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Trump Accepts White House Correspondents’ Dinner Invitation For First Time

Trump Accepts White House Correspondents’ Dinner Invitation For First Time

Authored by Kimberley Hayek via The Epoch Times,

President Donald Trump announced on Monday that he will attend the White House Correspondents’ Association (WHCA) dinner for the first time as president, after declining to attend during his initial term in office due to his view that the majority of the media is unfairly biased against him. The president also did not attend in 2025, the first year of his second presidential term.

“The White House Correspondents Association has asked me, very nicely, to be the Honoree at this year’s Dinner, a long and storied tradition since it began in 1924, under then President Calvin Coolidge,” Trump said in a post on Truth Social.

“In honor of our Nation’s 250th Birthday, and the fact that these ‘Correspondents’ now admit that I am truly one of the Greatest Presidents in the History of our Country, the G.O.A.T., according to many, it will be my Honor to accept their invitation, and work to make it the GREATEST, HOTTEST, and MOST SPECTACULAR DINNER, OF ANY KIND, EVER!

Trump criticized the press and its coverage of him in his acceptance, pointing to it as a reason for his absence from past events.

“Because the Press was extraordinarily bad to me, FAKE NEWS ALL, right from the beginning of my First Term, I boycotted the event, and never went as Honoree,” he wrote. “However, I look forward to being with everyone this year. Hopefully, it will be something very special.”

The annual dinner, which celebrates the First Amendment, is set to take place on April 25 at the Washington Hilton, outside of which John Hinckley Jr. attempted to assassinate President Ronald Reagan in 1981.

Trump was the first president to skip the event since Ronald Reagan in 1981, who was recovering from the assassination attempt at the time.

The event also serves as a fundraiser for journalism scholarships and awards.

The WHCA announced last week that mentalist and mind-reader Oz Pearlman would entertain at the event.

“For more than 100 years, the journalists of the White House Correspondents’ Association have enjoyed an evening with the president, a dinner that celebrates the First Amendment while supporting the work we do including awards honoring excellent journalism and scholarships to help the next generation of reporters who someday will be the ones asking the questions at the White House,” WHCA President Weijia Jiang, a CBS News correspondent, stated in a response to Trump’s acceptance.

The dinner started in 1924 during the presidency of Calvin Coolidge. The president and a comedian or entertainer generally make remarks, often roasting political figures and the media.

Trump made headlines in 2016 when he roasted his campaign opponent Hillary Clinton ahead of Election Day at the annual Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 03/03/2026 – 13:45

Voters Head To Polls In First 2026 Primary Election: What To Know

Voters Head To Polls In First 2026 Primary Election: What To Know

Authored by Joseph Lord via The Epoch Times,

Today, voters in Texas and North Carolina will cast their ballots in the first major contested primary elections of the 2026 midterm elections.

The elections in the two states have high stakes for the control of Congress in 2027.

The Texas Senate primaries for both parties have become some of the most closely watched in the nation, as Democrats vie for an upset victory over the GOP nominee in the general election.

In North Carolina, meanwhile, Republican candidates are facing off for their party’s nominations in a district redrawn to favor the GOP.

Here’s what to know.

Texas Republican Primary

While both parties are investing substantial resources and attention toward the race to be the Lone Star state’s next senator, Republicans enter the race with a strong advantage after President Donald Trump won the state by more than 14 points in 2024.

The incumbent in the race, Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), is facing one of the toughest primary challenges of his career from Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. Rep. Wesley Hunt (R-Texas) is also seeking the Republican nomination.

Political analysts and betting markets largely view Paxton and Cornyn as the leading contenders.

Paxton entered the race earlier this year, carrying lingering fallout from past controversies, including his 2023 impeachment by the Texas House and subsequent acquittal by the Texas Senate. Framing the contest in ideological terms, Paxton has cast the race as a showdown between his brand of populist “America First” conservatism and what he describes as the establishment politics embodied by Cornyn.

Cornyn, meanwhile, has characterized the primary as a referendum on character, pointing to Paxton’s impeachment proceedings and other legal issues. At a recent campaign event, Cornyn accused Paxton of a “scandal-plagued career” and warned that he could be a “dead weight” on the ballot.

Paxton currently holds a 3.8 lead over Cornyn in RealClearPolitics polling averages.

Trump has yet to say which candidate he will endorse but has expressed his appreciation for both.

Texas Democratic Primary

Given the historically favorable national political environment for the party of the opposition in the midterm elections, Democrats are hoping for a long-shot win in the Lone Star State’s Senate election this year.

Texas state Rep. James Talarico led the pack of potential Democratic nominees, though polls show the possibility of a close race with U.S. Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-Texas), who entered the race on Oct. 8 last year.

Talarico rose to prominence during the redistricting battle this summer as Texas Republicans voted to add five Republican districts to the state’s congressional map. The former seminarian has gained national media and online attention for his Christian-focused messaging.

Crockett has become well-known for her heated questions during hearings on Capitol Hill.

Former Rep. Colin Allred (D-Texas) had been running but ended his bid for the nomination after Crockett announced her candidacy.

According to recent polling averages from RealClearPolitics, Talarico is leading Crockett by 4.5 percent.

In hypothetical polling match-ups, surveys said Talarico would be advantaged in a race against Paxton, but is disfavored if Republicans select Cornyn as their nominee.

Meanwhile, polling currently has Crockett at a disadvantage against either of the major Republican candidates.

The primary race will be held on March 3, and any runoff races are scheduled for May 26.

North Carolina’s 1st District Republican Primary

In North Carolina’s First Congressional District, Rep. Don Davis (D-N.C.) is running for reelection in a district that was redrawn through redistricting.

Davis won a second term in 2024 by less than 2 percent, becoming one of 13 House Democrats to win elections in districts won by Trump. He’s criticized the new boundaries for his districts, which now favor Republicans.

He faces no opposition in the Democratic primary, while five Republicans are vying for their party’s nomination.

Among them is Army veteran and former Trump administration official Laurie Buckhout, who is seeking a rematch after narrowly losing to Davis in 2024.

State Sen. Bobby Hanig, former sheriff Asa Buck, and Lenoir County Commissioner Eric Rouse are other political notables in the district seeking the nomination.

Rounding out the GOP field is attorney and small-business owner Ashley-Nicole Russell.

North Carolina’s 11th District Democratic Primary

In North Carolina’s 11th Congressional District, five Democrats are competing in the primary for the opportunity to take on incumbent Rep. Chuck Edwards (R-N.C.).

Although Edwards won reelection comfortably in 2024, Democrats are hoping to win enough support to flip the seat in the upcoming election.

The Democratic field includes farmer Jamie Ager, educator and advocate Zelda Briarwood, physician Richard Hudspeth, cancer researcher and professor Paul Maddox, and civil engineer Lee Whipple.

Ager is centering his campaign on lowering everyday costs, expanding access to health care, advancing immigration reform, and strengthening public safety. An internal Democratic poll shared with Newsweek shows Ager leading Edwards by 1 percentage point.

Briarwood is advocating for increased investment in rural health care, expanding Medicaid, limiting private equity ownership of residential housing, and making community college tuition-free.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 03/03/2026 – 13:05

‘If Iran Had Nukes, They Would’ve Used It,’ Trump Amid Regional War Spiral, Oil Disruptions

‘If Iran Had Nukes, They Would’ve Used It,’ Trump Amid Regional War Spiral, Oil Disruptions

Here are the most critical developments unfolding in the US-Iran conflict: 

  • Trump tries to articular war justification: says if we have a little high oil prices, could be for a little while, but they will drop, and could even be below the levels before, but that he ‘had to’ act or else Iran would have ‘used nukes’. Claims Israel didn’t force America’s hand. Admits leadership vacuum.

  • US mulls offering military protection to ships in the Strait of Hormuz 

  • The Pentagon has released Operation Epic Fury’s objectives; 1- Demilitarization of Iran: destruction of its missile forces, production facilities, and naval fleet 2- Elimination of the terrorist regime 3- Protection of the United States from current and future threats 4-  Ensuring that Iran does not possess nuclear weapons

  • UAE mulling joining US-Israel attack on Iran, and the Saudis too, to stop Iranian missile and drone strikes on their countries.

  • The American Embassy in Riyadh has been hit in another drone attack, with WSJ reporting it was struck twice Tuesday, resulting in damage to the roof. More embassies across region are shuttering, including the US Embassy in Beirut.

  • President Trump mulling arming anti-Tehran militias. But he hasn’t decided yet while urging Iranians to rise up and be Washington’s ‘boots on the ground.’

  • The Israelis just struck the meeting of the Iranian Supreme Council where officials were gathering to choose a new Supreme Leader, a senior Israeli official told Fox News. “Israel struck while they were counting the votes for the appointment of the supreme leader.”

  • US-Israel bombing is expanding inside Iran. Explosions heard in the northwestern cities of Tabriz and Urmia, as the capital no longer the only focus.

  • Iraq’s crude oil output is being significantly curtailed. An update from Iraq specifies a shutdown of 460,000 bpd at West Qurna 2 and a cut of 700,000 bpd at Rumaila, while warning that more than 3 million bpd could be forced offline in the coming days if tanker access remains limited.

  • Export crude bottlenecks are developing across Iraq. Storage at southern export terminals is nearing critical capacity because tanker traffic in the Strait of Hormuz has been paralyzed. Iraq has also halted most Kurdistan-to-Turkey exports via Ceyhan, leaving only about 50,000 bpd for domestic use.

  • Iranian retaliation expanded on Tuesday, with Gulf states’ energy infrastructure hit by multiple drones. This included a drone strike on Fujairah in the UAE, a key bunkering and crude-loading hub outside the Strait of Hormuz, as well as a drone strike at the Port of Salalah in Oman.

  • The U.S.-Israeli operation against Iran is intensifying. Strikes are said to be hitting major targets, including state media, military command sites, and leadership compounds, with the reported Iranian death toll rising to 787 since the start of Operation Epic Fury.

