trump calls on the UK to incentivise drillers in the North Sea.
US Event Calendar
8:30 am: Jun P Wholesale Inventories MoM, est. -0.1%, prior -0.3%
9:00 am: May FHFA House Price Index MoM, est. -0.2%, prior -0.4%
10:00 am: Jun JOLTS Job Openings, est. 7500k, prior 7769k
10:00 am: Jul Conf. Board Consumer Confidence, est. 96, prior 93
DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap
For those with kids I hope you are surviving school holidays. My summer holidays were mostly spent playing in my garden with a football, cricket bat and my one golf club, whilst trying to ensure my window breaking tally was low. Yesterday I got home from work to find out my kids had just tried water skiing. How the world has changed.
The last 24 hours has seen the market try to ski across the turbulent waters behind the US/EU trade agreement boat. The evolving reaction to the deal was perhaps best captured by Volkswagen (VW) yesterday, which surged +3.02% in the opening minutes of yesterday’s session before closing -3.58% lower. It may have been a classic case of “buy the rumour, sell the fact,” especially with much of the optimism already priced in following last week’s Japan deal. VW, for instance, remains up +7.73% since that announcement. The DAX followed a similar path, opening around +0.94% higher before closing -1.02% lower.
What began as relief on Sunday quickly turned to frustration on Monday, as the narrative took hold that the EU had failed to secure meaningful concessions from the US. This was after pledging $750bn in energy imports, committing to large-scale purchases of US military equipment, and agreeing to zero tariffs on a range of US goods including autos. Whether these were genuinely new commitments or simply formalised versions of existing likely purchases is debatable, but the optics clearly favoured the US. The backlash across European diplomatic and business circles was swift. Spanish Prime Minster Sanchez said he would back the deal “without any enthusiasm” while French Prime Minister Bayrou even described the deal on X as more akin to a “submission”.
In response to the criticism, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen reminded reporters yesterday to “not forget where we came from,” pointing to Trump’s original tariff threats of up to 50%. Still, concerns over Europe’s export sector loomed large, particularly for automakers. BMW (-3.28%) and Mercedes-Benz (-3.21%) also gave up early gains. The euro weakened, falling from a high of around 1.178 at the Asia open to 1.1589 by the US close, down -1.26% on the day – its worst performance since May. It's steady overnight in Asia. And in a sign of how markets saw the deal favouring the US, the dollar gained against all G10 currencies.
Yesterday’s deal also left several ambiguous details. One is whether EU companies would really invest $600bn into the US economy, with EU officials admitting to Politico that this may not be achievable. Another is whether the 15% would also be the US tariff on EU pharma exports when the relevant Section 232 investigation concludes in the next few weeks. Pharma amounts to 25% of all EU exports to the US so it’s a material issue. Our European economists yesterday published a detailed take on the deal (link here), estimating the direct cost of 15% US tariffs at 0.5% of EU GDP. They have also updated their ECB call, seeing the current 2% as the likely terminal rate of the ECB’s easing cycle. While risks of another cut will persist for the coming months, they now expect the next ECB move to be a hike in late 2026.
US equities were relatively quiet as investors braced for a packed week of data and earnings. The S&P 500 (+0.02%) eked out a sixth consecutive record high, the longest such run since last July, even as over 70% of its constituents fell on the day. The upside for the S&P was dominated by the information technology sector (+0.77%) as the Mag-7 rose +0.79%. The Philadelphia semiconductor index gained +1.62% led by AMD (+4.32%). Big Tech takes centre stage with Microsoft and Meta reporting tomorrow, followed by Apple and Amazon on Thursday. The FOMC meets tomorrow, and we’ll also get core PCE, Q2 GDP, the ISM, and payrolls data before the week is out.
In bond markets, sentiment around the US-EU deal played out in divergent ways. European yields fell across the board, with 10yr bunds (-2.7bps), OATs (-3.5bps), and BTPs (-4.7bps) all moving lower. There were similar moves at the front end as the amount of ECB cuts priced by year-end actually inched up +1.5bps to 17bps despite the trade deal, showing a partial reversal of the moves that followed the ECB’s hawkish tone last week.
By contrast, 10yr US Treasury yields rose +2.2bps to 4.41% with the 30yr yield (+2.9bps to 4.96%) moving back within touching distance of 5%. Yields stayed near the session highs after a slightly soft 5yr auction. The Treasury’s latest quarterly borrowing estimates had little impact, coming largely in line with expectations, at $1.01trn for Q3 and a projected $590bn for Q4. We will learn the breakdown of this issuance plan with tomorrow’s QRA.
With less than three days to go until the August 1 deadline, more trade updates emerged. South Korea’s Finance Minister is set to meet US Treasury Secretary Bessent on Thursday to discuss a deal. Canada’s Prime Minister Carney said talks between the US and Canada “are at an intense phase”. At the UK-US summit press conference, Trump announced plans to impose a 15–20% tariff on countries that haven’t secured specific trade agreements with the US. And amid talks with China’s officials in Stockholm, US Commerce Secretary Lutnick suggested that a 90-day extension of the trade truce with China was likely, confirming Chinese press reports over the weekend.
