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An Aspirational Tech Right–Populist Right Alliance

Zero Hedge -

An Aspirational Tech Right–Populist Right Alliance

Authored by Nate Fischer via American Intelligence,

The relationship between the tech right and the populist right is a central question of our day.

After an initial alliance in the lead-up to the 2024 campaign, fissures quickly appeared. The first prominent one was the Christmas H-1B fight. Others followed, both in and out of the administration. In many ways, the divide has been growing -- with Bannon leading tech critiques, and Republican politicians like DeSantis staking out tech-skeptical stances. Trump has managed to keep things together, but the future is unclear.

I believe an alliance is necessary both for America's success and for the right to have the power to dislodge the entrenched establishment left.

The simplest approach would be a pragmatic alliance of necessity -- both factions push distinct priorities, and compromise where necessary to form a political coalition.

But I think we should aim for more — for an alliance between the tech right and the populist (or cultural) right that gives each group a crucial, or even heroic, role in a shared vision for America. I believe such a vision can center on (1) an appreciation for the conditions — and the people — that ultimately drive tech-enabled prosperity, and (2) an appreciation for how disruptive technology can structurally favor right-aligned constituencies and address central priorities of the cultural right.

Populists need tech:

The populist right needs tech. It may not need specific tech elites, or even anywhere close to a majority of current Silicon Valley figures, but it needs a positive vision for technology and it needs people who can master technology. Two factors drive this:

First, Americans have always been favorably inclined to technology. I believe if the parties split on technology, the pro-tech party will have a significant structural advantage with the electorate. This inclination is not new: In 1840, Tocqueville noted how Americans happily built ships that would last only a few years because of their enthusiasm for new innovations that would quickly obsolesce them. In the mid-to-late nineteenth century, Americans broadly embraced the power of technologies from the revolver to the railroad to conquer and settle the West. And America's embrace of technology was certainly apparent in the broad popularity of the tech industry for much of the last half-century. It's possible a tech-skeptical party can succeed in other countries, but I suspect that in America any party capable of real wins must present a positive vision for the use and mastery of technology.

Second, whether we like it or not, technology will shape the future. This has always been true to varying extents; people and groups who mastered major new technologies usually gained outsized influence, and often came to rule new regimes. In the case of major transitions like the shift to the digital age, the stakes are particularly high. Opposing technologies like AI may be a little like opposing gunpowder in the fifteenth century: many may not have liked its impact on the world, but the world was shaped by those who mastered it.

Tech needs populists:

The tech right also needs populist support. Entrenched legacy leftist interest groups retain tremendous power, and without strong opposition, will simultaneously try to stifle new technologies and squeeze technologists for the money needed to fund their ever-more-bloated programs. Populists represent large factions deeply skeptical of this legacy regime, and are capable of bringing tremendous political energy to any opposing coalition.

A populist right aligns with tech on more than just opposition to legacy elites. Right-leaning Americans are among the only people on earth broadly supportive of the free market policies and rule of law that allow Silicon Valley to thrive. While populism can create tensions with free-market and rule-of-law idealists, the broad populist right goal of cultural preservation includes restoration of the conditions necessary to preserve these norms.

Deeper alignment:

Finally, I believe the tech right and populist right need each other — not just to politically partner against common enemies, but to achieve the technological dynamism technologists pursue, and the restored status and opportunity populists seek.

This symbiosis reflects the particular character of the American people in a time of technological disruption: Americans are uniquely suited to mastering technology.

Americans are good for tech innovators--multiplying the impact of new technologies by acting not just as consumers but as creative and productive users of technology. This is not limited to a few exceptional entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley; rather, millions of Americans in companies across the country have a particular drive (relative to many other cultures globally) to find new sources of leverage and better ways to do things. These are the people who jump on new technologies that can solve such problems, embracing the change this entails. A country of such people is a country ripe for innovations that would find far smaller markets in more conservative or less resourceful societies. This particular character opens the aperture for technological innovation, and plays a key role in America's technological dynamism.

By the same token, technologists can be good for the American people. While many tech innovations theoretically spread rapidly around the globe, in practice, Americans will often be the biggest beneficiaries of them because of this particular facility with technology--advancing the relative position of the American people in a time of global and cultural competition. This is especially true for core constituencies of the populist right, such as independent executives and skilled physical-world workers, who stand to benefit from technologies like AI – in contrast with core opposing constituencies like bureaucrats, who are ripe for replacement with AI.

Call to action:

Thus, the tech right should champion not just the free markets widely recognized as enabling Silicon Valley's success, but also the people and culture that make America such a fertile place for technological innovation and development. Practically this means embracing both product and policy decisions that strengthen rather than undermine this culture. This means building products that solve critical problems and serve as platforms for broader productive application, and avoiding products that contribute to vice or addiction. And it means supporting immigration and trade policies that first and foremost strengthen the American people, rather than optimizing for those that serve the most immediate desires of tech companies.

The populist right should embrace technological innovation. This means encouraging Americans at all levels to master new technologies, recognizing the potential of such technologies to advance America's position versus geopolitical rivals and the position of core populist right constituencies domestically. And it means politically supporting tech leaders who accept their responsibility to the American people – supporting policies that allow continued innovation, and protecting successful innovators from the confiscatory efforts of the left.

The alliance I propose is aspirational: Today, many in Silicon Valley – even many who would see themselves on the right – have little regard for the priorities of the populist or cultural right. And many populists more easily see the immediate threats that social media poses to families and that AI poses to jobs, and they remember with distrust the degree to which tech companies embraced censorship and deplatforming. But I believe the need for political alliance is clear, and the potential alignment toward a shared vision far deeper than many recognize. One of the great opportunities for statesmanship in coming years is the forging of such an alliance.

Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 18:55

"Surprise" X1.5 Solar Flare Detected Ahead Of NASA's Rocket Launch To Moon

Zero Hedge -

"Surprise" X1.5 Solar Flare Detected Ahead Of NASA's Rocket Launch To Moon

Space weather website SolarHam reported Monday morning that a "surprise X1.5 solar flare" was detected on the sun and may impact Earth within the next 48 hours. This comes ahead of NASA's Artemis II launch on Wednesday and could affect the launch if the solar storm is severe.

"AR 4405 erupted this morning at 03:18 UTC (Mar. 30) with a surprise X1.5 solar flare. This event launched a halo coronal mass ejection (CME) into space, which also appears to have an Earth-directed component," SolarHam wrote in a space weather update earlier this morning.

The update continued, "Although the main bulk of plasma is heading to the east, the edge of the CME should pass Earth within the next 48 hours."

For context, an X1.5 solar flare is large. The standard scale goes A, B, C, M, then X, with each step representing a 10-fold increase in X-ray intensity. That means an X-class flare is the strongest major category.

A strong X-class solar flare can affect GPS, satellites, communications, and power grids, and even cause delays in rocket launches. The size of the disruption depends on whether it is Earth-facing and whether it is accompanied by a coronal mass ejection.

Upcoming this week is NASA's Artemis II crewed mission atop the Space Launch System rocket. So far, government forecasters are calling for an 80% chance of acceptable weather on launch day. NASA has not provided any update indicating that the current solar storm threat will affect the mission. Artemis II is currently targeted for no earlier than Wednesday, April 1, at 6:24 p.m. EST.

Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 18:30

The Assisted Suicide Of Lofty State And Local Taxes

Zero Hedge -

The Assisted Suicide Of Lofty State And Local Taxes

Authored by Rob Arnott via RealClearPolitics,

We get the government we choose to elect, hence the government we deserve. Voting for ever-higher punitive taxes on the rich is arguably a form of civic suicide. Consider that a wealthy New Yorker can get a raise of almost 40% just by moving.

That’s right. If moving eliminates a 14.8% top state and local tax rate, our top-tier taxpayer gets a 36% raise, not a 14.8% raise, by leaving. It’s doubtful if any of our city and state leaders have done this math, but it’s shocking.

Mamdani wants to take the top rate up another 2%, if not by the state then by the city, which would mean that our rich neighbor can get a 42% raise.

Here’s how the math works.

A rich New Yorker pays a maximum state and city income tax of 14.8%, on top of a maximum federal tax of 37%. But there are hidden taxes. Uncapped Medicare and Medicaid taxes push the marginal federal tax to 39.4%. If the income is earned on investments, the Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT, another gift from Obamacare) adds another 3.8%, pushing the top federal tax above 43%.

So, top-tier New York taxpayers may soon pay a marginal tax of 43% to the IRS and 17% to the city and state of New York. The combined 60% marginal tax rates mean they have the privilege of keeping 40 cents of each new dollar they earn. A move to one of the nine states with no income tax allows our taxpayer to keep 57% of every additional dollar of income, instead of 40%. Do the math. That’s a 42% raise.

Forget the argument about “paying their fair share.” “Fair” is an entirely subjective term. Your fair share of someone else’s money might be seen as a ripoff by them, especially if the money is spent less wisely than we might spend our own money. If you are rich and believe you’ve earned your money, will you consider leaving a state for a permanent 40% raise? Of course.

This is hardly a phenomenon unique to New York. California’s headline top rate of 13.3% becomes 14% with the phase-out of deductions. A Silicon Valley billionaire can keep 43% of each new dollar of income. Moving to Dallas or Miami, or Anchorage for the adventuresome, boosts this to 57%, a raise of almost 33%. This doesn’t even count the “please leave now” impetus of a “one-time only” 5% wealth tax on billionaires. Never mind that the fine print on the wealth tax initiative turns a 5% tax into a 50% expropriation for billionaires like the founders of Google, because their 30% voting share at Google, not their 3% equity ownership, is used to determine the tax.

People have called the United States “50 laboratories of democracy.” A state or a city is welcome to impose whatever taxes, regulations, or laws are allowed by its own bylaws or the national Constitution. And citizens are welcome to choose whichever states have taxes, regulations, and laws that they feel best align with their values and beliefs.

Nor is it unique to our various states, with their diverse tax regimes. Taxes drove the Rolling Stones to their own “Exile on Main Street,” relocating to France of all places to escape England’s 90% top tax rate (where a tiny drop to 85% would provide a 50% pay raise). Even Switzerland has divergent tax rates, ranging from 22% in Zug to roughly 40% in Berne, Geneva, and Vaud. Where do the billionaires tend to live? Zug.

Milton Friedman has been credited with the observation that the only thing more mobile than the wealthy is their capital. It is the rich who largely fund government spending, whether that spending is at the federal, state, or local level, and whether that spending is wise or foolish. Instead of a politics of envy, perhaps we should try a politics of gratitude.

Rob Arnott is founding chairman of Research Affiliates, a $160 billion asset management firm based in Newport Beach, CA.

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Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 18:05

Gulf LNG Crisis Set To 'Make Coal Great Again'

Zero Hedge -

Gulf LNG Crisis Set To 'Make Coal Great Again'

Our weekend wrap on the global energy crisis focused on Asia as ground zero and how the shock will ripple across the world, eventually hitting the US. This is now the second major energy crunch of the decade: first Russia's invasion of Ukraine, now the U.S.-Iran conflict. However, this one looks a lot more catastrophic.

The immediate impact of this energy crunch will be a resurgence of coal, especially across Asia, as power grid operators will be forced to switch to the dirtiest fuel to keep electricity affordable during the crisis.

"We are now seeing a second, very large energy supply shock," Goldman commodities expert Samantha Dart told Bloomberg.

Dart added, "If you're sitting in Asia, going through this again, it's possible you change your strategy long term, rely more on coal for longer, build out your renewables faster, and reduce your exposure to natural gas."

Last week, JPMorgan's commodity expert showed just how Asia has emerged as ground zero of the global energy crisis. The shock is expected to spread worldwide, hitting Asia first, then Africa and Europe, before eventually reaching the U.S., though the most acute impact there may be concentrated in California.

Source

Bloomberg noted that Japan is already turning back to coal-fired power generation. India and Bangladesh are also running coal plants at higher capacity, while some European countries may soon be forced to burn more coal as disruptions at the Strait of Hormuz and damage to Qatar's LNG export hub tighten global gas supplies and send prices sharply higher.

Fatih Birol, director of the International Energy Agency, who has warned about the worst energy shock on record, told the outlet that "high energy prices will lead governments, industries, and households to look at other options." Those options include "at least temporarily, upward pressure on the use of coal both for electricity generation and for the industrial sector," he said.

We cited Dart's note earlier this month that showed natural gas prices across Europe and Asia have jumped so much during the US-Iran conflict that gas and oil to coal switching has already been viewed favorably by power grid operators.

Dart showed the price zones for Europe's benchmark NatGas, TTF, where fuel switching occurs:

  • The pink band is the lignite-switching range.

  • The gray band is the hard-coal-switching range.

  • The green band is the industrial oil-switching range.

One takeaway is that Asia is likely to be the biggest switcher to coal because it has relied so heavily on Middle Eastern energy and already has large coal fleets. China is somewhat better insulated because it has diversified its energy supplies, as we notedearlier.

Wood Mackenzie coal specialist Tony Knutson also warned that the energy shock is a "bigger disruption than the Russian war" and said countries without sufficient gas buffers to weather the storm will be forced to switch to coal, adding, "I don't think they have a choice."

Trump did tell voters during the campaign trail he would 'make coal great again' ... 

Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 17:40

US Fighter Jets Intercept Civilian Aircraft Flying Near Trump's Mar-a-Lago

Zero Hedge -

US Fighter Jets Intercept Civilian Aircraft Flying Near Trump's Mar-a-Lago

Authored by Aldgra Fredly via The Epoch Times,

The North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) said F-16 fighter jets intercepted a plane that entered restricted airspace near President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate ‌in Palm Beach, Florida, on March 29.

The civilian aircraft entered a temporary flight restriction zone near the estate at about 1:15 p.m. ET, prompting fighter jets to dispense flares in response, which were visible to the public, NORAD said in a press release.

NORAD said the flares were intended to get the pilot’s attention and are designed “with the highest regard for safety, burn out quickly and completely, and pose no danger to people on the ground.”

The fighter jets subsequently escorted the plane safely out of the area, according to NORAD, which oversees the airspace of the United States and Canada.

“The situation was resolved safely,” NORAD wrote in a social media post.

NORAD did not specify where the aircraft originated from or where it was heading. It also remains unclear whether the president was present at the time of the incident.