  • The war is spreading into a broader regional conflict. Israel has expanded attacks into Lebanon, including renewed strikes on Beirut and a ground move into the south, while regional actors such as Qatar and possibly Saudi Arabia are portrayed as being drawn more directly into the conflict.

  • France sending aircraft carrier to Mediterranean, says Macron

*   *   * 

Update(12:45ET)To quote Rumsfeld there are many “unknowns” as the Iraq Iran war continues to go regional, but a Tuesday Oval Office press conference saw Trump try and articulate war justifications. A quick summary:

President Trump spoke at the White House alongside visiting German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, declaring the military campaign against Iran a decisive success. “We’re doing very well,” Trump said.

“They have no navy; it’s been knocked out. They have no air force; it’s been knocked out. They have no air detection — that’s been knocked out,” he stated, adding that Iran’s radar systems and “just about everything’s been knocked out.”

Pressed in the Oval Office on why there was no evacuation plan for Americans in the Middle East before Saturday’s strikes, Trump said, “Well, because it happened all very quickly.”

“I thought we were going to have a situation where we were going to be attacked. They were getting ready to attack Israel,” he said.

When asked whether Israel had “forced” his hand, Trump replied, “No, actually, I might have forced their hand.”

Addressing speculation about Iran’s future leadership, Trump referenced Reza Pahlavi. “He seems like a very nice person. But it seems to me that someone from within might be better” to take over, he said.

Trump acknowledged the risks of regime change. “I guess the worst case would be, we do this, and then somebody takes over who’s as bad as the previous person, right?” he said. “That could happen. We don’t want that to happen.”

Defending the timing of the strike, Trump said, “You see, we were having negotiations with these lunatics, and it was my opinion that they were going to attack first. They were going to attack. If we didn’t do it, they were going to attack first. I felt strongly about that.”

And finally: very GW Bush style

If we hadn’t attacked Iran, it would have already started a nuclear war with many countries, because “they are pure evil and sick in the head” – Trump.

* * *

Update(11:15ET): American or regional officials have confirmed that the US Embassy in Riyadh has come under drone attack twice on Tuesday resulting in the roof suffering a partial collapse.

Part of the building is engulfed in smoke, with staff said to be sheltering in place. An earlier State Dept statement said: “Embassy Riyadh has been struck by two UAVs that hit the roof and the perimeter of the chancery.” The cable added: “Post is sheltering in place and reported no injuries.” Initial reports say no casualties, according to a person familiar with the incident. Meanwhile…

Saudi Arabia condemns ‘flagrant’ Iranian drone attack on US Embassy in Riyadh – Al Arabiya English

Scenes from on the ground in Tehran:

* * *

Update(0920ET): In a massive though not completely unexpected development, Iraq has shut down 460,000 barrels per day of production at the West Qurna 2 field, Iraqi oil officials told Reuters. Officials warned the country will be forced to cut more than 3 million barrels per day within days if oil tankers cannot move freely and access loading terminals, as confirmed in Bloomberg.

On Tuesday, Iraq reduced output at the Rumaila oil field by 700,000 barrels per day. Rumaila is the second-largest oil field in the world, and storage levels at southern export terminals have reached critical capacity due to disruptions and slowdowns in tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, according to local officials.

Importantly, Iraq also halted crude exports from its semi-autonomous Kurdistan region through the key pipeline to Turkey’s port of Ceyhan, according to sources cited by Bloomberg. Roughly 200,000 barrels per day have been shut in as producers cut output amid escalating regional conflict. Only about 50,000 barrels per day are now being produced for domestic use.

Energy infrastructure in northern Kurdistan has faced repeated attacks during prior unrest. And now with major fields throttling output and exports constrained, oil prices are surging.

Targeting Gulf production from across water in Iran….

* * *

Israeli and US forces pressed forward with their assault on Iran, striking targets across the country, including Iran’s state broadcaster and central military command centers, as the official death toll has climbed to 787 Iranians killed since the start of the Trump-ordered Operation Epic Fury. The US has sustained at least six troop deaths and several more seriously wounded.

Fears that this could open to a broader multi-front war appear to be coming to reality, as at the same time Israel escalated operations on a second front, intensifying airstrikes on Lebanon and launching a new ground incursion into the south. Beirut is once again under Israeli bombs, after Israel accused Hezbollah of firing rockets on the north. What’s more is that Kann News is citing a senior Israeli official as follows: We assess that Saudi Arabia will attack Iran soon after it was attacked yesterdayThe war is expanding.

Beirut on fire, via AP

The conflict has continued to spread across the Gulf. Saudi authorities said two drones struck the US Embassy in Riyadh, igniting a small fire and causing minor damage. However, there’s been surprisingly little information or video to come out of this major incident.

Qatar has formally joined the war on the US-Israeli side, having already said it took out a pair of Iranian jets. The tiny oil and gas rich GCC country Foreign Ministry stated that “the two Iranian planes shot down by Qatar yesterday were flying toward Doha and were warned before being shot down. Qatar is searching for the pilots.”

Iran has continued its retaliation by targeting energy infrastructure across the Gulf, driving global oil and gas prices sharply higher. As we reported previously, Qatar’s state-owned petroleum company suspended all LNG production after two of its facilities were hit.

The status of the vital Strait of Hormuz remains a big unknown, with Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) announcing that the vital oil transit chokepoint for roughly one-fifth of global oil consumption is now “closed”. While the consensus is that after the US blew up all or most of the Iranian Navy’s vessels, it doesn’t have the maritime power to effect a blockage, the IRGC can certainly wreak havoc through its drone and missile arsenal.

Iran has also continued missile attacks on Israel, with the Israeli military reporting interceptions over West Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, and Eilat. At least 10 people have been killed in Israel since Saturday. Many dozens, possibly in the hundreds, have been injured and wounded. Fox live shots and correspondent on the ground Trey Yingst have been offering proof that Israel’s anti-air defenses are routinely being overwhelmed and significant impacts have resulted.

Costly interceptors are also being expended at a high rate across the Gulf, and these countries are urgently appealing for more from Washington, but they will soon be in short supply at this rate. The Wall Street Journal warns as follows:

Persian Gulf nations targeted by Iran have, so far, managed to limit the damage by deploying sophisticated U.S.-made air defenses against the hundreds of drones and missiles that have rained on their cities.

With costly interceptors and radar, all integrated with the U.S. military, the oil-rich Gulf Arab states have fielded some of the most advanced air defenses in the world, despite their small populations and militaries.

A crucial variable in this war, however, is whether these monarchies start running out of interceptors before the Iranian regime runs out of projectiles. At current burn rates, it could be very soon.

Alarmingly, initial White House talking points of a ‘limited’ campaign of mere days (and based on pre-war comments during the build-up) have now gone out the window as on Monday President Trump and Secretary Rubio indicated the operation could run for roughly four or five weeks. But they also admitted there’s a basically open-ended timeline to “do whatever it takes” to eliminate Tehran’s missile and nuclear capabilities, and to destroy the country’s missile arsenal.

But then here’s what the Trump administration failed to take into account, or perhaps chose to completely ignore. Trita Parsi told The Economist:

“This is not a monarchy in which the shah is gone and you take out all of the male heirs.” He explained: “This is a system—not a particularly popular system—but nevertheless one with a security establishment that is not dependent on a single person or a single family.”

Pentagon brass doesn’t seem to know what the plan is, how long it will last, or why they’re there: “The hours, days, and perhaps weeks ahead will challenge you. There will be noise and confusion.”

There are reports that in the instance of the Ayatollah’s death under US-Israeli bombs, which is the first thing that happened Saturday as he was apparently not in hiding, Iran put a strict emergency protocol in place. This reportedly involved plans for the IRGC and various military units across the country to begin acting autonomously within their respective chains of command, so that a state decapitation strike won’t disrupt the ongoing retaliation

That retaliation has already killed at least six US service members stationed at Gulf bases:

The U.S. is facing increasing risks to its military forces and diplomatic presence in the Middle East as Iran is launching waves of missile and drone attacks across the region that are testing its ability to defend a swath of territory.

U.S. Central Command said that six servicemembers had been killed in the three-day-old campaign on Monday. The six died in a drone strike on a base in Kuwait, The Wall Street Journal reported. Separately, three American F-15 jets were downed by apparent friendly fire over Kuwait on Monday, in one of the most significant losses of equipment for the U.S. in the operation.

Bases that house U.S. forces have also come under attack in Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain.

In at least one instance troops were in a mobile trailer which served as a makeshift command center or office when an Iranian projectile hit.

The White House has meanwhile said it is not at all in diplomatic contact with the Iranians, who may want to impose a deeper cost before even starting a discussion for an offramp – and it’s the same with the Gulf states – there doesn’t seem to be any top-level contact.

Rubio and Hegseth have kept repeating that “this is not Iraq” and have insisted this is not another Neocon “endless war”. They might be right in that what just opened up might prove far worse than the Iraq war. So far there’s no US boots on the ground that we know of, but we’re already at that admin talking point of ‘we haven’t ruled it out’. White House leadership has also been surprisingly open as to Israel’s role in the US decision to attack Iran.

More latest headlines via Newsquawk: 

  • Israeli defence forces announce that they did not deploy ground troops in Iran, Israeli source report.

  • The IDF announces that they have struck Iran’s leadership compound in Tehran.

  • IAEA confirms recent damage to entrance buildings of Iran’s underground Natanz fuel enrichment plan.

  • Israel’s Home Front announce early warning after detection of rockets fired from Iran toward Israel, Al Jazeera reported.

  • Israeli Military Spokesperson said it is not likely that Israel will deploy ground forces to Iran as it is not practical.

  • IDF spokesperson said launches detected from Iran and alerts expected in the northern area from the Golan to northern Sharon.

  • Iran’s military said it targeted the Al Udeid base with missiles.

  • Iran’s IRCG said they targeted the aircraft carrier “Lincoln” with 4 cruise missiles; The aircraft carrier “Lincoln” headed towards the southeastern Indian Ocean , Al Arabiya reported.

  • Member of Iran’s Assembly of Experts said choosing a successor to Supreme Leader Khamenei “won’t take long”, according to ISNA.