Oil prices spiked following comments by Trump that he may announce sanctions or secondary tariffs against Russia in 10-12 days’ time, shortening the 50-day deadline he had laid out in mid-July as he cited disappointment with President Putin’s failure to agree to a ceasefire in Ukraine. Brent crude rose +2.34% to $70.04/bbl, closing above $70 for the first time since July 11.
Markets are mostly lower in Asia even as US futures are up a tenth of a percent or two. The Hang Seng (-0.95%) is leading the losses followed by the Nikkei (-0.86%) which is falling for the third consecutive session. The ASX and mainland Chinese markets are down around a tenth of a percent. The KOSPI (+0.35%) is one of the few winners overnight.
In Japan, a 2-year government bond auction saw robust demand, the highest since October, driven by more attractive yields near 2008 highs. The average bid-to-cover ratio was 4.47, compared to 3.90 in a sale from the previous month. This auction precedes the two-day BOJ’s policy meeting concluding Thursday, where the central bank is expected to hold rates steady. JGB are a basis point lower across most of the curve but the recently volatile 30yr yield is up just under three basis points.
Back in the US, the July Dallas Fed Manufacturing Activity index surprised to the upside yesterday at +0.9 (vs -9.0 expected). Today’s data calendar is packed, with June JOLTS, advance goods trade balance, wholesale inventories, and the July Conference Board consumer confidence index all due. Investors will be combing through the numbers for clues ahead of Wednesday’s Fed decision. When asked in Scotland whether the Fed would cut rates this week, Trump said, “I think it has to.” Still, Fed futures continue to price in less than 1bp of easing.
Looking ahead to the rest of today, we’ll also get the Dallas Fed Services Activity index, May FHFA house price index, UK June net consumer credit and M4, France Q2 total jobseekers, and Sweden’s June GDP indicator. On the central bank front, the ECB will release its June consumer expectations survey. Earnings highlights include Visa, Procter & Gamble, UnitedHealth, L'Oréal, and AstraZeneca. On the auction front, the US will issue $30bn in 2-year FRNs and $44bn in 7-year notes.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 07/29/2025 - 07:59 Close
Tue, 29 Jul 2025 11:45:00 +0000 Of Course A Seattle Cat Lady Wants To Ban The Blue Angels
Of Course A Seattle Cat Lady Wants To Ban The Blue Angels
The Blue Angels, America's elite military aviation stunt team now in its 79th year, may have met its match; a Seattle cat lady who says in a new lawsuit the military
Read more.....
Of Course A Seattle Cat Lady Wants To Ban The Blue Angels
The Blue Angels, America's elite military aviation stunt team now in its 79th year, may have met its match; a Seattle cat lady who says in a new lawsuit the military jets traumatized her ailing cat to death.
It's not just the cat lady either, Seattle climate activists took out a billboard in Seattle this week declaring, "Say No to Blue Angels." The billboard depicts two black people covering their ears, a Muslim granny shaking her fist, a white guy with a bullhorn, and a dog who can't even.
The group, made up of members from local climate groups - so basically a Voltron of soy, including radical leftists "Extinction Rebellion," is planning to march and hold a rally Aug. 2 in protest of the Blue Angels airshow that weekend, Fox News reports.
The billboard depicts people with hands over their ears and others raising their fists in protest of the jets , which they wrote cause "war trauma" and pollution. At the billboard’s unveiling on Tuesday, protesters held signs reading "Demilitarize Seafair" and "No military airshows."
The climate activists are calling for military fighter jets to be excluded from participating in the annual event and demanding military airshows be scrutinized for their "harmful waste of resources, pollution and carbon emissions."
The Billboard's designer, Aedan McCall, lived on Mercer Island for more than a decade before leaving after the show triggered him.
"The sheer amount of carbon emissions the Blue Angels create - 670 tons in one weekend - is immense and wasteful on top of being a big display of U.S. militarism," McCall told The Seattle Times .
Meanwhile, community organizer Kimberly Larson created a petition calling for the end of the Blue Angels show - which more than 5,000 people have signed .
Dead Cat
Cat lady Lauren Ann Lombardi has sued Blue Angels officers in federal court , claiming that he sickly, elderly cat was 'terrorized' by the Blue Angels' "state-sanctioned acoustic torture..'
The lawsuit claims that the noise of low-flying F/A-18 fighter jets gave the cat panic attacks , who was already in critical condition due to her worsening congestive heart disease, and eventually led to her euthanasia in August 2024. So to be clear , the cat was on death's door and was voluntarily euthanized - but the Blue Angels gave the cat a panic attack, allegedly hastening its demise.
Lombardi is also pissed that the Blue Angels blocked her profanity-laced tirades on Instagram, and is seeking a court order to unblock her account and prohibit the Blue Angels from blocking any other accounts "on the basis of viewpoint."