Temporary flight restrictions are imposed when aviation authorities seek to block off some airspaces for a limited time. These restrictions could be in place because of national security situations, major sporting events, or natural disasters, according to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).

NORAD stated that when an intercept happens, pilots of the aircraft must immediately come up on frequency 121.5 or 243.0 and turn their plane around to reverse course until they receive further instructions on one of those frequencies.

“NORAD employs a layered defense network of radars, satellites, and fighter aircraft to identify and respond to potential threats,” it said.

Aircrews are reminded to check with the FAA on restricted airspaces, especially when operating near the National Capitol Region and Mar-a-Lago regions, it added.

Pilots who violate temporary flight restrictions could face sanctions ranging from warnings and fines to suspensions or revocations of their pilot certificates, depending on the circumstances of the violation, according to the FAA.

NORAD ​reported dozens of similar incidents near Mar-a-Lago last year. In November 2025, NORAD said it had responded to “over 40 tracks of interest” violating temporary flight restrictions near the Palm Beach area since Trump’s return to a second term in January 2025.

On Dec. 21, 2025, F-16 fighter jets responded after a civilian aircraft breached a no-fly zone near Mar-a-Lago, which had been put in place ahead of Trump’s arrival at the estate for his annual Christmas and New Year’s visit.

NORAD said the fighter jets responded by carrying out a “headbutt maneuver,” in which the jet flew directly in front of the plane to get the pilot’s attention.

Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 17:15

Two Chinese Container Ships That Were Previously Turned Back By Iran, Now Allowed To Transit Hormuz Strait

Zero Hedge -

Two Chinese Container Ships That Were Previously Turned Back By Iran, Now Allowed To Transit Hormuz Strait

On Friday we reported that there was a moment of surprise among vessel trackers, when Iran unexpectedly blocked two container ships owned by China's Cosco from transiting the Strait of Hormuz.

Two days later, this misunderstanding appears to have been resolved, and on Monday Bloomberg reported that the same two container ships linked to China’s state-owned Cosco Shipping exited the Persian Gulf through the Strait of Hormuz, the first such vessels operated by a major Beijing-backed company to navigate the waterway since the Middle East war broke out.

After aborting an initial transit attempt on Friday, COSCO’s ultra-large container vessels - CSCL Indian Ocean and CSCL Arctic Ocean - have successfully crossed the Strait of Hormuz after beginning their journey eastward from within the Persian Gulf on Monday morning, signalling a potential shift in conditions for commercial shipping.

The ships started their almost 12-hour-long journeys from waters off Dubai. They took a route near Iran’s Larak and Qeshm islands at the narrow opening of the strait, before sailing into waters of the Gulf of Oman.

The ships don’t appear to be carrying any cargo aside from empty container boxes, according to draft readings of how low they sit in the water. They are listed as part of Cosco Shipping Lines’ fleet, which is a subsidiary of Cosco Shipping Corp. Both vessels are currently bound for Port Klang, Malaysia, as they continue their voyage on COSCO’s MEX service, linking the Middle East with the Far East.

The global shipping market has been keenly watching the journeys of these two Cosco ships for signs of how China plans to extract its vessels from the gulf, as it seeks to stem a deepening energy crisis and a plunge in China-to-Middle East trade.  

The two vessels, each with the capacity to transport about 19,000 TEUs, were seen taking the same route on Monday. They have been stuck in the Persian Gulf for more than a month since the US and Israel launched the war against Iran.

The successful transit marks the first confirmed crossing by a major container carrier since the start of the conflict.

Cosco Shipping is one of the world’s largest shipowners, with massive containership and tanker fleets operated by its subsidies. Aside from the container ships, Cosco also has at least six crude tankers stuck inside the Gulf since the war began, according to ship-tracking data.

In an early sign of a resumption of Hormuz transits, Cosco Shipping Lines last week informed customers that it would be recommencing bookings for general cargo containers from east Asia to the Middle East, including some located in the gulf. The company owns and operates 453 container ships that have a total capacity of about 2.5 million twenty-foot equivalent containers, or TEUs, as at end January.

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Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 16:50

Springtime For RINOs

Zero Hedge -

Springtime For RINOs

Authored by James Howard Kunstler,

“This sort of derangment is a novel psychopathology in the human species. . . a synthesis of low-IQ feminized brain scramble & neurotic lunacy."

- JD Haltigan on X

Went to the No Kings assemblies in my town and the next nearby town on Saturday. Mental illness as far as the eye could see. Old folks, too, as far as the eye could see, predominately of the female persuasion: the devouring grandmothers. The Democratic Party has marshalled mental illness as its premier campaign strategy, and lately it is winning bigly around the country as mental illness becomes the go-to cope option for the ragged remnants of Boomerdom.

They believe things that are patently insane, for instance, the latest proposal by Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-WA) that illegal immigrants deserve reparations on account of being “traumatized” by U.S. immigration enforcement actions.

If it feels like the Democratic Party is at war with our country you are not hallucinating.

It is every bit as much a jihad as the Death to America crowd in Iran has explicitly pushed since 1979.

The president gets no help whatsoever from his own party, as you see in the disgraceful hijinks around the urgent issue of election reform. You know exactly how the election playbook was written: let x-million foreigners into the country illegally, give them (illegally) social security numbers, driver’s licenses, automatic voter registrations, addresses, mail-in ballots. . . and voila! They don’t even have to mail-in their own mail-in ballots. Lawfare ninja Marc Elias will arrange ballot pick-up service. And the cherry on top is that the census must count all the illegal aliens to add new congressional districts for extra seats in Congress.

So, in the face of that, Republican Majority Leader John Thune could not muster enough votes to save the SAVE Act. Or so he said. Looks more like lack a’wanna. Eerie lack a’wanna. On their tours of cable news, the hapless Republican senators, when asked, would not name their colleagues leaning against the SAVE Act. But you know who they are. Mitch McConnell, Murkowski, Tillis, Collins, Capito.

Leader Thune could not even manage to get Homeland Security funded with the prospect of Iranian sleeper cells awakening around the country. He just threw in the towel at three o’clock in the morning on Friday, and sent the whole crew home to meet the Easter Bunny. Chuck Schumer did an end-zone dance. The brokenness of our politics could not be more in your face. As things shape up this grueling springtime, Mr. Trump might have to go Abe Lincoln on these folks. That is, declare some sort of national emergency to save the election and the country.

Of course, the nation is more than a little distracted just now with doings in Iran. The No Kings folk are unabashedly rooting for everything to go wrong there, and not a few conservatives in the public arena are straining to conjure an Iranian victory in their black-pilled deliriums. Many claim they “have no idea” what we are doing there — can it be that hard? — or else they are rabidly exercised over our alliance with Israel in the operation. You know how that goes. Cue Tucker. He’ll explain.

The truth is we are pounding these savage Shia clerics and their Revolutionary Guard myrmidons to the garden of eternal bliss where the seventy-two virgins wait. Whatever remains of Iran’s legit government is bargaining under cover for an off-ramp now. Pakistan mediates. The parties sit in different rooms and pass notes through the mediators in a third room. Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi pretends that he will not negotiate with Mr. Trump’s envoys, Witkoff and Kushner, both Jews, the horror! But that’s sheer fakery.

To avoid humiliation in the process, Iran is still lobbing missiles and drones around the Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Israel, and they will probably keep doing that until the very moment of capitulation. Anyway, in less than a week, Mr. Trump turns the lights off all over Iran, and then they are back in the twelfth century. . . no command communication, no juice for anything, no money, no food, no water, no nothing . . . and a population getting dangerously desperate to make it all go away. . . to return to some dim memory of what normal life once was in an Iran not ruled by psychotic death cultists.

Everybody else is greatly alarmed by the disruption of Persian Gulf oil supplies through Hormuz.

Global finance was already pretty shaky before the hot war commenced, and the economic tail of that dog was not wagging happily.

In America, BlackRock, Morgan Stanley, Apollo Global, and Blue Owl Capital had recently “gated” redemptions — meaning investors can’t get all or part of their money out of plays that are folding on collateral rot. This private equity fiasco has significant contagion potential.

The sudden oil shock makes everything feel a hundred times worse, and pain is already felt, especially in the far east and Australia / New Zealand.

But consider that the Hormuz “blockade” is also a bit of last-ditch capitulation bravado.

It could be a shorter crisis than the alarmists imagine. We see everything that Iran has got from high in the sky, whatever attack boats remain. . . the thermal signatures of rockets going off. . . the bays where the drones emerge.

Mr. Trump might order troops in to the stabilize ports and more than one island. Or perhaps not.

I doubt we’ll know until after Iranian lights go out. If the kinetics conclude, what remains is re-starting the maritime insurance apparatus with or without Lloyd’s of London. Then, tankers start moving again.

Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 16:25

Off-Ramp In Progress? Israeli Media Signals 'Completion Phase' Of Iran War

Zero Hedge -

Off-Ramp In Progress? Israeli Media Signals 'Completion Phase' Of Iran War

It's no secret that Washington is looking for an off-ramp amid what has been a steady pattern of escalation with Iran over the past month since Operation Epic Fury began. The White House's anticipated timeline and even list of objectives has seriously shifted since the war's start, as has the scope, given Tehran's 'unexpected' big retaliatory strikes on the Gulf and Israel - including on energy and infrastructure targets.

It seems Trump was thinking Iran could be parallel to the Venezuela situation - where a 'decapitation' operation swiftly removed Maduro and the US basically acknowledged a pliant puppet in his place (Delcy Rodríguez). That's why White House officials at the very start were talking about an operation that would lust just 'days' or maybe a couple weeks. Now, one month in, and we have fresh headlines like this: "Iran war enters its fourth week with no clear end in sight."

The US administration is meanwhile trying to refocus its definable objectives, however overall vision and strategy for a 'mission accomplished' end-goal has been anything but clear. For example, the start of the war saw the White House officially list as an objective the end of Iran's nuclear program and removal of enriched uranium - but that is no longer listed.

Instead, the State Dept. - citing Marco Rubio - has issued the following military objectives in Iran:

1. The destruction of Iran's air force

2. The destruction of their navy

3. The severe diminishing of their missile launching capability

4. The destruction of their factories

These are much more 'achievable aims' allowing the Trump administration to save face by declaring they've all been met, whenever it wants to proclaim a mission complete situation, and pull Pentagon assets from the theatre.

But the fact that Iran still has de facto hold over the Strait of Hormuz remains a big problem, as does its ongoing nuclear capabilities, despite that nuclear sites have been degraded or possibly destroyed.

One big and somewhat surprising sign that the US-Israeli coalition could be about to wind down the war is that Times of Israel on Monday ran the following headline:

"A month into the war with Iran, the Israeli military has almost completed bombing all of the targets it defined for itself at the start of the conflict, and has now been ordered by Israel’s political leadership to shift to hitting 'economic' targets of the Iranian regime," the publication wrote.

It goes on: "The Israeli Air Force has conducted hundreds of waves of strikes in Iran, dropping over 13,000 bombs on Iranian regime and military sites, including air defense systems, ballistic missile launchers, weapon production sites, some nuclear facilities, and various headquarters."

The same report also details how dozens of top civilian and military leaders have been killed in the campaign, and most importantly longtime Ayatollah Ali Khamnieni. However, the report also mentions one Israeli objecting of "setting the conditions" for some kind of popular uprising which could topple the government, and that has not happened. Still, the language in the report strongly suggests an offramp could be in the works, perhaps under pressure by the United States:

On Saturday, IDF Spokesman Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin said that “within a few days” the military would complete targeting all of the “critical” assets of Iran’s military production industries, sites used to develop weapons that threaten Israel. The military has also said it has taken out most of Iran’s ballistic missile launchers and air defense systems.

And here's a key line from Times of Israel:

Israel’s defense establishment is now in what it described as the “completion phase” of the goals it set out at the start of the war, meaning it believes it has largely achieved its objectives of degrading Iran’s military capabilities and “creating the conditions” for the Iranian regime to fall, The Times of Israel has learned.

Yet there are still other signs which suggest the war could go on for quite a bit longer, and even turn into a deeper quagmire, given the White House has yet to rule out ground forces.

Is Trump heading toward trying to 'force' a 'mission accomplished' moment? It would be interesting if this happened before the Strait of Hormuz was actually opened up. Such an outcome would probably be used by Iranian officials to instead declare 'victory' for the Islamic Republic.

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Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 15:40

Cory Booker Blasts Party, Says Democrats 'Failed This Moment', And Calls For New Leaders

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Cory Booker Blasts Party, Says Democrats 'Failed This Moment', And Calls For New Leaders

Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.) appeared on NBC's Meet the Press Sunday morning and delivered a scathing rebuke of his own party, saying it has “failed this moment.” 

Booker was on the show to promote his new book, and host Kristen Welker read a passage from it in which he argues that political coalitions can’t succeed if they exclude people based on “purity tests” or demand total agreement on every issue. 

In his book, he wrote, “We cannot cancel everyone who fails a purity test. We cannot exile those who don’t align with our every belief, however passionately we hold it. Coalitions that are only composed of the already converted cannot change the country. If everyone in your coalition agrees with you on everything, your coalition is too small, too small to make big change and too small for what our democracy demands.”

Welker then pressed him on whether Democrats are shrinking their coalition by doing exactly that. “Do you believe Democrats are making the mistake of shrinking their coalition with what you describe as purity tests, senator?”

“Look, I’m proud of so many things that my Democratic colleagues are doing, but as a whole, our party has failed this moment,” he replied. “It’s why I’ve called for new leadership in America. I’ve called for a generational renewal, because this left-right divide is killing our country, and our adversaries know it. They come onto our social media and try to whip up hate in America. That is one of our biggest crises. It is time for a new vision of our country that’s far more uniting, that brings people together, doesn’t deepen divides. I really believe this is a time where we need new leadership, new moral imagination to pull our country together, because the challenges on the horizon aren’t just this current crisis that Trump has caused.”

Booker even appeared to criticize the Democrats’ Trump obsession, telling Welker that Trump “shouldn’t be the main character of our narrative right now.”

“We have real challenges from new technologies like AI and robotics, new challenges, that we need more unity in our country, and a reminder that we are not each other’s enemies. In fact, our ability to find common ground has always been our greatest hope.”

