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April 1, 2026

We’ve had four significant relief rallies since the U.S. started its campaign against Iran.

On March 4th, just days into the war, Scott Bessent went on CNBC before markets opened to calm markets.

On March 9th, the oil market shot up 30% on a Sunday night, and by the European morning there were talks of a coordinated supply release — markets calmed. 

On March 23rd, markets again were getting hit on Sunday night, after Trump threatened to “obliterate” Iranian power plants — and again by morning things were calmed, this time by Trump’s call for a five-day pause on any energy infrastructure strikes. 

And then to open this week, markets were at vulnerable levels again, until the administration started circulating talk that the end of the war was near

These last three are easy to spot in the Russell 2000 chart — small caps which benefit most from oil and rate stability. 

As you can see, each of these sentiment massaging events turned the tide for the key small cap index, at around the same level. And each resulted in a relief rally three-times the average daily range of the past decade (big bounces).

But the relief was short-lived in each case. 

In this case too, likely. 

Trump gave a primetime Oval Office address tonight. UK’s Starmer gave a public address to the British people earlier in the day.  And prior to that the Aussie Prime Minister (Albanese) addressed the Australian people. 

The takeaway was contrast

First, energy.

Trump wanted the American people to know that the gas price shock would be brief — that “gas prices will rapidly come back down.”

And he wanted the world to know that America is energy independent — produces more oil and gas than Saudi Arabia and Russia combined, imports almost nothing through Hormuz, and is now a joint venture partner with Venezuela on the second-largest reserves on earth.

Both Starmer and Albanese (Australia) were talking subsidies and energy rationing

The other big contrast: timing.

Trump wasn’t using tonight to call the mission complete, but said the end of the campaign is a few weeks away.

Conversely, Starmer and Albanese were preparing their countries for a longer storm — one with lingering consequences. 

Trump was saying it’s almost over. Starmer and Albanese were saying, the hard part is just starting.

This is the energy independent/energy dependent dynamic we’ve been talking about.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

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March 31, 2026

Today, markets rallied on expectations that an end to the U.S./Iran war is near.

Meanwhile, the White House posted this, from Trump, on the official account:

All of those countries that can’t get jet fuel because of the Strait of Hormuz, like the United Kingdom, which refused to get involved in the decapitation of Iran, I have a suggestion for you: Number 1, buy from the U.S., we have plenty, and Number 2, build up some delayed courage, go to the Strait, and just TAKE IT. You’ll have to start learning how to fight for yourself, the U.S.A. won’t be there to help you anymore, just like you weren’t there for us. Iran has been, essentially, decimated. The hard part is done. Go get your own oil!“‘

In a separate post, he called out France for blocking military supply planes from flying over French territory.

France has been VERY UNHELPFUL… The U.S.A. will REMEMBER!!!

This, while eurozone inflation just printed a sharp rise from 1.9% to 2.5%, driven by the spike in European energy prices. And with European-bound cargo still stalled west of Hormuz.

The full energy shock has yet to arrive.

And that pain fuels the “doom loop” we’ve been discussing.

Higher energy costs in Europe squeeze the budgets of the more fiscally fragile countries.

Meanwhile, the interest rate outlook in Europe has swung from rate cuts to rate hikes by year end.

Higher rates increase debt service costs on countries like Italy (137% debt-to-GDP).

That threatens solvency, which pressures bank balance sheets, which tightens credit, which weakens the economy, which can push the fiscally fragile to the fiscally broken.

That’s where the European Central Bank (ECB) would step in, armed with a June 2022 program it conceived to keep sovereign bond markets stable — to backstop the bond markets of the fiscally fragile (to prevent a fiscally broken scenario).

But the ECB’s firepower is only as strong as its credibility — as the market’s belief in it. And that credibility will be tested if the Trump-led Fed (coming in May) doesn’t have the ECB’s back.

And as we’ve discussed, that could be the catalyst for political change in Europe — a populist shakeup, trading diluted sovereignty, slow-to-no growth and excessive regulation for pro-sovereignty, pro-growth and deregulation.