Tyler Durden
Tue, 07/29/2025 - 07:45 Close
Tue, 29 Jul 2025 11:20:00 +0000 Manhattan Skyscraper Gunman Kills Four, Misses NFL Target In Botched Attack
Manhattan Skyscraper Gunman Kills Four, Misses NFL Target In Botched Attack
The gunman who shot five people, killing four, in a Midtown Manhattan office tower home to Blackstone and the National Football League was identified late
Read more.....
Manhattan Skyscraper Gunman Kills Four, Misses NFL Target In Botched Attack
The gunman who shot five people, killing four, in a Midtown Manhattan office tower home to Blackstone and the National Football League was identified late Monday as 27-year-old Shane Devon Tamura . He reportedly had grievances with the NFL but ended up on the wrong floor during the attack, ultimately killing himself on Rudin Management's floor.
Authorities say Tamura drove from Las Vegas to 345 Park Ave. in Manhattan. According to a CNN source, a suicide note was found in Tamura's pocket expressing Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy (CTE)-related struggles. One victim remains in critical condition, and an NFL employee was seriously injured.
Here's what CNN sources are saying:
Shooter Identified : Shane Devon Tamura, 27, from Las Vegas, drove to New York and carried out a deadly shooting at a Midtown Manhattan office tower. He opened fire in the lobby, then continued shooting on the 33rd floor before fatally shooting himself in the chest.
Mental Health & Motive : Tamura had a documented mental health history. A suicide note found in his pocket cited possible CTE-related struggles and grievances with the NFL, writing: "You can't go against the NFL, they'll squash you." He asked for his brain to be studied. Tamura had played competitive football in his youth.
The Attack : Tamura mistakenly arrived on the 33rd floor after following a woman into an elevator. The NFL's offices, his apparent target, are located on the fifth floor.
Weapon & Gear : He carried an AR-15-style rifle. Police also recovered a revolver, ammo, magazines, medication, and a rifle case from his vehicle. He had a Nevada concealed carry permit.
Latest headlines (courtesy of CNN):
Suspect's calm walk-up to office tower suggests he knew he was going to die, retired NYPD captain says
High school friend of gunman says he never caused problems, was a "great teammate"
An NFL employee was seriously injured in the attack, says staff memo
Officials pay respects to slain NYPD officer as his body is transferred from Manhattan hospital
Park Avenue attack is the deadliest shooting in New York City in 25 years
A lot can be inferred from the setup of a rifle for a specific operation. Notably, Tamura used a knockoff Trijicon ACOG (Advanced Combat Optical Gunsight), which is designed for effective engagement out to 800 meters. Unless the shooter had an offset red dot sight (e.g., mounted at 45 degrees) for rapid target acquisition in close quarters, the optic choice suggests he wasn’t equipped for close-range combat—though that has not been confirmed.
Office workers at 345 Park Ave barricaded themselves to prevent the shooter from entering their floor.
The shooter was found dead on the 33rd floor, which is Rudin Management's floor.
Alleged interview of Tamura when he was a football player in high school.
. . .
Tyler Durden
Tue, 07/29/2025 - 07:20 Close
Tue, 29 Jul 2025 10:30:00 +0000 Climate Armageddon Canceled
Climate Armageddon Canceled
Climate Armageddon Canceled
Authored by Chris Morrison via DailySceptic.org,
Lowest Six-Month Human Death Toll From Bad Weather Since Records Began
Something rather odd is happening to the weather. Millions, nay billions, are on the move fleeing droughts, floods, wildfires, runaway temperatures, rising sea levels (see any mainstream media page climate page to fill in rest of sentence). Armageddon will only be put on pause when hard-Left elites take control of the climate and corral us all into their fantasy world of Net Zero. But hold on a minute – news just in. The first half of 2025 has seen the smallest number of deaths related to extreme weather since records began. And more weird weather news – despite boiling seas, all four northern hemisphere ocean basins in the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific are running below average on accumulated cyclone energy. The North Atlantic has seen very little activity with the ACE energy measurement from January 1st to July 21st running at only 41% of the 1991-2020 average .
The cyclone news is natural variation of course, but don’t let on to climate fanatics. The news on deaths from extreme weather is not. It is a long-term trend that has seen weather fatalities plunge by over 99% during the last 100 years. As hydrocarbon use pulls billions out of grinding poverty, so fortunate humans can use the extra wealth to protect themselves against all that Nature throws at life on Earth.
Roger Pielke Jnr has compiled the weather and climate related deaths over the last 25 years and his graph above shows that just 2,200 deaths from a world population of over 8 billion can be attributed to the weather in the first six months of the year. Past number spikes are invariably caused by one-off disasters such as the 138,00 fatalities attributed to Cyclone Nargis in the Indian Ocean during 2008. Pielke concludes that it is likely that the first half of 2025 has seen the fewest deaths related to extreme weather of any half year “in recorded history”.
The slump in the extreme weather death in the hydrocarbon age is truly astonishing as the graph below illustrates.
“In contrast to apocalyptic sermons, at no point in human history have humans had less risk of death related to extreme weather and climate”, concludes Pielke.
In fact, the risks of extreme weather are the number one weapon used by activists to scare populations into accepting Net Zero. Just look at the twaddle below recently published by the part Green Blob-funded Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), or perhaps that should be the Union of Scientists you should be Concerned About.