Booker continued, "Americans want a new generation of leaders that show that they can lift the whole country up," he said. And then, in case anyone missed it: "It is time for a new vision of our country that is far more uniting that brings people together, doesn't deepen divides."

Booker’s comment reeks of irony. According to reports, Senate Democrats are quietly - and not so quietly - tearing each other apart over Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer. 

Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.) recently met with progressive activists in Georgetown, where the discussion turned to whether Chuck Schumer could be pushed out of leadership. Murphy indicated that some lawmakers had been informally counting votes to gauge support for removing Schumer. Murphy is reportedly part of a group of senators quietly canvassing colleagues about dissatisfaction with Schumer. That group, dubbed “Fight Club,” is reportedly coordinating through a Signal chat to oppose Schumer’s preferred candidates in key 2026 races. The group believes Schumer has been putting his thumb on the scale for centrist candidates while an insurgent wave of progressive energy goes untapped. 

That sounds like a party that is still demanding ideological purity, not diversity. It would be foolish to think that Cory Booker is calling for the next generation of Democratic leaders to take over because they’ll bring ideological diversity to the party. Much of the anger against Chuck Schumer stems from his vote to fund the federal government in March of 2025 to avoid a shutdown. His approval ratings tanked because he was seen as capitulating to President Donald Trump, and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has been floated as a possible primary challenger, and polling even showed her with a double-digit lead over Schumer.

 Who does Booker think he’s fooling?

*  *  *

Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 15:20

Turkey Reports Another Iranian Missile Near-Miss Over NATO Skies

Zero Hedge -

Turkey Reports Another Iranian Missile Near-Miss Over NATO Skies

Another near-miss has unfolded over NATO skies, with Turkey on Monday announcing that air defenses intercepted a ballistic missile fired from Iran. It's another dangerous indication that the Iran war could easily expand into a broader conflict at any moment. 

The intercept was carried out by air and missile defense assets positioned in the Eastern Mediterranean, according to the Turkish defense ministry, which offered no further initial details concerning trajectory, type, or what the intended target ultimately was.

US Navy image, illustrative

This marks the fourth fourth such interception since March of the war and Operation Epic Fury, which has surpassed the one-month mark.

The timing is notable given Ankara is simultaneously trying to play middleman between Washington and Tehran, alongside Pakistan where regional diplomats have been trying to jump-start direct Tehran-Washington talks, which has proven elusive.

Turkish and NATO officials have struck a familiar tone, describing that "all necessary measures" are being taken to counter threats to Turkish territory and airspace, and further saying that ongoing developments will be "closely monitored".

There's been speculation that these ballistic missiles from Iran could be intended for US-British military assets in Cyprus. Earlier in the conflict drones were sent - likely from Iranian allies in Lebanon - onto a British airbase in EU-member Cypriot territory.

NATO command has previously stated that "Our deterrence and defense posture remains strong across all domains, including when it comes to air and missile defense."

This developing pattern of large Iranian missiles flying over Turkey has raised the potential for invoking NATO Article 5, despite US officials having downplayed this option. 

During the first incident, Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth had described, "On the matter with Turkey, I'll have to get back to you on exactly what the intercept looked like."

He laid out at the time that "We're aware of that particular engagement, although no sense that it would trigger anything like Article 5."  

Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 14:20

Denver Imposes Water Restrictions, Orders Restaurants To Serve Only On Request

Zero Hedge -

Denver Imposes Water Restrictions, Orders Restaurants To Serve Only On Request

Authored by Jacki Thrapp via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Restaurants in Colorado’s capital are only allowed to serve water to guests if they ask, according to new restrictions by the Denver Board of Water Commissioners.

A scenic view of the Denver skyline at sunset, with the Rocky Mountains in the background and a forest in the foreground. Bill Ross/Getty Images

“Restaurants and catering businesses shall serve water only upon request,” the mandatory irrigation restrictions read.

The rules were issued in the Mile High City after the commissioners declared a Stage 1 Drought and made plans to seek a 20 percent reduction in water use. City officials expect drought conditions to last until April 30, 2027.

The update will affect many businesses, including the hospitality industry.

“Lodging establishments shall not change sheets more often than every four days for guests staying more than one night, except for health or safety reasons or upon express request of guests,” the Denver Board of Water Commissioners stated.

Drivers who attempt to wash their car are told to use a bucket or a hand-held hose equipped with an automatic shut-off nozzle if they don’t use a commercial car wash.

Residents can water their grass only two days per week, according to the schedule provided by city officials, but it is prohibited between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m., when the sun is up.

Current conditions indicate that this is going to be an exceptionally challenging year for our water supply,” Nathan Elder, manager of water supply for Denver, said at a Denver Board of Water Commissioners meeting.

“Snow pack levels are at historic lows and are melting earlier and more rapidly than normal.”

This graphic shows how much water is stored in mountain snowpack in 2025–2026 compared to previous years. Denver Water

Denver collects water from a 4,000-square-mile area across the state to serve 1.5 million people, but the rivers that feed the water supply have experienced record-low snowpack.

Our Colorado River snow pack in our collection system is currently at 53% of normal. This is the lowest on record for the date,” Elder said during the meeting.

City officials warned that the snowpack, which contributes to the city’s water supply, has significantly decreased after a recent heatwave that pushed temperatures into the 80s in mid-March.

This graphic shows the drought conditions in Colorado on March 28, 2026. National Weather Service

The drought is currently affecting 3.6 million residents in Colorado, according to the National Weather Service’s Drought Monitor.

As of March 28, the Drought Monitor listed the Denver-metro area as under severe drought, while counties in the Rocky Mountains are under extreme and exceptional drought.

​According to the data, more than 74 percent of the state is in a drought.

Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 13:45

Dutch Treasury Banking Portal Goes Dark For 1,600 Public Institutions After Cyberattack

Zero Hedge -

Dutch Treasury Banking Portal Goes Dark For 1,600 Public Institutions After Cyberattack

The Dutch Finance Ministry informed members of Parliament in a letter on Monday about "unauthorized access" to several of its banking systems, including the digital portal for treasury banking.

"Because of the ongoing forensic investigation and for security reasons, several systems have been temporarily taken offline, including the digital portal for treasury banking," Finance Minister Eelco Heinen wrote in the letter.

Heinen warned that the cyberattack has resulted in "around 1,600 public institutions that hold their funds with the Ministry of Finance" being "currently unable to view the balance of their treasury accounts digitally."

He continued, "Participants in treasury banking include, among others, ministries, agencies, legal entities with a statutory task, educational institutions, social funds, and decentralized governments."

"It is also temporarily not possible for participants to apply for loans, deposits, or credit facilities through the portal, change the intraday limit, or generate reports," Heinen warned.

Heinen admitted, "At this time, it is not yet known how long this situation will last."

He said investigations are ongoing in unison with the National Cyber Security Centre and other forensic security experts.

Heinen did not comment on who the responsible actor or actors were, or whether any ransom was involved.

To sum up, with the digital portal for treasury banking down, day-to-day cash management for a large swath of the Dutch public sector appears inaccessible at the moment.

So what happens if the portal stays offline long enough that the Dutch government cannot pay its bills?

Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 13:25

UAE Will Be Pounded If US Invades, Iranian Officials Warn

Zero Hedge -

UAE Will Be Pounded If US Invades, Iranian Officials Warn

Via Middle East Eye

Tehran believes the United Arab Emirates is playing an active role in the US-Israeli war on Iran and any ground invasion could lead to widespread attacks on Emirati state assets, two senior Iranian sources told Middle East Eye. A month into the conflict, which has battered global markets, Donald Trump is weighing whether to use ground troops to seize strategic islands in the Strait of Hormuz in an attempt to stop Iran from disrupting energy supplies.

Attention has particularly focused on Kharg Island, the hub through which roughly 90 percent of Iran’s oil exports flow, and Qashm Island which overlooks the strait. Such an operation would probably be launched from US bases in Gulf Arab states, which have come under Iranian attack in retaliation for US-Israeli strikes on Iran, which have killed at least 1,900 people so far.

Explosion in the Fujairah industrial zone from Iranian attack on UAE on March 3, via AFP.

Anti-Iranian sentiment has grown in Arab Gulf states, where retaliatory strikes have hit various targets, including key energy infrastructure. Combative rhetoric has particularly come from the close Israeli ally the UAE, whose ambassador to the US wrote a column in the Wall Street Journal this week saying a ceasefire would not be “enough” and the belligerents should push for a “conclusive outcome” that “addresses Iran’s full range of threats”.

The WSJ even reported that some Gulf Arab states were considering joining the US-Israeli attacks on Iran. However, according to a senior Iranian security official, leaders in Tehran now believe the UAE has played an active role in the war from the very beginning.

According to the official, the Iranian leadership has “decided to end a weeks-long period of tolerance towards Abu Dhabi, after concluding that the Emirati role went beyond simply hosting US military facilities already hit in Iranian retaliatory attacks”.

The official said: “Iranian intelligence believes the UAE also made some of its own air facilities available for operations against Iran.”

Abu Dhabi has served as an advanced platform for Israeli interests in the region, the official said. He suggested this included “deception operations” - false-flag Israeli attacks on Oman and at least one other country intended to look like Iranian ones.

He said Tehran assesses that “part of that cooperation has also involved the use of advanced AI infrastructure inside the UAE to support data collection and analysis for US and Israeli targeting, including information on Iranian figures and sites”.

The official added that attacks on Iranian vessels, small boats and coastal areas launched from UAE territory would now be considered by Tehran as a major escalation requiring a “strong response”.

Imminent attack

A separate senior Iranian diplomatic official told MEE that Tehran believes a US ground offensive may now be imminent. He said intelligence assessments - supported by information from Iran’s allied states, including Russia - increasingly point to a scenario in which an assault could be launched from the UAE.

Last week, Trump threatened to destroy Iran’s power plants if it did not reopen the Strait of Hormuz, through which 30 percent of the world’s oil passed before the war. However, he has since twice delayed the promised attack, citing negotiations with Iran on a settlement that would end the bombing and allow oil to flow freely again.

The diplomat said Iran sees the current delay not as a genuine diplomatic pause, but as cover for the deployment of additional troops and preparations for a new phase of the war.

Reuters reported this week that the US is expected to send thousands more personnel to the Middle East, adding to the large American military presence already in the region. When the US and Israel on March 18 bombed South Pars gas field, one of the most important parts of Iranian infrastructure, Tehran responded by targeting energy facilities across the Gulf states.

Missiles and drones have also hit hotels, airports, data centers, ports and embassies in the region as the war has escalated. Yet the diplomat said Iran has so far deliberately avoided treating countries from which attacks were launched as fully enemy states.

For that reason, the diplomat said, Tehran confined itself to striking what it viewed as direct US military targets, or intelligence sites linked to the US and Israel, including some located inside civilian areas in countries such as the UAE and Bahrain.

That restraint, the diplomat warned, “would end immediately if any ground invasion takes place or if any part of Iranian territory or any of its islands becomes a target of a ground invasion”. Any country from which such an attack is launched would immediately be treated by Iran as an enemy, he said.

“Iranian strikes would no longer be limited to military or intelligence facilities but all state institutions and state-linked interests would become potential targets, including commercial and property assets in which the Emirati state holds investment stakes,” he said. “The previous rules will not hold if there is an invasion,” the diplomat added. “If any state participates in the occupation of even a single piece of Iranian land, that state will be dealt with as an aggressor.” This message, he said, has already been conveyed to the Emiratis.

*  *  * 

Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 13:05

Transcript: Judd Kessler, Lucky by Design

The Big Picture -

 

The transcript from this week’s MiB Judd Kessler, Lucky by Design, is below.

