Individual Economists

Jay Bhattacharya Will Bring Much-Needed Transparency To NIH

Zero Hedge -

Jay Bhattacharya Will Bring Much-Needed Transparency To NIH

Authored by Andrew Noymer via RealClearPolitics,

Dr. Jay Bhattacharya – the Stanford professor who is President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for the directorship of the National Institutes of Health – will bring transparency to this government agency, which sorely needs it.

I am an odd person to write a piece supporting Jay Bhattacharya’s nomination to lead the NIH. During the pandemic, I disagreed with Jay on COVID response. Jay supported the Great Barrington Declaration, while I favored a more active and engaged public health response, broadly although not completely along the lines of what was actually done in the United States. At times our differences were fundamental, other times pragmatic. Nonetheless, the differences of opinion between Jay and me on this subject were deep.

I debated Jay over Zoom on the topic of pandemic response, so I am well aware of his views on COVID response, as he is of mine. Our debate was not archived but was roughly similar to the Munk Debate I did with Jay’s Stanford colleague, John Ioannidis, and the SoHo Forum debate I did with Jay’s Great Barrington collaborator, Martin Kulldorff. These discussions are dated now, but they still reflect deep intellectual rifts that were brought into sharp relief by COVID and the collective response to it.

What makes my endorsement of Jay all the more peculiar is that he and I still disagree on COVID response. I know because I had the chance to talk with Jay and others in October at a conference that he organized at Stanford, at which I served as a panelist. What’s more, Jay invited me to this conference knowing that his and my opinions on this subject continue to diverge. Here and in other examples, I have seen Jay’s commitment to hearing diverse and disagreeing viewpoints. Jay is not one to try to muzzle a dissenting opinion.

The most important outstanding item on the COVID agenda is: Where did SARS-CoV-2 – the virus that causes COVID – come from? The pursuit of this question is where Jay Bhattacharya and I have the most in common. I am on the advisory board of Biosafety Now, an organization dedicated to increasing transparency in high-risk experiments on pathogens with the capacity to harm people. Jay was, for a time, also involved with BN.

The stakes could not be higher: COVID killed 15 million people worldwide in 2020 and hasn’t stopped killing, although thankfully at a lower rate more recently. Tracing the origins of epidemics is one of the cornerstones of public health. This task is woven into its very fabric, even from before John Snow’s founding the science of epidemiology in the 19th century, through to the work of American pioneer Theobald Smith in the 20th century, and to the present day. There are a number of questions about COVID that may point to SARS-CoV-2 having leaked from a lab.

The NIH has not heretofore acted with enough transparency on COVID origins. It was a funder of gain-of-function research on coronaviruses. Former NIH director Francis Collins and former director of NIAID (National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases), Anthony Fauci, were both major proponents of gain-of-function virology research, some of which is objectively dangerous enough to require the highest security (BSL-4) labs (think: labs inside an air lock and researchers in pressure suits). Grants from NIH in this area included funding the research of Peter Daszak of EcoHealth Alliance and Peter Hotez of the Baylor College of Medicine.

However, NIH has not acted to shed light on its actions, and has even stonewalled Congress.

There is nothing inherently political about wanting to know where COVID comes from; it is a core function of epidemiology. It is virologists – not those in epidemiology who wish to get to the bottom of COVID origins – who have politicized the COVID origins debate. As one of my colleagues at the University of California, Irvine condescendingly scolded me via email in 2022: “Suggesting lab leaks or worse (without any real evidence) feeds into the right-wing, anti-China conspiracies promoted by the Trump administration.” Other virologists have shown a remarkable incuriosity: “What difference does it make where it [SARS-CoV-2] came from?” asked another one of my University of California, Irvine colleagues, at a conference here. It makes an enormous difference. To avoid a repeat of COVID, we need better regulation of gain-of-function virology, and full transparency about coronavirus research in the years leading up to the pandemic.

Jay Bhattacharya understands that the NIH budget is public money, and that every American is a stakeholder in research performed by NIH, including the grants it makes to external scientists. He and I had, and continue to have, deep disagreements about the public health response to COVID, but the most important task facing NIH at the moment is give the world a full account of its involvement in research on the bat viruses that are the ancestor of the COVID virus, so we can better understand how SARS-CoV-2 jumped into humans. Transparency is a principal (and principled) solution to lack of public trust in institutions. I am confident that Jay’s pursuit of transparency can restore public trust in NIH.

Andrew Noymer is associate professor of population health and disease prevention in the Joe C. Wen School of Population & Public Health, University of California, Irvine.

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 19:15

10 Most Impressive Day One Reveals At CES 2025, Includes Jumping Hypercar

Zero Hedge -

10 Most Impressive Day One Reveals At CES 2025, Includes Jumping Hypercar

The Consumer Electronics Show (CES) 2025, the world's biggest tech show, officially began on Monday. 

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang kicked off the week by unveiling the latest products designed to advance gaming, autonomous vehicles, robotics, and agentic AI (key takeaways here). 

Along with Nvidia's new AI products, here are the ten most impressive unveils at CES 2025 so far (courtesy of Rowan Cheung):

A 360° AI-powered body scanning health mirror that can scan your heart, weight, and metabolic health

Roborock's Saros Z70: A robotic vacuum that has a mechanical arm for picking up objects in the way of cleaning the floor

Halliday Glasses: Smart glasses with a 3.5-inch internal monochrome display

Project DIGITS by NVIDIA: A $3000 personal supercomputer that's 1,000x the power of an average laptop

BYD's supercar, Yangwang U9, jumping 6 meters forward (over potholes)

A pen with three cameras at the tip that turns any surface of the world into a canvas with notes synced and recorded to your phone

NVIDIA Cosmos: An open source, open weight Video World Model designed for the upcoming age of robotics source

Portalgraph: A 3D projector that projects VR space into the real world

Samsung Vision AI TVs that come with real-time translation, the ability to adapt to user preferences, AI upscaling, and instant content summaries

NVIDIA GB200 NVL2: A datacenter superchip with 72 Blackwell GPUs, 1.4 exaFLOPS, and 130 transistors

This is only day one. 

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 18:50

The End Of Economic Growth: Energy Shortages Drive Global Downturn

Zero Hedge -

The End Of Economic Growth: Energy Shortages Drive Global Downturn

Authored by Gail Tverberg via Our Finite World,

  • The global economy is expected to enter a recession in 2025 due to a decline in the availability of crude oil, coal, and uranium relative to population.

  • Government attempts to stimulate the economy through debt will lead to inflation rather than growth, as energy supplies are constrained.

  • High interest rates, low energy prices, and a decline in industrial output will characterize the economic landscape in 2025.

As the world enters 2025, the critical issue we are facing is Peak Crude Oil, relative to population. Crude oil has fallen from as much as .46 gallons per person, which was quite common before the pandemic, to close to .42 gallons per person recently (Figure 1).

Figure 1. World crude oil production per person, based on data of the US EIA. Data through September 2024.

People have a misimpression regarding how world peak oil can be expected to behave. The world economy has continued to grow, but now it is beginning to move in the direction of contraction due to an inadequate supply of crude oil. In fact, it is not just an inadequate crude oil supply, but also an inadequate supply of coal (per person) and an inadequate supply of uranium.

We know that when a boat changes direction, this causes turbulence in the water. This is similar to the problems we are currently seeing in the world economy. Physics dictates that the economy needs to shrink in size to match its energy resources, but no country wants to be a part of this shrinkage. This indirectly leads to major changes in elected leadership and to increased interest in war-like behavior. Strangely enough, it also seems to lead to higher long-term interest rates, as well.

In this post, I share a few thoughts on what might lie ahead for us in 2025, in the light of the hidden inadequate world energy supply. I am predicting major turbulence, but not that things fall apart completely. Stock markets will tend to do poorly; interest rates will remain high; oil and other energy prices will stay around current levels, or fall.

[1] I expect that the general trend in 2025 will be toward world recession.

With less oil (and coal and uranium) relative to population, the world can be expected to produce fewer goods and services per person. In some sense, people will generally become poorer. For example, fewer people will be able to afford new cars or new homes.

This trend toward lower purchasing-power tends to be concentrated in certain groups such as young people, farmers, and recent immigrants. As a result, older people who are well-off or firmly established may be able to mostly ignore this issue.

While the shift toward a poorer world has partially been hidden, it has been a huge factor in allowing Donald Trump to be voted back into power. Major shifts in leadership are taking place elsewhere, as well, as an increasing share of citizens become unhappy with the current situation.

[2] Many governments will try to hide recessionary tendencies by issuing more debt to stimulate their economies.

In the past, adding debt was found to be effective way of stimulating the world economy because energy supplies supporting the world economy were not seriously constrained. It was possible to add new energy supplies, quite inexpensively. The combination of additional inexpensive energy supplies and additional “demand” (provided by the added debt) allowed the total quantity of goods and services produced to be increased. Once energy supplies started to become seriously constrained (about 2023), this technique started to work far less well. If energy production is constrained, the likely impact of added debt will be added inflation.

The problem is that if added government debt doesn’t really add inexpensive energy, it will instead create more purchasing power relative to the same number, or a smaller number, of finished goods and services available. I believe that in 2025, we are heading into a situation where ramping up governmental debt will mostly lead to inflation in the cost of finished goods and services.

[3] Energy prices are likely to remain too low for fossil fuel and uranium producers to raise investments from their current low levels.

Recession and low prices tend to go together. While there may be occasional spikes in oil and other energy prices, 2025 is likely to bring oil and other energy prices that are, on average, no higher than those of 2024, adjusted for the overall increase in prices due to inflation. With generally low prices, producers will cut back on new investment. This will cause production to fall further.

[4] I expect “gluts” of many energy-related items in 2025.

Gluts are related to recession and low prices for producers. The underlying problem is that a significant share of the population finds that finished goods, made with energy products and investment at current interest rates, are too expensive to buy.

Even farmers are affected by low prices, just as they were back at the time of the Great Depression. We can think of food as an energy product that is eaten by people. Farmers find that their return on farm investment is too low, and that their implied wages are low. Low income for farmers around the world feeds back through the system as low buying power for new farm equipment, and for buying goods and services in general.

In 2025, I expect there will be a glut of crude oil due to a lack of purchasing power of many poor people around the world. My forecast is similar to the forecast of the IEA that predicts an oversupply of oil in 2025. Also, a December 2024 article in mining.com says, “A glut of coal in China is set to push falling prices even lower.”

Even wind turbines and solar panels can reach an oversupply point. According to one article, number of Chine solar panel builders seems to be far too high for world demand, leading to a potential shake out. As the share of wind and solar power added to the electric grid increases, the frequency of low or negative payment for wholesale electric power increases. This makes adding more wind turbines and solar panels problematic, after a certain point. We don’t yet have a cost-effective way of storing intermittent electricity for months on end. This seems to be part of the reason why there recently were no bidders for producing more offshore wind power in Denmark.