  • Hezbollah said it targeted the Ramat David Air Base in northern Israel.

  • US VP Vance said President Trump wants to make sure Iran never had nuclear weapons, adds the US has a lot of capacity in Iran.

  • US President Trump held a call with Kurdish leaders in Iraq on Sunday to discuss the US-Israel war with Iran and what might come next, according to three sources with knowledge of the called cited by Axios.

  • US is said to prepare for a ‘pickup’ of attacks in Iran during the next 24 hours, according to CNN.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 03/03/2026 – 12:45

OpenAI Rewrites ‘Sloppy’ Pentagon AI Deal After Backlash Over Surveillance Risks

OpenAI Rewrites ‘Sloppy’ Pentagon AI Deal After Backlash Over Surveillance Risks

OpenAI – which millions of users trust with everything from legal documents to tax returns – is revising its newly signed contract with the US Department of War, just days after it was announced that they would replace Anthropic for use in government systems because the rushed rollout “looked opportunistic and sloppy.” 

Hours after negotiations collapsed between the Pentagon and rival startup Anthropic on Friday, the San Francisco-based company agreed to supply its AI models for use in classified military operations. The breakdown followed talks with Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth over how the government could deploy advanced AI tools.

OpenAI initially described its agreement as containing “more guardrails than any previous agreement for classified AI deployments, including Anthropic’s.” But on Monday, CEO Sam Altman said the company was working with the department to add explicit contractual language barring the intentional use of its systems for domestic surveillance of U.S. persons or nationals.

The AI system shall not be intentionally used for domestic surveillance of US persons and nationals,” Altman said the revised terms would state, adding that intelligence agencies such as the National Security Agency would be excluded from the deal for now.

So – while OpenAI has likely bought some legal cover with these changes, there’s always the possibility of unintentional use

From a Monday update to OpenAI’s statement on the deal: 

Throughout our discussions, the Department made clear it shares our commitment to ensuring our tools will not be used for domestic surveillance. To make our principles as clear as possible, we worked together to add additional language to our agreement. 

This language makes explicit that our tools will not be used to conduct domestic surveillance of U.S. persons, including through the procurement or use of commercially acquired personal or identifiable information. The Department also affirmed that our services will not be used by Department of War intelligence agencies like the NSA. Any services to those agencies would require a new agreement. 

The new language reads:

  • Consistent with applicable laws, including the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, National Security Act of 1947, FISA Act of 1978, the AI system shall not be intentionally used for domestic surveillance of U.S. persons and nationals.
  • For the avoidance of doubt, the Department understands this limitation to prohibit deliberate tracking, surveillance, or monitoring of U.S. persons or nationals, including through the procurement or use of commercially acquired personal or identifiable information.

The Department of War plans to convene a working group made up of leaders from the frontier AI labs, cloud providers, and the Department’s policy and operational communities. OpenAI will participate and expect this will be an important forum for ongoing dialogue on emerging AI capabilities, privacy, and national security challenges going forward. 

These updates build on the framework we announced last week and we hope will help create a pathway for other labs to work with the Department going forward.

* * *

Guardrails, Technical Controls and Legal Debate

OpenAI says it can uphold its own red lines through a mix of contractual provisions and technical controls. The company says it will deploy models via cloud access rather than installing them directly onto military hardware and will keep its personnel involved in the loop. It has reiterated that its technology cannot be used to direct autonomous weapons systems.

Altman suggested the company was comfortable relying in part on existing law. “Anthropic seemed more focused on specific prohibitions in the contract, rather than citing applicable laws, which we felt comfortable with,” he said Saturday.

But by Monday, he acknowledged concerns about how AI systems could enable large-scale data gathering.

We shouldn’t have rushed to get this out on Friday. The issues are super complex, and demand clear communication,” Altman wrote in a message to employees reposted on X. “We were genuinely trying to de-escalate things and avoid a much worse outcome, but I think it just looked opportunistic and sloppy.”

The updated language would “prohibit deliberate tracking, surveillance or monitoring of US persons or nationals, including through the procurement or use of commercially acquired personal or identifiable information,” according to the company.

Fallout From Anthropic’s Collapse

The Pentagon’s pivot to OpenAI came after Anthropic’s negotiations unraveled over two core red lines articulated by its CEO, Dario Amodei: no domestic mass surveillance and no use of AI in lethal autonomous weapons systems – and would require the Pentagon to seek approval to use it in the heat of battle.

According to the Financial Times, Hegseth sought language permitting the models for “all lawful use.” Anthropic executives argued existing U.S. law could allow mass AI-enabled data collection and pressed for tighter contractual safeguards until new legislation was enacted. Discussions reportedly stalled over terms governing the mass collection of publicly available data.

The Pentagon had signaled openness to revising phrasing that Anthropic viewed as overly broad, and senior figures at the company believed a deal was close. But negotiations ultimately fell apart.

Since then, the Trump administration has moved aggressively against Anthropic. President Donald Trump has directed agencies to phase out the company’s tools. The Treasury Department, the Federal Housing Finance Agency, and government-backed mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac all announced they would end Anthropic contracts – with full dis-integration to occur within six months. The Pentagon also designated the company a supply chain risk.

Employee Dissent and Public Protest

The deal has triggered unrest inside OpenAI and across the broader tech sector. Employees have voiced concerns internally and on social media, according to people familiar with the matter. Nearly 900 workers at OpenAI and Google signed an open letter urging leadership to refuse government demands for domestic mass surveillance or autonomous killing capabilities.

Over the weekend, chalk graffiti appeared outside OpenAI’s San Francisco office reading “NO TO MASS SURVEILLANCE” and urging staff to “Do the right thing!”

The controversy has also spilled into the consumer market. Anthropic’s chatbot, Claude, briefly climbed above ChatGPT in Apple’s App Store rankings, according to Sensor Tower data, amid calls online for users to delete ChatGPT.

Miles Brundage, OpenAI’s former head of policy research, publicly criticized the company’s handling of the negotiations, writing that employees’ “default assumption” should be that OpenAI “caved + framed it as not caving,” though he acknowledged the organization is complex and that some staff worked toward what they considered a fair outcome.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 03/03/2026 – 10:50

Regime Change Will Not Be Easy: Tehran’s Goal Is To Survive By Any Means Necessary

Regime Change Will Not Be Easy: Tehran’s Goal Is To Survive By Any Means Necessary

By Molly Schwartz, cross-asset macro strategist at Rabobank

My Circus! My Monkeys!

Europe was hit with the first strike to its energy supply chain after the Russian invasion of Ukraine and had to start diversifying its inflows from elsewhere. Now that Middle Eastern LNG is losing reliability, Europe might have to get involved just to keep the lights on.

While the EU and UK would probably be more than happy to spectate from the proverbial “monitoring chair,” they may not have a choice. TTF prices reached highs of – €48.95/MWh yesterday—the highest since February of 2025- and are up more than 20% today. 

QatarEnergy announced that it has ceased production of LNG and associated products due to the recent escalation. Our Energy Strategists, Florence Schmit and Joe DeLaura, note that we could see prices return to 2022 levels should Qatar be taken out of the LNG equation entirely (easily back to €100/MWh). Read more here.

This puts the entire European energy complex at risk and might be just the incentive needed for Europe to get out of the monitoring chair and into the ring.

France24 reports that “France, Germany, UK ready to take ‘defensive action’ against Iran.” As the EU touts commitments to increase defense spending and build up its military capabilities, Rabobank Global Strategist Michael Every has mused, “why have all these war planes sitting on the tarmac not doing anything?”

A little farther south, the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) is considering its own involvement. Omani foreign minister Badr Albusaidi said on X that “neither the interests of the United States nor the cause of global peace are well served by this. I urge the United States not to get sucked in further. This is not your war.” But the GCC has made it clear that they don’t want it to be their war either. Threats to the economies of the Gulf are not just about energy—this also impacts their budding tourism and hospitality industries as few want to vacation in an active warzone. The UAE and Qatar have reportedly been lobbying allies to end this war as soon as possible.

Meanwhile, in a statement, the Saudi Ministry of Foreign Affairs affirmed “its full solidarity with and unwavering support for the brotherly countries, and its readiness to place all its capabilities at their disposal in support of any measures they may undertake. It also warns of the grave consequence resulting from the continued violation of states’ sovereignty and the principles of international law.” As much as the GCC may want to stay out of it (or, at least as far out of it as they can when their territory is being striked by Iranian drones), the Saudis, at least, are prepared to escalate further.

Trump and Hegseth have not shown any signs of backing down just yet. Early yesterday morning, Hegseth affirmed that “Iran is not a regime change war, but the regime did change,” and that the war will be finished “on America-first conditions.” What those conditions are is still TBD. And the ambiguity of those conditions still leaves us with the question of what constitutes a win.

Hegseth and Rubio would tell you that the aim is the same as last time—to set back Iran’s nuclear proliferation program. But as we saw recently, it doesn’t take Iran very long before they can start to rebuild capacity. The best way to cut off nuclear proliferation is to cut off the head, and that necessitates regime change.

However, as noted in yesterday’s installment, regime change will not be easy. The goal of Tehran is to survive by any means necessary. Even if the regime is rendered a shell of what it once was, but manages to hang on by a thread, then the US has failed. While Trump has announced that this military operation could take weeks and Hegseth rejected the idea that this would be another endless war to echo Iraq and Afghanistan, this may still be a much longer ride than expected.

Yesterday’s stellar performance of USD also exemplified how calls of “Sell America” in recent months were shortsighted. While USD has not been behaving as a safe-haven traditionally would, given the dramatic USD sell-off in H1 2025, we have long argued that this was more about positioning—a repricing of EUR/USD in the aftermath of European announcement of defense spending, and rising USD hedge ratios from foreign investors—than it was a loss of USD’s safe haven status. Indeed, recent price action makes it clear that when the going gets rough, investors still flee  to the warm embrace of greenback liquidity.