The question: Is this “catalyst” by design?

Trump is dismantling the Iranian geopolitical weapon — energy.  And in the process, he’s exposing the flawed economic, security and energy architecture of the eurozone.

And remember, the U.S. National Security Strategy document we discussed earlier this year.

It called out the European Union and “other transnational bodies” for undermining political liberty and sovereignty through migration policies, censorship, and loss of national identities and self-confidence. And it explicitly questioned whether or not they were strong enough “to remain reliable allies.”

Add to this, Marco Rubio’s speech two months ago at the Munich Security Conference.

He didn’t pull any punches.  He formalized the move from “implicit” to “conditional” support — by calling out Europe’s “foolish” policies on climate, migration, deindustrialization as anti-sovereignty and self-harming.

He reset the alliance on the basis of “reciprocity and seriousness.

He evoked the history of “godless communist revolutions” and terminal decline of 1940s Europe.

And he said the U.S. seeks “renewal and restoration” of Western civilization.  This was an invitation to do it together — “join us.”

Otherwise, the message was, Europe is not entitled to automatic U.S. backstops (Trump’s leverage).

Why would the Trump administration want to see change in European leadership?  To counter China’s influence by restoring U.S./European alignment.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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March 30, 2026

In 1987, Trump told Barbara Walters that the next time Iran threatened this country, America should go in, grab one of their big oil installations, and keep it.

In 1988, he told The Guardian he’d “do a number on Kharg Island” and take it. Over the weekend, he told the Financial Times that his “favorite thing [option] is to take the oil in Iran.”

This afternoon he reposted the 1987 Walters clip himself. Almost forty years later. 

Safe to assume, the plan hasn’t changed since 1987. Eradicate the regime. Take the oil. Remove the leverage.

If so, this doesn’t end with a peace deal.

The Trump view on Iran has a well documented four-decade history. That view: The regime has to go. Kharg Island — which handles 90% of Iran’s crude exports — has to come under American control.

And as we discussed here in my daily notes, there’s a bigger reason than Iran. 

Iran is China’s operational arm in the most strategically important energy region on earth. As long as the regime exists, Beijing has a partner that can selectively close Hormuz to Western shipping while keeping Chinese-bound oil flowing.

That’s exactly what’s happening.  As you can see below (far right of the table, highlighted) Iran’s own exports rose in March, which went almost entirely to China, according to Windward (maritime intelligence). Meanwhile, Iraq and Saudi’s exports through the Gulf plunged.

So, there is no peace deal that changes the control architecture. It takes regime removal and physical control of the oil.

That’s the Venezuela model. Capture Maduro, take the oil, install a compliant successor. Iran is the same playbook at a bigger, more meaningful geopolitical scale.

And remember, Trump has told the world “oil is going to be cheap after this.” 

Energy as a geopolitical weapon is being dismantled.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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March 25, 2026

We’ve been talking about the “boom loop” in the American economy. Compute generates revenue, revenue funds more compute, compute generates more revenue.

Here’s the result of that in a chart.

This black line (going straight up) is this self-reinforcing loop at work, fueled by $650 billion of AI capex this year, $1 trillion next year, massive commitments to expand domestic energy capacity, and simultaneously, a defense industrial mobilization.

This is why the Fed is raising its growth forecast, and sees high productivity growth continuing, leading to higher incomes and higher potential growth for the economy.

Notice in that chart above, the planned capacity for the “rest of the world” (led by China) is following the U.S. trajectory.  This is the “AI race” we’ve been documenting.

And then there’s the blue line. 

Europe. It’s barely visible, at the bottom. 

This is a key ingredient in the doom loop” we’ve been talking about for the European economy.

Europe has spent a year planning a big spend on defense, AI and energy capacity.  The question has been, how will they pay for it?

The plan: They tried to knit together support last month for fiscal union: “One Europe, One market.”

That plan may have blown up on February 28th, when the U.S. started dropping bombs on Iran. 

Twenty-six days later, Europe’s deficits in defense, AI and energy have been exposed, and now its solvency and liquidity vulnerabilities may be exposed. 