[5] I expect long-term interest rates to remain high. This will be a problem for new investments of all kinds and for governmental borrowing.

In Section 2 of this post, I tried to explain that a peak-oil impact is likely to be inflation. This occurs because ramping up debt to try to stimulate the economy no longer works to get additional cheap energy products from the ground. Instead of getting as many finished goods and services as hoped for, the added debt tends to produce inflation instead.

I believe that we are reaching a stage of fossil-fuel depletion where it is becoming increasingly difficult to ramp up production, even with added investment. Because of the added debt added in an attempt to work around depletion, inflation in the price of finished goods and services can be expected. Investors are beginning to see long-term inflation as a likely problem. As a result, they are starting to demand higher long-term interest rates to compensate for the expected decrease in buying power.

Figure 2. Interest rates on 10-year US Treasury Securities, in a chart by the Federal Reserve of St. Louis. Data is through December 30, 2024.

Figure 2 shows that US long-term interest rates have varied widely. There was a period of generally dropping long-term interest rates from 1981 to 2020. Starting in late 2020, interest rates began to rise; in 2023 and 2024 they have been in the 4% to 5% range. These relatively high rates are occurring because lenders are demanding higher long-term interest rates in response to higher inflation rates.

Because of inflationary pressures, I expect that long-term interest rates will tend to stay at today’s high level in 2025; they may even rise further. These continued high interest rates will become a problem for many families wanting to purchase a home because US home mortgage rates rise and fall with US 10-year interest rates. Often families are faced with both high home prices and high interest rates. This combination makes mortgage costs a problem for many families.

Governments are also adversely affected. They tend to hold large amounts of debt that they have accumulated over a period or years. Up until 2020, much of this added debt often was at a very low interest rate. As more long-term debt at higher interest rates is added, annual interest rate payments tend to rise rapidly. This can cause a need to raise taxes. Japan, especially, would be affected by higher interest rates because of its high level of government debt, relative to GDP.

Higher interest rates will also raise costs for citizens trying to finance the purchase of homes, and for investors wanting to build wind turbines or solar panels. In fact, investment in any kind of factory, pipelines, or electricity transmission will tend to become more expensive.

In a sense, we seem to be seeing the peak oil problem shifting in a way that affects interest rates and the economy in general. Either higher interest rates or higher oil prices will tend to push the economy toward recession. We tend to look for rising prices to signal an oil supply problem, but perhaps that only works when there is excessive demand. If the problem is really inadequate oil supply, perhaps we should look for higher long-term interest rates, instead.

[6] Industry around the world is likely to be hit especially hard by recessionary tendencies.

Industry requires investment. Higher interest rates make new industrial investment more expensive. Industry is also a heavy user of energy products. Putting these observations together, it shouldn’t come as a surprise if new industrial investment is one of the first places to be cut back because of peak oil supply.

Figure 3. Expected world industrial output, based on calculations I made with using industrial output and population forecasts from detailed output data provided with the article Recalibration of limits to growth: An update of the World3 model” by Arjuna Nebel et al.

The original 1972 Limits to Growth analysis, in its base model, suggested that resources would start to run short about now. The variables in this model were recently recalibrated in the article, “Recalibration of limits to growth: An update of the World3 model.” Based on the detailed data given in the endnotes to the article, I calculated the expected industrialization per capita shown in Figure 3.

Based on Figure 3, this model shows that industrialization per person reached a peak in 2017. Peak industrialization (total, not per capita) occurred in 2018, which coincides with peak crude oil extraction (not per capita).

The model seems to suggest that after an inflection point in 2023 (that is 2024 and after), industrialization will start to fall more steeply. The model shows a decrease in production per capita of 4.1% in 2024 and of 5.3% in 2025. Such decreases would push the world economy toward recession.

The model suggests that people, on average, are getting poorer in terms of the quantity of goods and services they can afford to buy. New cars, motorcycles, and homes are becoming less affordable. Heavily industrialized countries, such as China, South Korea, and Germany are likely to be especially affected by headwinds to industrialization. I expect that the economic problems in these countries will continue and are likely to worsen in 2025.

[7] The US has tried to isolate itself from this nearly worldwide recession. I expect that during 2025, the US will increasingly slip into recession, as well.

There are several reasons for this belief:

(a) The US is heavily dependent upon imports of raw material. China is restricting exports of critical minerals used by the US. This will make it very difficult or impossible to ramp up high tech industries as planned.

(b) The US is heavily dependent on Russia for supplies of enriched uranium. Any plan for added nuclear electricity needs to consider where the uranium to power these plants will come from. It also needs to consider how this uranium will be enriched to the required concentration of uranium-235.

(c) If the US can ramp up crude oil and natural gas production, this can perhaps counter this trend toward US and world recession. Unfortunately, recent US oil supply has not been ramping up; instead its production has been fairly flat. Natural gas production has actually been lower since February 2024. Plans have been made to rapidly ramp up US liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports, but these plans cannot work if the US natural gas supply is already decreasing.

(d) The US government has had an advantage in borrowing because the US dollar is the world’s reserve currency. As such, the US is, in some sense, the first borrower, pulling the rest of the world along. The US, by making its short term interest rates higher than those of many other countries, was able to largely escape recession 2023 and 2024. Additional investment was attracted to the US by these higher interest rates. But the US cannot follow this strategy indefinitely. For one thing, a high US dollar handicaps exports. For another, interest costs on government debt become burdensome.

(e) Donald Trump has plans to close inefficient parts of government. These changes, if enacted, will reduce “demand” within the economy because workers in these sectors will lose their jobs. Over the longer term, these changes might be beneficial, but over the short term, they are likely to be recessionary.

(f) It is difficult for the US to do much better than the rest of the world. If the rest of the world is in recession, the US will tend to head in that direction, as well.

[8] I expect more conflict in 2025, but today’s wars will not look much like World War I or World War II.

Today, not many countries are able to build huge fleets of fighter airplanes. Even building drones and bombs seems to require supply lines that extend around the world. So, instead, wars are being fought in non-military ways, such as with sanctions and tariffs.

I expect that this trend away from direct military conflict will continue, with more novel approaches such as internet interference and stealth damage to infrastructure taking place instead.

I do not expect that nuclear bombs will be used, even when there is direct conflict between powerful adversaries. For one thing, uranium in these bombs is needed for other purposes. For another, there is too much chance of retaliation.

[9] I expect many types of capital gains will be low in 2025.

The situation we are facing now is the opposite of the drop in long-term interest rates observed between 1981 and 2020, in Figure (2), above. This historical drop in interest rates made it possible for businesses to more easily finance new investments. It also made it possible for individual citizens to be able to afford more homes and cars. It should not be surprising that this period has been a time of rising stock market prices, especially in the United States.

The world’s economic problem is that it no longer has the tailwind of falling long-term interest rates. Instead, rising long-term interest rates are becoming a headwind. Home prices are un-affordably high for most potential buyers at today’s interest rates. A similar problem faces those hoping to purchase agricultural equipment and farmland at today’s high prices and high interest rates.

We should not be surprised if home and farm prices stabilize and begin to fall. Prices of shares of stock are likely to encounter similar headwinds. Prices of derivative investments may perform even worse than the shares themselves.

Recently, a great deal of the strength of the US market has been in a few stocks. Artificial Intelligence (AI) needs to very quickly provide a lot of benefit to the stock market as a whole for this to change. I cannot imagine this happening. With the US slipping toward recession, I expect that the US stock market will at best plateau in 2025.

[10] With less energy available and higher interest rates on government debt, I expect to see more government organizations disbanding.

It takes energy, directly and indirectly, to operate any kind of governmental organization. Eliminating governmental organizations is one way of saving energy. This is what happened when the central government of the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. I would think that parallel kinds of changes could start happening in the next few years, in many parts of the world.

At some time, perhaps as soon as 2025, the European Union could collapse. If things are going badly for many member countries, they will be less willing to support the European Union with their tax revenues. Other organizations that seem like they could be in peril include NATO and the World Trade Organization.

In some ways, such shrinkage would be in parallel with Trump’s plan for eliminating unnecessary governmental organizations within the United States. All these organizations require energy; cutting their number would go some way toward reducing crude oil and other energy consumption.

[11] It is possible that the world economy will eventually get itself out of its apparent trend toward recession, but I am afraid this will happen long after 2025.

We know that the world economy tends to operate in cycles. We would like to believe that the apparent current down-cycle is just temporary, but we can’t know this for sure. Physics tells us that we need energy supplies of the right kind for any action that contributes to GDP. Running short of energy supplies is therefore a very worrisome condition.

We also know that there are major inefficiencies in current approaches. For example, oil extraction leaves much of the oil resource in place. In theory, AI could greatly improve extraction techniques.

We also know that uranium consumption is terribly inefficient. M. King Hubbert thought that nuclear energy using uranium had amazing potential, but most of this potential remains untapped. Perhaps AI could help in this regard, also. If nothing else, perhaps recycling spent fuel could be made less expensive and problematic.

Figure 4. Figure from Hubbert’s 1956 paper, Nuclear Energy and the Fossil Fuels.

We can’t know what lies ahead. There may be a “religious” ending to our current predicament that we are discounting that is actually the “right story.” Or there may be a “technofix” solution that allows us to avert collapse or catastrophe. But for now, how the current down-cycle will end remains a major cause for concern.

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 18:25

Preemptive Strikes On Iran Will Be A 'Real Possibility' Under Trump: Officials

Zero Hedge -

Preemptive Strikes On Iran Will Be A 'Real Possibility' Under Trump: Officials

Starting in December the head of the UN nuclear watchdog, IAEA, warned that Iran is "dramatically" accelerating enrichment close to the roughly 90% level which is weapons-grade.

On Tuesday President Emmanuel Macron called Iran the main "strategic and security challenge" for France and Europe. "The acceleration of the nuclear program leads us nearly to the point of no return," he told an annual conference of French ambassadors.

However, it remains anything but clear whether the Islamic Republic has actually decided to build a nuclear weapon, something recently (and surprisingly) acknowledged by the CIA.

Via Reuters

Still, the constant daily headlines over Iran's enrichment advances set things up for a collision course with the Trump administration after the Jan.20 inauguration.

According to a fresh report in Axios, the chances of Trump ordering a preemptive military strike on Iran's nuclear facilities are now higher than ever:

Iran's recent nuclear advances give President-elect Trump a crucial decision to make in his first months in office: Try to neutralize the threat through negotiations and pressure, or order a military strike.

Trump's decision in 2018 to withdraw from an Obama-era nuclear deal prompted Tehran to accelerate its nuclear program, such that it's now a de facto "nuclear threshold state." Officials and diplomats from the U.S., EU and Israel all told Axios they expect Trump to face an Iran crisis in 2025.

