Friday, June 5, 2026

"One of Wall Street's Most Bullish Market Strategists Sees a 3-Phased Market Coming That Includes a Correction or Bear Market"

Mr. Lee is only the second analyst we've seen mention lock-up periods. In the case of SpaceX the current shareholders will have to sell stock just to get the free-float high enough to meet S&P's criteria for inclusion into the 500 sometime next year.

Additionally Lee's crossing the valley of the shadow of death to the broad sunlit uplands (boy, there's a pair of mixed allusions/metaphors) is interesting for its eventual bullishness.

From The Motley Fool, June 5:

Tom Lee of Fundstrat is undeniably one of Wall Street's most bullish market strategists.

In fact, it's unusual for Lee not to be bullish. To his credit, Lee has nailed most of his bull market calls over the past several years. Interestingly, however, Lee recently appeared on CNBC to discuss what he called an upcoming three-phased market. Lee expects a bumpy ride in the near term, including a correction or bear market that could begin shortly. Let's take a look.

The market is about to run into a host of challenges 
At recent prices, the benchmark S&P 500 (^GSPC 1.53%) index has risen nearly 11% this year. That's impressive, considering all the challenges it's had to overcome, including doubts about artificial intelligence (AI) at the beginning of the year and then the Iran war, which has led to higher oil and gas prices that are likely contributing to elevated inflation.

However, Lee said the market has been bolstered by incredibly strong first-quarter earnings. According to Lee, most market forecasters had penciled in $70 of collective earnings per share (EPS) for the S&P 500. First-quarter EPS actually came in at about $80, a big beat on expectations for what had already been expected to be a strong quarter of growth.

If the market stays on this trajectory, that's $40 in additional EPS on an annualized basis, which could lift the S&P 500 by 800 to 1,000 points, according to Lee. However, Lee's base case, based on what he and the team at Fundstrat had expected to be a "challenging year," is a three-phased market.

The first phase, currently underway, is largely bullish. With the S&P 500 now slightly above 7,560 (as of June 3), Lee thinks the rally could last a little bit longer, potentially taking the market to around 7,700.

The second phase, which will shortly follow, will be a challenging period for the market.

"Then we are going to digest a lot of things until October," Lee told CNBC. "And that's a new Fed chair; it's the energy shock ... especially shortages of petroleum products and lubricants. ... And the third is the IPOs of SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic that when the unlocks happen, that's a lot of extra supply.

By "unlocks," Lee refers to the expiration of lock-up provisions that allow insiders and employees with company shares to sell those shares in the public market.

"I think that could pressure stocks in a way that feels like a bear market," Lee added.

However, Lee sees this more difficult period settling after the midterm elections, at which point he expects stocks to rally strongly, with 2027 yielding "some of the best we've ever seen in our lifetime."....

....MORE 

Big Business: "The paper trail linking a US fuel trader to a notorious Mexican cartel"

From Reuters, May 27: 

Mystery customers. Missing permits. Inaccurate customs declarations. Investigations in the U.S. and Mexico. Documents shed light on an alleged fuel smuggling racket.

Ikon Midstream, a Houston-based petroleum trader whose offices were raided last month by U.S. authorities, is under investigation in Mexico in connection with fuel smuggling, according to three Mexican security sources with direct knowledge of the matter and four Mexican government security documents viewed by Reuters.
 
The probe is part of ongoing investigations into maritime shipments of petroleum products that were brought to Mexico from the U.S. and Canada in an alleged scheme to evade a hefty tax due on these imports, the documents and sources said.
 
Ikon Midstream is among the “central pieces” in a suspected scheme linked to one of Mexico’s most powerful crime groups, the Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG), and Mexico’s attorney general’s office has opened an investigation into the company “based on testimonies, documents and surveillance,” according to one of the documents.
 
Mexico’s attorney general’s office did not respond to requests for comment.
The Texas trader’s export of diesel aboard the tanker Torm Agnes is being scrutinized for potential cartel links, as is Ikon Midstream’s purported relationship with a suspected CJNG-related trucking company that helped offload the vessel’s cargo in the ports of Ensenada and Guaymas, according to the security sources and the document.

Smuggled fuel and stolen crude oil have become the second-largest source of revenue for Mexico’s cartels behind narcotics, according to the U.S. government.