With that, European policy makers and economists were in Frankfurt today at “The ECB and Its Watchers” conference.

And the ECB’s own chief economist presented a “severe scenario” where eurozone inflation rises to almost six percent this year — and does not return to target over the next two years. Growth goes negative for 2026.

Important detail:  This “severe scenario” (which includes destruction of energy infrastructure) is particularly interesting, because it’s already happened.

The data modeling in the presentation (see it here) had a March 11th cutoff date.  That’s two weeks ago. 

There has since been a strike on the world’s largest natural gas facility, and 19 million tonnes of LNG supply has since gone offline, through at least the end of May. And in the same conference, ECB President Lagarde acknowledged this is the largest supply disruption in history.

That brings me to an interesting study today.

The ECB also published a working paper focused on the resilience of euro liquidity under financial stress. On the surface, it looks reassuring. The paper says the euro repo market remained resilient in recent periods of stress.

But from this paper (study from 2021-2025) 30% of the government bond collateral supporting that “resilience” was Italian government bonds — the bonds of the most fiscally fragile major economy in Europe, and the very bonds we’ve been flagging from the onset as most vulnerable to a solvency crisis.

This is the doom loop we’ve been discussing.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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March 24, 2026

Despite the de-escalation talk of the past two days, one of the key barometers of economic pain associated with the war is showing no relief.

Remember, we looked at this chart a couple of weeks ago.

Both the red and the blue lines show the key spread between Italian yields (Europe’s most fiscally fragile major bond market) and German yields (the anchor).  This spread represents the risk premium in Europe.  

The red line is the 2022 period surrounding Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.  The blue line is the current period (18 trading days into the war).  Everything to the right of the black vertical line is the market reaction to the war catalyst.

As you can see from the blue line, the risk premium continues to rise, albeit from a low base.  But, importantly, it’s been led by Italian 10-year yields that traded over 4% the past two days.

And 4% has significance.

The European sovereign debt markets started showing stress in the summer of 2022.  And it was the sharp move above the 4% level in Italian yields that compelled the ECB to act — restarting QE (QE by a new name, the “Transmission Protection Instrument”) to stabilize bond markets of the weak euro zone countries.

This is the place we’ve been watching for the signal that the market expectations are shifting from “short-term pain” to “long-term structural economic damage.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

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March 23, 2026

We open the week with another wide swing in markets.

It was led by Trump’s TruthSocial post  on Saturday, threatening to “obliterate” Iranian power plants unless they “fully open” the Strait of Hormuz — in 48 hours!

Stocks gapped down Sunday night, and oil was trading back above $100.

But it was all reversed this morning with another Trump post — he called a five-day pause on any energy infrastructure strikes, citing “productive conversations” with the Iranians.

That was good for a 4% rally off of the morning lows in the S&P futures, and a $16 collapse in crude oil futures (peak to trough on the session).

Look familiar?

It’s the third time in three weeks the administration has talked down the temperature — calming markets on a day that could have turned into a slippery speculative frenzy.

Remember, three days into the war, Scott Bessent went on CNBC to calm markets — stocks ripped, oil dropped. On Day 10, talk of a coordinated supply release crashed oil from $119 to $76. And today, a “5-day extension” talk is doing the same work.

Each time, the sentiment massage has worked temporarily. But each time, the physical reality on the ground hasn’t changed.

The CENTCOM commander summed it up today: the Strait of Hormuz is physically open, but operationally closed — because Iran continues to target any vessel attempting transit.

The 11 million barrels a day of global oil supply lost is not coming back on a 5-day timeline (or a 5-week timeline). The insurance market remains frozen. The shipping lanes remain threatened. And Qatar’s LNG infrastructure remains physically damaged (key European energy supply).

On the latter, the leading commodity data provider (Kpler) confirmed that 19 million tonnes of LNG supply is offline through at least the end of May.  And this is what matters for the European doom loop we’ve been discussing.

The U.S. can use tools to manage oil prices at home — and they are. As a net energy exporter, the oil shock is partially offset by domestic production profits. The Fed said as much last week.