Trump and his advisers are planning to quickly return to the "maximum pressure" campaign they conducted against Iran between 2018 and 2020.

Axios further underscores that "Several Trump advisers privately concede Iran's program is now so far along that the strategy might not be effective. That makes a military option a real possibility."

But it remains that US attacks on the Islamic Republic would only surely accelerate possible efforts to achieve a bomb. Much of the country's nuclear infrastructure and technology is now likely underground, which would make it hard for any external power to destroy everything.

Though in prior years the Ayatollahs have condemned nuclear weapons as 'unIslamic' - if the Iranians perceive themselves under direct threat of annihilation, they would urgently feel the need to rapidly have a bomb.

Below is more from Axios on Trump expressing his position on the prior campaign trail:

Back in October, Trump criticized President Biden for advising Israel not to bomb Iran’s nuclear facilities. “They asked him, what do you think about Iran, would you hit Iran? And he goes, ‘As long as they don’t hit the nuclear stuff.’ That’s the thing you want to hit, right?” Trump said at a campaign rally.

It's no secret that Iran has also long been engaged in sanctions-busting activity regarding global oil transit, and selling to powerful BRICS countries like China. Trump is expected to get 'tough' on that as well, and he has already nominated plenty of Iran hawks to top foreign policy positions.

But from Tehran's perspective, the problem remains that Israel possesses a large undeclared nuclear arsenal, which has long been an 'open secret'. If Iran does pursue a nuke, it will be to establish a balance of power and deterrent against Israel and the United States in the region.

Ironically if Trump does order 'preemptive' military strikes on Iran in the name of stopping WMD, this will be deeply contradictory to his stated aims on the campaign trail of wanting to stop and reign in US wars abroad.

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 18:00

January 6, 2025: The Real Insurrection Begins

Zero Hedge -

January 6, 2025: The Real Insurrection Begins

Authored by Julie Kelly via 'Declassified',

The original Jan 6 narrative died in spectacular fashion. Monday's proceedings represent the start of a legitimate insurrection against a corrupt, unaccountable, and failed government in Washington...

It’s a plot twist even the most creative—or diabolical—fiction writer never would have imagined.

On Monday afternoon, Vice President Kamala Harris will preside over Congressional proceedings to certify the election of Donald Trump, who defeated her in the 2024 presidential election.

The moment will represent one of many surreal moments on a date—January 6—that the Biden regime, news media, and Democratic voters consider one of the darkest times in American history. In fact, Harris herself categorizes January 6, 2021 alongside September 11, 2001 and December 7, 1941 as events she claims “remind all who have lived through them where they were…when our democracy came under assault.”

Four years ago, the ruling class in Washington attempted to commit what all evidence now points to as the premeditated murder of the MAGA movement. Powerful political and government saboteurs aligned to stoke the events of January 6, a four-hour disturbance those same saboteurs immediately branded an “insurrection.”

The talking points, in fact, went out before the first protester entered the building. As the chaos still was unfolding at the Capitol, Joe Biden gave a nationwide address—he allegedly had planned to talk about the economy at 4 p.m. but in yet another fortuitous coincidence for Democrats, Biden quickly pivoted to a lengthy rant about the protest—to denounce the “insurrection.”

The intervening four years has consisted of a nonstop loop of January 6-related propaganda and lawfare intended to keep Trump and his movement from rising from the political dead.

Trump and MAGA Left for Dead

And they pounded as many nails as they could into what they believed was the J6 coffin. Trump was impeached for the second time. FBI Director Christopher Wray designated January 6 an act of domestic terror thereby branding anyone who participated in the Capitol protest a domestic terrorist.

The Department of Justice opened what would become the biggest criminal investigation in its history resulting in the arrest of nearly 1,600 individuals, most of whom supported Donald Trump, and the jailing of several hundred even those convicted of petty misdemeanors.

Attorney General Merrick Garland opened a separate investigation into Trump over the events of January 6; top Trump confidants and associates were dragged before a D.C. grand jury to testify and produce records. DC judges routinely denied privilege claims.

For the first time in history, a sitting president (Biden) repeatedly denied executive privilege requests from his predecessor. And for the first time in history, a former president faced a criminal indictment related to his conduct in office. (In another history-making event, Special Counsel Jack Smith also indicted Trump in the so-called classified documents case but that involved allegations after he left the White House.)

Two weeks after Smith charged Trump in a four-count indictment for Jan 6, Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis also indicted Trump and more than a dozen of his advisors in a massive RICO case tied to Jan 6. Other state officials charged Trump supporters in the so-called “fake electors” plan tied to Jan 6.

Congress did its part, too. The January 6 Select Committee offered a steady primetime infusion of J6 propaganda; crying police officers and turncoat White House aides testified in the hope of providing the emotional punch necessary to convince the most stubborn MAGA loyalists that their leader posed a dire threat to the future of “democracy.”

No good anti-Trump operation succeeds, of course, without the complicity of the media. The amount of ink and airtime and clicks dedicated to all things January 6 may never be fully accounted for; books were written, documentaries were made. There is no question the collective coverage of January 6 rivals coverage of every war and legitimate terror attack in American history.

The exhaustive operation—the multi-faceted lawfare, the Congressional theater, the media fixation—was supposed to end with Trump sitting in jail, a final death blow to his political future and the populist movement he created.

But it all came crashing down on November 5, 2024.

A “Revolt Against Civil Authority or an Established Government”

Trump won in decisive fashion as the majority of Americans sent a big middle finger tied to a wrecking ball to the halls of power in Washington. The failures of the Biden regime unquestionably contributed to Trump’s victory but so too did the relentless pursuit of the president, his family, his allies, his businesses, and his voters.

The January 6 operation backfired in a spectacular way. Instead of representing one of the darkest days in history, January 6 to millions of Americans instead embodies the corrupt, bloodthirsty, and vengeful nature of the existing government and its media bootlickers, which foreshadowed the sort of banana republic-style rule seen in Marxist hellholes not in the United States.

And voters acted accordingly at the ballot box.

So Monday, January 6, 2025 signals the start of a real insurrection, which is defined as a “revolt against civil authority or an established government” not an unarmed and at points unruly demonstration inside a government building on a Wednesday afternoon.

Should Trump fulfill his boldest campaign pledges, federal agencies in the nation’s capital will never be the same. Permanent changes in now untrusted institutions such as the DOJ, the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security and, sadly, the Department of Defense among others promise to gut the rogue, unelected bureaucracy that really runs the show.

The Trump Insurrection already is paying dividends as employees flee agencies soon to be led by sworn foes of the Deep State. Chris Wray resigned ahead of his scheduled ten-year tenure as FBI boss.

Even more gratifying is that the architects of the original “insurrection” narrative are sweating and on the run. Reports indicate top DOJ officials including Jack Smith and prosecutors in the D.C. U.S. Attorney’s office, which has been responsible for the “Capitol Siege” prosecution, are lawyering up and worried about going bankrupt—fitting karma for the hell they’ve inflicted on others.

Ditto for Liz Cheney and members of the J6 select committee. Cheney currently is the subject of a congressional investigation related to her role as vice chairman of the committee; a Trump DOJ is expected to look into her conduct as well. J6 Committee chairman Bennie Thomspon, who along with Cheney just received a medal from Biden, said he would accept a presidential pardon.

The career of Fani Willis has entered death twitch stage; not only did a Georgia appellate court put an end to her involvement in the RICO case but her personal foibles will long be a source of mockery and ridicule.

Overall, the Democratic Party is in disarray, as listless and useless as Joe Biden, who is expected to issue more broad-based pardons to cover up the criminality of the entire J6 operation against Trump.

And the media is just crushed that their propaganda and teeth-gnashing and hyperbole didn’t work. In a Sunday morning interview, CNN’s Jake Tapper asked Senator Amy Klobuchar if “the horrible things that happened that day are being forgotten?"

Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on “Face the Nation” Sunday morning lamented about the “denial of what happened on Jan 6.”

But perhaps no one said it better than the New York Times’ Peter Baker, a reliable regime mouthpiece. “If you woke up on January 7th of 2021 with the glass still shattered on the floor of the Capitol and the smoke rising and the troops are surrounding the building, and you had said that Donald Trump will be president in four years, nobody would have believed that."

Correct, Peter. The death of Trump and MAGA, as the old saying goes, was greatly exaggerated. And you did it to yourself.

Now bring on the real insurrection.

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 17:40

"How About If We Buy Alaska?" Top Canadian Politician Eyes Takeover Of U.S. States As Battle With Trump Escalates

Zero Hedge -

"How About If We Buy Alaska?" Top Canadian Politician Eyes Takeover Of U.S. States As Battle With Trump Escalates

Canadians are touchy, eh?

Ontario Premier Doug Ford fired back at President-elect Donald Trump’s calls for Canada to join the United States as its 51st state by countering with a surprising offer: for the Great White North to purchase Alaska and Minnesota.

"You know something, to the president, I'll make him a counteroffer: How about if we buy Alaska and throw in Minnesota and Minneapolis at the same time?" Ford told reporters during a Monday press conference, addressing Trump’s looming threat of U.S. tariffs against Canada.

Trump, speaking at a freewheeling press conference at Mar-a-Lago on Tuesday, expressed frustration over how the U.S. is treated by Canada, claiming that its biggest trading partner is subsidized by approximately $200 billion annually.

They don't essentially have a military,” Trump said. “They have a very small military. They rely on our military. It's all fine but, you know, they have to pay for that. It's very unfair. Something has to be done.

We are going to put very serious tariffs on Mexico and Canada,” the president-elect continued, before turning his focus to the surge of illegal substances flowing from Canada into the U.S. “They come through Canada, too. The drugs coming through are at record numbers,” Trump said. “So we are going to make up for that by putting tariffs on Mexico and Canada. Substantial tariffs. We want to get along with everybody but, you know, it takes two to tango.”

Trump also reiterated his wish for former NHL star Wayne Gretzky to consider running for Canada’s prime minister, suggesting that he could be a viable successor to Trudeau.

In November, Trump raised alarms in both Canada and Mexico with a threat to impose 25 percent tariffs unless the two countries helped curb the migrant and fentanyl crises. The threat prompted Trudeau to immediately travel to Mar-a-Lago for talks on how the U.S. and Canada could avoid a tariff war.

Ford, however, maintains that Mexico and China—not Canada—are responsible for the trade issues Trump has singled out.

“I’ve talked to so many governors and congresspeople and senators and never once did they say Canada is the problem,” Ford told CNN on Monday. “I’ll tell you who the problem is: China is the problem. China shipping in cheap parts, putting them through Mexico. Mexico slapping on a 'Made in Mexico' sticker and shipping up through the U.S. and Canada. [It’s] costing American and Canadian jobs.”