Still, other US assets have not felt the love. The inflationary risks posed by an extensive war with Iran are at front of mind for investors, especially as analysts keep a watchful eye on the strait of Hormuz. Even though the Fed prefers to look at core inflation, which strips out direct energy costs, energy is an input into everything, including core goods and services. While inflation is already above the 2% target, and the lagged effects of tariffs are starting to put pressure on core goods, the additional price increases posed by turning the major oil exporter of the world into a warzone may put the Fed in a tricky position. US 2 year and 10 year Treasury yields moved in parallel, closing the day up 11bp, which is the greatest single day move since the US-Iranian skirmish last June.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 03/03/2026 – 10:30

US B-2 Bombers Belatedly Authorized To Use British Bases To Hit Deep Inside Iran

US B-2 Bombers Belatedly Authorized To Use British Bases To Hit Deep Inside Iran

In the modern era Britain has always been America’s junior partner when it comes to launching Middle East wars, and so in the opening days of Trump’s Operation Epic Fury targeting Iran, there was anger in Washington as the Starmer government appeared to waffle and was fence sitting.

However by Monday and Tuesday, the United Kingdom is as expected now aligning directly with Washington, having belatedly authorized the use of British military bases to support American operations targeting Iran’s missile capabilities.

Illustrative file image: Google Earth/Reddit

Prime Minister Keir Starmer approved the request after a 24-hour legal review, granting Washington access to UK bases for what he called a “specific and limited defensive purpose.”

“The only way to stop the threat is to destroy the missiles at source, in their storage depots or the launchers which are used to fire the missiles,” Starmer said in a social media statement. “The U.S. has requested permission to use British bases for that specific and limited defensive purpose. We have taken the decision to accept this request.”

The bases will likely be used for US B-2 bombers to reach deep inside Iran. In the opening waves of attacks Saturday, these same B-2s were flying all the way from airbases in the US mainland.

Starmer likely got political cover in the fact that regional bases where British troops are stationed have come under Iran’s intense retaliatory strikes.

This included a drone strike late Sunday on the Royal Air Force base at Akrotiri in Cyprus, which may have actually been launched by Iran-allied Hezbollah in Lebanon.

Starmer was apparently worried about the ‘legal status’ of the US-led operation, but now the British government has definitively stated the action is “solely focused on ending the threat of air and missile attacks against regional allies unlawfully attacked by Iran and who have not been involved in hostilities from the outset.”

Still, London is taking pains to say this “does not signal the U.K. having any wider involvement in the broader ongoing conflict between the U.S., Israel, and Iran.”

President Trump has wanted much more direct involvement in military action by Britain:

But like with other regional wars of the past couple decades it’s likely only a matter of time before Britain jumps in more fully into the conflict. The Brits have been involved in everything from Afghanistan to Iraq to Libya to Syria in recent years, especially going to back to the chummy Blair-Bush days just after 9/11.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 03/03/2026 – 09:35

Oil Spikes To Session High As Iraq Starts Shutting Output At Massive Oil Field

Oil Spikes To Session High As Iraq Starts Shutting Output At Massive Oil Field

Here are the most critical developments unfolding in the US-Iran conflict: 

  • Iraq’s crude oil output is being significantly curtailed. An update from Iraq specifies a shutdown of 460,000 bpd at West Qurna 2 and a cut of 700,000 bpd at Rumaila, while warning that more than 3 million bpd could be forced offline in the coming days if tanker access remains limited.

  • Export crude bottlenecks are developing across Iraq. Storage at southern export terminals is nearing critical capacity because tanker traffic in the Strait of Hormuz has been paralyzed. Iraq has also halted most Kurdistan-to-Turkey exports via Ceyhan, leaving only about 50,000 bpd for domestic use.

  • Iranian retaliation expanded on Tuesday, with Gulf states’ energy infrastructure hit by multiple drones. This included a drone strike on Fujairah in the UAE, a key bunkering and crude-loading hub outside the Strait of Hormuz, as well as a drone strike at the Port of Salalah in Oman.

  • The U.S.-Israeli operation against Iran is intensifying. Strikes are said to be hitting major targets, including state media, military command sites, and leadership compounds, with the reported Iranian death toll rising to 787 since the start of Operation Epic Fury.

  • The war is spreading into a broader regional conflict. Israel has expanded attacks into Lebanon, including renewed strikes on Beirut and a ground move into the south, while regional actors such as Qatar and possibly Saudi Arabia are portrayed as being drawn more directly into the conflict.

  • A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman called on all parties in the conflict to ensure the safe transit of commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, as Beijing’s cheap crude imports from the region are under threat.

  • There are reports that a costly critical air defense missile shortage has materialized in Gulf states. Israel was seen using its Iron Beam laser system in recent days.

*   *   * 

 

Update(0920ET): In a massive though not completely unexpected development, Iraq has shut down 460,000 barrels per day of production at the West Qurna 2 field, Iraqi oil officials told Reuters. Officials warned the country will be forced to cut more than 3 million barrels per day within days if oil tankers cannot move freely and access loading terminals, as confirmed in Bloomberg.

On Tuesday, Iraq reduced output at the Rumaila oil field by 700,000 barrels per day. Rumaila is the second-largest oil field in the world, and storage levels at southern export terminals have reached critical capacity due to disruptions and slowdowns in tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, according to local officials.

Importantly, Iraq also halted crude exports from its semi-autonomous Kurdistan region through the key pipeline to Turkey’s port of Ceyhan, according to sources cited by Bloomberg. Roughly 200,000 barrels per day have been shut in as producers cut output amid escalating regional conflict. Only about 50,000 barrels per day are now being produced for domestic use.

Energy infrastructure in northern Kurdistan has faced repeated attacks during prior unrest. And now with major fields throttling output and exports constrained, oil prices are surging.

Targeting Gulf production from across water in Iran….

* * *

Israeli and US forces pressed forward with their assault on Iran, striking targets across the country, including Iran’s state broadcaster and central military command centers, as the official death toll has climbed to 787 Iranians killed since the start of the Trump-ordered Operation Epic Fury. The US has sustained at least six troop deaths and several more seriously wounded.

Fears that this could open to a broader multi-front war appear to be coming to reality, as at the same time Israel escalated operations on a second front, intensifying airstrikes on Lebanon and launching a new ground incursion into the south. Beirut is once again under Israeli bombs, after Israel accused Hezbollah of firing rockets on the north. What’s more is that Kann News is citing a senior Israeli official as follows: We assess that Saudi Arabia will attack Iran soon after it was attacked yesterdayThe war is expanding.

Beirut on fire, via AP

The conflict has continued to spread across the Gulf. Saudi authorities said two drones struck the US Embassy in Riyadh, igniting a small fire and causing minor damage. However, there’s been surprisingly little information or video to come out of this major incident.

Qatar has formally joined the war on the US-Israeli side, having already said it took out a pair of Iranian jets. The tiny oil and gas rich GCC country Foreign Ministry stated that “the two Iranian planes shot down by Qatar yesterday were flying toward Doha and were warned before being shot down. Qatar is searching for the pilots.”

Iran has continued its retaliation by targeting energy infrastructure across the Gulf, driving global oil and gas prices sharply higher. As we reported previously, Qatar’s state-owned petroleum company suspended all LNG production after two of its facilities were hit.

The status of the vital Strait of Hormuz remains a big unknown, with Iran’s Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) announcing that the vital oil transit chokepoint for roughly one-fifth of global oil consumption is now “closed”. While the consensus is that after the US blew up all or most of the Iranian Navy’s vessels, it doesn’t have the maritime power to effect a blockage, the IRGC can certainly wreak havoc through its drone and missile arsenal.

Iran has also continued missile attacks on Israel, with the Israeli military reporting interceptions over West Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, and Eilat. At least 10 people have been killed in Israel since Saturday. Many dozens, possibly in the hundreds, have been injured and wounded. Fox live shots and correspondent on the ground Trey Yingst have been offering proof that Israel’s anti-air defenses are routinely being overwhelmed and significant impacts have resulted.

Costly interceptors are also being expended at a high rate across the Gulf, and these countries are urgently appealing for more from Washington, but they will soon be in short supply at this rate. The Wall Street Journal warns as follows:

Persian Gulf nations targeted by Iran have, so far, managed to limit the damage by deploying sophisticated U.S.-made air defenses against the hundreds of drones and missiles that have rained on their cities.

With costly interceptors and radar, all integrated with the U.S. military, the oil-rich Gulf Arab states have fielded some of the most advanced air defenses in the world, despite their small populations and militaries.

A crucial variable in this war, however, is whether these monarchies start running out of interceptors before the Iranian regime runs out of projectiles. At current burn rates, it could be very soon.

Alarmingly, initial White House talking points of a ‘limited’ campaign of mere days (and based on pre-war comments during the build-up) have now gone out the window as on Monday President Trump and Secretary Rubio indicated the operation could run for roughly four or five weeks. But they also admitted there’s a basically open-ended timeline to “do whatever it takes” to eliminate Tehran’s missile and nuclear capabilities, and to destroy the country’s missile arsenal.

But then here’s what the Trump administration failed to take into account, or perhaps chose to completely ignore. Trita Parsi told The Economist:

“This is not a monarchy in which the shah is gone and you take out all of the male heirs.” He explained: “This is a system—not a particularly popular system—but nevertheless one with a security establishment that is not dependent on a single person or a single family.”

Pentagon brass doesn’t seem to know what the plan is, how long it will last, or why they’re there: “The hours, days, and perhaps weeks ahead will challenge you. There will be noise and confusion.”

There are reports that in the instance of the Ayatollah’s death under US-Israeli bombs, which is the first thing that happened Saturday as he was apparently not in hiding, Iran put a strict emergency protocol in place. This reportedly involved plans for the IRGC and various military units across the country to begin acting autonomously within their respective chains of command, so that a state decapitation strike won’t disrupt the ongoing retaliation

That retaliation has already killed at least six US service members stationed at Gulf bases:

The U.S. is facing increasing risks to its military forces and diplomatic presence in the Middle East as Iran is launching waves of missile and drone attacks across the region that are testing its ability to defend a swath of territory.