Certainly this does not appear to be a Union that cares much for unbiased science and the rigours of the scientific process. Earlier this year, President Trump signed an executive order telling all federal scientists to stop pissing about with propaganda piffle and reconnect with Popperian scientific principles. It was a tricky order to complain about since it laid down perfectly reasonable rules and procedures for employees paid by the taxpayer. “It all sounds very non-objectional, but it’s extremely dangerous in its details and subtext” , observed Gretchen Goldman, President of the UCS. Danger is a word much favoured by these Armageddonites – it seems that 169 million Americans are in extreme danger this summer, particularly if they don’t use sunscreen lotion.
In fact, desperation stalks the halls of activism, politics, media and science. Forty years of hysterical climate alarms, predicated on the unproven opinion that humans control the climate by adding the trace gas carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, is coming to an end. Opinion polls asking unloaded questions are starting to show that interest in climate cry-baby catastrophising is waning . The Swedish Doom Goblin has moved onto more fashionable causes. Promised tipping points don’t tip, the corals don’t disappear – ditto the polar bears – and the ocean currents don’t stop. Eventually, the vox populi shrugs – nice try, but no cigar. The climate, in fact, is in a relatively benign phase. A little (largely natural) extra warmth and a CO2 top-up from previously denuded levels has greened the planet, and crop yields have soared, leading to reduced levels of global famine. Despite all the Net Zero blather and unworkable mandates, hydrocarbon use across the world still provides over 80% of total energy – a prospect that holds out hope for further action against grinding poverty in the developing world.
For decades, elites have managed to shut down scientific debate by dishonestly claiming the science is somehow ‘settled’. As a result, most climate activists have lost the ability to debate the underlying science backing Net Zero. When public scientific discussion is encouraged on broadcast forums such as Britain’s Talk and GB News, the fact that almost the only person willing to debate against known critics is the climate comedy turn Jim Dale says it all.
The inability to stand up arguments in the face of increasing public scepticism will count heavily against the activists when the settled science barrier crumbles away. Needless to say, it started to fall some time ago on social media. On genuine free speech platforms such as X, the activists have long fled to the safer spaces offered by echo chambers such as Bluesky. Hiding behind the settled science comfort zone and backed by the pseudoscience offered by weather attribution guesses and computer model predictions, the activists are woefully unprepared to engage in genuine scientific discussion about the little understood complexities of the atmosphere and climate. The notorious letter published by the Guardian in 2018, when a group of activists including BBC regular Professor Mark Maslin said they would no longer “lend their credibility” in debating human-caused climate change, was a notable low point in the decades-long campaign to quash dissent.
Put simply, the activists are terrified to enter into genuine dialogue. The more intelligent ones are probably aware that if they reveal an obvious inability to counter all the alternative views around natural climate variation, this will greatly reduce public support for the Net Zero project. They are aware that CO2 levels have been much higher in the past without a provable link to runaway temperatures. Propping up this hard-Left controlling political fantasy with an unproven claim that humans somehow control the climate by releasing a trace gas into the complex atmosphere will likely be seen by future historians as the centrepiece of one of the greatest science swindles of all time.
And of course the dosh is starting to dry up. Some of the most fanatical Net Zero cash incontinent countries are running out of money, or rather other people’s money that they are borrowing to destroy the financial prospects of future generations. In the United States, the entire Net Zero scam is dead in the water with President Trump taking all the toys away. Delegates to the upcoming COP 30 Belem meeting in Brazil, travelling through the Amazon on the special road carved out of the rain forest to speed their virtuous journeys, will find the magic money tree has also been chopped down. There will be no more financial freebies from the US, which accounts for almost 60% of the GDP of the G7 group of guilt-tripped industrialised countries. China is not interested in handing out no-strings attached cash and India only plays lip service to the aims of Net Zero. Grifting nations likely to be disappointed include all those Pacific Islands growing in size but apparently destined to soon disappear beneath the waves. Bad news also for all those political chancers inventing nonsense tales for gullible woke westerners of climate justice and colonial climate oppression.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 07/29/2025 - 06:30 Close
Tue, 29 Jul 2025 09:45:00 +0000 Korea Pitches Multibillion-Dollar "Make American Shipbuilding Great Again" As US Tariff Deadline Looms
Korea Pitches Multibillion-Dollar "Make American Shipbuilding Great Again" As US Tariff Deadline Looms
A Trump-imposed firm August 1st deadline looms for South Korea to reach a finalized trade agreement with the US, or else a 25% ta
Read more.....
Korea Pitches Multibillion-Dollar "Make American Shipbuilding Great Again" As US Tariff Deadline Looms
A Trump-imposed firm August 1st deadline looms for South Korea to reach a finalized trade agreement with the US, or else a 25% tariff could be imposed on America's closest regional ally, which hosts major US military bases, and is heavily reliant on US 'protection' from North Korea and its nuclear arsenal.