Recently resigning PM Justin Trudeau, meanwhile, took to X on Tuesday to reaffirm his staunch opposition to Trump’s proposal, declaring, “There isn’t a snowball’s chance in hell that Canada would become part of the United States.”

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 17:20

The Climate Agenda's March Through The Institutions: Can It Be Stopped?

Zero Hedge -

The Climate Agenda's March Through The Institutions: Can It Be Stopped?

Authored by Tilak K. Doshi via RealClearEnergy,

A spate of stories in the media recently provides a remarkable illustration of how the globalist policy agenda of the climate industrial complex has captured key international institutions and perverted their original organizational aims. From initially serving broad, laudable objectives for the welfare of their constituents, these institutions have been subverted over the years to serve the insistent pseudoscientific claims of climate alarmists.

The corruption of global institutions has, in turn, led to significant opposition that is becoming apparent. There is the prospect of an incoming Trump administration that is avowedly sceptical of the claims of an alleged climate crisis and is intent on exiting the UN’s Paris Agreement and its “net zero by 2050” policy target for a second time. This presents a welcome challenge to these corrupt institutions. Will President Trump and some of the populist parties in Europe be capable of countering the entrenched globalist climate agenda?

The World Bank

On 17th October, Oxfam published a report that shockingly found that up to $41 billion in World Bank climate finance —nearly 40% of all climate funds disbursed by the Bank over the past seven years— is “unaccounted for between the time projects were approved and when they closed.” In other words, no one knows how the money was used. There is no paper trail revealing where the money went or what the accomplished results were.

Green cronyism, ranging from the Solyndra debacle – the waste of almost half a billion dollars of taxpayers’ money on a failed solar farm project under President Obama’s watch -- to President Biden’s duplicitously-named Inflation Reduction Act which will unleash an estimated $1 trillion deluge of subsidies on favored “green” industries is nothing new. But it is instructive to trace the World Bank’s decline from its honorable founding objectives to its current status as yet another institution advocating green causes.

Dr. Jim Yong Kim, reflecting the progressive virtues of President Obama who appointed him as president of the World Bank in 2012, imposed a ban on the financing of coal-fired power stations in 2013. This was followed by a ban on investments in all new upstream oil and gas resource development projects. The distinguished economist Deepak Lal,  a former Research Administrator of the Bank, remarked that Dr. Kim incredulously “over-ruled the cost-benefit estimates of coal-based power over solar and wind-based power generation produced by his own economic staff, justifying this by reference to a wish to cut global emissions of greenhouse gases.”

The World Bank’s objections to the use of fossil fuels despite their importance to economic growth and poverty alleviation – which constitute its foundational institutional objectives -- can be traced to the intellectual evolution of its management under James Wolfensohn during his decade as president (1995 - 2005). Mr. Wolfensohn traced the arc from the old regime to the new. The old was represented by the “Washington consensus” of free markets, liberal trading regimes, sound money and entrepreneurship associated with the classical liberalism of Adam Smith.

The new intellectual environment of the World Bank’s management – personified by Joseph Stiglitz, Chief Economist of the World Bank (1997 - 2000) -- was defined by the theoretical failures of the free market, especially in accounting for the alleged negative climate impacts of fossil fuel use. Stiglitz, a climate alarmist, wrote in a 2015 court brief for a failed climate lawsuit brought on behalf of a group of children against the US Federal government that “fossil fuel-based economies imposed ‘incalculable’ costs on society and shifting to clean energy will pay off.”

Rupert Darwall, a former adviser to the United Kingdom’s Chancellor of the Exchequer and author of Green Tyranny, encapsulates the betrayal of the World Bank to its founding objectives as follows:

The World Bank’s mission has been subverted by green ideologues who assert that a low-carbon world benefits the world’s poor but fail to acknowledge that making energy much more costly increases poverty. The World Bank tags itself as ‘working for a world free of poverty’…In making its choice between development and sustainability, the World Bank has decided it is going to try and ‘save the planet’ on the backs of the poor.

By abdicating its founding principles for alleviating global poverty, the World Bank has taken a lead role among multilateral financial institutions in denying vast financial resources to poorer countries. It has hypocritically vetoed the right of developing countries to adopt the path of economic growth and environmental improvement that the now-rich countries had taken up successfully since the industrial revolution two centuries ago. The Bank’s obsessive support for intermittent, low-yield renewable energy such as solar and wind power comes at the cost of its central charter to help the poor, an outcome that can only be described as egregiously unjust.

The UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

The UN IPCC issued a news release on December 6th prior to the start of a “scoping” meeting in Kuala Lumpur of over 230 experts from 70 countries to draft outlines of working group contributions to the UN IPCC’s 7th Assessment Report (to be completed in 2029). In the press release, the IPCC claimed that human combustion of fossil fuels “has resulted in more frequent and more intense extreme weather events that have caused increasingly dangerous impacts on nature and people in every region of the world.” This is contrary to the IPCC’s position hitherto, which is that almost all types of extreme weather events cannot be attributed with confidence to human activity. 

The position of the IPCC regarding the lack of any link between climate change and extreme weather events is contrary to the almost daily headlines in the mainstream media attributing specific adverse weather events to “climate change.”  The work of eminent climate policy analysts  Steve Koonin and Roger Pielke Jr. has done much to expose the pseudoscientific nature of what has been called “attribution studies.” These typically involve researchers who apply their climate models and historical observations to conclude that any particular weather event (say a hurricane or a drought) was made “more likely” or “more severe” by some magnitude in percentage units due to “human influence” (referring to the combustion of fossil fuels).

Based on the dubious claims of “attribution science,” New York Gov. Kathy Hochul signed a climate law last week that will require companies operating in New York state responsible for large amounts of planet-warming pollution to contribute to climate damage repair efforts. Under the new state law, companies responsible for the bulk of emissions from 2000 to 2018 will be on the hook for some $3 billion a year over the next 25 years.

Steve Koonin cites the World Meteorological Organization that states that “any single event, such as tropical cyclone cannot be attributed to human-induced climate change, given the state of scientific understanding.” The IPCC’s “Special Report on Extreme Events” states that “Many weather and climate extremes are the result of natural climate variability…Even if there were no anthropogenic changes in climate, a wide variety of natural weather and climate extremes would still occur.”

Nonetheless, international organizations such as the World Bank and the IPCC have been increasingly politicized to serve climate hysteria. In this context, Chris Morrison of The Daily Sceptic finds that “[f]ears are growing that the IPCC could water down or even ditch its current finding that almost all types of extreme weather events have little or no sign of past human involvement, or any going forward to 2100.”

International Energy Agency

On December 23rd, U.S. Senator John Barrasso (R-WY), ranking member of the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, released a report documenting how the International Energy Agency “has moved away from its energy security mission to become an “energy transition” cheerleader.” The report finds that the “French President Macron’s observation that IEA has become the ‘armed wing for implementing the Paris Agreement’ is regrettably true. With the many serious energy security challenges facing the world, however, IEA should not be a partisan cheerleader. What the world needs from IEA—and what it is not receiving now—is sober and unbiased analyses and projections that educate and inform policymakers and investors. IEA needs to remember why it was established and return to its energy security mission.”

The divergence of the IEA away from its original mission to advise policymakers in its member countries with sound analysis of trends in global energy supply and demand to becoming a “cheerleader” for radical net zero emission policy targets has not gone unnoticed over recent years. I have written on the ideological approach adopted by the IEA in its advocacy for green causes here, here, and here.

When the organization issued a call for the cessation of all future investments in developing fossil fuel resources in May 2021, this is what I wrote:

It is a month since the International Energy Agency – the rich world’s energy advisory body established in the wake of the oil price shock of 1973 — issued its astonishing report calling for the end to all new investments in oil and gas (let alone coal) from 2021. As expected, the IEA “road-map” elicited widespread media coverage and strong reactions, ranging from gushing support from those convinced of a “climate emergency” to outright dismissal, as in the case of the Saudi oil minister who called the report a sequel to “La La Land.” 

When ideological advocacy becomes the measure of achievement for the IEA, the loss of credibility and soundness of its policy advice is only to be expected.  The IEA’s messianic fervour for green technologies such as solar and wind power, “green” hydrogen, batteries and electric vehicles prevents it from asking basic questions. If it is true that drastically cutting back on fossil fuels is consistent with higher economic growth and increased productive employment, why does the IEA recommend policymakers to force countries along “net-zero” pathways? Surely, if replacing fossil fuels with wind and solar energy and electric vehicles promote growth and employment, then wouldn’t countries such as China and India naturally race towards this best of all possible worlds without expensive green subsidies and punitive anti-fossil fuel policies?

The Trumpian Revolution Looms

Non-profit organizations reflect the needs of their funding members, and organizations such as the World Bank, IPCC and IEA are no different. As their funding is primarily from the US and EU, it is not surprising that they manifest the “climate emergency” predilections of the Biden administration and the largely left-socialist West European governments which see climate change as an existential threat and a national security priority. In taking up the mantle of green advocacy on behalf of their paymasters, these organizations have lost all credibility as independent and objective advisors for their member countries.

The climate industrial complex fears the prospect of the Trump administration’s pullout of the Paris agreement for the second time. Politico, a reliable mouthpiece for the climate establishment, expressed these fears soon after Mr. Trump’s election victory: “The world is bracing for President-elect Donald Trump to withdraw the U.S. from the Paris climate agreement for the second time — only this time, he could move faster and with less restraint.” In Europe, the emergence of populist parties  have been partly propelled by the widespread rejection by EU citizens of the onerous fiscal burdens imposed by green policies. 

The seismic change in policy direction that a second term “drill, baby, drill” Trump administration promises for the global climate juggernaut – represented by the three leading international agencies covered here – can only be seen as hopeful as we look forward to positive developments in energy policy in 2025.

Dr. Tilak K. Doshi is an economist, a former contributor to Forbes and a member of the C02 Coalition. Follow him on Substack and X.

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 17:00

AI Chatbot Startup Anthropic Valued At $60bln In New Funding Round

Zero Hedge -

AI Chatbot Startup Anthropic Valued At $60bln In New Funding Round

AI startup Anthropic, another OpenAI ChatGPT rival with its AI assistant Claude, is reportedly in talks to raise $2 billion, which would value the chatbot startup at a whopping $60 billion. 

According to The Wall Street Journal, sources familiar with the matter revealed that Lightspeed Venture Partners is leading the funding round. 

Last fall, Amazon agreed to invest up to $4 billion in Anthropic for a minority stake in the startup, bringing its total investment since 2023 to $8 billion. Amazon's November investment was a convertible note. 

Other investors in Anthropic include Google, Menlo Ventures, Wisdom Ventures, Ripple Impact Investments, and Factorial Funds.