You can stream and download our full conversation, including any podcast extras, on Apple Podcasts, SpotifyYouTube, and Bloomberg. All of our earlier podcasts on your favorite pod hosts can be found here.

~~~

This is Masters in Business with Barry Ritholtz on Bloomberg Radio.

[00:00] Barry Ritholtz:  This week on the podcast, another extra special guest, Judd Kessler, Wharton professor, author of Lucky by Design, tells us about market design, how we allocate scarce resources for everything from Taylor Swift tickets to kidneys. I thought the book was really interesting, kind of wonky economic analysis, but fascinating and the conversation absolutely fascinating.

Also, with no further ado, my interview of Professor Judd Kessler. So I found the book to be really fascinating. Look at market design, which is an area that we don’t usually think about. We’ll talk about the book in a few moments. I wanna start with your background. Bachelor’s, master’s and PhD from Harvard, but that wasn’t enough.

[00:49] Judd Kessler: You get a master’s in philosophy from Cambridge. What, what was the career plan? So the career plan was to go to college and then find a career, not in academia. That was not something that I even thought of as an option. I was an econ major. I thought I’d be a consultant. I accepted a Bain New York offer to take after graduation, but senior year of college, I wrote a thesis under a supervisor named Alvin Roth, and I loved it.

It was my first experience doing research, and I thought, this is really fun. I’m on the cutting edge of this topic that I chose that interests me, and so that made me think, all right, maybe I should give it a shot. So that was the trip to Cambridge, England was me doing an M fill in economics to see. is this something that I might want to pursue as a career?

I didn’t love the pedagogy in England, so I, the courses I wasn’t enjoying. But every day I’d come home and think, oh, there’s some research questions that, that lecture prompted. And I realized, oh, the research is keeping me engaged in this program. Even though I don’t love the coursework, I probably should be doing this full-time.

[02:14] Barry Ritholtz: What was the research topic in your senior year that led you to heading to England? So it was a experiment. So I’m an experimental economist. Most of my, not all of it, but most of my research is experimental, meaning undergrads are coming into the lab, playing a game I’ve designed, or, we’re doing some experimentation in the field where people are going about their lives.

[02:40] Judd Kessler: They don’t realize that half of them are getting one version of an experience and half are getting the other, and we’re seeing what the effect is. So my undergrad thesis was trying to understand how pairs of people could. Contribute to public goods, to things that benefited both of them. And I learned about everything that I could learn about public good provision.

And I varied both the structure of the game and how the benefits of the public good were split across people. And this, was something that had never been done before. And my advisor, Al, was very encouraging, enthusiastic, funded the research study. And I had this experience of looking at the data and thinking, this is the, the first, I’m the first person I’m on the frontier.

I’m, I’m not, I’m never gonna be a, an astronaut, but I’m on the frontier here exploring the answer to this question that interests me. ,I’m looking at the data and discovering the answer. So this sounds like it’s a cross section of game theory and behavioral economics. Fair, fair description. Exactly right.

And. It w it was, it’s a paper. I, I’ve since become an academic and I’ve been writing research papers for a long time. This one was never published. And the reason was that in my twenties and even into my thirties, I didn’t really know how to motivate it. I didn’t know what it was about.

[04:15] Barry Ritholtz: at a deep level. I knew what I had done, and I knew that it was new and different. ,but I finally cracked the code in my late thirties, because what I had studied, unbeknownst to me was how couples allocate effort to construct, public goods in their household. Does that mean who cooks?

[04:37] Judd Kessler: Who cleans, who gets the kids, who basically pays the bills? Is it just that simple? Exactly. Well, it’s, it’s, the game was we each put in some effort. Sometimes the production is split evenly between the two, and sometimes it’s split unevenly. So one person gets more of the output and some per, and the other person gets less.

And what I found was that. In some structures where we each have to match each other’s contribution to generate an output, then the inequality didn’t matter. Pairs of people, these are random strangers, they’re able to contribute at high levels. It’s when we’re contributing to the public good and one of us can cut back and kind of free ride off of the other one, when we split it equally, we’re able to sustain with the pair high levels of contribution.

 

[05:33] Barry Ritholtz: But when we’re split unequally and one of us can free ride off each other, the contribution collapses. I was gonna say that sounds like a rep recipe for a divorce. Well, I I, the reason I was able to later understand what I had studied in, in my twenties was those are the situations where my wife and I have conflicts when we both need to contribute for the public good to be provided.

 

[06:03] Judd Kessler: Like we both have to be diligent with. Bedtimes with our kids because if one of us slips, then the kids schedule slip, run ’em up, slip up, then it doesn’t matter if I care more about that or my wife, we kind of both realize we have to be at the same level or, or we both lose. Where, where does it sort of, where does that gap between effort Yeah.

Show, how does that manifest? So if one of us cares more about, say, the kids eating vegetables, right. So for hypothetical, keeping the house neat, but Yeah. Yeah. The, for us it’s the, the health healthful eating one of us might care more than the other. And in that case if my wife cares more and I free ride off of her, she fed them a healthy lunch, say yesterday, then I can feed them a less healthy dinner when it’s my turn.

 

[07:06] Barry Ritholtz: That’s where the recipe for disastrous, those, those are omissions. What about commiss missions? How, what about doing things positively where one of you might slip? How does that manifest? most of the things I’m thinking of are like, are we giving them too much screen time? Oh, I guess we could, it could be, reading them books at night.

 

[07:30] Judd Kessler: so we both care a lot about this, so, we’ll, we’ll do it. But if if one of us cared more, that would be a recipe for disaster because that person would read to the kids and the other person would say what? Like, oh, you got read to last night, I won’t do it. Right. And that’s when the, the trouble, yeah.

That’s when trouble started. So I, that was my, my first academic research was exploring those kinds of dynamics in two person games. How do you go from that to studying market design? So this was, Alvin Roth, the, the, mentor that I mentioned. He was my undergrad thesis advisor. And when I was getting my PhD, I committed a kind of sin of ac academic sin, which is, you’re not supposed to go back to the institution.

 

[08:29] Barry Ritholtz: You did your undergrad degree right. To get your PhD. But I wanted to work with Al, so I kind of, I cheated a little bit. I, I went back to Harvard, but it was technically a Harvard Business School, PhD joint with the econ department. So I pretended, oh, I’m getting a different angle on this. Right. I ended up being helpful because being at the business school helped me transition to my current job as a Wharton professor.

 

[09:00] Judd Kessler: But I went back to work with Al and he was doing both, he was doing experimental work and he was doing market design work, and I had gotten exposure to both of them, in his course courses as an undergrad and, and, early PhD student. And the research that kind of transitioned me was on Oregon.

Donation and organ allocation. The book has some fascinating data points on that. We’ll talk about that in a bit. I wanna stay with your background. You end up winning the Vernon Smith Scholar Prize in 2021. What work was that for? So that was for a line of work, starting with this organ allocation work.

 

[09:43] Barry Ritholtz: Because that was, both a public good study, like I described in the, the earlier work, and policy relevant. And so the Vernon Smith Prize is for somebody who’s contributed with experimental research in a bunch of areas. And I had I’d done that, I’d done that in organ allocation, I’d done that in course course allocation.

 

[10:07] Judd Kessler: I had done work on summer youth employment, but kind of always with this experimental lens to try to understand. what the effects were. And what’s kind of fascinating is you’re clicking off a lot of chapters in the book, which are, how do we allocate scarce resources when there are a variety of different ways to do it?

Sometimes it’s lottery, sometimes it’s effort. sometimes it’s people paying more to get it, which really is, I, I never thought of those things as market design. And yet most people look at those things as just, Hey, you got lucky. You, you got the summer job or the course you wanted. Yep. Or the kidney you needed because you signed up.

A big theme of the book is, Hey, this isn’t luck. This is recognizing all of these. Market design structures and figuring out the rules and playing them as well as you can. Exactly right, and I, in the book, I call these hidden markets because they’re not the markets that we always think of when we think of markets.

 

[11:18] Barry Ritholtz: We think of the farmer’s market where you’re paying a price for produce. We think of the stock market where you’re paying a price for equity and publicly traded companies, but there are all of these markets where you’re trying to allocate a scarce resource. You might have a price that gets paid, but it’s not doing all of the work.

 

[11:42] Judd Kessler: There’s something else that is deciding who gets access to the scarce resource. And then there are markets where there is no price. We’ve decided that we want to do the allocation without having folks pay. We wanna distribute it in some other way. And these are areas that market design thinks about, but that a standard econ class, like the ones I teach to my undergrads, or MBA students or executives.

Would not necessarily cover. So other than the students in your Wharton class, how can individuals become more aware of all of these hidden market mechanisms and use them to their best advantage? Yeah, so the first step is recognizing that these things are markets. You want access to something, it’s scarce.

There is a limited amount that can be allocated, and you’re competing with lots of other people who want them. Examples might make it more concrete because we’re thinking about things that people participate in every day, these markets. So you wanna get a reservation at a hot restaurant, you want to get a ticket to a live event.

You want to get a product that is hard to come by either a clothing special clothing drop, or this summer it was labu boos, the, ugly, cute stuffy dolls. But you could think of Beanie babies or, or cabbage patch dolls. If you’re as old as me and. In these cases, there is a price that you pay, but there’s also some other ordeal that you may have to go through to get access to those scarce resources.

 

[13:25] Barry Ritholtz: Same thing with benefits or or services provided by the government. You want to get your kid into public elementary school, you wanna get a library book, you want to get a lifesaving organ transplant. These are environments where you have to understand, okay, what is the rule that is doing the allocation?

 

[13:45] Judd Kessler: And then how can you use your knowledge of that rule to figure out the right strategy? Y your daughter trying to get into her favorite afterschool program really resonated. ’cause it, it was such a little niche thing. ,it’s just one of those everyday life frictions. You don’t really think of those as markets that have been designed, but you do a really nice job explaining.

Any allocation of scarce resources is a market decision. Exactly. And that one is one of the bains of my existence. I have to, it’s a first come first serve race, which is what I call the experience that folks have on a regular basis of there is a scarce resource. It is being made available at a point in time and whoever clicks first gets it, whoever calls in first in, in different market structures, is the one who can claim that scarce resource after school programs.

 

[14:45] Barry Ritholtz: At my daughter’s elementary school, this is what the kids are doing between two 30 when school lets out and five 30 when working, parents can pick them up. There are some very popular classes, for the kids to, to do during those hours, but there are a lot of kids who want to participate in them. And so every semester they will say, okay, on June 12th at 10:00 AM we’re gonna release all of the fall semester courses and whoever.

 

[15:18] Judd Kessler: Clicks to claim the spots in those classes first will get them and everybody else will be disappointed. And it is a first come, first serve race. And I, I like the race, analogy because I don’t do a ton of cardio and this is where my heart races faster than this is fight or flight because I know I’m competing with all these other parents who want to get their kids into these classes.

 

[15:48] Barry Ritholtz: And if my daughter gets what she wants, mornings are wonderful. And if she doesn’t, it’s I don’t want to go to school today. There’s some, you, you seem to have an advantage. ’cause there are some fascinating strategies here. Hey, maybe you don’t start with the Monday classes. Maybe you do Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday.

 

[16:10] Judd Kessler: Because they’re gonna fill up while everybody’s racing again Monday. And if you’re disappointed in Monday, but you’ve locked in the three ones for the rest of the week there, there’s an advantage thinking about how the rest of the participants are playing the game. This is exactly right. So the, the all game theory, all it’s all game theory.

And I wrote a book about game theory. I didn’t use the term game theory ’cause I didn’t wanna scare people off, but it’s, it’s, it’s thinking about what it is that you want and then what it is that other folks might be going for and developing the, the right strategy for that. Now first come, first serve races.

There’s a bunch of strategy that is kind of maybe obvious when you think about it, of, okay, you have to know that it’s a race. You have to know that this is a situation where you need to be available to click as fast as you can at that time. Right? When, when I get the email and it says June 12th at 10:00 AM is when registration opens.

Even if I’ve never participated. In the registration for these afterschool classes. The 10:00 AM tips me off that something is going on. At my son’s school where the classes are not as demanded. There is no 10:00 AM there might be a time when the registration begins, but nobody really cares about it because you can go whenever you want that day or later in the week and there’s plenty of options available.

 

[17:54] Barry Ritholtz: But at this market, the 10:00 AM tells you, alright, by 10 0 1 or 10 0 2, the good stuff might be taken. Did your wife ever get to the French laundry in Napa? This was a first come first serve race that I, talk about in the book. ,it’s four milestone birthdays only ’cause it’s so expensive. So little pricey.

 

[18:18] Judd Kessler: Yeah. In the book, I, I talk about how we did not get it, for her 40th birthday, so she will try again when she’s 50. I, I was reading that and using your strategy immediately, thought, oh, you’re flying out just for a weekend. Four o’clock is essentially seven o’clock in New York. Why not do four or four 30 and bang, they’re, they’re good to go.

This is exactly, so the, the strategy to play there is to think about what I call settling for silver versus going for gold. So the settling for silver strategy is that seven o’clock or seven 30 is the most desirable time to eat, at least for regular people, not in retirement communities.

That’s the, the ideal time. If you’re gonna go on a Saturday, that is what most people are gonna be aiming for. When I went for her 40th birthday to try to register, I knew it was a race. I knew when the starting gun was going off, I was there, my heart was beating fast, and I went first for the seven 30 reservation page, reloads.

I don’t get it. And I see that four 30 is still available. So I click for four 30 thinking it’s better than nothing. And the page reloads and that is also gone. So struck out there. That’s why we’re waiting a decade. To your point, if I had, I was doing it as a surprise for my wife. If I had planned and talked to her about it in advance, we might have recognized four or four 30 is just, is nearly as good.

If you’re an east coaster, it’s nearly as good as seven 30. Right? And that’s the kind of situation where you want to settle for silver, where you want to go for something where there’s less competition. Again, the game theory coming in, fewer people are gonna be going for 4, 4 30. That is something that you actually have a much better shot at if you go for it first.

 

[20:33] Barry Ritholtz: You have to act as if that is what you wanted all along, right? Because when the page reloads the first time, four 30 is still available. Meaning if instead of going for seven 30, I’d gone for four 30 initially as if it was my first choice. She would’ve been able to cross French laundry off the bucket list.

 

[20:56] Judd Kessler: There you go. Aside from the East coast, west coast, difference. Post pandemic. My wife likes to point out that you use apps like OpenTable or Resi, and she says six 30 is the new seven 30. ’cause everybody wants to get home and stream whatever they’re streaming. It’s so different than it was in the 2010s.

And I’m like, am I just getting old? Are we gonna start going to the early bird specials? She’s like, no, no one wants to have dinner at 10, 9, 10 o’clock at night. I, I believe that. And at the French Laundry, the meals take forever. So getting out of there early four 30 gets you out at nine, 10 o’clock.

 

* * *

[22:35] Barry Ritholtz: lotteries wait lists, queues, scoring rules, algorithms. Norms. Explain this concept that luck by design may really be based on some hidden economic rules. Yeah, so the way the markets operate, there’s a set of rules that decides who gets what. So we talked about. First come, first serve races. But as you point out, there’s first come, first serve waiting lists.

 

[23:00] Judd Kessler: There’s lines, there are lottery systems where you’re putting your name in the hat and we’re pulling people out. And then there are centralized clearing houses where you might rank your preferences over ,things you want. And then there’s some priorities or rules in, in the background. And I have this sense that people look at these systems and they don’t have a framework for thinking about them.

And so when they participate in these markets, they don’t really realize they’re doing so, and then the outcomes seem like they’re based on chance, or they try to understand them and they struggle and they feel overwhelmed and stressed out, and then play a strategy that might not be right for them.

And then they look around and they think, oh man, that person got what they wanted. I didn’t, they must have been lucky. Because if you don’t understand the system, then it all seems. Like it’s happening by chance. But by understanding the rules that are applying in each market, you then can recognize, okay, this is a situation where it’s a first come, first serve waiting list.

So I have to put my name down early. Then I have to think about the strategy I’m gonna play when it’s my turn. Do I take what’s offered to me? Do I keep waiting? And you have a, develop a framework for, for that. Even in lottery allocations, which we often think of as being the ones that are based entirely on chance.

If you understand the rules, you can develop strategies that help you do better. So you want to go see a theater production and there’s gonna be a ticket lottery. You can go, you can enter your name for two tickets, but maybe you can bring your friend that you’re gonna go see the show with, or your partner and you both enter.

 

[25:04] Barry Ritholtz: Now you have twice as many chances. Maybe you get a bunch of friends who work nearby to enter maybe it’s online, they enter for you. If they lose, they lose. But if they win, they come down to the theater, pick up the tickets and give them to you, all of a sudden now you’ve dramatically increased your chances of winning.

 

[25:29] Judd Kessler: These are technically allowed often by the rules. Sometimes you can enter a lottery in years you intend to lose because the system rewards you in subsequent years for prior losses. It’s trying to be fair over time. And so the rules are if you have lost nine years in a row, then in your 10th year you’ll get 10 entries or a hundred entries or a thousand entries relative to someone who’s entering for the first time.

 

[26:01] Barry Ritholtz: Or maybe you win the lottery in a year, you don’t want to win, and you defer what you get for a year. And now you basically get to enter this year in the hopes of deferring for next year. And if you lose this year, you get to enter next year for the chance of getting whatever it is next year. So you’ve gone to school at Harvard and Cambridge, you teach at University of Pennsylvania.

 

[26:31] Judd Kessler: When we look at college admissions mm-hmm. Yeah, that seems to be like a mess of everything. Some credentials, some skill, some checking the boxes. Yeah, a little bit of lottery, a little bit of early admission. First come, first serve. What do you think of that entire college admission process? What’s driving that design?

Yeah, so that is what I call a choose me market. It’s a two-sided market where it’s, as you point out, it’s not as simple as any one rule. It’s not like whoever applies first to the school gets it, or they’re, they’re gonna totally pick people by lottery. They have a strategic decision. As an institution, I, maybe I should say we as a employee of one of these, ,institutions, but the features of a Choose Me market of a two-sided market are that there are market participants on both sides.

So for college admissions, there’s applicants who are trying to get into the colleges. And then there are colleges who, that are deciding, who am I gonna admit? We’re trying to make a class of smart motivated, well-rounded or very pointy people who are gonna make the class, a rich, fun environment.

And the dynamics are about are we both succeeding in getting what we want? So I think the, the thing that people think of is, okay, is the candidate strong enough? Do they have good enough grades, good enough SAT scores, good enough extracurriculars, but something that we think less about as an applicant, say, because it requires thinking about the other side of the market is how do the universities or colleges feel about the applicants?

 

[28:22] Barry Ritholtz: Well, one of the things that, that they value is high yield. We want the people who we admit to enroll in our school, we want them to matriculate. When I was applying to college that yield that fraction of folks you admit, who come was in the US News and World Report rankings of best colleges and universities.