Two of the documents laid out the operations and players in the alleged racket. Among them, Ikon Midstream was allegedly a supplier of petroleum products that moved through a complex web of importers, transporters, distributors and facilitators in Mexico. The other two documents contained summaries of the probes. The four documents were created in March and April and their authenticity was confirmed by the security sources.
 
Asked to comment about the investigations, Ikon Midstream Executive Director Rhett Kenagy said in a May 12 email to Reuters that there was “not a single shred of documentation to back any of it up” and that the company was “not going to respond to accusations grounded in hearsay.”
 
Homeland Security Investigations, the primary transnational investigative agency within the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, executed a criminal search warrant at Ikon Midstream’s Houston offices on April 14, a DHS spokesperson told Reuters in an April 17 statement. “This is related to an ongoing investigation into criminal activity,” the statement said. DHS did not elaborate, and it did not comment on whether it was coordinating with Mexican authorities.
 
Tearaway of statement from the US Department of Homeland Security. Handout via REUTERS 
Excerpt from an April 17, 2026, statement to Reuters from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security 
about a raid made earlier that week by its investigative unit at the Houston offices of Ikon Midstream.
Ikon Midstream has repeatedly denied wrongdoing. In an April 24 statement to Reuters, the fuel trader said it “has never knowingly provided, and does not knowingly provide, material support or resources to CJNG.” Regarding the raid by Homeland Security Investigations, Ikon Midstream said in its statement that “an investigative action by law enforcement is not itself a finding of wrongdoing.” 
 
Mexican authorities have announced the arrests of at least 16 people since September in connection with fuel smuggling. While officials have said they’ve uncovered a “criminal structure” behind the alleged illicit activity, they haven’t publicly named the detainees or said anything about their possible connections to CJNG.
 
In an October report, Reuters chronicled how diesel exported by Ikon Midstream aboard the tanker Torm Agnes made its way into the hands of Intanza, a Mexican company that authorities there suspect is a front for CJNG. Intanza has no listed phone number, website, social media presence or physical location that Reuters could find.
 
That story detailed how Mexican cartels earn billions of dollars annually by smuggling fuel, mainly from the U.S. to Mexico, in what boils down to a massive tax dodge: Diesel, gasoline and naphtha are claimed in trade paperwork to be lubricants to avoid a steep import duty that Mexico charges on these imported fuels. 
 
Smuggled fuel and stolen crude oil have become the second-largest source of revenue for Mexico’s cartels behind narcotics, according to the U.S. government, which has ramped up efforts to crack down on the illicit trade. The Trump administration designated CJNG as a foreign terrorist organization in February 2025. 
 
Import-export paperwork for these transactions is often incomplete or faked by smugglers, who use front companies to facilitate these deals and enlist established oil industry players to help, some actively colluding, others acting unwittingly, trade experts, tax authorities and law enforcement officials told Reuters.
 
Ikon Midstream sued Reuters for defamation on November 14 in a district court in Texas, contending the news agency made “categorically false” statements about its business in the October article. Reuters stands by its reporting and is contesting the suit.
 
Ikon Midstream said it never did business with Intanza. Following publication of Reuters’ October report, Ikon Midstream provided Reuters with internal company documents that showed the Torm Agnes cargo plus three other 2025 shipments of diesel and naphtha aboard the tanker Torm Louise were sold to a Mexican customer named Azteca Cone.
 
Azteca Cone, like Intanza, is part of the same alleged scheme and is likewise under investigation for fuel smuggling and suspected links to CJNG, according to the three Mexican security sources and two of the government security documents.
 
Azteca Cone cuts a mysterious figure in the fuel industry. Just like Intanza, Azteca Cone has no listed phone number, website or physical location that Reuters could find....

....MUCH MORE

Previously:

October 2025 - "How a ‘dark fleet’ of tankers helped a Mexican cartel build a fuel-smuggling empire"
A very deep dive into some very nasty people, from Reuters, October 22...

With this outro: 

For more on just how depraved the CJNG members are see Borderland Beat on blogroll at right or here in a site search

Capital Markets: "New Fed may Sap Market's Reaction Function to US Jobs Report"

From Marc Chandler at Bannockburn Global Forex:

The low-intensity war in the Middle East continues. Crude oil looks set to close the week higher for the first time in three weeks. Meanwhile, some poor earnings have hit the tech sector this week and it is evident in both Asia and the US. A dramatic revision to Ireland’s Q1 growth spurred a downward revision in Q1 eurozone growth to show a 0.2% contraction rather than a 0.1% expansion. Nevertheless, the market remains confident that the ECB will hike rates next week.