U.S. Central Command said that six servicemembers had been killed in the three-day-old campaign on Monday. The six died in a drone strike on a base in Kuwait, The Wall Street Journal reported. Separately, three American F-15 jets were downed by apparent friendly fire over Kuwait on Monday, in one of the most significant losses of equipment for the U.S. in the operation.

Bases that house U.S. forces have also come under attack in Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Bahrain.

In at least one instance troops were in a mobile trailer which served as a makeshift command center or office when an Iranian projectile hit.

The White House has meanwhile said it is not at all in diplomatic contact with the Iranians, who may want to impose a deeper cost before even starting a discussion for an offramp – and it’s the same with the Gulf states – there doesn’t seem to be any top-level contact.

Rubio and Hegseth have kept repeating that “this is not Iraq” and have insisted this is not another Neocon “endless war”. They might be right in that what just opened up might prove far worse than the Iraq war. So far there’s no US boots on the ground that we know of, but we’re already at that admin talking point of ‘we haven’t ruled it out’. White House leadership has also been surprisingly open as to Israel’s role in the US decision to attack Iran.

More latest headlines via Newsquawk: 

  • Israeli defence forces announce that they did not deploy ground troops in Iran, Israeli source report.

  • The IDF announces that they have struck Iran’s leadership compound in Tehran.

  • IAEA confirms recent damage to entrance buildings of Iran’s underground Natanz fuel enrichment plan.

  • Israel’s Home Front announce early warning after detection of rockets fired from Iran toward Israel, Al Jazeera reported.

  • Israeli Military Spokesperson said it is not likely that Israel will deploy ground forces to Iran as it is not practical.

  • IDF spokesperson said launches detected from Iran and alerts expected in the northern area from the Golan to northern Sharon.

  • Iran’s military said it targeted the Al Udeid base with missiles.

  • Iran’s IRCG said they targeted the aircraft carrier “Lincoln” with 4 cruise missiles; The aircraft carrier “Lincoln” headed towards the southeastern Indian Ocean , Al Arabiya reported.

  • Member of Iran’s Assembly of Experts said choosing a successor to Supreme Leader Khamenei “won’t take long”, according to ISNA.

  • Hezbollah said it targeted the Ramat David Air Base in northern Israel.

  • US VP Vance said President Trump wants to make sure Iran never had nuclear weapons, adds the US has a lot of capacity in Iran.

  • US President Trump held a call with Kurdish leaders in Iraq on Sunday to discuss the US-Israel war with Iran and what might come next, according to three sources with knowledge of the called cited by Axios.

  • US is said to prepare for a ‘pickup’ of attacks in Iran during the next 24 hours, according to CNN.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 03/03/2026 – 09:20

China Panics, Urges Ceasefire To Reopen Strait Of Hormuz As Beijing Is Addicted To Cheap Iranian Crude

China Panics, Urges Ceasefire To Reopen Strait Of Hormuz As Beijing Is Addicted To Cheap Iranian Crude

Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning said at Tuesday’s regular press briefing in Beijing that all parties in the Iran conflict must ensure the safe transit of commercial shipping through the critical maritime energy chokepoint of the Strait of Hormuz.

China urges all parties to immediately cease military operations, avoid escalating tensions, and safeguard the safety of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz,” spokeswoman Ning said.

We’ve briefed readers that China is heavily exposed to cheap Iranian crude exports. About 80% of Iran’s oil exports – about 1.6 million barrels per day – go to China.

This means Beijing will do everything in its power to preserve this lifeline and remove any blockage in Hormuz.

And this. 

Chinese officials have reportedly been pressing Iran not to disrupt tanker traffic, damage Qatari gas exports, or hit major export hubs, according to Bloomberg.

The latest AIS shipping tracking data via Bloomberg shows the Strait of Hormuz remains paralyzed, with Iran’s Revolutionary Guards commander threatening fire and destruction to any ship that transits the narrow waterway.

Our latest reporting shows that a day after a reported Iranian drone strike forced Saudi Arabia’s largest oil refinery offline, there are numerous reports of drone strikes on critical Gulf energy infrastructure on Tuesday morning (read report).

We highly recommend that readers review a report titled “The Iran Question Is All About China” to better understand that this conflict extends well beyond Iran.

Looking ahead, top U.S. and Chinese trade negotiators are expected to meet in mid-March, according to Bloomberg, ahead of a planned Trump-Xi summit later this month. Trump’s moves against Venezuela and now Iran can be viewed as an effort to tighten pressure on two of Beijing’s cheap crude supplies before those talks (that’s if those talks don’t get canceled).

Tyler Durden
Tue, 03/03/2026 – 08:55

“From Orderly Selloff, To Panic”: Stocks, Bonds Plunge As Oil, Dollar Soar On Iran War

“From Orderly Selloff, To Panic”: Stocks, Bonds Plunge As Oil, Dollar Soar On Iran War

US equity futures are down sharply, along with all global markets, as the Iran war expands and escalates (attack on US embassy in Saudi Arabia; uncertainty over duration of Strait of Hormuz closure; targeting non-military infra / businesses) rattling markets and sending oil and the dollar surging. Global bonds also plunge on fears that Trump’s “whatever it takes” vow on Iran will fuel energy prices and inflation. As of 8:00am ET, S&P futures are down 1.4%, off session lows, as market odds for Fed rate cuts in the coming months slide on the spike in oil prices; Nasdaq futures tumble 1.9% with all Mag 7 names lower. Pre-market, only Energy and Aero/Def are up in absolute terms while healthcare and staples outperfom. European and Asian equity benchmarks headed for their worst two-day drop since April. While yesterday dip-buyers helped US stocks close little changed, they may have their work cut out for them today.  WTI crude trades above $75, Brent touching $85 for the first time since 2024, and European gas futures up 70% over the last two days; after soaring on Monday, precious metals are smashed today as the USD rips. Ten-year Treasury yields climbed six basis points to 4.10% as expectations dimmed for a second Federal Reserve cut in 2026. A surprise acceleration in euro-area inflation added to bets that the European Central Bank could raise rates this year. The yield on two-year UK gilts surged 16 basis points. Currently, there is no defined off-ramp with initial timelines expanding from 1 week to one month; and now potentially longer and the US has not ruled out a ground war. Mercifully there is no macro events today.

In premarket trading, all Mag 7 names are sharply lower. Nvidia lags most peers as US officials are considering caps on the number of AI accelerators the semiconductor giant can export to any one Chinese company (Nvidia -2.2%, Alphabet -2.4%, Amazon -2%, Tesla -1.6%, Microsoft -1.4%, Meta -1.4%, Apple -0.7%)

  • Banks and financial firms fall as bond yields climb on the prospect of a prolonged conflict and the inflationary effect of high oil prices.
  • Energy stocks are set to extend Monday’s gains, while airlines are once again lower. Movers include APA (APA) +2%, Exxon (XOM) +1.6%, American Airlines (AAL) -2.8%.
  • Archer Aviation (ACHR) falls 4% after the electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft maker reported a fourth-quarter adjusted loss per share that was wider than analysts’ estimates
  • Best Buy Co. (BBY) climbs 13% after posting fourth quarter results and providing guidance.
  • Credo Technology (CRDO) drops 11% after the communications equipment company reported revenue for the third quarter that matched its preliminary results announced in February.
  • LendingTree (TREE) rises 8% after the consumer finance company’s revenue forecast for the full year exceeded the average analyst estimate.
  • MongoDB (MDB) drops 26% after the database software company gave weaker-than-expected forecasts for full-year revenue and first-quarter adjusted earnings.
  • On Holding (ONON) slumps 9% after the athletic apparel company forecast net sales for 2026 that fell short of Wall Street’s expectations.
  • Ouster (OUST) surges 16% after the lidar company’s first-quarter revenue outlook topped the average analyst estimate
  • Sea Ltd. (SE) plummets 16% after its quarterly earnings missed analysts’ estimates, a sign that competition from deep-pocketed rivals is weighing on the e-commerce company’s profitability.
  • Surgery Partners (SGRY) falls 24% after the health-care facilities operator reported adjusted earnings per share for the fourth quarter that fell short of Wall Street’s estimates. Adjusted Ebitda also disappointed.
  • Target Corp. (TGT) climbs 3% after forecasting better-than-expected profit for the full year, indicating the big-box retailer’s turnaround plans are generating results.

In other corporate news, Fitch downgraded Paramount Skydance’s corporate and long-term borrower ratings to junk following the Warner Bros. Discovery deal. OpenAI’s CEO said the company’s rush to forge a deal with the Pentagon looked “opportunistic and sloppy.” And Blackstone is allowing investors to redeem a record 7.9% of shares from its flagship private credit fund, the latest sign of unease in the industry.

Stocks fell and bonds deepened losses as the war in Iran entered its fourth day with no sign of de-escalation, heightening fears of a lengthy disruption to energy markets and a surge in inflation. Futures accelerated their drop after reports on Monday evening of drones striking near the US Embassy in Riyadh, pulling Saudi Arabia into a widening conflict. Drone strikes also damaged three Amazon Web Services data centers in the Middle East in recent days, with the company warning of prolonged disruptions to its services. The dollar remained the haven of choice, rising 0.7%. Concern that energy prices could remain elevated pushed global yields higher for a second day. 

“Geopolitics is difficult to trade,” wrote Mohit Kumar, chief strategist for Europe at Jefferies. “We are happy to be overweight cash right now, waiting for more clarity and then use market moves to buy the dip.”

After soaring 50% on Monday, European natural gas prices surged as much as 34% amid uncertainty over how long exports will be halted from the world’s largest LNG export plant in Qatar. Brent spiked as much as $85 a barrel to the highest since January 2025. The Trump administration has no immediate plans to release oil from the nation’s emergency reserve. Crude tanker rates are set to extend gains despite already surging 1,586% from a recent low, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.

“Sentiment is gradually drifting from an orderly selloff to a panic selloff,” said Joachim Klement, head of strategy at Panmure Liberum. “We are now starting to see overreaction by investors. This increased panic selling may last for a little longer, but will eventually open up buying opportunities.”