It’s not anymore, but it’s still a matter of pride and reputation. ’cause it’s hard to say you’re one of the best schools in the country if half or two thirds of the people you admit choose to go somewhere else. And so when you mentioned early admissions, early decision or early action, that is where this kind of yield question comes into play.

 

[29:10] Judd Kessler: So the way that it works with early decision is when you apply, say to Penn, where my employer early decision, if you do that, you are committing to come. If we admit you. So that’s great for our yield because now you’re guaranteed to come. And lots of schools do this. They have an early admission deadline.

 

[29:34] Barry Ritholtz: There’s also early action where you’re not committing, but you can only apply to one school early action. And so it has similar properties where you’re kind of giving up, applying elsewhere early. And the kind of deal is that admission standards appear to be a little lighter. And so researchers have estimated, it’s kind of worth about a hundred SAT points really to, if you apply early, it’s kind of, we’re gonna, we’re, we like the idea that you want to come, we like that you’re gonna help us with our yield.

And so we’re gonna kind of be more open to having you enter. Now I should say I don’t work at the admissions committee, so this is right. This is as an outsider doing looking at the research about it. But all of a sudden then it becomes a strategic decision as you, as an applicant. So you have one shot in the early decision game, where do you wanna apply?

Yeah, we talked a little bit about going for gold or settling for silver. Do you go for the thing you really want the seven 30 reservation at the hot restaurant, or do you go for something there where there’s less competition like a four 30 and the early decision game? That strategy, that settling for silver strategy might be a smart play because if the place you really want to enroll that gold medal option for you is too far out of reach, that even if you apply early, you’re, you’re, you’re not gonna hit that admission cutoff, then you’re essentially wasting that application in that, in that school and you should be applying instead to a place where if you applied early, you would actually get in, but if you didn’t apply early, you wouldn’t.

 

[31:32] Judd Kessler: Some place where you’re kind of more on the market, that’s a very narrow little slice you have to figure out exactly. What your odds are. Yeah. What you can do with research, with talking to other people seeing how does your SAT score compare to the ones that are published on the website?

the people who went to your high school in prior years, who succeeded in getting in. What were their grades like, what were their extracurriculars like? So when these, when it matters for you, the, the research that you do to figure out how to succeed in these markets will inform what strategy you should play.

Huh. Really interesting. Let’s talk about the three E’s. You discuss what’s equitable, efficient, and easy when people are designing various types of market mechanisms. Give us a little overview of that core framing device. Yeah, so the, the three ees are about how well a market operates. So you mentioned them, efficiency, ease, and equity.

Equity is about fairness. It’s about are we treating the market participants? Equally if, if that’s our goal, right? If we want everybody to have an equal chance at getting the scarce resource, is our allocation mechanism are our market rules allowing us to do that? Efficiency is about making sure that we’re not wasting any scarce resources and whether the scarce resources that we’re giving out are being put to their best possible use.

So if there’s someone who really wants something, are we recognizing that and saying, oh, actually the, as a society, we’re better off if we give that scarce resource to that, that person. And then ease is the one that think standard Econ doesn’t think that much about. And the reason is that. Prices are easy to work with.

You might not love that. You have to pay a lot of money to buy something, but the actual process of buying something in a market where price is doing all the work is trivial. You go to the website, you click a button and the thing is shipped to you, or you walk into a store or you pay a price, or you go online and, and execute some trade or call your broker and do it.

It’s very straightforward to work with prices. So let’s, let’s talk a little bit about one of the most fascinating market mechanisms that’s out there, which is live performance tickets. You use the example of Taylor Swift who could have charged a whole lot more for her tour, which still made billions of dollars.

but lots of other artists charge less than the market bears. why do these artists not go for revenue maximizing? What’s the downside of that? Yeah, so I, when I think about sellers deciding. Should I set a price below the market clearing price? The price that I would teach in my econ class is, is gonna be the best for the here.

Here’s the price, here’s the demand. Where that intersects is your profit maximizer. But they don’t do that. Yeah. So before we get to Taylor Swift, let’s think about the restaurant that is letting there be a line around the block or the fad product that is, making it hard to get access to their to, to what they’re selling.

In those cases, I think one of the reasons is to bolster future demand. I see a line around the block for a restaurant I walk by, I might have never heard of the restaurant before, but I look and I think, oh man, that restaurant must be really good. Look at that line that. Might mean that I get turned into a future customer, or at least somebody who’s interested in going when the line might be a little shorter.

 

[35:45] Barry Ritholtz: Lots of buzz, lots of pr. Yeah. Just by the virtue that it looks like more people want a limited scarce resource. Correct. And that we see that throughout, with lots of fad products or with scarcity driving interest in demand. Now, I don’t think Taylor Swift has to do that. I think we all know who she is.

 

[36:09] Judd Kessler: I her fans are famously loyal and she doesn’t have to worry so much about getting more people to be interested in her as an artist. So she might have other considerations. She might think more about the equity and the efficiency of the allocation of her scarce resource. And one reason she might not charge very high prices, which might be hundreds of dollars for the cheapest ticket and thousands for the, the kind of closer to the stage seats is that she’s a billionaire.

Her Swifties, I’m sure she has billionaire fans ’cause she’s such a great artist. But most of her fans, a few thousand dollars is gonna be a big chunk of their, of their income for that month or, or more. And so it might not be a great look if she’s charging, what would be market clearing prices?

So for the Errors tour, she charges \$49 for the cheapest seats. The average ticket price was just above 200. And so at those prices there’s gonna be massive excess demand. but she might think that that’s more fair, that that might be not just ’cause it will make her look bad, but also, right.

She might want her fans to be able to come and only have to pay 49 or 99 or \$199. It, it might also be that those folks really, really want to go. So you think about efficiency, right? There’s no guarantee that the person who can pay the most actually values go into the concert the most. If her. Biggest fans have less income than the, the fans who can pay more, they’re gonna get pushed out whenever the market is relying exclusively on prices and you end up with a series of rentiers and, and middlemen that arguably contribute nothing positive to society.

And just exact a cost in the book. I don’t remember, was it the UK or or Europe, EU that they banned places like StubHub and those sort of ticket middlemen? Yeah, so this is one of the super interesting things about these hidden markets is that whenever you are giving folks access to a scarce resource at a below market price, and there is the opportunity to resell it, you will get middlemen, you will get speculators or brokers who come in exclusively to.

Try to extract surplus from the fact that the market is, letting the price kind of low initially. Now, there are economists who say, oh, that’s how it’s supposed to work. We’re supposed to get to market clearing prices. But that’s not what I argue because the seller has decided that she, in this case, wants to keep the price low.

She wants people, regular people to be able to buy for 49.99, \$199. So the middleman becomes a problem that the market has to address. One way to do that is ban resale, but then you get situations where this was the, London Olympics where there were seats that were empty to see some of the events when there were people standing outside the stadium who would desperately want to get in.

But because there’s no way for the tickets to be redistributed. you end up with empty seats, which is clearly inefficient. Well, you could redistribute them at a 10% markup or something like that. So there’s, and only once, you can’t just go 10, 10, 10, 10, 10. So this is the, the question is how do we innovate in this market?

So, in the book, I have some ideas about how to do it. I think one key problem with how a lot of live event tickets are being allocated is that they’re relying on first come first serve. ,first come, first serve races is the way that we do it on the internet now, and that allows the ticket brokers to program bots that will race faster than any human can.

And that is going to mean that the folks who are building the bots with the intention of getting a bunch of tickets and reselling them, are going to be at an advantage and be able to extract surplus. The FTC sued Ticketmaster a few months ago about this issue, basically letting. There be bots on the platform that extract too much, including their own bots that then resell at higher prices?

 

[40:59] Barry Ritholtz: Well, this is part of the problem, which is the, the secondary market platforms, the ones that are facilitating the trades between the, the brokers or, or regular people who buy tickets, but then can’t go and have to resell them. Those platforms are benefiting from the sales. They get hefty fees. I bought tickets recently and my calculation was that Ticketmaster, where I was reselling them, I was buying them and then I, I had friends who canceled.

 

[41:31] Judd Kessler: I had to resell them, was getting 30% of the transaction price. You would think the artists would be the one that should garner those gains. I’ve, I’ve heard, I, I love the expression, crypto is a solution in search of a problem. One would imagine that if the tickets, and I’m not a. Bitcoin, bro, but if you could sell tickets on the blockchain and there’s a smart contract built into that, that the artist gets half of the resale price, it changes the dynamics there a lot.

 

[42:07] Barry Ritholtz: So you could do that, but of course, if the artists wanted more, they could just raise the prices, right? They, they don’t need, they don’t need the resale market to extract. Surplus. Right, right. The, what I describe in the book, it doesn’t, you don’t need to go all the way to the blockchain for it. You do need names on tickets, meaning, oh, really?

 

[42:33] Judd Kessler: Yeah, because, right. So it’s ticket and Id not just a stand or, but yeah. And it seems complicated. ’cause then it’s like, oh, I’m going to the, it’s like going to the airport. I don’t wanna go to a concert to be like going to an airport. Although last concert I went to, I had to go through security anyway.

Right. So yeah. You from metal detector in Madison Square Garden for a Knick game. So, exactly. But, but no, your phone can identify who you are. If I tap my tickets through my phone, right. It can validate who I am. Facial recognition is getting very good. And so there’s clear the, service you use at the airport, if, if that’s something you’ve subscribed to.

They have similar style products that get used at venues. ,major League Baseball has had a version of this that they, rolled out at some point. And so validating that you are named on the ticket is easy to do, or getting easier. If you don’t have that, then you could put some cap on resale. But then it doesn’t, nothing stops anybody.

 

[43:48] Barry Ritholtz: If they have a physical ticket from doing what used to happen, which is standing outside the venue and selling them or, or selling them on some third party platform, that’s not tracking how much more the, the ticket is being paid for. Right. If it’s in cash, there’s no way to validate that.

 

[44:10] Judd Kessler: It’s only 10%. And then the other thing you have to do, and this is trickier, it is a different type of change, is get away from first come first serve. Because even if you have names on tickets, but you’re doing a first come first serve race, the folks who program the fastest bots are still gonna be able to extract surplus.

So could someone like Taylor Swift with an army of swifties, Hey, sign up here and it’s two tickets per name, and you have to be in their system for that long. And so at least. What is Madison Square Garden? 25,000 people, at least the first 10,000 tickets are gonna go to local people who are our fan base.

So the, for the Aris tour that I, that we started talking about, they did something similar where they did a, verified fan process. We had a validate who you were, and then folks came to the, website if they were lucky enough to, after being verified to win a lottery ticket. So, still a lottery, still a lottery, but then, then, but a fairer lottery.

Fairer lottery among people that they thought were, were real folks rather than, brokers. And then you had to wait. In a virtual queue and, and wait for some people hours, right? So what ended up happening was, they claim there were a lot of bot attacks. Try people that didn’t have the verified fan code that they needed to buy.

The tickets were coming and the systems ground to a halt and they crashed and people were waiting for hours. And so all of a sudden you had a first come, first serve line built into the system that was supposed to be a lottery, right? Where now you’re going through an ordeal. We talked about is the market easy?

It’s not easy if you have to wait online in front of your computer for hours. It’s almost as painful as having to wait outside the box office, which we used to do for hours. And so I think the solution is to actually lean more on the lottery and basically say, look, at some point we’re just gonna have you put your name in, say what your preferences are, what shows you want to see her perform at, which sections you’d be willing to buy tickets for.

And you’re gonna enter yourself in and we will tell you whether you won. But you don’t have to be there and pick the specific seats, right? You can say, I want, I prefer to be in the center and I’m willing to pay more, whatever. But, but that would make the participation in the market way easier. You could run whole tours or sections of tours at once.

You could reward folks who are more flexible. If I’m willing to see Taylor Swift perform at any venue on the East Coast, and I’ll go to any show and sit in any section, I am revealing myself to be a very big swifty that there is a, or a broker that wants to flip the ticket. Well, but if the names are on it, then I’m stuck.

 

[47:41] Barry Ritholtz: If I have to return, if I can’t go, I have to return it to the, to to Swift and she can give it to somebody on the wait list. But on the randomized wait list, right, like you could design this system to basically cut out. The brokers altogether. So the craziest thing about the brokers in the US, I heard stories from several people who said, rather than pay the markup in the US it was cheaper to secure tickets in Paris or London.

Fly over there, stay in a hotel for a few days, go to the show and go home. That was less expensive than paying full boat to any of the SeatGeek StubHub middlemen that they charge what the market will bear. They charge what the market will bear. They don’t add anything to the production. And yeah, it couldn’t be and you get a vacation out of it.

 

[48:43] Judd Kessler: You go to Paris to see the show coming up. We continue our conversation with Judd Kessler, professor at the Wharton School discussing Lucky by Design, the Hidden Economics. You need to get more of what you want. I’m Barry Ritholtz. You’re listening to Masters of Business on Bloomberg Radio.

 

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[49:25] Judd Kessler: So let’s talk a little bit about some things that are, are lucky by design. one of the things that, slightly before my time but certainly resonated was what took place during Vietnam with the draft lottery. some of the data was pretty shocking. At the time. African Americans made up 11% of the population.

They were 22% of the people. The, that were drafted and, and, and 22% of the casualties, two x the representative population, why did that go down that way? Yeah, so the situation that arises when you have these hidden markets is whoever’s in charge of the market gets to pick the rules and they might not be equitable or efficient or easy.

And the Vietnam draft before the lottery, which was introduced, to kind of correct some of these issues, had a bunch of loopholes in them in the system. So you could get a deferment for a various reasons. You could have some, some of your friends or family members, lobby folks on the local draft boards that were gonna decide which men of that age were gonna be sent to be known.

 

[50:41] Barry Ritholtz: So if you were politically connected, you had a better shot, politically connected, wealthier, whiter, those were the things that let. Folks, so, so you could have a medical disability, you could be in college or grad school and you could go to the National Guard. So you would be kind of stay stateside and not everybody gets, gets admitted to the National Guard.

 

[51:05] Judd Kessler: Correct. So having a, a kind of way to circumvent what would have been the task of going overseas. The loopholes were kind of played by a few, and, and a bunch of folks did not. Either have the means or have the connections or kind of know that this was a way out, did, did the lottery, and, and I, I learned a lot more than I knew about it in the book.

 

[51:34] Barry Ritholtz: So they just randomly picked birth dates, your month and day of birth, and that was the order in which people were drafted. How did that impact how things, yeah, so they proceeded, they, did it have the desired effect? Yes. Well it had the desired effect. There were still loopholes that you could use to get out of service, but it had the desired effect of 366 possible birth dates, including February 29th, because you didn’t wanna, leave those folks out.

 

[52:06] Judd Kessler: they got pulled in order randomly, one at a time. And then the way the lottery worked was they were just called down the number. So folks who were old enough to remember this at my father’s generation, this was a big deal. And you wanted to have a later, your, have your birth date picked later, so you were less likely to be called.

Now, again, still loopholes, but folks looking back, histor at at history say this helped facilitate the anti-war movement that eventually got the US out of Southeast Asia, because when you have well-educated, wealthier kind of folks who have a little bit more socioeconomic status, a little more power in society, when their sons started getting called up and this was a fair system and so it was harder to get out, then you saw a bunch more kind of influential folks saying, no, no, no, this is not a, a war we want to be in for the long term.

H,really, really interesting. Let, let’s talk about the area that you spent so much of your career on, which is organ donation and what those rules look like. To start, I have to ask about the numbers. There are a hundred thousand Americans. On an organ waiting list, organ transplant waiting list. I was shocked to read of a, that a hundred thousand 90% are waiting for a kidney.

That, that’s amazing. Yeah. so the, the reason for that is that there is dialysis for kidney failure, which can keep you alive for, for five or more years. the, you want to get a kidney as soon as possible. Dialysis is time intensive. It’s painful, it’s expensive. Although the cost is born by Medicare primarily after, a certain number of months that your, insurance, your private insurance covers it, and then it, it hand gets handed off to Medicare.

So there’s a lot of costs that go into it. But of course, if you don’t have a kidney that you can get as a, a recipient if there isn’t a donor kidney available, this is your only option. But this is why the waiting list for kidneys is so long, because folks can kind of wait for an extended period of time.

Think about another organ, like a liver. There is no dialysis. So at some point, if your liver function gets bad enough, you either need a transplant or done. That’s it. So this is why the, the kidney list goes on for so long, but it’s also a major financial burden in addition to all the emotional and, and, physical burden that the folks, the patients and their families face.

 

[55:07] Barry Ritholtz: the estimate suggests that it’s basically 1% of the federal budget is spent on end stage renal disease on, on folks who have kidney failure because Medicare is covering it. Medicare, a big chunk of the federal budget, and, this in particular, this line item is very expensive. And, and the crazy thing about this, the another data point that shocked me is sometimes an imperfect match shows up and you have the option of.

 

[55:37] Judd Kessler: rolling it over and saying, I’ll wait for the next one. 20% of the donated kidneys are just thrown away. This is the nature of these first come, first serve waiting lists. So there’s, when an organ becomes available, there’s a list that’s generated. It’s based on how close you are to the transplant center on the medical match between the organ donor and the recipient.

So there’s a bunch of considerations that come in, including how long you’ve been waiting. So if you’ve been waiting many years on dialysis, you’re gonna be closer to the top of the list. So an organ becomes available and you as the patient, with the help of your doctor, have to decide, is this gonna be an organ I take or not?

Some of the information about whether it’s a good match for you, we only can learn after the organ has been removed from the donor who’s passed away. And so. Now we have testing that’s getting done on the organ and there’s only so much 20 hours. Yes. You, you. So we have this testing getting done and folks are getting are learning or this, it could be this organ that you take or we can keep waiting and if you’re at the top of the list, maybe you get offered a bunch of organs.

And so it is hard to get through the whole list of 90 makes sense. 90,000 folks waiting for the organ. And so if the organ’s not great and we can’t identify somebody who might take it, gets wasted, gets escorted. I was kind of fascinated by the example you describe of what they do in Israel that if you check, I’m willing to be an organ donor three years prior, you are higher on the recipient list.

The theory being, hey, if everybody understands this, there’s that many more organs available for transplant. How has that, tested out in real life? And are any states here, putting that into work? Yeah. This, this was the research that got me into market design in particular. I was working with Al We started thinking about Oregons.