The country's Deputy Prime Minister Koo Yun-cheol and Foreign Minister Cho Hyun are set to meet with US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Secretary of State Marco Rubio next week, and Seoul appears ready to pull out all the stops . "The government has pledged to devote its full efforts to concluding trade negotiations with Washington before the August 1 deadline," a recent Korean government statement from the office of the presidency pledged.
The Koreans appear ready to get creative in satisfying Trump, as the weekend statement confirmed Washington's "strong interest in the shipbuilding sector" and agreed to work towards mutual cooperation on that front. Fresh Monday reports indicate South Korea is ready to go all-in, offering a major proposal to seal a last-minute agreement to avoid a dreaded 25% tariff rate.
Yonhap News has reported a multibillion-dollar proposed project dubbed "Make American Shipbuilding Great Again" - or MASGA - but without offering much more in the way of details.
"We confirmed the US side’s strong interest in the shipbuilding sector and the two countries agreed to work together to develop mutually acceptable terms that include shipbuilding cooperation," South Korea’s presidential office said.
While Korean officials have been warning media to not jump the gun, and to report sensitive negotiations responsibly, the reality is that the US ally has something America actually needs - the ability for major investment as well as technical expertise and experience in overhauling the nation's shipyards.
This has been one of the Trump administration's top America First priorities, and though the US has long been a leading global naval power, it also desperately needs its navy modernized - a massive, costly, and time-consuming endeavor.
And South Korea is among few rare nations which actually has the capability to do it , as one regional publication underscores :
Korea’s shipbuilding sector has been regarded as the country’s unique leverage in the tariff talks with the US as its world-class capabilities can contribute to the Trump administration’s goal of reviving American shipbuilding .
Two of Korea’s leading shipbuilding conglomerates -- HD Hyundai and Hanwha Group -- have already been ramping up their investments in the US and bolstering partnerships with American companies in the shipbuilding sector.
HD Hyundai joined hands with US shipyard operator Edison Chouest Offshore to build medium-sized container vessels at the American company's shipyard by 2028.
To review of Trump's early prioritization of this sector, an April 9 executive order highlights that America's shipbuilding capacity has been hampered and weakened by "decades of Government neglect."
This has not only led to the decline of a once strong US industrial base, but has resulted in "simultaneously empowering our adversaries and eroding United States national security."
"Both our allies and our strategic competitors produce ships for a fraction of the cost needed in the United States," the executive order said, and called for "the United States to revitalize and rebuild domestic maritime industries and workforce to promote national security and economic prosperity."
The White House is likely to be keenly interested in pursuing MASGA, as it offers something tangible and speaks the language of Trump's America First, and desire to bring a forgotten industry back home.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 07/29/2025 - 05:45 Close
Tue, 29 Jul 2025 09:00:00 +0000 Netherlands Labels Israel 'Threat To National Security' In Unprecedented Move
Netherlands Labels Israel 'Threat To National Security' In Unprecedented Move
Netherlands Labels Israel 'Threat To National Security' In Unprecedented Move
Via The Cradle
The Netherlands has, for the first time, included Israel on a list of states which pose a threat to its national security , according to a report from the Dutch National Coordinator for Security and Counterterrorism (NCTV) – the country’s main counterterrorism agency.
The report bears the title Assessment of Threats from State Actors. It notes that Israel has made efforts to manipulate and influence public opinion and policy in the Netherlands , via disinformation campaigns.
Source: Associated Press
According to the Dutch report, an Israeli ministry circulated a document to journalists and officials in the Netherlands last year, which included personal details of Dutch citizens.
This took place after fans of the Israeli football team Maccabi Tel Aviv carried out provocative acts after their team lost a match in Amsterdam in November 2024, triggering tension and clashes with locals.
The report by the Dutch agency also noted concerns over threats against the International Criminal Court at The Hague , from both Washington and Tel Aviv. It said these threats could negatively affect the court’s work.
Israel has long posed a threat to the ICC. According to a report by The Guardian from May last year, Tel Aviv has waged a years-long intimidation campaign against the ICC, which included the “stalking” and “threatening” of its officials in a bid to stifle investigations into Israeli war crimes.
Since the court issued arrest warrants against Israel’s premier and former defense minister last year, Washington has imposed sanctions on the ICC. Israel and the US are not signatories of the 1998 Rome Statute nor members of the ICC.
The American Servicemembers' Protection Act of 2002, nicknamed the "Hague Invasion Act," authorizes a US president to use "all means necessary and appropriate" to free any US or allied personnel detained by the ICC. This includes the potential use of military force. The law also restricts US cooperation with and support for the ICC.
The Dutch Assessment of Threats from State Actors notes that the Netherlands has a “special responsibility” to protect the operations of the international legal institutions it hosts.
While the NCTV has previously listed Israeli spyware as a concern , this latest report does not include Israel in its espionage section.
Israeli spyware has infected the devices of millions across the planet, including journalists and activists. It has also been used as a tool for targeted assassinations .
Tyler Durden
Tue, 07/29/2025 - 05:00 Close
Tue, 29 Jul 2025 08:15:00 +0000 Inside The World Of Billionaire Islands
Inside The World Of Billionaire Islands
From Coastal Australia to the turquoise waters of Fiji, billionaires have snapped up private islands as the ultimate status symbols.