A key focus for traders is what happens in the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway off the coast of Iran that carries about a fifth of global oil supply.  According to JPM the magic number is 25: that’s how many days the world has before it is effectively starved of energy supplies that transit the strait.  Attention is also turning to the region’s vast array of energy infrastructure, with a fire at a major storage hub in the United Arab Emirates underscoring the risk to supplies.

“There was definitely a degree of complacency in US equity market valuations at close yesterday, and a perception that military conflict in Iran was a self-contained geopolitical risk,” said Emma Moriarty, portfolio manager at CG Asset Management. “Comments from the White House yesterday suggest a will to make the conflict more durable and to do whatever it takes.”

In Europe, the Stoxx 600 down by 3.2% with all subindexes in the red. European Banks and insurers are now in negative territory for the year as rising bond yields weigh on valuations. Deutsche Bank AG and BNP Paribas SA slumped more than 5%. Here are some of the biggest movers on Tuesday:

  • AJ Bell shares rise as much as 3.3% after the investment platform was upgraded by UBS, with analysts saying slower EPS growth is now fully reflected in the price.
  • Deutsche Boerse shares rise as much as 3% following upgrades to buy from Kepler Cheuvreux and Jefferies, with analysts citing the exchange operator’s resilience in uncertain markets and its insulation from AI disruption.
  • Beiersdorf shares fall as much as 18% after the German owner of the Nivea brand posted disappointing guidance for the year that is likely to lead to consensus cuts, according to Citi.
  • Insurers, banks are at the forefront of a broad selloff in European stocks, with both sectors having now fallen into negative territory year-to-date. Their steep underperformance reflects rising bond yields as traders weigh the possibility of a prolonged conflict in the Middle East that drives up inflation.
  • Schaeffler shares sink as much as 20% after the German auto parts supplier announced weaker-than-expected 2026 guidance, with analysts predicting downgrades to consensus estimates.
  • Aberdeen Group shares fell as much as 9.2% following its 2025 results. While analysts said the earnings were in line with expectations, the stock pulled back from near its highest since 2023 on Monday amid a wide selloff in financial services.
  • Intertek shares crater as much as 14% after the testing and inspection firm’s results gave bears “too much to get their teeth stuck into” this morning, according to RBC Capital Markets.
  • Forbo shares drop as much as 7.5% after the Swiss linoleum maker revealed only a minor improvement in second-half results and issued cautious guidance for the year ahead, dashing hopes of a swift recovery.
  • Fresnillo shares drop as much as 6% after analysts at RBC Capital Markets said the capital expenditure budget for this year is much higher than expected, which is stealing the show from the mining company’s strong annual results.

Asian stocks extended losses into a second day as mounting conflict in the Middle East intensified risk-off sentiment among investors.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index dropped as much as 3.1%, setting the gauge on track for its worst two days in 11 months after US and Israeli strikes on Iran. One of the day’s most pronounced moves came in South Korea, which slumped 7.2% in its worst session since August 2024, as markets reopened after a holiday. Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix dropped more than 10%.

The volatility is forcing some investors to lock in year-to-date gains in hot markets and sectors like technology after a frenzy around all things artificial intelligence. Heavyweights Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix and TSMC were among the biggest drags on the regional gauge. Still, Korea’s Kospi and Taiwan’s Taiex Index are up 37% and 18%, respectively, this year, among the best performing gauges globally.

If transport disruptions persist in the Strait of Hormuz, that could continue to weigh on Asian equities that have been trading at record highs, said Dilin Wu, a research strategist at Pepperstone Group. “Any further supply tightening can quickly push up costs, squeeze corporate margins, fuel inflation, and weigh on risk assets.”

“The investment question is not primarily about Iran itself — it is whether the conflict leads to a larger value-at-risk episode driven by correlation into other markets,” said Nick Ferres, chief investment officer of Vantage Point Asset Management in Singapore. “My guess is that markets traded as though the conflict would be relatively short last night. However, that view might be too optimistic.”

Consumer stocks will be in focus in early trading with big-box retailer Target and a slate of consumer discretionary stocks due to report. Nivea maker Beiersdorf fell in Europe after saying challenging conditions in the skincare market will likely continue.

In FX, Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index up by 0.7% with Norwegian krone and Swedish krona underperforming.

In rates, treasury futures extend Monday’s slide, lifting yields by 4bp-8bp with short maturities rising most, flattening the curve. Bonds are under pressure with crude oil futures up more than 8% at highest level since June, stoking inflation expectations, as US military action continues for a fourth day.  US front-end yields climbed as much as 10bp as traders priced in a more restrictive Fed policy path, flattening the 2s10s curve by nearly 3bp, 5s30s more than 4bp; 10-year is near 4.09%, about 6bp higher on the day, with UK and German counterparts up about 15bp and about 8bp respectively. UK gilts lead the global bond selloff, with front-end yields cheaper by about 17bp and curve spreads flatter. European bonds are plunging with the biggest decline at the short-end in the UK, with two-year yields spiking by 17 basis points. Yields higher across Europe as traders pull back their central bank bets and wager on the possibility of a hike by the ECB this year as Eurozone inflation comes hotter than expected. It’s not just Europe: globally, expectations for central bank easing are shifting further into the future based on rising inflation expectations; Fed swaps are price in around 40bp of easing by year-end vs 60bp at the end of last week. For ECB, swaps price in around 10bp of rate hikes by year-end while BOE contracts are priced for about 20bp of cuts. IG dollar issuance slate includes a couple of names. Nothing was done Monday as 15 borrowers — including one with a jumbo offering — that planned to sell new investment-grade bonds stood down. Syndicate desks had projected about $65 billion of high-grade issuance for the week. 

In commodities, gold is missing out on any haven flows falling 2.9% after a four-day rally. It wa last trading around $5170. Base metals are also under pressure with copper falling over 2%, but aluminum spiking after QatarEnergy said it would stop output of the metal. Bitcoin sliding below $67,000.

US economic data slate empty for the session. Fed speakers include Williams (9:55am) and Kashkari (11:45am)

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 mini -1.7%
  • Nasdaq 100 mini -2.2%
  • Russell 2000 mini -2.6%
  • Stoxx Europe 600 -3.1%
  • DAX -3.6%
  • CAC 40 -2.8%
  • 10-year Treasury yield +6 basis points at 4.1%
  • VIX +4.8 points at 26.22
  • Bloomberg Dollar Index +0.6% at 1203.44
  • euro -0.7% at $1.1605
  • WTI crude +6.4% at $75.77/barrel

Top Overnight News

  • Prolonged war in the middle East and a persistent fall in oil and gas supplies from the region could cause a “substantial spike” in inflation and a “sharp drop in output” in the Eurozone, ECB chief economist warned. FT
  • Brent hit $85 a barrel after news of a fire in Fujairah, a major UAE oil hub that lies outside the strait. QatarEnergy halted production of some downstream products and European natural gas surged again after the closure of the country’s LNG export plant yesterday. BBG
  • The Trump administration will unveil a plan on Tuesday to combat the rise in oil prices triggered by the U.S. military strikes against Iran, Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Monday. Politico
  • Two leading Republican senators are reportedly asking the Trump admin to pass a USD 200bln tax cut without congressional approval; GOP seeks improving its economic approval rating ahead of the mid-term elections. Two senators incl. Ted Cruz and Tim Scott. Aims to reduce some of the taxes paid on capital gains: WaPo
  • Fresh market volatility triggered by the Middle East conflict has heightened the chance the Bank of Japan will hold off on raising rates in March, sources said, as policymakers need more time to gauge the impact on the economy. RTRS
  • US and Chinese trade negotiators are slated to meet in mid-March, according to people familiar with the matter, signaling a planned summit between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping is pushing ahead despite American strikes against Iran. BBG
  • The Bank of Russia is suing the EU over the indefinite freeze on assets blocked following the invasion of Ukraine, arguing that it’s being deprived of legal protections. BBG
  • Fed chair-in-waiting Kevin Warsh’s path to rate cuts is narrowing amid elevated inflation, a stabilizing labor market and — now — surging oil. Traders pared rate-cut bets to price a 50% chance of a second quarter-point reduction this year. BBG
  • Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu insisted the U.S.-Israeli joint military operation in Iran will not lead to an “endless war” in a Fox News interview on Monday in which he lavishly praised U.S. President Donald Trump’s role in leading the airstrike campaign. Politico
  • Market ‘dispersion’ is hitting levels not seen in decades as investors sort AI winners from losers. While the S&P 500 has traded within a range of just 2.7% in 2026, the average company in the index has moved within a band that is about seven times as much. That ratio is the largest since at least 1994, signaling a market with unusually high divergence in returns between different companies. WSJ

Trade/Tariffs

  • US Treasury Secretary Bessent and Chinese Vice Premier He Lifeng are expected to convene in Paris at the end of next week to discuss bilateral matters, according to Bloomberg.
  • US and China trade negotiaters are to meet mid-March prior to the Trump-Xi summit.

A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newquawk

APAC stocks were pressured with risk appetite weighed down by geopolitics as the Iranian conflict entered a fourth day, and with US President Trump warning of larger strikes to come. ASX 200 was led lower by weakness in mining and materials, with broad weakness seen in nearly all sectors aside from energy and financials. Nikkei 225 slumped beneath the 57,000 level amid the Iranian conflict and global disruption, with sentiment also not helped by a rise in the unemployment rate and as higher energy prices stoked inflationary concerns, which could narrow policy space for the BoJ. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp traded indecisively with price action initially rangebound, before eventually succumbing to the risk-off mood, while there was a fairly substantial liquidity drain by the PBoC, and participants continue to await China’s annual Two Sessions conclave.

Top Asian News

  • Japanese PM Takaichi said chances of a supplementary budget are not zero.
  • Japanese Finance Minister Katayama said sees large market volatility on the Middle East situation, while Trade Minister Akazawa said watching impacts on prices including energy and will take steps to ensure economic impact is minimal.

