Monday, July 13, 2026 RSS
News Markets & Finance Jul 13 CAPITAL

Energy Premium Meets Soft Landing Denial

Hormuz closure and Brent's 3.63% jump toward $80 make the energy-inflation premium dominant. Soft landing still prices growth intact even as Warsh's Fed is priced for tightening and SPR hits a 1983 low — a gap that resolves when shipping resumes or energy equities reprice higher.

The energy-inflation premium is no longer a scenario. It is the board's loudest narrative after Iran's indefinite Hormuz claim, U.S. strike packages that answered shipping attacks, and Ukraine's week-long campaign against roughly ninety Russian vessels in the Sea of Azov. Brent's 3.63% jump toward $80, and war-risk premiums near 5% of vessel value, are the market's first honest admission that supply risk is back. The second admission has not arrived. USO remains about 12% below its fifty-day average. XLE rose only 2.47% on the session and still sits half a percent under that same moving average. Crude validated a choke point; energy equities priced a flicker. That is the Soft Landing…

Continue reading →
Advertisement

Latest from each beat

All 72 →
Jul 4 CAPITAL

The Russell Refraction

The Russell 2000 rose roughly 21 percent through the first half of 2026, its strongest start in three decades, as hyperscaler capex broadened into semiconductor equipment, power, and connectivity suppliers. That rally is real — but the index is refracting AI spending into winners and losers, not distributing it evenly.

All 15 →
Jun 29 LABOR

The Utility Gap: Can AI Apps Justify the Buildout?

Artificial intelligence infrastructure is racing ahead of proven consumer willingness to pay. With free-to-paid conversion near six percent and enterprise carrying most revenue, the industry faces a utility test: enough daily engagement and durable subscriptions to justify megawatt-scale buildouts — or a cycle of dark racks, repriced debt, and cascading GPU obsolescence.

All 36 →
Jun 19 STATE

The Court Will Redefine Who Is Born American

The Supreme Court will rule by early July on whether Trump can end birthright citizenship by executive order. The constitutional fight is abstract; the consequences begin in delivery rooms where hospitals assume every newborn is a citizen — and where losing that assumption breaks Medicaid and newborn care.

10 additional stories