The graphic below, by Read more.....
Inside The World Of Billionaire Islands
From Coastal Australia to the turquoise waters of Fiji, billionaires have snapped up private islands as the ultimate status symbols.
The graphic below, by Made Visual Daily , compares the acreage and sticker prices of some of the best-known billionaire islands, revealing just how uneven the market is.
Why Size Isn’t Everything
Island valuations depend on far more than acreage alone. Proximity to major airports, protected harbors, and existing resort infrastructure can drive prices exponentially higher. Bell Island’s $100 million price tag for just 349 acres reflects its prime location in the Exumas archipelago in The Bahamas, a renowned luxury-yacht destination with established high-end amenities.
The location premium becomes clear when comparing cost per acre: Bell Island costs roughly 87 times more per acre than Lana?i, demonstrating that exclusivity and accessibility often outweigh sheer size in determining value.
The Tech Billionaire Land-Grab
Technology entrepreneurs have emerged as dominant players in the private island market. There are a few reasons behind this trend:
Unprecedented wealth accumulation : The tech boom has created liquidity that enables nine-figure recreational purchases previously reserved for oil barons and industrial magnates.
Remote work capabilities: Modern satellite communications and digital infrastructure allow tech leaders to maintain business operations from virtually anywhere, making isolated islands viable as working retreats.
Privacy and security concerns: High-profile tech executives increasingly seek refuges from public scrutiny and potential security threats, with private islands offering unparalleled isolation and control.
Cost per Acre: The Luxury Premium
The private island market reveals stark disparities in pricing based on location and amenities. Ellison’s $300 million acquisition of 98% of Lana?i in 2012 included not just land but two Four Seasons resorts, championship golf courses, and existing infrastructure serving the island’s 3,000 residents.
In contrast, smaller Caribbean properties like the Aga Khan’s Bell Island purchase command premium prices due to their proximity to established luxury tourism circuits and superior accessibility via private aircraft and superyachts.
This market segmentation suggests that beyond a certain size threshold, factors like location, climate, and existing development become the primary value drivers rather than raw acreage.
What are the world’s most populated islands? Find out with this post on the Voronoi App.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 07/29/2025 - 04:15 Close
Tue, 29 Jul 2025 08:10:00 +0000 NYC Blackstone Tower Shooter ID'd As Shane Tamura
NYC Blackstone Tower Shooter ID'd As Shane Tamura
NYC Blackstone Tower Shooter ID'd As Shane Tamura
Watch live feed here:
VIDEO
* * *
Update (2110ET) :
X account Viral News NYC has identified the shooter as 27-year-old Shane Tamura of Las Vegas.
Here are more details from Bloomberg :
An armed shooter attacked 345 Park Ave. in Manhattan, the tower housing Blackstone Inc.'s global headquarters and the National Football League among others, killing at least five people, according to a city official.
The suspected shooter is dead, three officials said. Victims include at least one police officer. At least two other people died at the tower.
The weapon of choice: an AR-platform short-barrel rifle with a lower receiver made by Palmetto State Armory.
Fear...
Tamura is registered Non-Partisan in Nevada.
Shooter found dead on the 33rd floor.
Alleged interview of Tamura when he was a football player in high school.
Fox News and CNN paint very different pictures of the shooter...
No motive has been released yet.
* * *
Update (2030ET) : U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi wrote on X that U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Jay Clayton, has set up a command post to assist with the shooting at 345 Park Avenue, the site of Blackstone's headquarters. She also stated that FBI agents have arrived at the scene.
* * *
Update (1930ET) : It is being reported that the shooter has been found dead on the 33rd floor of the building . He died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound .
* * *
An active shooter has been reported at 345 Park Avenue, the site of Blackstone's headquarters as well as some offices belonging to the National Football League, an NYPD senior official told Bloomberg News.
According to a social media report, the perpetrator is a Middle Eastern man with a bulletproof vest who is "running around with an AR-15 and shooting."
According to ABC, at least one civilian and one police officer have been shot, while Bloomberg reports that at least three people have been taken to a hospital, according to a fire department official.
While news of the attack is still scarce, the Viral News NYC account reports that the suspect has shot himself.
*Developing...
Tyler Durden
Tue, 07/29/2025 - 04:10 Close
Tue, 29 Jul 2025 07:30:00 +0000 Britons Flock To VPNs To Dodge New Age Verification Checks Online
Britons Flock To VPNs To Dodge New Age Verification Checks Online
Britons Flock To VPNs To Dodge New Age Verification Checks Online
Authored by Owen Evans via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),
Downloads of virtual private network (VPN) apps have surged in the UK as users look for ways to bypass new age verification rules introduced after the latest provisions of the Online Safety Act took effect on July 25.
A child using a computer in an undated file photograph. Peter Byrne/PA Media
The rules require online platforms to implement strict age checks to shield children from content deemed harmful, including bullying, pornography, self-harm, and hateful content.
They effectively mean that all adult internet users in the UK must prove they are not children to access certain websites.