European bourses (STOXX 600 -3.4%) continue to selloff as risk tone remains sour, with participants using this opportunity to profit from the trend higher, which is also exacerbating losses. Banks remain the hardest-hit, affecting the FTSE MIB (-4.5%) and IBEX 35 (-4.7%) the most. The broader STOXX 600 has now dipped below the 50DMA at 611.7, the index closed at 633.9 only two days ago. Unlike Monday, in which Energy (-2.0%) was supported by the higher oil prices, all sectors are in the red. As stated above, Banks (-4.6%) and Insurance (-4.6%) are the worst performing sectors due to the effects of higher oil on growth and the increased war-risk claims. Surging Nat Gas prices have failed to support Utilities (-4.7%), due to the energy disruption caused by QatarEnergy (which accounts for nearly 20% of global LNG trade) stopping the production of LNG.

Top European News

  • Two UK government aligned think tanks are reportedly working on the options to reform student loans, Politico reported citing sources.

FX

  • DXY continues to extend higher, with the geopolitical environment remaining turbulent, and with recent US commentary suggesting no near-term solution to the war. In brief, the IRGC continues to threaten any ship attempting to pass through the Strait of Hormuz, whilst President Trump warned of larger strikes against Iran. (Newsquawk analysis on the war on the headline feed at 08:15 / 03:15 ET). For the time being, DXY resides at the upper end of a 98.43 to 99.22 range, and now trading at levels not seen since late Jan’26; another leg higher could see the retest of January 19 high at 99.47, and then the round 99.50 mark thereafter.
  • EUR and GBP continue to remain pressured by the ongoing Iranian war – both are net-importers of energy, as such, have been considerably pressured in the past couple of session. Geopols aside, the EUR saw some very modest upticks on the hotter-than-expected HICP – this is a bit stale, given the ECB will likely have to consider the inflationary/growth impacts of higher energy prices. UK-specific traders will also be attentive of the UK’s Spring Statement – it is likely to be a “non-event”, though focus will remain on the OBR, DMO forecasts and the implied headroom for Chancellor Reeves. (A Newsquawk primer is on the headline feed at 09:01 GMT / 04:01 EST)
  • CHF continues to underperform vs peers. As above, Switzerland is a net-importer of energy, with downside also exacerbated by reports that the SNB is increasingly prepared to intervene. This stems the haven-related strength, that would otherwise be expected during times of geopolitical turmoil. Sticking with havens, the JPY also continues to weaken against the USD. USD/JPY now trades around 157.82, and is gradually edging its head back towards the touted intervention zone of 158-160. Further upside would likely see the resurgence of jawboning via Japanese officials. This perhaps explains why the JPY is holding up better vs peers (albeit is still lower vs USD). Earlier, Japanese Unemployment ticked a touch higher in January, but had little impact on the currency.

Fixed Income

  • Fixed benchmarks under pressure as energy prices continue to climb and bias yields higher. A narrative that is sparking a hawkish repricing for central banks, with the near-term odds of a BoE cut trimming significantly and ECB pricing implying a small chance of tightening by end-2026.
  • Bunds are down by 88 ticks at most, to a 128.75 trough. If the move continues, we look to 128.03 from the week of February 13th before the figure and then a cluster of lows from the first few weeks of the year between 127.51 to 127.82. If those are taken out, the YTD base is 126.98 before the 126.75 March contract low.
  • Gilts gapped lower by 54 ticks and then fell almost a full point lower to a 91.58 trough, lower by 143 ticks at worst. Pressure is a function of the energy narrative as discussed above. A point that has seen the odds of BoE easing in the near-term trim significantly, with pricing now less than a 50% chance of a March cut vs. c. 85% at the end of last week.
  • For the UK, the docket is theoretically headline by the Spring Statement. Though, the expectation is firmly for Chancellor Reeves to be a non-event. Nonetheless, the forecasts and DMO remit will be of note; Newsquawk primer available at 09:01GMT.
  • USTs are in-fitting directionally, though magnitudes are less pronounced than its UK or even German peers. Down to a 112-24 base with losses of c. 13 ticks. Ahead, the docket features a handful of data points before Fed speak from Williams and Kashkari (2026), with a text and Q&A expected from both. Though, of course, any fresh geopolitical escalation/moderation will dominate the narrative.
  • Germany sells EUR 3.825bln vs exp. EUR 5.0bln 2.50% 2031 Bobl: b/c 1.19x (prev. 1.65x), average yield 2.43% (prev. 2.40%), retention 23.5% (prev. 23.8%).

Commodities

  • WTI and Brent futures remain firmer within USD 70.41-74.19/bbl and USD 76.74-79.27/bbl, with prices underpinned as the Iran conflict entered a fourth day, with the IRGC threatening to attack any ship trying to pass through the Strait of Hormuz, while US President Trump warned of larger strikes against Iran (analysis on the Newsquawk feed).
  • Nat Gas has been in focus amid the upside from the war, further exacerbated by Qatar’s shuttering of output yesterday. Qatar accounts for roughly one-fifth of global LNG supply. Analysts warn that every week of downtime removes 1.6-1.8mln tons of LNG from the global market. Dutch TTF currently trades +23% intraday at EUR 54.805/MWh vs around EUR 32/MWh on February 27th.
  • Precious metals are trading slightly lower. Silver faces a steeper drop thus far, down 4.6%, whilst spot gold is down 0.4%. XAG and XAU trade within the narrow ranges of USD 5,284.62-5,292/oz and USD 84.84-85.13/oz, respectively. Continuous dollar strength continues to hamper gains in the precious metals space despite weaker global risk sentiment amid geopolitical tension between the US and Iran, which increases haven demand for precious metals. Some analysts also suggest that profit-taking has been the key driver behind the slight pressure on the yellow metal. That being said, BMI forecasts that gold should rise above USD 5,600/oz this week with further upside to USD 5,850-6,500/oz if the conflict lasts 2-3 weeks.
  • Base metals are also lower, hampered by global risk sentiment amid geopolitical tension between the US and Iran. 3M LME copper trades within the lower range of USD 12.798-13.281k/t.
  • IAEA confirms recent damage to entrance buildings of Iran’s underground Natanz fuel enrichment plan.
  • US President Trump will meet with US Treasury Secretary Bessent and the Energy Secretary Wright at 14:00EST/19:00GMT on Tuesday.

Central Banks

  • Fed Chair nominee Warsh’s attempt to shrink the Fed’s balance sheet would proceed only slowly as he would face resistance over his plan to scale back one of the Fed’s most powerful tools, according to FT.
  • BoJ Governor Ueda said the BoJ will conduct technical experimentation on settlement using central bank money in the form of current account deposits on a blockchain-based system.
  • ECB’s Stournaras said should the Iran war continue, then there will be an upward pressure on EZ inflation; no rush to change rates.
  • ECB’s Villeroy said French economic exposure to tensions in the Middle East is limited, would be a mistake to predict a rate move in a hurry.
  • ECB’s Lane warned that a prolonged war in the Middle East and a persistent decline in oil and gas supplies could cause a “substantial spike” in inflation and a sharp fall in output in the Eurozone, according to FT.
  • RBA Governor Bullock said underlying demand in the economy is further from supply potential than they had assessed. A large part of the unexpected increase in inflation was sector specific. Policy is well positioned to respond if needed.
  • Riksbank’s Thedeen said inflation is close to target, interest rates have come down and the labour market has started to improve. Core inflation may trail forecast in 2026.
  • PBoC purchased CNY 50bln worth of sovereign bonds in February on the open market.

Geopolitics: Middle East

  • Israeli defence forces announce that they did not deploy ground troops in Iran, Israeli source report.
  • The IDF announces that they have struck Iran’s leadership compound in Tehran.
  • IAEA confirms recent damage to entrance buildings of Iran’s underground Natanz fuel enrichment plan.
  • Israel’s Home Front announce early warning after detection of rockets fired from Iran toward Israel, Al Jazeera reported.
  • Israeli Military Spokesperson said it is not likely that Israel will deploy ground forces to Iran as it is not practical.
  • IDF spokesperson said launches detected from Iran and alerts expected in the northern area from the Golan to northern Sharon.
  • Iran’s military said it targeted the Al Udeid base with missiles.
  • Iran’s IRCG said they targeted the aircraft carrier “Lincoln” with 4 cruise missiles; The aircraft carrier “Lincoln” headed towards the southeastern Indian Ocean , Al Arabiya reported.
  • Member of Iran’s Assembly of Experts said choosing a successor to Supreme Leader Khamenei “won’t take long”, according to ISNA.
  • Hezbollah said it targeted the Ramat David Air Base in northern Israel.
  • US VP Vance said President Trump wants to make sure Iran never had nuclear weapons, adds the US has a lot of capacity in Iran.
  • US President Trump held a call with Kurdish leaders in Iraq on Sunday to discuss the US-Israel war with Iran and what might come next, according to three sources with knowledge of the called cited by Axios.
  • US is said to prepare for a ‘pickup’ of attacks in Iran during the next 24 hours, according to CNN.

Geopolitics: Ukraine

  • Russian Kremlin spokesperson Peskov on Ukraine talks, said its hardly possible to talk about meeting, adding that there’s no certainty on venue or timing.

US Event Calendar

  • 9:55 am: United States Fed’s Williams Gives Keynote Remarks
  • 11:45 am: United States Fed’s Kashkari Speaks at 2026 Bloomberg Invest Conference

DB’s Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

Events in the Middle East cascaded across global markets yesterday, triggering some of the biggest moves in years across multiple asset classes. Most notably, Brent crude oil prices surged by +7.26%, their biggest daily jump since March 2022, lifting prices to $77.74/bbl. Meanwhile in Europe, front-end natural gas futures rose by +39.26%, the most since February 2022, after Qatar shut down liquefied natural gas production. And this morning the moves have continued, with Brent crude up another +2.55% to $79.72/bbl, whilst S&P 500 futures are down -0.72%.

The latest moves have come as the conflict has shown no sign of easing thus far. Indeed, overnight in Saudi Arabia, the US embassy in Riyadh was attacked by two drones, and Trump said to NewsNation “you’ll find out soon” what the retaliation would be. So events like that are adding to fears about a more protracted conflict. Trump himself hasn’t pointed to a fixed timeline either, saying that “we projected four to five weeks. But we have capability to go far longer than that.” 