Several months ago, Microsoft-backed OpenAI raised $6.6 billion at a $157 billion valuation. Last month, Elon Musk's xAI raised $6 billion from BlackRock, Fidelity, and Sequoia Capital at a $40 billion valuation. 

An individual familiar with Anthropic's annualized revenue—an extrapolation of the next 12 months' revenue based on recent sales—stated that this figure recently reached $875 million.

The Anthropic deal would make it the fifth-most valuable US startup, trailing SpaceX, OpenAI, Stripe, and Databricks, according to data from CB Insights. The company was valued at $18 billion in a round led by Menlo Ventures last year.

Meanwhile, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei penned an op-ed in WSJ on Monday, emphasizing, "The nations that are first to build powerful AI systems will gain a strategic advantage over its development," adding, "Incoming Trump administration officials can take steps to ensure the U.S. and its allies lead in developing this technology." 

Sustaining these lofty valuations is troubling, given that many of these AI startups are operating at a loss. OpenAI's Sam Altman admitted on X on Sunday that his company continues to lose money.

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 16:40

Trump Not Ruling Out Using Military Force To Reclaim Panama Canal, Greenland

Zero Hedge -

Trump Not Ruling Out Using Military Force To Reclaim Panama Canal, Greenland

Authored by Emel Akan via The Epoch Times,

President-elect Donald Trump said on Tuesday that he would not rule out the possibility of using military force to take control of the Panama Canal and Greenland, emphasizing their strategic significance to U.S. national security.

Speaking at a press conference at his Mar-a-Lago resort, Trump said that he “cannot assure” that military or economic coercion would not be used to take control of these two strategic locations, in response to a question.

“No, I can’t assure you on either of those two, but I can say this, we need them for economic security,” Trump responded.

“It might be that you'll have to do something. Look, the Panama Canal is vital to our country. It’s being operated by China. We gave the Panama Canal to Panama. We didn’t give it to China, and they’ve abused it. They’ve abused that gift.

Trump in recent social media posts expressed his frustration over China’s expanding influence in the canal, despite it having been built by the United States more than 110 years ago at great financial and human cost.

The Panama Canal, which opened in 1914 after a decade of construction led by the United States, was gradually handed back to Panama under a 1977 treaty signed by President Jimmy Carter.

During his speech, Trump criticized Carter for handing over the Panama Canal.

“Carter gave it to them for $1. ... I thought it was a terrible thing to do. It was the most expensive structure ever built in the history of our country,” Trump said.

The president-elect said that this action cost Carter the election in 1980.

In 1999, Panama assumed full control of the canal, which has since become one of the busiest shipping routes in the world, connecting the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.

Construction of the canal, however, came at a high human cost. Official estimates suggest that around 5,600 workers died during the U.S.-led effort to build the canal. Additionally, nearly 22,000 people are estimated to have died during an earlier French-led construction attempt.

Trump reiterated that 38,000 people died during the waterway’s construction.

“They laugh at us because they think we’re stupid, but we’re not stupid anymore. So the Panama Canal is under discussion with them right now,” Trump said during the press conference.

Trump also said the United States needs Greenland, an autonomous territory of Denmark, for “national security purposes.”

“People have been talking about it for a long time. You have approximately 45,000 people there,” Trump said.

“They should give it up, because we need it for national security. That’s for the free world. I’m talking about protecting the free world.

“You have China ships all over the place. You have Russian ships all over the place. We’re not letting that happen. We’re not letting it happen.”

Trump questioned whether Denmark has any right over Greenland.

“The people are going to probably vote for independence or to come into the United States,” he said.

If Denmark rejected the U.S. proposal, Trump said, he “would tariff Denmark at a very high level.”

In recent social media posts, Trump has floated the idea of taking control of Greenland and the Panama Canal and proposed making Canada the 51st state in order to protect U.S. national security.

Under the separate 1977 Neutrality Treaty, Panama and the United States agreed that the waterway would remain permanently neutral with fair access and tolls for all countries. Hence, any Chinese challenge to this pact may require the United States to employ military force.

In recent years, U.S. military commanders have expressed grave concern over Beijing’s increasing military and technology presence in Latin America, including Panama.

In 2017, Panama cut long-standing diplomatic ties with Taiwan to establish closer ties with China. It also became the first Latin American country to endorse Beijing’s infrastructure plan, the Belt and Road Initiative. Since then, Chinese companies have been heavily involved in logistics and infrastructure projects near the canal, including port operations on both ends of the waterway.

Trump earlier criticized what he called the “exorbitant” fees Panama has been charging the United States, its Navy, and U.S. corporations for passage.

On Dec. 22, Panamanian President José Raúl Mulino responded to Trump’s social media posts about the Panama Canal by saying that “every square meter” of the canal belongs to his country.

In a televised address, Mulino said that Panama’s sovereignty and independence were non-negotiable.

Trump quickly replied, “We’ll see about that!”

In a Dec. 22 post, Trump also shared an image of the U.S. flag flying over the Panama Canal with the text “Welcome to the United States Canal!”

Trump’s offer to buy Greenland is not new. He first proposed the idea in 2019, but it was rejected by Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen, who called it “absurd.”

In response, Trump canceled a planned visit to Denmark, calling Frederiksen’s remarks “nasty” and “inappropriate.”

Trump later indicated to reporters that his idea was normal by referencing past U.S. efforts to purchase the strategic island, including Harry Truman’s proposal to buy it for $100 million in 1946.

According to Trump’s former national security adviser Robert O’Brien, the territory is expected to become increasingly important in the coming years.

“It’s strategically very important to the Arctic, which is going to be the critical battleground of the future,” O’Brien told Fox News on Dec. 29, adding that “the Russians and Chinese are all over the Arctic” and that Denmark is unable to adequately defend the vast island.

On Dec. 22, Trump announced his appointment of PayPal co-founder Ken Howery as the U.S. ambassador to Denmark. In his message, Trump reiterated his idea to take ownership of Greenland.

“For purposes of National Security and Freedom throughout the World, the United States of America feels that the ownership and control of Greenland is an absolute necessity,” he wrote.

Howery, who served as the U.S. ambassador to Sweden during Trump’s first term, will represent U.S. interests in the region, Trump said.

Hours after Trump’s statement, the Danish government announced a substantial increase in defense spending for Greenland, pledging at least $1.5 billion.

Greenlandic Prime Minister Mute Egede said in a statement: “Greenland is ours. We are not for sale and will never be for sale.

“We must not lose our long struggle for freedom.”

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 16:20

Russia Has Blunted Major Ukrainian Counterattack In Kursk

Zero Hedge -

Russia Has Blunted Major Ukrainian Counterattack In Kursk

Ukraine's military is on day three of what has been called a major counterattack in Russia's Kursk region, which the Kremlin now claims is being beaten back.

A Monday Russian defense ministry statement said that Moscow forces "continue to rout the Ukrainian Armed Forces’ formations in the Kursk Region." On the same day, President Zelensky issued a written statement to the Ukrainian presidency's website which reiterated he is "bringing the war back to Russia".

Via Associated Press

"We continue to maintain a buffer zone on Russian territory, actively destroying Russian military potential there," Zelensky stated.

"The Russians have deployed their strong units to the Kursk region," he continued. "Soldiers from North Korea are involved there. What's important is that the occupier cannot currently redirect all this force to other directions, in particular the Donetsk, Sumy, Kharkiv or Zaporizhzhia regions."

"I thank all our warriors who are bringing the war back to Russia and providing Ukraine with greater security and strength," he added.

But Russia has claimed to have already destroyed at least ten tanks and inflicted heavy losses on the invading Ukrainians.

"According to the ministry, the Ukrainian advance focused on the town of Bolshoye Soldatskoye, and Russian forces have destroyed Kiev’s main strike group with the support of the Air Force and artillery," writes RT.

"In the past 24 hours, the Ukrainian military has lost a total 485 troops, ten tanks, seven infantry fighting vehicles, five armored personnel carriers, an artillery gun, an electronic warfare system and multiple other vehicles in Kursk Region," the statement added. The assertions can't be independently verified.

The Kursk offensive, which has been ongoing all the way back to early August, has been Zelensky's riskiest gambit of the nearly three-year long war yet. 

Ukrainian officials have articulated the goals of the operation in various ways, but it was hoped that Russia would be forced to divert many of its troops from the Donbass.

So far this doesn't seemed to have happened in large numbers, and Moscow has reportedly used North Korean troops to bolster security forces in Kursk.

Ukraine, Washington and NATO have all vehemently condemned the presence of North Korean troops in the conflict, but Russia has said it struck a mutual defense pact with Pyongyang this past summer, and that the Kursk offensive constitutes the Russian homeland coming under direct threat which justifies the foreign assistance.

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 15:45

159 Democrats Voted Against Laken Riley Bill To Detain Criminal Illegals

Zero Hedge -

159 Democrats Voted Against Laken Riley Bill To Detain Criminal Illegals

Authored by Stacey Robinson via The Epoch Times,

The House of Representatives has passed the Laken Riley Act with a vote of 264–159. Almost all Republicans and 48 Democrats united to push the bill through the lower chamber of Congress.

The legislation requires the Department of Homeland Security to detain illegal immigrants who have committed certain crimes, such as theft, burglary, or shoplifting.

It also allows states to sue the federal government for injunctive relief over “certain immigration-related decisions or alleged failures” if they resulted in harm to that state.

These can include the failure to detain an individual who has already been ordered to be deported, or neglecting to fulfill vetting requirements for immigrants seeking to enter the United States.

“The tragic and preventable murder of Laken Riley serves as a stark reminder of the consequences of failed leadership,” Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-Minn.) said at a press conference before the vote.

“The Laken Riley Act is a direct step toward ensuring that criminal illegal aliens are swiftly and permanently removed from our communities and our country,”

The bill passed the House last year but was never brought to the floor by the Senate. Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) noted that 170 House Democrats had voted against the passage of the bill at that time, saying he felt they had “put politics ahead of principle.”

Democrats opposing the bill on the floor of Congress today called the bill overbroad and likely to sweep up illegal immigrants who are wrongly arrested, even if they have lived in the United States for years.

“This is a radical departure from current law, which since 1996 has generally required mandatory detention only for persons who are criminally convicted or who admit to having committed certain serious crimes,” Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) said. 

Raskin also objected to stipulations allowing suit of the government, saying that approach violates the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in the U.S. v. Texas case, which said states have no standing to bring legal actions over federal implementation of public policy.

Rep. Tom McClintock (R-Calif.) countered that the High Court’s majority decision, written by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, said that such suits would require a change in law.

“That is exactly what this bill does, by the book,” he said.

Shortly before the House vote, Sen. Katie Britt (R-Ala.) introduced the companion Senate bill, which is likely to pass as the GOP holds a 53–47 majority in the upper chamber.