But the market and sentiment massaging in the U.S doesn’t help Europe.

They are energy dependent.  And the squeeze on Europe continues.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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March 19, 2026

We’ve talked in recent days about the American “boom loop,” fueled by the self-reinforcing loop that Jensen Huang described at GTC — compute generates revenue, revenue funds more compute, compute generates more revenue.

Conversely, Europe is facing a “doom loop.”

And a catalyst to put it in motion arrived three weeks ago.  

And it’s in this chart we’ve been watching … 

The U.S. is energy dominant (a net exporter). Europe is energy dependent.

That’s why this ratio has spiked.

And it traded over 7 this morning — a doubling in three weeks. That’s Europe paying seven times what the U.S. pays for energy.

Here’s the doom loop: Higher energy costs squeeze the budgets of the more fiscally fragile countries.  And with that, market interest rates in Europe are rising, which increases debt service costs, which further squeezes the fiscally fragile countries in Europe. That threatens solvency, which pressures bank balance sheets, which tightens credit, which weakens the economy, which can push the fiscally fragile to the fiscally broken.

Why did the energy shock catalyst of this “doom loop” in Europe become more obvious to markets today?

Because an attack on Qatari LNG (a key supplier to Europe) evolved into what could be a potentially large scale supply destruction in the region (from the Trump retaliatory threat on Iranian supply).

With that potential accelerant to the EU doom loop, today, the leaders of the UK, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Japan issued a joint statement expressing “readiness to contribute” to reopening the Strait of Hormuz.

Two days ago, the President posted that NATO allies (he put allies in quotes) “don’t want to get involved” and that the U.S. “no longer needs, or desires” their assistance.

Today, those same allies offered to help.

That’s a 48-hour flip — from refusal to compliance. And it tells you everything about who has the leverage.

Now, with that in mind, lets revisit my March 10 notes, where we talked about three important meetings that happened within days of each as bombs were dropping on Iran.

Trump had top AI executives in the White House strategizing on the race to AI supremacy and formalizing an agreement to power AI. And he called defense executives to discuss the quadrupling of production of the certain high level weaponry. Then he brought together 17 leaders in the Western Hemisphere to sign a formal military alliance.

As we discussed, this was/is an industrial mobilization and the fortification of the Western Hemisphere for a bigger confrontation — bigger than Iran.

Today, the Pentagon requested a $200 billion supplemental defense budget. That’s not a “quick surgical strike” budget. That’s a multi-year industrial mobilization war chest.

This is about positioning for China. Trump was due to meet Xi in April. It was just postponed.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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March 18, 2026

The Fed met today. They held rates. No surprise.

But let’s connect some events of the past few months with what was said today.

Remember, back in December, the Fed quietly restarted balance sheet expansion — buying Treasuries at a pace that Powell himself said would require $250 to $300 billion a year, permanently.

This was huge news.  Within days, the Fed had flipped from shrinking the balance sheet, to expanding the balance sheet again.

By the next Fed meeting (January 28th) gold had made one of the biggest 35-day spikes in the past 50 years — mapping directly to the Fed’s announcement to restart the liquidity spigot.

In that statement/press conference, what did Powell say about the revived liquidity injection program?  Nothing

How many questions did the room full of financial journalists ask about it in the press conference? Zero

Fast forward to today, and the Fed has now pumped $100 billion into the economy over the past three months. In the Summary of Economic Projections, the Fed raised its growth and inflation projection. 

What did Powell say about the ongoing aggressive balance sheet easing that happens to promote growth and inflation?

He didn’t mention it.  Nobody asked.  

The silence seems intentional, and the media seems to oddly lack curiosity about it. The question is, why? 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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March 17, 2026

Let’s talk about this post from the President of the United States this morning:

The United States has been informed by most of our NATO ‘Allies’ that they don’t want to get involved with our Military Operation against the Terrorist Regime of Iran…despite the fact that almost every Country strongly agreed with what we are doing…I always considered NATO, where we spend Hundreds of Billions of Dollars per year protecting these same Countries, to be a one way street…We no longer ‘need,’ or desire, the NATO Countries’ assistance…”

We’ve talked about the U.S. plan to restructure global trade and realign the world (away from China, back toward the U.S.), which has been anchored by “burden sharing” — where allies and trading partners pay for access to safety (U.S. security guarantees), stability (the dollar and U.S. capital markets), and markets (U.S. consumers).