Rather than upload their ID or have their faces scanned, users are moving towards VPNs.
A VPN allows users to establish a secure and encrypted connection over the internet. They effectively mask Internet Protocol (IP) addresses and anonymize online presences, making it more difficult for websites, advertisers, and government agencies to track a user’s activities.
On July 25, ProtonVPN said on X it was experiencing a surge in sign-ups from UK users.
“Just a few minutes after the Online Safety Act went into effect last night, Proton VPN signups originating in the UK surged by more than 1,400 ,” ProtonVPN stated. “Unlike previous surges, this one is sustained, and is significantly higher than when France lost access to adult content.”
Created by the former Conservative government as the world’s first comprehensive online safety law, the Online Safety Act received Royal Assent in October 2023.
The now-Labour government states on its website that platforms “have a legal duty to protect children online.”
Telecommunications regulator Ofcom said on July 25 that the most popular adult service providers, including Pornhub, along with thousands of smaller sites, have committed to deploying age checks across their services.
“This means it will be harder for children in the UK to access online porn than in any other OECD country ,” it said, referring to Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development member nations.
Ofcom also said that other online platforms have now announced they will deploy age assurance, including Bluesky, Discord, Grindr, and X.
News aggregation website Reddit said that, from July 14, a third-party provider called Persona will perform age verification for the social media platform either through an uploaded selfie or “a photo of your government ID,” such as a passport.
“Reddit will not have access to the uploaded photo, and Reddit will only store your verification status along with the birthdate you provided so you won’t have to re-enter it each time you try to access restricted content ,” it said.
The Age Verification Providers Association lists several approved methods for age checks, including mobile phone account verification, credit database matching, transactional records, and digital ID apps.
Biometric age estimation can be done using facial or even voice blueprints, gestures, and keystrokes (how you type), though it is said that these methods are currently less well-developed than facial analysis, but are progressing fast.
Ofcom said that it is now actively checking compliance.
If companies fail to comply with their new duties, Ofcom has the power to impose fines and, in very serious cases, apply for a court order to block the site or app in the UK.
Google Trends data showed that searches for VPNs in the UK quadrupled following the law’s implementation.
A recent petition to repeal the act has already gathered more than 350,000 signatures. Many of the top 10 free apps in the UK Apple Store are currently VPNs.
An undated file photograph showing VPN software running on a phone. Dan Nelson/Unsplash
‘Unintended Effects’
Economist Maxwell Marlow told The Epoch Times that he believed that the rise in the use of VPNs is “indicative of how short-sighted, malicious, and authoritarian this Act is.”
“It seems members from all parties were taken in by the spiel of ’safety first,' disregarding concerned critics and specialists, about how this legislation will only crush freedom of speech and association, and not protect a single vulnerable person,” he said by email.
“Young and old know what VPNs are, no matter if the government tries to prevent their usage, they are ubiquitous and will easily side-step the provisions in the law. The government should repeal this dreadful law,” Marlow said.
Conservative Peer Lord Daniel Moylan told The Epoch Times that during the passage of the Online Safety Act, he challenged the government over the “unintended effects of implementing blanket protections for children from harm.”
“The government was not keen to engage and, remarkably, expressed confidence in Ofcom to get these fine balances right,” he said via email.
“I’m not surprised that many people appear to be seeking to circumvent requirements to disclose personal details to often foreign websites with no proven track record of data security. Wasn’t this predictable? And how many of those doing so are in fact children?”
Moylan previously told NTD’s “British Thought Leaders” that while the intention to protect children is “laudable,” he doesn’t believe that seeking to “regulate the entire internet is a proportionate or effective answer to that particular problem.”
‘Not a Silver Bullet’
An Ofcom spokesman told The Epoch Times by email that some teenagers might bypass checks.
“Until now, kids could easily stumble across porn and other online content that’s harmful to them without even looking for it. Age checks will help prevent that. We’re now assessing compliance to make sure platforms have them in place, and companies that fall short should expect to face enforcement action,” the spokesperson said.
“But age checks are not a silver bullet, and some determined teenagers may get round them. Ultimately, this needs to work alongside education, awareness campaigns and through supportive conversations with trusted adults.”
VPNs are legal in the UK.
A government spokesman told The Epoch Times by email that platforms “have a clear responsibility to prevent children from bypassing safety protections.”
“This includes blocking content that promotes VPNs or other workarounds specifically aimed at young users,” he said. “Where platforms deliberately target UK children and promote VPN use, they could face enforcement action, including significant financial penalties.”
Tyler Durden
Tue, 07/29/2025 - 03:30 Close
Tue, 29 Jul 2025 06:00:00 +0000 How Trump Just Turned Europe Into A Vassal Market
How Trump Just Turned Europe Into A Vassal Market
Submitted by Thomas Kolbe
On Sunday, the United States and the European Union agreed on a new framework for transatlantic trade. The outcome exposes Europe’s
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How Trump Just Turned Europe Into A Vassal Market
Submitted by Thomas Kolbe
On Sunday, the United States and the European Union agreed on a new framework for transatlantic trade. The outcome exposes Europe’s open flank - its dependency on foreign energy.