House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) told reporters on Jan 7 that Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.) is eager to push for a vote on the bill in the Senate “as early as this week.”

The Laken Riley Act draws its name from a 22-year-old Georgia nursing student who was assaulted and murdered in February 2024 while out for a morning run near the University of Georgia campus.

The murderer, Jose Antonio Ibarra, had come into the United States illegally and had been arrested and released multiple times for theft. He was arrested for the murder after surveillance footage showed him throwing a jacket containing strands of Riley’s hair into a dumpster near his apartment.

On Nov. 20, 2024, Ibarra was convicted on 10 counts including murder and aggravated assault with intent to rape. He was sentenced to life in prison without parole.

Riley’s murder also resulted in a push for state legislation tightening Georgia’s laws against illegal immigrants, which Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp signed into law on May 1, 2024.

That law, known as Track and Report, requires authorities to verify the immigration status of any individual over the age of 18 if they are arrested or detained on suspicion of having committed a crime.

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 15:25

Sam Altman: OpenAI Is "Losing Money", Shares 2025 Agentic AI Outlook

Zero Hedge -

Sam Altman: OpenAI Is "Losing Money", Shares 2025 Agentic AI Outlook

The road to profitability for OpenAI remains uncertain as the CEO, Sam Altman, revealed on Sunday on X, "Insane thing: We are currently losing money on OpenAI Pro Subscriptions!" He blamed the high usage of ChatGPT. 

"I personally chose the price," Altman told one X user, adding, "and thought we would make some money."

OpenAI launched ChatGPT Pro last year and charges $2,400 for unlimited access to the company's top model, OpenAI o1, as well as to o1-mini, GPT-4o, and Advanced Voice. 

"While this problem demonstrates the product's popularity, it's not clear how OpenAI is meant to turn a profit, much less operate its costly business sustainably," Goldman Sean Johnstone told clients on Tuesday. 

Tech Crunch noted, "OpenAI isn't profitable, despite having raised around $20 billion since its founding. The company reportedly expected losses of about $5 billion on revenue of $3.7 billion last year." 

... and this all seems sustainable. 

Separately, Altman posted a blog entry on Sunday reflecting on the company's journey over the past few years, highlighting that AI agents will be joining the US workforce this year. 

"We believe that, in 2025, we may see the first AI agents "join the workforce" and materially change the output of companies. We continue to believe that iteratively putting great tools in the hands of people leads to great, broadly-distributed outcomes," he said. 

In November, Bloomberg cited multiple sources that said OpenAI was preparing to launch a new AI agent codenamed "Operator" that can use a computer to take actions on a person's behalf, such as helping with IT support, HR support, sales and marketing, travel booking, and writing code. 

OpenAI's eventual release of an Agentic AI tool could generate additional revenue streams for the money-losing startup, which is backed by Microsoft, as the development of more advanced models becomes increasingly expensive. 

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 15:05

The Truth About America's Crumbling Infrastructure

Zero Hedge -

The Truth About America's Crumbling Infrastructure

Authored by Michael Snyder via TheMostImportantNews.com,

Signs that we were once a truly great nation are all around us.  Previous generations of Americans handed us the keys to the most magnificent domestic infrastructure that the world had ever seen, but now it is literally falling apart all around us.  Thousands of bridges are structurally deficient and there have already been some very high profile collapses.  Hundreds of thousands of miles of highways and roads in the United States are in very poor shape.  Aging sewer systems are leaking raw sewage all over the place, and children are being slowly poisoned by lead pipes that desperately need to be replaced.  The power grid is hopelessly overloaded and is extremely vulnerable.  Meanwhile, our ports, our dams, our subway systems, our bus terminals and our airports are crumbling right in front of our eyes.  The truth is that our nation’s infrastructure says a lot about who we are.  

So what does America’s crumbling infrastructure say about us?  Sadly, it says that we are a rusting, crumbling, decaying leftover from a better, more prosperous time.

When Joe Biden took office in 2021, his administration told us that “investment in U.S. infrastructure as a share of GDP has fallen by more than 40 percent since the 1960s”…

Public investment in U.S. infrastructure as a share of GDP has fallen by more than 40 percent since the 1960s. The World Economic Forum now ranks the United States 13th when it comes to the overall quality of infrastructure.

So Congress passed a bill that gave the Biden administration more than $100,000,000,000 to spend on fixing our infrastructure.

Honestly, I have no idea what they did with all that money.

In 2021, the official White House website was reporting that 45,000 bridges and 20 percent of our roads were in poor condition…

More than 45,000 U.S. bridges and 1 in 5 miles of roads are in poor condition, per the American Society of Civil Engineers. In 2007, the I-35 bridge over the Mississippi River in Minneapolis collapsed during rush hour, killing 13 and injuring 121.

Well, fast forward a few years later and the Department of Transportation is still telling us that “over 40,000 bridges” are in poor condition…

The Department of Transportation considers 6.8% of the over 600,000 bridges it tracks and rates to be in “poor” condition. That doesn’t sound too bad on a percentage basis, but it’s over 40,000 bridges in total.

And it appears that the condition of our roads has actually gotten worse in many states.

For example, Consumer Reports says that almost half of all urban roads in the state of California are not currently in acceptable condition…

Despite an enormous yearly disbursement for highways that tops $21 billion, the Golden State manages to keep just a little more than half their urban roads in acceptable condition. However, this is an outsized job since, in addition to 840 miles of coastline, California boasts more miles of urban roads than any other state and has the second-highest mileage of rural roads in the country.

Data from the National Highway Administration shows California’s roads are the most traveled in the U.S., so it makes sense that the state also has the second-highest number of motor vehicle-related fatalities in the country.

Back in 2021, the Biden administration also made a big deal out of the fact that millions of Americans were getting their tap water through lead pipes…

Millions still get water from lead pipes, despite the fact that exposure to lead has irreversible health effects; in 2015, a state of emergency was declared in Flint, Michigan as citizens learned that their water supply contained toxic levels of lead.

So why didn’t the Biden administration fix this problem?

An article that was published late last year revealed that the EPA is estimating that “more than 9 million service lines” are still made out of lead…

The EPA estimates that more than 9 million service lines are made of lead, a neurotoxin that can cause nervous system damage, learning disabilities and other health problems, especially in children. If lead pipes corrode, as in the infamous case of Flint, Michigan, they can poison drinking water.

While no amount of lead exposure is safe, the federal rule now requires utilities to notify the public and improve corrosion treatment if lead in their water exceeds 10 parts per billion. Some homes in Syracuse, New York, recently tested at 70 parts per billion.

Our politicians are constantly telling us that they just don’t have enough money to get everything done.

Personally, I would really love to see exactly what the Biden administration spent more than 100 billion dollars of infrastructure money on.

Have you traveled through any of our airports lately?

Compared to other industrialized nations, they are a complete and utter joke.

Why can’t we have beautiful airports, modern subway systems, functional roads and bridges, and safe water coming out of our taps?

More tax revenue is collected in America than anywhere else in the world, and so we certainly deserve the best infrastructure.

When I bring up the topic of taxes, most people immediately think of the federal income tax.  But the truth is that there are literally dozens of different taxes that they use to extract wealth out of us…

  • Building Permit Tax
  • Capital Gains Tax
  • CDL License Tax
  • Cigarette Tax
  • Corporate Income Tax
  • Court Fines (indirect taxes)
  • Dog License Tax
  • Federal Income Tax
  • Federal Unemployment Tax (FUTA)
  • Fishing License Tax
  • Food License Tax
  • Fuel Permit Tax
  • Gasoline Tax
  • Gift Tax
  • Hunting License Tax
  • Inheritance Tax
  • IRS Penalties (tax on top of tax)
  • Liquor Tax
  • Local Income Tax
  • Luxury Taxes
  • Marriage License Tax
  • Medicare Tax
  • Payroll Taxes
  • Property Tax
  • Real Estate Tax
  • Recreational Vehicle Tax
  • Road Toll Booth Taxes
  • Road Usage Taxes (Truckers)
  • Sales Taxes
  • School Tax
  • Septic Permit Tax
  • Service Charge Taxes
  • Social Security Tax
  • State Income Tax
  • State Unemployment Tax (SUTA)
  • Telephone federal excise tax
  • Telephone federal universal service fee tax
  • Telephone federal, state and local surcharge taxes
  • Telephone minimum usage surcharge tax
  • Telephone recurring and non-recurring charges tax
  • Telephone state and local tax
  • Telephone usage charge tax
  • Toll Bridge Taxes
  • Toll Tunnel Taxes
  • Traffic Fines (indirect taxation)
  • Trailer Registration Tax
  • Utility Taxes
  • Vehicle License Registration Tax
  • Vehicle Sales Tax
  • Watercraft Registration Tax
  • Well Permit Tax
  • Workers Compensation Tax

When you take all forms of taxation into account, some Americans actually end up handing over more than 50 percent of their incomes each year.

So our politicians have no excuse for not fixing our infrastructure.

But even though they extract money from us in dozens of different ways, our infrastructure crisis just seems to keep getting worse.

In some areas of the country, roads that were once paved have actually been transformed into gravel roads because they are cheaper to maintain.

Our crumbling infrastructure is a perfect metaphor for our crumbling society as a whole, and it is time for the American people to start demanding better from all levels of government.

*  *  *

Michael’s new book entitled “Why” is available in paperback and for the Kindle on Amazon.com, and you can subscribe to his Substack newsletter at michaeltsnyder.substack.com.

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 14:45

Intel On The Brink Of Death Due To Culture Rot Says Scathing Report

Zero Hedge -

Intel On The Brink Of Death Due To Culture Rot Says Scathing Report

Authored by Mike Shedlock via MishTalk.com,

SemiAnalysis has a scathing report on critical mistakes made by Intel. Let’s investigate...

Please consider Intel on the Brink of Death | Culture Rot, Product Focus Flawed, Foundry Must Survive

Intel’s board is incompetent and its horrible decisions over the decades are going to push it towards death. The decision to fire Pat Gelsinger, put in charge a CFO + career sales and marketing leader, and cut spending on fabs in favor of a renewed focus on x86 is an example of the incompetence that will end Intel. Fabricated Knowledge wrote The Death of Intel: When Boards Fail recently explaining how board issues around leadership and planning have failed the company. Simply put, the Intel board has escaped blame for over a decade of failures. This decade of failure culminates in the ultimate mistake: dismissing CEO Pat Gelsinger.

Upon closer inspection, these failures are no surprise. 7 of 11 members have no relevant semiconductor experience. Two more are accomplished in the field but as academics, not industry players. They have no experience making hard decisions, understanding critical business inflections, and are not qualified for what’s at stake. The only member with a strong and relevant CV, Stacy J. Smith, joined just this year as a replacement for Lip-Bu Tan.