The immediate attention turns to the US May employment report. It often elicits a dramatic reaction in the foreign exchange market. The median forecast in Bloomberg’s survey is for an 88k increase. The 150k average in March and April are subject to revisions. Still, given the new Fed chair, the impact on expectations for the June 16-17 FOMC will likely be minimal and this may dampen the reaction today’s report. That said, the intraday momentum indicators appear to favor a dollar recovery ahead of the weekend....

....MUCH MORE 

Anthropic Warns Fully Recursive AI Is Coming Faster Than Expected, Humans May Lose Control

In other news...

From Anthropic, June 4:

When AI builds itself 

For most of AI’s history, humans drove every step in its development cycle. But at Anthropic, we are delegating a growing share of AI development to AI systems themselves, which is speeding up our work.

Taken far enough, and given enough compute, that trend points to an AI system capable of fully autonomously designing and developing its own successor. This is called recursive self-improvement. We are not there yet, and recursive self-improvement is not inevitable. But it could come sooner than most institutions are prepared for.

Using public benchmarks and previously unreported data from within Anthropic, The Anthropic Institute is showing that AI is already accelerating the development of AI systems. To take just one example: today, Anthropic engineers on average ship 8x as much code per quarter as they did from 2021-2025.

The technical trends discussed in this piece suggest that AI systems are going to become much more capable in coming years. These trends have huge implications. AI that can build itself would be a major development in the history of technology—one that could bring enormous good for the world in science, healthcare, and beyond. But full recursive self-improvement also might increase the risks of humans losing control over AI systems. If systems are capable of fully building their own successors, the ways we secure them, monitor them, and shape their behavior all grow much more important.

Evidence from the outside world

The rate at which AI models improve is accelerating. The length of tasks that they can reliably complete on their own has been doubling roughly every four months, up from an earlier trend of doubling every seven months. In March 2024, Claude Opus 3 could complete software tasks that take humans about four minutes to complete. A year later, Claude Sonnet 3.7 managed tasks that took about an hour and a half. A year after that, Claude Opus 4.6 managed 12-hour tasks.1 If this trend holds, tasks that take a skilled person days could come into range this year. In 2027, AI systems could be capable of tasks that take a person weeks.

The same pattern appears on coding and research benchmarks. Benchmarks measure the performance of models in a given domain, and they’re “saturated” when models achieve close to 100% performance.2 SWE-bench is a standard test of real-world software engineering: it hands a model an actual open-source codebase and a real bug report, and asks it to write a code change that fixes the issue and passes the project’s own tests. Models have gone from scoring in the low single digits to saturating the benchmark in two years.

CORE-Bench tests whether a model can reproduce existing research, a prerequisite for them to conduct original research. It gives an AI model the code and data behind a published paper, and asks it to rerun everything and confirm it can replicate the paper’s results. AI systems went from succeeding at reproducing the results roughly 20% of the time in 2024 to saturating the benchmark fifteen months later. METR, which runs the benchmark measuring how well models can complete long-duration tasks, found that Claude Mythos Preview could work for “at least” 16 hours and was “at the upper end of what [METR] can measure without new tasks.”

Public benchmarks say a lot about the capabilities of these systems. But they can’t reveal the impact AI systems are having on speeding up AI development itself. For that, we need direct evidence from within AI companies like Anthropic.

Evidence from within Anthropic

Building a frontier model takes two broad categories of work. There is engineering: writing the code, standing up the infrastructure, and overseeing the model training. And there is research: deciding what experiments to run, interpreting what comes back, and figuring out which ideas to try next.

Across both engineering and research, the picture is consistent. In engineering, Claude can be handed an underspecified problem and figure out how to solve it; humans supply the goal, but they no longer need to supply the method. In research, Claude can already match or outperform skilled humans at executing a well-specified experiment. However, large performance gaps persist when it comes to Claude exercising judgement in choosing goals in both engineering and research. That’s the gap between AI today and a future system that could autonomously design its own successor.