It was a home game for U.S. President Donald Trump, albeit on foreign soil, as he and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen stepped in front of the cameras at Trump’s golf resort in Turnberry, Scotland. In a visibly upbeat mood, Trump announced what he called “the greatest trade deal ever” between the U.S. and the European Union.
America Reshapes Global Trade
The framework agreement—still pending ratification by EU member states and the European Parliament—imposes a 15% tariff on most EU exports to the United States. That’s half the originally threatened 30%, but still far above historic norms.
In return, the EU commits to energy imports worth $750 billion over the next three years—including liquefied natural gas (LNG) and petroleum products . And then there’s the MAGA component: investment in the American heartland. A whopping $600 billion is to be mobilized from European industries and invested in the United States, with a strong focus on defense manufacturing. The message from Trump is clear: if Europe wants to keep fighting its proxy war in Ukraine, it will now have to pay for American weapons. Nothing comes free—not even Europe's newly rediscovered belligerence, which the U.S. appears increasingly reluctant to subsidize.
For selected strategic goods—aircraft components, key chemicals, semiconductor equipment, and generic pharmaceuticals—a “zero-for-zero” rule will apply.
Europe Without Leverage
This clause rounds out the package, which von der Leyen, visibly exhausted , praised as delivering “security and predictability” for both sides. Not exactly false—but the deal starkly reveals the EU’s geopolitical decline. Europe has now been forced into the energy orbit of the United States. In the end, Brussels looks like a student dutifully copying the dictation of its transatlantic teacher.
The EU is not the first to swallow Washington’s bitter pill. Recent deals with Japan and the UK suggest the new normal for tariffs is somewhere between 15% and 25%. The price of accessing the world's largest consumer market has now been made explicit.
A Great Deal—for America
From a U.S. perspective, this is a great deal. Hundreds of billions in capital will flow from Europe to America. Some of it will help Europe paper over its self-inflicted wounds—its energy crisis being one, after cutting ties with Russian gas and shutting down German nuclear power.
Trump has secured two outcomes. First, U.S. tariff revenues will continue to rise. Second, the president has scored another PR win for American industry—following up on his Middle East tour a month ago, where he clinched multi-trillion-dollar investment commitments for U.S.-based projects.
EU-Europe Stays the Course Toward the Wall
Trump is doing what any rational realpolitik leader should do—pursuing national interest through trade leverage. His foreign policy is essentially trade policy. His domestic economy is made more competitive through deregulation, tax incentives, and aggressive promotion abroad. That, dear Chancellor Friedrich Merz, is what’s called location competition—a challenge Germany and the EU might embrace rather than resist. It could be a moment to reconsider failed policies and return to economic reason.
But that didn’t happen. During negotiations, the EU’s entrenched interests won out—at the expense of ordinary citizens. Brussels could have used the talks to scrap entire catalogs of non-tariff trade barriers. Instead, nothing was touched. Climate regulations, the Digital Services Act, harmonization rules that deter foreign investment—all remain intact.
The EU’s hidden protectionism, the true power base of Brussels' corporatist ambitions, remains untouched.
Short-Term Relief, Long-Term Price
For Germany, the deal offers some short-term relief—especially for carmakers, chemical producers, and machine builders. Strategic industries benefit from zero tariffs on high-tech goods like aircraft parts and specialty chemicals. That helped avoid a trade escalation that would have devastated Germany’s export-heavy economy. Chancellor Merz called it a “desperately needed signal of economic pragmatism.”
But this partial reprieve comes at a price. The punitive 50% tariffs on steel and aluminum remain—a crushing burden for German basic industries. This deal is no fair trade; it’s an asymmetric arrangement in which Washington selectively relieves and structurally dominates.
Lessons from the Deal
What’s being sold as a “trade deal” is, in truth, a geopolitical alignment. EU-Europe has maneuvered itself into a dead-end by burning its last diplomatic bridges with Moscow. Now, with 60% of its energy needs dependent on imports, Brussels finds itself tethered to U.S. energy dominance. And Trump has no intention of letting Europe’s green welfare utopia flourish at America’s expense. Energy comes at a cost—and Brussels is beginning to grasp the real price tag of its green transformation experiment.
That green experiment, like Europe’s resurgent militarism, will weigh heavily on public finances. It’s now up to the voters to push for a course correction—or sink ever deeper into the pit they’ve dug themselves.
The deal also has major implications for monetary policy. It forces the EU deeper into the energy-mercantilist world of the U.S., reinforcing the petrodollar system. The investment shift toward U.S. soil will help shore up the dollar’s role as king of fiat currencies. The dollar remains the unit of account. The euro wasn’t even mentioned.
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About the author: Thomas Kolbe, a German graduate economist, has worked for over 25 years as a journalist and media producer for clients from various industries and business associations. As a publicist, he focuses on economic processes and observes geopolitical events from the perspective of the capital markets. His publications follow a philosophy that focuses on the individual and their right to self-determination.
Tyler Durden
Tue, 07/29/2025 - 02:00 Close