This post Trump made this morning is not a negotiating position on burden sharing.

This is the President of the United States publicly repudiating the security architecture that has underpinned European stability for 75 years.

It’s a big deal. 

Europe’s stability has been built on a set of assumptions that the U.S. would provide security, that energy would be affordable, that the ECB could backstop sovereign debt, and that dollar funding (access to U.S. dollars) would flow freely.

All four have been under pressure.  And this statement (“allies”, in quotes) may have just ended it all. Everything now should be seen as conditional, not automatic.

That means those assumptions that hold Europe together (security, financial and economic stability) no longer hold, unless/until conditions are met.

This, as European markets, are already beginning to price in risk of the energy price shock becoming more of a structural crisis (spreads widening, euro down, European stocks down).

As we’ve discussed the past two weeks, higher energy costs in Europe squeeze the budgets of the more fiscally fragile countries.

Meanwhile, the interest rate outlook in Europe has swung from prospects of a cut to 33 basis points of tightening by year end.

Higher rates increase debt service costs on countries like Italy (137% debt-to-GDP).

That threatens solvency, which pressures bank balance sheets, which tightens credit, which weakens the economy, which can push the fiscally fragile to the fiscally broken. 

It’s a self-reinforcing loop — a “doom loop.”

The big question is, does the ECB have the firepower to contain another sovereign debt flare up, IF the U.S./a Trump-led Fed isn’t there to back them up (answer: not likely).

Meanwhile, yesterday we talked about the self-reinforcing loop that Jensen Huang described at GTC — compute generates revenue, revenue funds more compute, constrained only by power.

This “boom loop” is being built in the United States.

It’s powered by $650+ billion of private AI capex this year ($1 trillion next year) and an industrial mobilization.

So, we have a European “doom loop” and an American “boom loop.”  

As we’ve been discussing past two weeks, this divergence sets up for more pain in Europe (markets, economy). 

And that could be the catalyst for political change in Europe — a populist shakeup, trading diluted sovereignty, slow-to-no growth and excessive regulation for pro-sovereignty, pro-growth and deregulation. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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March 16, 2026

Last October Jensen Huang stood on a stage in D.C. and said “over the next five quarters, there’s half a trillion dollars” to fulfill.

Today, Jensen was on a stage in San Jose, and said “right now, through 2027, at least $1 trillion” of high confidence demand.

And then he said they will be short on supply, and he’s certain it (demand) will be much higher than that.

Remember, on the earnings call last month, Jensen said “compute equals revenue.”

He said every dollar of compute capacity added (the huge industry capex spending that continues to grow) is being monetized the moment it comes online.

This is the self-reinforcing loop that is fueling what Jensen calls the biggest industrial buildout in human history: compute generates output, output generates revenue, revenue funds more compute.

And today, he drilled down into the unlock for it all — it’s power.

He says revenue equals tokens per watt.  Tokens/output is only constrained by watts/power.

That’s the big theme of this AI revolution:  Abundance is only constrained by scarcity.

With that, the Nvidia monopoly is well secured, because they’re churning out new advanced chips on about an annual schedule — which are proving to be multiples more efficient than the prior generation (more output per watt).

So, the Nvidia chip cycle alone is a global economic driver.  And those efficiency gains feed directly into Elon Musk’s economic-growth-tsunami theory.

And Elon’s “limitless” economic output theory then becomes plausible if you believe global energy capacity can be expanded.

Until then power is the limiting factor.

It’s scarce.

And with that, if AI is creating a world of abundance, then we should invest in scarcity.

We just launched a new site at AIInnovationPortfolio.com where you can see how we’re thinking about this “invest in scarcity” theme, and how we’re positioned.