It’s, it has this nice feature of being a public good. If I agree to register as an organ donor, hopefully I won’t be in this situation, but my organs are available for transplant if I die in a way that that makes them available. When folks agree to register, they are making this scarce resource, the organ, they’re making it be less scarce.

 

[58:28] Barry Ritholtz: There are more organs available in expectation if folks are registered. So a bunch of countries, including Israel, but also Chile, China and Singapore, have built into their allocation rules an incentive to get people to provide this resource, to make it less scarce. And as you said, they. In Israel it’s three years.

 

[58:49] Judd Kessler: But can think about doing it different ways where if you are 18 years old and you’re going to the DMV and it’s the first time you’ve ever been asked, do you want to be an organ donor? You are rewarded if you say yes insofar as 50 years later, if you end up needing a kidney, you are gonna get priority over someone that’s kind of in the same situation as you.

 

[59:18] Barry Ritholtz: But when they were 18, said, no, no, no, I don’t wanna help out other people. And so we saw when we did our research that this incentive of being given the option to, to be a donor so that you can have priority later on, induced a lot more people to say they wanted to donate in a game that was modeled on that decision.

We looked at Israel and we saw when Israel implemented it, our estimate suggests about a hundred thousand more people. And Israel’s a small country, so. Right. That’s a lot. Yeah, it’s a lot. Signed up in the runup kind of before the, they, they had, they announced it and, and they were letting people sign up and, it was the date when if you signed up before you’d immediately have priority.

Oh, really? Otherwise you’d have to wait the three years to avoid the three years by the way, is, is to avoid a loophole where, right, I get sick, I need a kidney, and I go sign a donor card and then I have priority. That would totally undermine defeat the whole purpose. Right. Which we have research showing that that it would in fact undermine it.

 

[60:41] Judd Kessler: So, yeah. So then they, they implemented it and, and it seems to work. have any places in the US adopted this yet? No. So it would have to be, this is not a state by state thing that Oregon allocation systems are national, and so you would need the country as a whole, the, to have a, a change in the allocation rules.

So I have been advocating for that since we did that research over a decade ago. ,but we have not yet had movement on that, although I remain perennially optimistic because. It’s been many years and the problem isn’t getting better. So basically anything we can do to make this scarce resource less scarce is valuable.

I’m, I’m recalling Richard Thayer’s book Nudge, I think he co-wrote that with Kas. Sunstein. Yep. And there was questions about opt out, opt in, in other words, if everybody by default is an organ donor, but you have to opt out the, the reasons people didn’t want to do that, religious reasons and other, but, is that a potential solution?

So that was, there, that was like a, a great hope of behavioral economics was that these kinds of nudges in this space choice architecture. Yeah. So this is a ca There are many places where it works well. This is a case where it doesn’t, and the reason it doesn’t is that if you are. Say it’s an opt out system, so I should pause and say, we don’t, we can’t do that in the US without a major law change because Oregons fall under the gift act.

 

[62:29] Barry Ritholtz: So you have to actually make an affirmative statement that you want. Got it. you could make it salvage law, so if you’re not using it, we can take it. Right. But that’s, people might not wanna do that, but, but in the, in the countries that use these opt-out systems. The next of kin are still consulted.

 

[62:54] Judd Kessler: Right. So what the, the next of kin are told is that the person did not opt out and it def defaults basically to the next of kin to decide. And so what the research shows is that there just isn’t a delta between the countries that use opt in and the countries that use opt out because it always goes to, that affirmative decision.

Yeah. And when, when I’ve opted in I, I might be special ’cause I talk about it a lot. Right. But, but if you’ve opted in, then the next of kin see that, and, and they know that it was your wish, right? You did. You said at some point, yes, I want to register. They know that, that you want to do that.

And so if you pass away, they know that they should donate your organ. So they’re not gonna stand in the way. it, it is a binding agreement to be an organ donor, but of course if the next of kin don’t want it, right, they, they’re the only ones who are left around to sue the doctors. Right? Right.

 

[64:10] Barry Ritholtz: So, so, so, but it ends up being the case if you register. the vast majority of folks, who register have their organs, recovered. I, I found a lot of the book had really surprising themes and data. Doing your research, what’s the thing that surprised you most about market design? What, what sort of things did you go, huh?

 

[64:34] Judd Kessler: That, that doesn’t make any sense. ,so in the, at the end of the book, I talk about how you are a market designer. We’ve talked about you as a market participant. We’ve talked about others as market designers, but, hidden market is one where there’s a scarce resource that needs to get allocated without prices being what determines who gets what.

And if you think about it that way, you are a market designer for things like your time and attention, which lots of people want. They wanna have you respond to their emails, they want to get on your calendar, and you have to decide who you serve and who you don’t. That’s the, the preface. The thing that I learned was a set of market rules that I thought made no sense, which was how we used to a.

Water from the Colorado River Uhhuh. So for, for many years, the, the rule was first in time, first in right, which meant that the first folks to tap the river, to take water out to divert for their own purposes, kind of always got their allotment. So that was California in 1901, where they diverted water from the river to, turn a desert into farmland.

And then decades later when there was a drought and there was less water coming down the Colorado, the California got to keep the exact same allotment. And folks who tapped the river later, like the city of Phoenix, Arizona, which in 1901 was 10 or 15,000 people, but it’s now a million and a half, they had to cut back, even though for them it was drinking water.

 

[66:23] Barry Ritholtz: And for California it was to grow alfalfa to feed to. Livestock. So I looked at that and I thought, oh man, what a terrible, it’s not efficient. It’s not equitable. The race that determined who got what was run centuries ago. Yeah. A century ago. And, so I’m thinking, I’m feeling like, oh man, isn’t it great that we don’t use these kinds of systems anymore?

 

[66:51] Judd Kessler: And then I looked at my calendar and I saw my recurring meetings on there, and I thought, that’s first in time, first in, right, right. I’m doing what they were doing with the Colorado River, a meeting that I put on my calendar two years ago that takes Thursday at 11:00 AM every week, Thursday at 11:00 AM is being allocated to this, this project, even if it’s not the most efficient or equitable use of my time.

And I realize like, oh man there’s some stuff that’s sacrosanct like my teaching, but a lot of these recurring meetings, right. It, it’s not adhering to the efficiency and equity. Standards that I would want for for my allocations. Huh? Having read the book, I keep coming across things. As I was reading it, I was thinking about different things, and then either yesterday or this morning, I saw a Wall Street Journal piece.

The new mayor elect in New York wants to freeze prices, not just on apartments, but at Yankee Stadium on hotdog and beer. And there’s a couple of interesting issues that, hey, are people gonna get too drunk? But some other stadiums have done this and it’s worked out really well. When we look at price controls, how do you think about rent control for apartments or.

 

[68:19] Barry Ritholtz: Capping the price of hot dogs. Costco very famously Yeah. Has the dollar 50 hotdog for 36 years. how do you think about those different price mechanisms really as a form of branding or marketing? Yeah I, I love the Costco hotdog, so I can see the branding and marketing benefits there. I have thought a bunch about this because it is, it has the potential to create hidden markets or exacerbate hidden markets that are already there.

 

[68:51] Judd Kessler: So I recently wrote a piece about, affordable housing lotteries. So this is in New York City, and, and a bunch of major, cities around the world do this where they’ll, a new development will be built and you’ll have 30% of the units that are built are gonna be designated affordable.

Meaning folks are only expected to spend 30% of their income on housing, but there are. So many people who are finding rents hard to bear in New York City, in these other big cities that the lotteries get flooded. So in a last full year, there were about 6 million applicants for about 10,000 units.

So each lottery entry has a one in 600 chance of winning. And so as a result, folks are kind of constantly applying to these lotteries because that’s the only way that you’re gonna have a chance of getting something is if you’re applying to every possible lottery. But then there’s all these inefficiencies that can crop up.

Maybe I win a lottery, I get really lucky, but it’s, it’s not in my desirable, desired neighborhood. It was still a good lottery to enter ’cause better to get affordable housing than not. Maybe you win, in the neighborhood that I want and there’s no way, but there’s no way for us to switch. Right, right.

It’s kind of like golden handcuffs if you, for getting an affordable place. And the same thing with freezing rent, where the folks who are in. A rent controlled, a rent stabilized apartment that are going to be able to kind of keep paying that low rate. that’s great for them, but that doesn’t solve the bigger problem, right?

It’s, it’s affordability for the, the lucky few, but not for other folks who are moving to the city for the first time and, and want to make a life here. And so I, I can see why folks are eager to do that, but it’s hard to think about how to solve that problem without broader changes. Right? It doesn’t move the needle on the broader underlying problem.

It just, for that handful, it kind of raises the issue of, of nimbyism and just not building well since the great financial crisis, we’ve wildly underbuilt. Single family homes, affordable housing, go down the list. The focus has been on luxury properties. ’cause hey, there’s the most amount of economic benefit for the builders to put their time and energy into.

But this is definitely a supply and demand problem. Yeah. If you, if you want to bring cost down, you have to increase supply. And as an economist, we are trained to kind of think one step further. So I’d have to read the specific policy about the Yankee stadium, concessions.

 

[71:59] Barry Ritholtz: Right. But my, my first instinct would be, oh, if you cap the price of concessions, the logical next step is that the ticket price goes up a little bit. Right? Because like now all of a sudden it’s cheaper to go to to have the full night out at the city field or at Yankee Stadium. and so is there also gonna be a price control on the ticket or, or not?

 

[72:30] Judd Kessler: And then are we actually getting the gains that we want or. are we, are we getting nice sound bites? The, the thing about constructing your own market design is kind of interesting. I have a friend, Dave, who comes to New York a couple of times a quarter, works in finance, comes down from the Berkshires, and since he’s one person and doesn’t care which Broadway show he goes to, his market design hack is, he waits to, depending on the day, five minutes to seven or five minutes to eight.

The prices plummet. Yeah. ’cause they’re about to expire. Worthless. Oh, Hamilton, for half price. Let’s go. Wicked Half price. And he’s seen half the stuff on Broadway at shockingly reasonable prices. So as I was reading this, I, I thought about that and then I just hadn’t experience up in Newport. My first time visiting.

You wrote about this in the book about the restaurant reservations. And the waiting list. So we stayed at this hotel and there’s a super hot restaurant there, which I didn’t even know about. We made other reservations, for the weekend, and we stop in and there’s a line of people at five o’clock.

Waiting to sit at the bar. I said, we’re on the waiting list. He’s like, well, we have like a hundred seats, and the waiting list is about 400 long. I’m like, oh, forget it. And I said something to the Matre D and he said, why don’t you come down later and see what the line looks like? It usually moves pretty, and it was beautiful out.

You could see it at the bar. It was outdoors. So it was like we had a seven o’clock reservation. The, the, the gold. The gold, well done. and we walked and we were gonna walk to the restaurant. So we come down like six 30, no line at the bar. So I said, Hey, you’re not seeing people at the bar. He goes, no, there’s no line.

Get over there. And it was just simply being nice to the mare d and asking a question was, was that behavioral hack? Th this is learning about the market and the market rules and getting inside information about when, when is there less demand? What, what is the optimal strategy in this environment?

 

[75:05] Barry Ritholtz: It requires. Often doing a little bit of research, but it’s not unattainable. We all have the ability to think about the market rules, think about who will know the mare d if, if you’re polite to him or her, they might want you to come and give you the, the inside tips. ,but you have to, you kind of have to either do your own research or, or have folks advise you that you trust.

 

[75:35] Judd Kessler: and yeah, you can, you can often succeed in markets where other people fail. So I only have you for another 10 minutes, so let me jump to my favorite questions. Great. I ask all my guests. Starting with, tell us about your mentors who helped shape your career. Yeah, so the main one already mentioned him, so you can see how big an influence is.

Alvin Roth. So he took me in as a undergrad mentee. I, I had this story in the book and then it got cut for space. So I put it in the acknowledgements because it was such a formative experience for me where I was taking his PhD class. ,as a senior in undergrad. And so I was kind of a little bit out of place already and I wanted to write a senior thesis, the thing that kicked me off to this career and put me at this table talking to you Now, I had procrastinated asking him to be my advisor ’cause I was a little intimidated.

I felt a little outta place. ,and I came up to him on the day the form was due and I said, I wanna write a senior thesis. I would really like for you to advise it. the form is due today, but and this is the commitment. He was like, all right, why don’t I sign the form and we’ll see how it goes.

And he signed the form and the rest is history. but it was both the idea that I could be involved in learning new things that people didn’t know before, and do it with somebody who was willing to mentor me. That was a real, real big impact. Yeah, I can imagine. What are some of your favorite books?

What are you reading right now? So there, this is a, a pop econ book, my book, lucky by Design. It’s in the spirit of. ,another pop econ book about market design, which Al wrote, which is called Who Gets What and Why. And so for a while I didn’t wanna write another pop, market design book.

’cause I didn’t wanna step on his toes as, as a, that’s a great title. Who gets what, what and, and why. Yeah. And there’s a little in the text of my book and kind of, I dropped that every so often, that kind of question, that wording of that question. So that was an idea for me. This idea that you can communicate these market design concepts to regular folks.

I recommend my book, but also that book for folks who are interested in this. My colleague, whose office is next to mine, had a book that came out a few weeks before mine. It’s called Having It All Uhhuh. So my colleague is Corin Lo and I’m really enjoying that book. I’ve, I’ve heard about everything that was in it along, along the way.

 

[78:56] Barry Ritholtz: But, she writes about the time that. Women and their partners spend in doing household production and how society has progressed over decades where women have entered the workforce, but the norms at home about how time is household chores are split. ,it has not changed. So women end up really, yeah, the data in that book is quite shocking.

I had been hearing about it, as, as she was doing the research, but women, even in households where they earn more than their male partners will still be doing more household labor, all of that stuff in at home. So that in, in my book, I talk a little bit about how my wife and I manage our household, responsibilities using the concepts of market design to kind of avoid some of these systematic.

Problems that, that on average couples display. Huh? Really? I love to cook, but I tend to make a giant mess and my wife is convinced that it’s a purposeful strategy. So she cooks and it’s, I’m like, honey, we’re married 30 years. me. Is this how I roll? you gotta, yeah. Sometimes this is the, just my technique, but, but one of the things that, I talk about in the book and, and mu must you pour from so high, it’s olive oil splatters everywhere.

 

[80:27] Judd Kessler: It doesn’t, it doesn’t need that height. No. You gotta get that. You’re not aerating it. It’s, it’s part of the fun. ,but no, we, one of the strategies is having one person be in charge of the whole task from conception to execution. So that means if you are a cooking. You are also cleaning, right?

Would be part of that, right? ’cause then the incentives are aligned when, exactly. When you don’t do that, the person who cooks can leave a giant mess. The other person cleans that. That seems fair. But the decisions, the resentment comes in and why are you making such a big mess? And so it turns out it might be more efficient and equitable if.

One person does that whole task and somebody else does a whole other task. Right? You, you cook and I’ll do the laundry and clean the floors and that, that’s the the, the split. That might be fair. I’m usually out the door early or if I’m home, I’m at the desk writing. So she takes care of the dogs and during the weekend I try and give her a break and, and feed and walk the dogs early.

we’ve never discussed it. It just kind of worked out that way that sometimes that’s how it happens. But, be for those who are not finding it that easy, talking it out and kind of splitting the tasks is, is a, a effective strategy. Tell us what’s keeping you entertained these days? What are you watching or listening to?

Either podcasts or, or Amazon Prime, Netflix, whatever. So, I am a major fan of The Simpsons. Get outta here. Really? Yeah. I have always loved it. What are we up to? Season 40 something. It’s crazy’s almost. Yeah. And, but what has been great I found. Throughout my life rewatching old episodes that I kind of get jokes that I didn’t get before, which makes sense, right When I started watching.

Well you’re, it’s one of those things that works for just both kids and adults at the same time. Exactly. And so what has been phenomenal for me is exposing my kids to it for the first time. And I’ll say, I’ll make some reference to something and my kids will be like, what are you talking about?

 

[83:04] Barry Ritholtz: And then I’ll pull up the YouTube clip, I’ll show it to them, and then they’ll be like, oh, can can we watch that episode? So that has been phenomenal. Our final two questions. What sort of advice would you give to a recent college grad interested in a career in either market design or economics or academia?

 

[83:27] Judd Kessler: Yeah, so academia, there is a path forward for folks who have just graduated college and are thinking about this and that is to get some experience doing research to see if you like it, because the market for. Tenure track academic positions is getting tightened. We’re feeling the political wins as well as other things that’ve kind of, demographically there’s slightly smaller admission classes and I just read 17% drop in international students.

That’s a big number for a lot of the universities that have big PhD programs. The budgets for things like the PhD program will depend on their revenue streams. And foreign students coming for undergrad or for master’s degrees is a big revenue source for a lot of institutions. So all of that is to say that academia remains a great option for folks who are interested in it, but it’s getting harder and harder.

but if folks are interested getting, and they have not yet done it, they may have done it in undergrad, getting exposure to the research experience. There are predoctoral programs for folks who work with. Academic researchers on their projects and kind of get a sense of what it’s actually like. there are master’s programs that folks can participate in to see what the coursework is like.

 

[84:51] Barry Ritholtz: so that is definitely one way to go. There are kids who start earlier who start in college, but I, I was not one of them. Right. I told the story about senior year kind of realizing, oh, I want to do academia. So I hadn’t done any research assistant work until after I graduated, but that is, that was the next step for me was saying, okay, I want to see what this is like.

so it is a, is a path to do, but, but you should only do it if you really want to have a job that only someone with a PhD can have, because there are a lot of great jobs out there for folks interested in these topics. ,but not in academia. So, final question. What do about the world of market designs and economics or even academia that would’ve been useful 20 plus years ago when you were first getting started?

Yeah, I think. ,something I’ve recently developed in, in part researching for the book is just how diverse the hidden markets are that we participate in every day. As a young economist being trained in how markets worked, I thought basically exclusively about prices and the price mechanisms. That, that was how I was taught, that those were the markets I looked at.

And it’s only recently that I’ve realized markets are much broader than that, and thinking through the rules of those markets, how we could design them better, so that they’re more equitable and efficient and easy for participants. I, I think there’s a lot of gains for us to have as a society, so I’m excited to be working on it for the next 20 years, but if I, if I could go back 20 years and say, Hey, maybe focus on these markets a little bit more because there’s a lot of low hanging fruit where we could be making things better for everybody.

I, I, I wish I knew that and I, I want others to kind of look at these markets and say, yeah, this could be better. Fascinating, professor, really enjoyed the conversation. ,we have been speaking with Judd Kessler, professor of Behavioral Economics and market design at Wharton at the University of Pennsylvania, and author of the new book, lucky By Design, the Hidden Economics.

You need to Get More of What you Want. I would be remiss if I failed to thank the crack team that helps me put these conversations together each and every week. Alexis Noriega is my video producer. Sean Russo is my research assistant. Anna Luke is my producer. I’m Barry ols. You’ve been listening to Masters in Business on Bloomberg Radio.

 

 