Intel’s Failures

The problems at Intel began with the 10nm node (arguably 14nm). In 2016, TSMC and Intel planned to introduce their 10nm processes into volume production. While TSMC executed on schedule with a lower performing node, Intel pushed an aggressive shrink requiring quadruple patterning, novel Cobalt interconnects, and contact over the active gate. The yield was bad, and the node took three years to fix. By the time Intel shipped 10nm products in volume, TSMC had sold more than half a million N7 wafers and was sampling N5.

Competitors like AMD had the advantage of TSMC’s fabrication and in many cases better chip designs/architectures. Datacenter market share began to slip, and Intel’s business issues only snowballed.

Culture – Rotten to the Core

The story of Intel’s cultural rot goes back to Paul Otellini. Paul and Pat Gelsinger were the front runners for the CEO position. This is the classic leadership choice of business bro versus technologist. The result was that Intel chose its first non-engineer CEO.

Paul was ultimately chosen due to his ruthless anti-competitive business decisions that locked AMD out of the CPU market and cemented Intel’s role as a monopoly for more than a decade. Paul instituted a policy that involved paying various OEMs and system integrators not to use AMD, which choked out AMD’s revenue, R&D, and fab investments. Dell alone was paid ~$4.3 billion, and this was the only reason Dell was profitable during this period. Intel and the EU are still fighting out this anti-competitive behavior in courts to this day.

Brian Krzanich was a disaster as CEO. He presided over the 10nm debacle. This mismanagement of the fabs is the single greatest issue the company faced, because that is the core of Intel. Despite this, Krzanich was only fired when an illicit workplace relationship came to light.

Not to be outdone, the 2018 board iteration replaced Krzanich with the first truly non-technical CEO in Intel’s history: Bob Swan. Technically, Paul Otellini was the first non-engineer to lead Intel, but he spent more than 30 years with the company, including his time as a technical advisor to the legendary Andy Grove and leading the microprocessor division.

Swan was a professional CFO – Intel was his 10th CFO role – and so process engineering took a backseat to financial engineering. Swan’s Intel spent as much on stock buybacks as it did capital expenditures on fabs over his tenure: more than $36 billion towards buybacks versus $38 billion in Capex. This was malpractice in a capital-intensive industry when the company was bleeding market share and more than two nodes behind its chief rival.

Brian Krzanich, Bob Swan, and Intel’s board cut not only Capex, but also technical talent, in droves. From 2013 to 2020, 4 out of 7 years had shrinking headcount all while the business lost its technical leadership and had fantastic profitability.

There is No Moat in x86 and the Product Group

Intel’s glory days were when they had superior process technology combined with their x86 moat. The x86 moat was also twofold: Intel had a moat in x86, and x86 had a moat in computing. Today, neither of those moats hold.

Before the smartphone era, x86 was the dominant instruction set within general-purpose CPUs. Almost every PC and server was guaranteed to have an x86-based CPU as the software was written to be compatible with the x86 instruction set. This was propagated by the “Wintel” (Windows and Intel) alliance, where Windows was the dominant Operating System that ran exclusively on x86. Software developers would rationally focus their efforts on developing software for the largest user base: Windows, and that meant making software for x86. This was a classic ecosystem: customers would want Windows PCs because of the larger suite of software options, and to use Windows meant buying an x86-based CPU.

Most of those x86 CPUs were Intel CPUs. While AMD also had the IP rights to design x86-based CPUs, AMD was for a long time tied to its own fabs (now spun off as Global Foundries) with inferior process technology to Intel’s, making it uncompetitive. Ironically, this is Intel’s position today.

Competition is Coming Even for x86 Client CPUs

This began the fading relevance of Windows and Intel, replaced by the Apple and Arm era. This partnership has encroached on Intel Product Group’s core: Apple took the knowledge and experience from designing APs with their A-series iPhone SoCs and parlayed that into the hugely successful Arm-based M-series SoCs for their client notebooks and desktops in 2020. Fifteen years after succumbing to the dominance of x86 over IBM PowerPC, Apple ended its Intel partnership.

This transition was only made possible with a tremendous effort to port software written for x86 to Arm. The key piece was the Rosetta 2 emulator, which recompiled apps at install to work with Apple silicon, enabling a seamless transition. The Apple M1 unlocked substantial performance gains with various accelerator engines not offered by Intel along with considerable boosts in battery life. It was a hit.

Trump and a Chip Czar

SemiAnalysis says it’s crucial to save Intel’s foundry on grounds of national security.

Customers want to de-risk their TSMC/Taiwan exposure the same way the national security community does.

Intel Foundry should be laser-focused on 1) a competitive process technology and 2) making design switch over from TSMC as cheap and easy as possible. The former is on track, but it is not clear what the latter is. A split from the Intel parent would reduce distractions and increase focus. Government support on national security grounds is necessary. Intel Foundry is the single best hedge America has against a Chinese-sponsored coup or invasion of Taiwan.

But note that Intel selling Intel Foundry will not work without a significant capitalization to the tune of ~$50B injected into Intel Foundry. AMD tried to spin off the fabs, and it was disastrous. Mubadala purchased the fabs from AMD and created GlobalFoundries. They then proceeded to lose $22.4 billion over the next decade.

While the Trump administration is probably allergic to anything that looks like “corporate welfare,” many key officials are national security hawks who recognize the importance of having advanced logic manufacturing capability on-shore. A standalone Intel Foundry that is capitalized and with long term manufacturing agreements from 2 of the largest semiconductor companies in the US is much easier for the government to support, both in dollar amounts and politically.

Intel Foundry won’t be laden with Intel’s lagging product team, Mobileye, or Altera. Intel Foundry will have one clear function, and it’s vital to national security and the future of America and the West.

Who should lead the charge here? Maybe a “Chip Czar” charged with restoring American logic prowess. We know someone with a great CV who has just become freed up for new opportunities…

Priorities, Priorities

There is much more in the lengthy article for inquiring minds to investigate. It does take a subscription to read some of it, but there is plenty to see without subscription.

Chips are a genuine matter of national security, not autos, not underwear, not most of the things Trump is pissing and moaning on tariffs over.

But we are off to a horrid start.

Intel Announces 15,000 Job Cuts, 15 Percent of its Workforce

On August 1, 2024 I noted Intel Announces 15,000 Job Cuts, 15 Percent of its Workforce

Intel received $8.5 billion in Biden administration grants (Inflation Reduction Act) but announces massive layoffs and halts dividends due to a decline in revenue.

Intel’s Money Woes Throw Biden Team’s Chip Strategy Into Turmoil

On September 4, Bloomberg reported Intel’s Money Woes Throw Biden Team’s Chip Strategy Into Turmoil

The Biden-Harris administration’s big bet on Intel Corp. to lead a US chipmaking renaissance is in grave trouble as a result of the company’s mounting financial struggles, creating a potentially damaging setback for the country’s most ambitious industrial policy in decades.

TSMC Arizona Production Remains on Schedule

On September 9, 2024 TechPowerUp reported TSMC Arizona Achieves Yield Parity with Taiwanese Facilities, Production Remains on Schedule

TSMC has reportedly managed to produce yields at its Arizona facility that are on par with yields back home in Taiwan, making its expansion efforts successful. According to Bloomberg, TSMC did a trial production, a multi-month effort, to produce N4 node wafers with low defect rates. With wafers now in TSMC’s labs for testing, it is reported that Arizona facility yields have achieved parity with their Taiwanese facilities back home. This indicates that TSMC’s efforts to expand in the US are so far considered a success, as advanced chipmaking is a very complex process that is only done by a few makers and in very few locations. With TSMC expanding in the US now and proving that its technology can work on US soil, the company has a green light to start volume production in the first half of 2025.

However, this is only the beginning of TSMC’s Arizona expansion. The Taiwanese giant plans to have a second fab operational by 2028 and produce 2 nm and 3 nm chips in the state. Additionally, there will be a third facility for 2 nm and more advanced nodes in Phoenix, bringing the total value of TSMC’s US expansion efforts to $65 billion, with $6.6 billion from the CHIPS Act grants and $5 billion in loans from the US government. If upcoming fabs follow the lead of the first facility, US-based production needs will possibly be satisfied.

Trump Accuses Taiwan of Stealing U.S. Chip Industry, Threatens Tariffs

On October 29, I noted Trump Accuses Taiwan of Stealing U.S. Chip Industry, Threatens Tariffs

Trump also suggested foreign companies shouldn’t be able to enter the U.S. and use government money. “That chip deal is so bad,” he said. “We put up billions of dollars for rich companies to come in and borrow the money and build chip companies here. They’re not going to give us the good companies anyway.”

The claim seems absurd given TSMC is investing in technology in the US.

Trump does not like any deal he didn’t negotiate. Heck, he does not even like the USMCA (NAFTA rewrite) that he did negotiate.

Getting TSMC to build a factory in the US was one of the best things, perhaps the only thing, good to come out of the Chips act.

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 14:15

Ugly, Tailing 10Y Auction Flops Despite Highest Yield Since 2007

Zero Hedge -

Ugly, Tailing 10Y Auction Flops Despite Highest Yield Since 2007

The meltdown in bonds, or rather meltup in rates, continued today especially after the red hot JOLTS and ISM prints and today's 10Y auction simply confirmed just how ugly it is getting out there, when the reopening sale of $39BN in 9-year, 10-month notes priced not just ugly but with the highest yield since August 2007!

The auction stopped at a high yield of 4.680%, up a whopping from 44.5bps from 4.2520% last month. And even though this was the highest yield since August 2007...

... the demand was clearly not there, and the auction tailed the When Issued by 0.2bps, the first tail since October.

The bid to cover was 2.53, down from 2.70 in December, and the lowest since October.

The internals were also ugly, with Indirects sliding to 61.39% from 70.0%; this was the lowest foreign award since October 2023. And with Directs taking 22.97%, or the highest since November, Dealers were left holding 15.6%, the highest since August, and an ominous warning that the time for the Fed to restart "taking" bonds from Dealers is almost upon us.

Overall, this tailing auction of benchmark paper was ugly, even if the market response to the results was somewhat muted, but that's only because the 10Y is now trading at 4.70%, the highest since April 2024, and only in October 2023 were yields even higher. Of course, back then the yield surge promptly led to a 1% tumble in rates amid fears of a sharp economic slowdown. This time, however, there is virtually no weakness in the data (at least until Trump goes into the White House), and it is quite possible that yields may rise substantially more before they inevitably drop.

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 13:28

EU Commission Threatens Musk Ahead Of Interview With Conservative Leader

Zero Hedge -

EU Commission Threatens Musk Ahead Of Interview With Conservative Leader

Via Remix News,

The European Commission will check whether the X platform promotes an interview between its owner, American entrepreneur and billionaire Elon Musk, and the leader of the Alternative for Germany (AfD) Alice Weidel, the body’s spokesman Thomas Regnier said on Monday, reports the Do Rzeczy news portal.