The other critical question is what happens in the Strait of Hormuz, a key chokepoint accounting for around 20% of global oil supply. Concern mounted yesterday after an adviser to the to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said that Iran “will set fire to any ship attempting to pass through the Strait”. However, Bloomberg have also reported overnight that China was pushing Iran to keep the Strait open, according to senior gas executives. 

Unsurprisingly, the sharp moves in commodities drove a significant spike in sovereign bond yields. The 10yr Treasury yield rose by +9.7bps, surging back to 4.03% in its biggest daily jump since October. And this morning it’s up another +1.9bps to 4.05%. Meanwhile in Europe, equities also slumped, with the STOXX 600 (-1.61%) posting its worst day since November, and European equity futures are pointing to further losses today. Strikingly, however, the S&P 500 (+0.04%) was essentially flat, as gains for the Mag 7 (+0.41%) and energy stocks offset weakness elsewhere. S&P futures had been as low as -1.7% early in the London session, so there was a notable recovery through the US session. But this morning they’re down another -0.72% as the conflict has continued and oil prices have posted a further gain. And that’s been echoed across Asia as well, with sharp losses for the KOSPI (-5.67%) and the Nikkei (-2.65%). However, Chinese equities have seen a relative outperformance, with the CSI 300 (-0.14%) and the Shanghai Comp (-0.21%) only posting modest declines. 

More broadly, it’s always tough to trade geopolitical shocks given what we know about their historical impact. We’ve often cited the work of DB’s Parag Thatte and Binky Chadha, who have long argued that such shocks have had an average negative impact of around -6% to -8% on US equities over a three-week period, but that markets tend to recover back to prior levels within another three weeks. Notably, over the past three years we haven’t even seen such mild drawdowns when geopolitical shocks have hit, as with events over Venezuela and Greenland in January. So that raises the question of whether markets have begun to internalise this pattern as geopolitics becomes more important and we’re more used to dealing with it, or whether complacency has simply increased.

For me, much will depend on the price of oil. Any sustained spike would undoubtedly trigger a more meaningful risk-off move, but without that, markets are likely to revert fairly quickly to focusing on macro data and AI-related themes. It’s hard to know the ultimate aims of the US administration. With midterm elections around eight months away, there is likely a desire to show momentum in approval ratings. The cost of living is a key factor here, and a prolonged spike in oil prices would clearly be unhelpful. In addition, a Reuters/Ipsos poll on Sunday showed that only 27% of the American public supported the strikes, while 43% disapproved. That makes a prolonged mission seem less likely, although uncertainty remains very high. In a sign that the administration is wary of the oil price impact, Secretary of State Rubio said yesterday that a programme to mitigate energy costs would begin today.

We also heard a few other comments from US officials, including President Trump’s first White House remarks since Saturday’s strikes. The President said he took the decision to launch the war as it was “our last, best chance to strike” and eliminate the threats posed by Iran’s regime, though he did not refer to regime change as an objective. Before the US open, Pete Hegseth had similarly stated that the current situation in Iran was “not a regime-change,” though adding that the “regime did change.” However, Hegseth had signaled more clearly that a prolonged conflict is not currently envisaged, saying “this is not an endless war.” 

Turning back to yesterday’s moves, we saw the biggest jump for Brent crude oil since March 2022. But interestingly, it only ranks as the 56th biggest daily move going back to 1990, something I looked at in my CoTD yesterday (link here). So while the move is large, it doesn’t yet compare with the extreme swings seen around the GFC, the Covid turmoil, or even some other geopolitical events such as the Gulf War in 1990–91. For reference, to enter the top 20, 10 and 5 daily moves, prices would need to rise by +9.6%, +13.6% and +13.9% respectively. 
There were also signs that investors are still pricing the conflict as temporary rather than protracted. In particular, it has mainly been the front end of energy curves that have seen sharp spikes, while longer-dated contracts have moved much less. For example, when news broke that QatarEnergy would halt LNG production, after its facility was targeted by an Iranian drone attack, front-end futures rose by as much as +50% intraday, while the 1yr-ahead contract (+7.12%) saw a far more muted increase.

While yesterday’s dominant market story was clearly oil, there was little surprising about the direction or magnitude of moves in fixed income. Treasury yields rose across the curve, led by the 5yr (+10.8bps), with the 2yr (+9.8bps) and the 10yr (+9.5bps) seeing similar moves. While Middle East developments were the main driver, the moves were exacerbated by the February ISM manufacturing release, which surprised to the upside at 52.4 (vs. 51.5 expected). Notably, the prices paid component surged to 70.5 (vs. 60.0 expected), its strongest reading since June 2022. So that reinforced geopolitical inflation concerns and raised questions about whether the Fed will still be able to cut rates as markets had been pricing. The amount of Fed cuts priced by year-end fell by -9.2bps to 52bps. Note that on page 32 of my new pack (link here) we show US data surprises and 2yr yields. On this basis there is no need for a rate cut. Something needs to give to justify one. 

Those yield moves were echoed in Europe, where investors rapidly priced out the chance of an ECB rate cut this year. The implied December probability fell from a 55% chance of a cut on Friday to a 17% chance of a hike by yesterday’s close. As a result, yields rose sharply, with 10yr bunds (+6.8bps), OATs (+7.2bps) and gilts (+7.5bps) all moving higher. Front-end yields were up around 8-12bps.

US equities, however, were relatively resilient. The S&P 500 (+0.04%) posted a modest gain, supported by strength in information technology (+0.91%) and energy (+1.95%) stocks. That said, there was significant sector-level churn, with airline stocks down -2.40%, while aerospace and defence (+2.52%) outperformed. Meanwhile, the VIX rose by +1.58pts to 21.44 but remains below its YTD highs from last month even if it did spike above it at 25.24 early in the London session. 

By contrast, European equities saw more uniform weakness, with the CAC 40 (-2.17%), DAX (-2.56%), STOXX 600 (-1.61%) and FTSE 100 (-1.20%) all slumping. All the major STOXX 600 sector groups except energy were lower on the day, with consumer discretionary stocks (-3.98%) most hit. There were some notable advancers amid defence stocks, including BAE Systems (+6.11%) and Leonardo (+2.50%). And given that Europe is more exposed to the energy shock than the US, the euro weakened sharply against the dollar, falling -1.05% to $1.1688. (See our European economists’ latest take here for how events will affect the European economy.)

Finally, away from the Middle East, there were several other noteworthy developments, as Treasury Secretary Bessent announced that Anthropic would lose all its contracts with the Treasury following Trump’s direction for agencies to cease use of its technology. Meanwhile on tariffs, a US appeals court rejected the administration’s bid to pause the next steps in the fight over tariff refunds, sending the case immediately back to the Court of International Trade that had first ruled against the IEEPA tariffs back in May 2025. And in a sign of the headwinds in credit markets, we saw Bloomberg data showing that US leveraged loan issuance declined by nearly 80% in February compared to January.

Looking to the day ahead, we’ll see US February total vehicle sales, France’s January budget balance, Eurozone February CPI and Italy CPI. Central bank speakers include the Fed’s Williams and Kashkari, and the ECB’s Kocher and Sleijpen. Notable earnings include CrowdStrike, Thales and Target.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 03/03/2026 – 08:41

Supreme Court Sides With Parents Over Kids’ Gender Disclosure In California

Supreme Court Sides With Parents Over Kids’ Gender Disclosure In California

Golden State groomers were dealt a devastating blow on Monday after the Supreme Court sided with parents challenging school policies in California that restrict when educators may disclose changes to a student’s name or pronouns, handing parental rights advocates an early but significant victory in a closely watched culture-war dispute.

In an unsigned ‘shadow docket’ order, the justices restored a lower court’s injunction blocking enforcement of policies that prevent teachers from informing parents when their child socially transitions at school. The Court said the parents are likely to succeed on their claim that the policies violate their First Amendment right to freely exercise their religion.

The parents who assert a free exercise claim have sincere religious beliefs about sex and gender, and they feel a religious obligation to raise their children in accordance with those beliefs,” the Court wrote. “California’s policies violate those beliefs.”

The decision does not definitively resolve the constitutional question. Instead, it reinstates a preliminary order issued by a federal district judge while the case proceeds through the appellate process. Justice Amy Coney Barrett, joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh, emphasized in a concurring opinion that the ruling is “preliminary,” underscoring that the Court’s assessment that the parents are “likely” to prevail does not constitute a final merits determination.

The case centers on whether public school officials may withhold information from parents about a student’s gender identity or use of different names and pronouns at school. California officials have argued that such policies are designed to protect student privacy and safety, particularly for LGBTQ youth who may face difficult home environments.

The State argues that its policies advance a compelling interest in student safety and privacy,” the Court acknowledged. “But those policies cut out the primary protectors of children’s best interests: their parents.”

At least five members of the Court’s conservative majority voted to grant the emergency relief, though Justice Neil Gorsuch did not publicly disclose his vote. Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito indicated they would have gone further by also siding with teachers who argue their own constitutional rights are implicated.

The Court’s three liberal justices dissented. Justice Elena Kagan, joined by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, criticized the majority for acting through the Court’s emergency docket before the lower courts had completed full review.

This case cries out for reflection and explanation,” Kagan wrote, arguing that the legal questions are “novel” and deeply contested. She warned that the Court appeared “impatient” to intervene before the appellate process had run its course.

California Attorney General Rob Bonta had urged the justices to deny the emergency request, contending that the district court’s order would require “instant, dramatic changes” to school policies and could cause irreversible harm to students whose gender identity is disclosed without their consent.

“For many students, the consequences of compelling the disclosure of confidential information about their gender identity would be irreversible,” Bonta’s office wrote in court filings.

The case now returns to the U.S. Court of Appeals for further proceedings on the merits. After that court issues a decision, the dispute could return to the Supreme Court for full briefing and oral argument — setting the stage for a potentially sweeping ruling on the scope of parental rights and student privacy in public schools.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 03/03/2026 – 08:25