~~~

 

 

 

The post Transcript: Judd Kessler, Lucky by Design appeared first on The Big Picture.

Trump Signals Potential Military Action Coming Against Cuba

Zero Hedge -

Trump Signals Potential Military Action Coming Against Cuba

Authored by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

President Donald Trump again suggested that U.S. military action could be coming against Cuba as his administration has placed economic pressure on the communist-ruled island nation.

U.S. President Donald Trump waves as he boards Air Force One at Pope Army Airfield at Fort Bragg, N.C., on Feb. 13, 2026, on his way to Palm Beach, Fla., to spend the weekend. Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

“I built this great military. I said, ‘You’ll never have to use it.' ​But sometimes you have to use it. And Cuba is ​next by the way,” Trump said at the Future Investment Initiative summit in Miami Beach, Florida, on March 27. He then added: “But pretend I didn’t ‌say ⁠that. Pretend I didn’t.”

After that, Trump said, “Cuba’s next.”

The Trump administration has opened up negotiations with elements of Cuba’s leadership ​in recent weeks, and the president has previously hinted that military action could be possible.

Cuban leader Miguel Díaz-Canel has acknowledged that the country is in talks with the U.S. military in a bid to avert potential military confrontation. Cuba’s economy has been battered ​by disruptions in ​oil imports, which ⁠it relies on to run power plants and transportation.

Díaz-Canel said in an address that the purpose of the talks was “to determine the willingness of both parties to take concrete actions for the benefit of the people of both countries,” coming after Cuba said it would release 51 people from prison.

Prior to the U.S. operation to capture then-Venezuelan regime leader Nicolás Maduro in January, Venezuela had ​provided much ⁠of Cuba’s oil needs, but Caracas’s new government has ended those shipments. Earlier in March, Trump had said Cuba ⁠may ​be subject to a “friendly takeover,” before ​saying, “It may not be a friendly takeover.”

“They have no money. They have no anything right now,” Trump also said outside the White House in February, referring to Cuba. “Maybe we’ll have a friendly takeover of Cuba.”

Trump has said that he would turn his attention to Cuba once the U.S. military operation in Iran is concluded.

We could do them all at the same time,” Trump said in remarks on March 6. “But bad things happen. If you watch countries over the years, you do them all too fast, bad things happen.”

Cuba has been an adversary of the United States for decades, although there have been intermittent periods of engagement between the two countries. The United States has kept in place a trade embargo on the island for decades, prohibiting American businesses from engaging with Cuban interests, in part because the country held Soviet-made nuclear missiles during the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis.

Díaz-Canel, 65, took over as Cuba’s leader in 2021 after the resignation of 89-year-old Raul Castro, whose brother Fidel Castro had led the regime from 1959 until 2008. Fidel Castro died in 2016.

In January, Maduro was taken to the United States during the military operation, and he currently faces federal drug-related charges. During an initial court hearing in January, Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, pleaded not guilty to the charges.

Since then, the U.S. government has moved to open up trade with Venezuela, including the easing of sanctions against the country’s state-run petroleum company earlier this month. The U.S. Treasury Department in February issued a license for the exploration, development, and production of oil and gas reserves in Venezuela.