Regnier said that under the EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA), which among other things governs content moderation rules on internet platforms, platforms must respond to “potential threats to EU electoral processes,” including providing above-average visibility to content promoting political forces, including content posted on X by Musk himself, the EU official said. 

The interview is taking place ahead of Germany’s snap parliamentary elections, enraging the political establishment. 

“The foundation of the DSA is freedom of speech. Mr. Musk has the right to express his private views and political opinions about the EU both online and offline,” Regnier said, adding that nothing prevents Musk from conducting an interview with Weidel, which will be streamed on his platform.

However, if the conversation with Weidel gains above-average visibility on X, as part of the procedure against this platform conducted in December 2023, the European Commission will look into whether the service provided users with the option to, for example, turn off streaming and whether it used algorithms to give it greater visibility. 

It is unclear what threshold the EU commission would set for “greater visibility,” as Musk’s posts tend to garner millions of views and sometimes tens of millions of views regardless of what he posts.

He does have, after all, over 200 million and followers.

In addition, both he, Weidel, and many others have been promoting the interview in the last weeks.

Last month, Musk openly expressed his opinion that “only the AfD can save Germany.” 

Read more here...

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 13:25

Wholesale Egg Prices Hit Record, Shortages Reported At Supermarkets

Zero Hedge -

Wholesale Egg Prices Hit Record, Shortages Reported At Supermarkets

Wholesale egg prices, as tracked by the Urner Barry Egg Index, have reached record highs at the start of the new year. This surge is mostly driven by the ongoing devastating impact of Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza (HPAI), which has crushed commercial flocks and dented the nation's egg-laying capacity. 

Three weeks ago, new data from Expana showed that a dozen eggs at Midwest supermarkets averaged around $5.67, a record high that eclipsed the prior high of $5.46 set in December 2022. 

Source: Bloomberg

Expana's managing editor for eggs in the Americas, Karyn Rispoli, told Bloomberg last month that a "potent combination of avian flu-related production losses and heightened retail demand throughout the holiday baking season" catapulted prices to record highs.

Rispoli said 17 million egg-laying hens and younger birds known as pullets had been culled since mid-October amid a surge in bird flu cases, adding that was one of the worst stretches in the current bird flu outbreak since the virus first emerged in the nation's flock in February 2022.

Last week, the USDA released a report showing the nation's egg production totaled 8.92 billion, down 4% from the same period last year. Sliding production has sparked egg shortages at supermarkets in certain regions across the US.

The Google Search trend "egg shortage" has erupted to the highest levels since late 2022. 

In California alone, USDA data showed the price of a dozen large white eggs spiked to as high as $8.97 last week, up from $5.23 in late November - a 70% increase. 

X users are reporting shortages:

The latest wave of egg shortages and soaring retail prices remind consumers about the urgent need to break away from the food supply chain controlled by mega-corporations. Instead, consider building a chicken coop and planting a garden as steps toward becoming ungovernable. 

Besides egg prices, cattle futures in Chicago surged to record highs last week on the continued decline in the nation's herd size. 

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 13:05

Job Openings Unexpectedly Soar On Record 2-Month Surge In Professional Services, Even As Hiring Tumbles

Zero Hedge -

Job Openings Unexpectedly Soar On Record 2-Month Surge In Professional Services, Even As Hiring Tumbles

Many were stunned one month ago when, after several dismal prints, including the worst JOLTS report in almost a year, the BLS reported that in October the US added 372K jobs, the biggest monthly increase since August 2023, and one which most establishment economists jeered - after all Trump was now president so it was fair to finally rugpull the economy - and said would promptly reverse in the next report. Well, the next report just came out, and it was  shocker, because after an upward revised October (which makes the 372K increase a 467K surge), the unexpected burst in job openings accelerated in November, when the number of job openings soared to 8.098 million, a 259K surge, and the first 8+ million job openings print since May.

For context, after a year in which there was not one positive 2-month period of gains, in November the BLS reported the biggest 2-month surge in job openings since March 2022!

According to the BLS, the number of job openings increased in professional and business services (+273,000), finance and insurance (+105,000), and private educational services (+38,000) but decreased in information (-89,000).

How realistic is this surge in professional services JOLTS? We don't know, but we know that the 2-month increase in pro services job openings was the largest on record!

In  the context of the broader jobs report, in November the number of job openings was 953K more than the number of unemployed workers (which the BLS reported was 7.145 million), up from last month's 855k.

Said otherwise, in July the number of job openings to unemployed was 1.1, a modest increase from last month, but on the low end of the pre-covid range in 2018-2019.

While the job openings data set was an upside shock, where the weakness continued was in the number of hires, which resumed their drop, sliding by 125k to 5.269 million, just shy of the lowest since the covid crash, while the number of quits plunged to a fresh 4 years low of 3.065 million as workers are clearly far less optimistic they can find a higher paying job elsewhere, and would rather be fired than quit.

Finally, no matter what the "data" shows, let's not forget that it is all just estimated, and it is safe to say that the real number of job openings remains still far lower since half of it - or some 70% to be specific - is guesswork. As the BLS itself admits, while the response rate to most of its various labor (and other) surveys has collapsed in recent years, nothing is as bad as the JOLTS report where the actual response rate remains near a record low 33%

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 10:57

Certifiable

Zero Hedge -

Certifiable

By Benjamin Picton, Senior Macro Strategist at Rabobank

US stocks closed higher yesterday to open the first full trading week of the year as Vice President Harris certified the results of the November presidential election ahead of Donald Trump’s inauguration on January 20th. Crossing that milestone in Trump’s return to the White House may have contributed to the re-stoking of optimism in equities after a selloff late last year.

The S&P500 rose 0.55% driven by a 3.43% gain for Nvidia as markets await CEO Jensen Huang’s keynote speech at the CES conference in Las Vegas. Other techs also performed well, but the more value-oriented Dow Jones closed slightly lower. Bitcoin rallied back above the $102,000 level.

Crude oil prices fell slightly after rallying for five-straight days. Oil markets had been correcting higher on a constellation of influences that included mooted Chinese stimulus, low inventory levels at the Cushing storage hub and the prospect of fresh sanctions on Iran once President Trump takes office. RaboResearch Energy Analyst Joe DeLaura has said that traders may be overestimating the effects and quickness of any sanctions, and that pops in prices are likely to be met with greater supply from OPEC+ producers.

Henry Hub natural gas futures gained almost 10% following forecasts of persistent colder weather in the United States and a fall in production of almost 2%. Spot gold continues to trade just above the $2,600/oz level and the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index fell for a second-straight trading day, but remains close to multi-decade highs.

Many analysts continue to expect Dollar outperformance in 2025 with an alleged shrinking US trade deficit (courtesy of tariffs) and relatively tight monetary policy (courtesy of tariff-induced inflation) being the main constructive influences. However, if those forecasts don’t play out there is plenty of air under the DXY from current levels. If broad-based Dollar weakness were to occur it would likely push commodity prices higher (since commodities are typically denominated in dollars) and re-stoke goods inflation pressures. Perhaps a latent fear of an inflation resurgence is part of the reasoning behind equities remaining well-bid despite eye watering P/E ratios?

EUR and CAD were the best performing G10 currencies yesterday following a substantially stronger than expected German CPI print alongside a strong inflation print for the state of Hesse and an announcement from Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau that he will be resigning the leadership of the governing Liberal Party ahead of elections expected later this year. Trudeau’s Liberals trail the opposition Conservatives by a wide margin in published polling and are on track for a sufficiently large wipeout that some polling suggests they may struggle to win enough seats to become the official opposition.

The strong CPI prints prompted 10-year German bund yields to rise 2.3 bps to 2.45%, while 2-year bund yields gained 3.4bps to 2.19%. 10-year yields also rose in the United States (+3.2bps) and the United Kingdom (+1.8bps), but fell in France, Italy and Spain. We will see further inflation data for German states throughout the week, which should give a better picture of how widespread the turn up in inflation is and how great the influence of rising energy prices might be.

The higher yields in the USA likely came as a reaction to comments from Donald Trump on Truth Social that a story in the Washington Post suggesting that Trump’s tariffs would only cover critical imports was “fake news”. Yields had initially fallen by around 2.5bps upon publication of the article as traders apparently surmised that a more targeted tariff regime may provide the Fed with additional breathing room to lower the Fed Funds rate without risking an resurgence in inflation pressures.

The denial of any change to planned tariffs comes as fresh data released yesterday showed a faster than expected decline in durable goods orders in November. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg had expected the final read of the November data to show a decline of -0.5% including transportation orders, but the actual figure came in at -1.2%, which was actually slightly worse than the preliminary figure of -1.1%. Similarly, November factory orders disappointed with a worse than expected -0.4% print, though the ex-transportation figure printed at +0.2%.

Much has been made of the success of Joe Biden’ signature industrial policies of driving renewed investment in factory construction in the USA. While that may be the case, it certainly appears that the rubber is yet to hit the road in terms of actual production and reduced dependency on imported goods. As noted above, the Trump tariffs have the express purpose of reducing the USA’s import dependence and re-shoring manufacturing jobs lost during the neoliberal experiment in globalized free-trading, but growth in manufacturing payrolls remained relatively weak during the first Trump administration and is likely to have been negative in 2024. We await Friday’s payrolls figures to confirm this point.

Services PMIs released yesterday were stronger for most major European economies, with a particularly strong reading for Spain. The China Caixin services PMI also recorded a handy lift, but the US, UK and Canada all saw softer results than expected with the latter slipping into contractionary territory.

The S&P US services PMI had lately diverged from the better-established ISM survey. The downward revision to the December reading brings the two into better alignment, but the release of the ISM services figures today ought to be a key point of interest for market participants.

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 10:20

Rate-Cut Odds Plunge As ISM Services Inflation Index Surges Near 2-Year-High

Zero Hedge -

Rate-Cut Odds Plunge As ISM Services Inflation Index Surges Near 2-Year-High

With 'soft' survey data trending lower (and PMIs mixed), analysts expected this morning's ISM Services data to print higher (catching up to S&P Global's PMI surge in December) and they were right.

ISM Services surged to 54.1 (from 52.1 prior and better than the 53.5 expected)

Source: Bloomberg

However, below the surface things are not so awesome as Prices Paid exploded from 58.2 to 64.4 and employment slipped to 51.4...

Source: Bloomberg

Producers remain challenged by a strong dollar, potential tariffs (Trump Effect) and general uncertainty from dockworkers’ contract negotiations that are set to resume Tuesday.

'Inflation' expectations are at their highest since Feb 2023 - The market is no longer pricing in a full cut by July...

... not at all what Powell and his pals want to see (or maybe it is).

Tyler Durden Tue, 01/07/2025 - 10:10

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