Reuters contributed to this report.

Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 12:25

Sony "Temporarily Suspends" Memory Card Orders In Japan As Global Memory Crunch Worsens

Zero Hedge -

Sony "Temporarily Suspends" Memory Card Orders In Japan As Global Memory Crunch Worsens

First, Sony hiked PlayStation console prices, blaming "continued pressures in the global economic landscape." Now, Sony Japan is warning that the global memory shortage has become severe enough to force a temporary halt to new orders for memory cards, as supply can no longer keep up with production needs.

"Due to the global shortage of semiconductors (memory) and other factors, it is anticipated that supply will not meet demand for CFexpress memory cards and SD memory cards for the foreseeable future," Sony wrote in a press release.

Sony explained that, due to the memory shortage, it has "decided to temporarily suspend the acceptance of orders from our authorized dealers and from customers at the Sony Store."

The suspension covers Sony's CFexpress Type A cards in 240GB, 480GB, 960GB, and 1.92TB sizes, as well as CFexpress Type B cards in 240GB and 480GB. It also affects Sony's high-end SDXC/SDHC lineup, including 64GB, 128GB, and 256GB TOUGH models, as well as SF-M and SF-E series cards ranging from 64GB to 512GB.

What this suggests is that even some of the largest consumer electronics companies are not immune to the global memory shortage, which is rippling across the world due to surging demand from data centers.

In February, TrendForce raised its Q1 2026 DRAM contract price forecast to 90%-95% quarter-over-quarter, while forecasting NAND flash prices would jump 55%-60% over the same period. Phison's CEO warned the NAND shortage could force some consumer electronics companies to shutter production lines this year. 

Last week, Sony was forced to raise prices on PlayStation consoles, which infuriated some gamers.

"Hot take but I think things should get cheaper the more old that they are, crazy idea," one X user said.

We told readers in late January: "If you want to buy any consumer goods, PCs, or smartphones ... do it now, as it is for sure all the prices will be increased. Take an average PC, for example. The ratio of memory chips in the BoM [bill of materials] cost has increased from some 15% to almost 40%."

There is hope: We detailed last week that "Google's DeepSeek Moment," introducing TurboQuant, sent memory stocks spiraling lower because its compression algorithm for large language models and vector search engines shrinks the amount of memory needed (report here).

*  *  * With all this creatine malarkey, don't forget about SURVIVAL

Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 11:25

Dallas Fed Mfg Activity Holds Near One Year High Despite Plunge In Respondent Sentiment On Iran War

Zero Hedge -

Dallas Fed Mfg Activity Holds Near One Year High Despite Plunge In Respondent Sentiment On Iran War

The Dallas Fed Manufacturing Index continues to straddle the unchanged line, and despite a tiny dip from 0.2 in February, the highest print since July, to -0.2 in March, just below the 1.5 median estimate, the index remained near the highest level in a year and absent a modest and brief, post-Trump election spike, this remains one of the highest prints since mid-2022.

Curiously, the headline index barely dropped even though most index components (9 out of 12) showed a sharp decline, with just a handful rising fractionally.

But it was the survey responses that showed a decidedly negative view on the economy, except for respondents in Machinery Manufacturing. Below is a snapshot from the latest survey:

Beverage and tobacco product manufacturing

  • We have seen decreases in some of our costs, in particular agricultural raw materials. We have seen increases in the costs of our packaging materials, some of this related to increase in energy costs. We expect the Iran war to cause increases in energy costs for a period extending at least six months and potentially longer. This has increased our uncertainty for the rest of the year.

Chemical manufacturing

  • The Iran war and bottleneck in the Strait of Hormuz has caused significant supply chain disruption from China, allowing the U.S. chemicals sector to benefit from the supply bottleneck. We believe this to be short-lived and the situation to return to the lower demand levels in the latter half of 2026.

Computer and electronic product manufacturing

  • I am thinking about recommending to our board to close the company.
  • We have seen no impact yet from higher fuel prices. However, we expect to see this very soon, as our vendors will increase raw materials prices to include the increased cost for transportation.
  • We would like to see lower interest rates throughout this year.

Food manufacturing

  • Continuing confusion at the federal level, illiquid consumer base and falling federal government spending are not helping the food industry.
  • High density Hispanic channels are down. Costs are up, and freight is increasing fast. Tariff chaos has wreaked havoc with all of our export customers and seasoning suppliers.
  • We are worried about costs increasing due to fuel price increases. We are worried about a slowdown in the economy due to geopolitics.

Furniture and related product manufacturing

  • The Iran war and impact on energy prices are concerns as consumers have to deal with the rapid increase in energy cost. Hopefully it will moderate as the conflict curtails. That said, the more demoralizing impact of the constant circus out of Washington and inability to fund critical infrastructure like TSA is killing the animal spirits of our economy.

Machinery manufacturing

  • We are beating our competition due to the continued vertical integration plans that we are focused on implementing and improving. This requires a great deal of planning and money, but the payout is very sound.
  • Spring has sprung. It’s truly like the balm of Gilead. After an extended period of ailment and woe, the healing has occurred and we are on our way to greater things.  Our business growth thus far in 2026 is like a sweet fragrance that is healing our loss and hardship from prior years.
  • We are still seeing strong business activity with our backlog increasing.
  • Our company is seeing an increase in activity totally unrelated to the current geopolitical conditions. The effect of uncertainty delayed the start of a new manufacturing project in the U.S. (tariffs, capital expenditures) in 2025. Project 2025 is underway with a six-month delay and scaled back to accommodate a less ambitious picture for 2026. We are still recovering from 2025 plus a more conservative outlook for 2026. Things are trending upward in our field but at a much slower pace.

Miscellaneous manufacturing

  • Many external factors contributing to an unstable market.
  • If we could get our tariff reimbursement back, that would put us in a position to invest in growth. Without it, though, we don't have the capital to invest in growth.

Nonmetallic mineral product manufacturing

  • We are waiting for home building activity to pick up, which is dependent upon interest rates.

Paper manufacturing

  • Overall business still slow. Have achieved limited price reductions in some raw materials that are in an oversupply condition but not enough to keep up with the decline in selling prices of our products. We still see upward pressure on labor and benefits cost. Margins are reduced from 12 months ago.

Plastics and rubber products manufacturing

  • Importing from China is precarious. The costs of product and freight are higher and slower. Suppliers are apprehensive. Their costs are increasing, especially a certain raw material plastic impacted by petrochemicals affected by cost of oil.

Printing and related support activities

  • We have been stupid slow recently, slower than we can recall in many years. We continue to believe it’s from the chaos and confusion coming out of Washington. In addition, now with the Iran war, prices are going to shoot up due to shipping costs, and tariffs are still in effect. So, there is no telling when business will start to improve. We have some nice work coming in soon, but it's work we knew was coming.  We are seeing some improvement in our estimating backlog, which is a good sign of better days to come. The war is causing a disruption of raw materials prices as we are producing plastic-based products, virtually all of our raw materials are hydrocarbon based. Fifteen percent increases are normal.
Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 11:15

Iran Alleges Series Of 'False Flags' - Including On Kuwait Water Plant - Designed To Perpetuate War

Zero Hedge -

Iran Alleges Series Of 'False Flags' - Including On Kuwait Water Plant - Designed To Perpetuate War

Via The Cradle

The Iranian military denied on Monday being behind the recent attack which hit a desalination plant in Kuwait, labeling the strike a US-Israeli false-flag operation aimed at "destabilizing and destroying the region."

"The brutal aggression by the Zionist regime against the desalination facility in Kuwait, carried out in recent hours under the pretext of accusing the Islamic Republic of Iran, is a sign of the vileness and depravity of the Zionist occupiers," the Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters of the Iranian army said in a statement.

via AFP

"We declare that US bases, personnel, and their interests in the region, as well as the military, security, and economic infrastructure of the Zionist regime in the occupied Palestinian territories, remain powerful targets for us," it added. 

The Iranian military went on to urge "countries of West Asia must remain vigilant against the sedition of the US–Zionist axis aimed at destabilizing and destroying the region."

Regional states "must put an end to the presence of the criminal US army and occupying Zionists in the region," it stressed. The attack on the desalination plant took place on Sunday. 

"A service building at a power and water desalination plant was attacked as part of the Iranian aggression against the State of Kuwait, resulting in the death of an Indian worker and significant material damage to the building," said a spokesperson for the Kuwaiti Electricity Ministry.

This is not the first attack Tehran has labeled a false flag. Iran has also denied recent strikes on fuel tankers in Oman and a refinery in Iraq's Erbil, as well as one that targeted an Aramco facility in Saudi Arabia at the start of the month. 

US journalist Tucker Carlson reported earlier in March that Mossad agents were detained in Gulf states for planning bombings.

Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said on March 15 that the US has been using its new Lucas drone modeled after the Iranian Shahed – to carry out false-flag attacks in the region and attribute them to the Islamic Republic. 

Tehran has said only US and Israeli-linked military and economic assets in the Gulf will be struck by its forces. Iran is warning Gulf governments against allowing Washington to use their bases for attacks on the Islamic Republic. 

Iranian drone and missile strikes targeted the Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia on March 27, wounding at least 12 US troops and damaging aircraft and buildings.

A senior Iranian intelligence official told The Cradle on March 26 that the Islamic Republic is preparing a "strong response" against the UAE due to the “active role” it has played in the US-Israeli war on it.

Roughly 90% of Kuwait's drinking water comes from desalination.

"A decision has been made at the leadership level to end the weeks-long tolerance toward this country. In addition to US military barracks and bases in the UAE, which were targeted in Iran's defensive attacks, the Emiratis also provided some of their own air bases to the US to be used in attacking Iran," the intelligence officials went on to say, citing security reports. 

"The UAE is considered a foothold for Israel in the region," the source continued, adding that Abu Dhabi has "carried out misleading operations against Oman and other countries" – likely a reference to false-flag operations pinned on Iran.

Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 11:05

Watch Live: Fed Chair Powell Speaks At Harvard University

Zero Hedge -

Watch Live: Fed Chair Powell Speaks At Harvard University

Fed Chair Jerome Powell, who has just over a month left in his tenure as head of the world's most important central bank, speaks at 10:30am ET to the Harvard University Principles of Economics class. He is not expected to make monetary policy comments. 

As CNBC notes, this will be one of Powell’s final scheduled public appearances before his term ends in May. The discussion comes with markets anticipating the central bank will be on hold regarding interest rates through the end of the year.

In his most recent comments, Powell characterized the economy as growing at “a solid pace” and said he is not concerned with worries of stagflation, low growth with high inflation. However, he noted that policymakers are taking a cautious approach as multiple factors play out this year, including the Iran war, tariffs and a stagnant labor market; he flagged frustration over sticky non-housing services and made clear that, if inflation progress does not resume, cuts will not follow.

On rates, Powell kept optionality but did not open the door to near-term easing. He said policy was in a good place, noting it was around the high end of neutral, or only modestly restrictive. He said the labour market was being watched closely, particularly weak private payroll growth, but stopped short of suggesting employment risks now dominate the Fed’s policy balance.

On his role as Fed Chair, Powell said that if a successor had not been confirmed before his term as Chair ends in May, he would remain in place as Fed Chair "Pro Tern"; on his role as Governor beyond that, he said he has no intention of leaving the Board until the DoJ investigation is over, and he he had not yet decided whether he would stay on.

Powell’s term ends officially on May 15, and there is only one more policy meeting between now and then. However, it’s possible he will stay in the position longer if the Senate does not confirm is designated successor, former Governor Kevin Warsh.

Watch live:

Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 10:30

Vance Tops CPAC Straw Poll For 2028 GOP Presidential Nominee

Zero Hedge -

Vance Tops CPAC Straw Poll For 2028 GOP Presidential Nominee

Authored by Tom Gantert via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Vice President JD Vance is the leading candidate to take the Republican nomination for president in 2028, according to a straw poll taken at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) on March 28.

Vice President JD Vance waves as he departs Air Force Two at Rocky Mount-Wilson Regional Airport in Elm City, N.C., on March 13, 2026. Kent Nishimura/Getty Images

Vance received 53 percent of the support of the people who attended the annual conference in Grapevine, Texas. Secretary of State Marco Rubio was in second place at 35 percent. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Donald Trump Jr. came in at 2 percent each. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), War Secretary Pete Hegseth, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.), Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott all had 1 percent support.

The poll was announced at the end of the four-day CPAC conference.

In 2025, Vance won the CPAC straw poll for the 2028 Republican presidential nomination, receiving 61 percent support, and Steve Bannon took second place at 12 percent.

Vance also holds a big lead in the RealClearPolitics average of New Hampshire’s 2028 Republican presidential primary polls conducted in February 2026 and March 2026. Vance leads those polls at 47.3 percent, and Rubio is second at 17.3 percent. They are followed by former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley at 6.7 percent and DeSantis at 5.3 percent.

A presidential matchup between President Donald Trump and Haley had overwhelmingly favored Trump in CPAC’s February 2024 straw poll.

According to the poll, 94 percent of respondents said they would support Trump if a Republican primary were held that day, compared with 5 percent for Haley. Only 1 percent said they were undecided.

Trump is not eligible to run for president in 2028. The president did not attend the 2026 CPAC conference.

The recent CPAC straw poll supports earlier polling that had Vance as the leading candidate.

A September 2025 poll from YouGov showed Vance with a commanding early lead in the 2028 Republican presidential field. The survey had Vance as the top choice with 44 percent of Republican respondents, far ahead of any other potential candidate.

The rest of the field trailed in single digits; Trump Jr. drew about 10 percent, followed by DeSantis at roughly 8 percent and Rubio near 4 percent.

Vance talked to Fox News host Sean Hannity in November 2025 about running against Rubio in a presidential election.

In a segment that was aired separately from the full interview, Hannity said Rubio was Vance’s “best friend” in the administration, and Vance agreed.

“People have asked me, ‘Do you see Marco as a rival?’“ Vance said. ”First of all, if either one of us end up running, it’s a long ways in the future and none of us are entitled to it. It would be ridiculous for me to say, ‘Marco is a rival.’ No. No. No. Marco is a colleague.”

Tyler Durden Mon, 03/30/2026 - 10:25

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