It’s common for employees at Anthropic to receive more open-ended and important tasks as they gain more experience. Early on, they execute a task someone else specified, like, “The export button isn’t working, please fix it.” With experience, they’re handed a goal and design the approach themselves, such as, “Investigate why the network slows down under heavy load.” At the most senior levels, they are deciding which problems are worth working on at all: “What should the team build next quarter?” We can use internal Anthropic data to see how far Claude has come in being able to handle these different kinds of tasks.

Claude writes a significant proportion of Anthropic’s code. As of May 2026, more than 80% of the code we merge into Anthropic’s codebase was authored by Claude.3 Before Claude Code launched in research preview in February 2025, this number was in the low single digits. That shift also shows up in the amount of output per engineer. Lines of code merged per engineer per day stayed constant through Anthropic’s first four years (2021-2024), then began to climb upward in 2025 when Claude began to run code rather than just suggesting it for an engineer to copy and paste. The slope steepened again in 2026 when models began to work autonomously over longer time horizons. These two inflection points are shown in the chart below. In the second quarter of 2026, the typical engineer was merging 8× as much code per day as they were in 2024.4 This is because much of the code is written by Claude, with the engineer directing and reviewing, rather than typing it themselves....

....MUCH MORE 

If interested see also:

January 28 -  So it Begins: "Silicon Valley Wants to Build A.I. That Can Improve A.I. on Its Own"

The headline at TechCrunch was "AI chip startup Ricursive hits $4B valuation two months after launch

Serious money believes these women are on to something. 

April 26 - U.S. Treasury Secretary Bessent On A.I.: "'a year, maybe 18 months,' before the new technology defines our lives across the board." 

May 8 - AI: "Are we just 18 months away from everything changing?"

May 12 - "AI Is Starting to Build Better AI"

Not there yet but some very smart people think it's close.

May 18 - Recursive Artificial Intelligence: The Coming Acceleration (plus Recursive, the company, raises $650 million)

And related:

December 2025 - Introducing Unified Model Collapse

Possibly also of interest:

May 2025 - News You Can Use: "....How AI-enabled coups could allow a tiny group to seize power"

U.N. FAO Food Price Index Sideways In May (with notable dispersion among constituent commodities)

From the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, June 5: 

» The FAO Food Price Index* (FFPI) averaged 130.8 points in May 2026, down 0.2 points (0.2 percent) from its revised April level, remaining broadly stable. Increases in the price indices for cereals and sugar were offset by declines in vegetable oils and dairy products, while the index for meat products remained almost unchanged. Compared to historical levels, the FFPI in May stood 3.7 points (2.9 percent) higher than a year ago but remained as much as 29.4 points (18.4 percent) below its peak reached in March 2022.

https://www.fao.org/images/worldfoodsituationlibraries/default-album/home_graph_2_jun26.jpg?sfvrsn=d0e1a022_497 

» The FAO Cereal Price Index averaged 114.3 points in May, up 2.9 points (2.6 percent) from April and 5.3 points (4.9 percent) from its level a year earlier. The continued increase reflected higher prices across all major cereals. World wheat prices rose for the fourth consecutive month in May, supported by smaller expected harvests in major exporters, including the United States of America, where winter wheat crop conditions are among the least favourable in decades, while higher fuel and fertilizer costs added further upward pressure globally. Maize prices continued to be supported by stronger import demand in key markets, tighter availability in Brazil and the United States of America, and firmer energy prices boosting ethanol-related demand. International prices of sorghum and barley increased mainly due to spillover effects from tighter global maize and wheat markets. The FAO All Rice Price Index increased by 2.7 percent in May 2026, as weather concerns and higher prices of crude oil and its derivatives underpinned quotations in some leading Asian exporting countries.

» The FAO Vegetable Oil Price Index averaged 185.0 points in May, down 9.0 points (4.6 percent) from April, marking the first monthly decline since the beginning of 2026. The decrease was mainly driven by lower prices of palm and soy oils, which more than offset increases in rapeseed oil and sunflower oil prices. After rising for five consecutive months, international palm oil prices declined, reflecting expectations of weaker global import demand and uncertainty in crude oil markets. World soyoil prices showed mixed trends, with seasonal increases in exportable supplies weighing on prices in South America, while firm biofuel demand supported values in the United States of America. Meantime, rapeseed oil prices rose on seasonally tightening supplies in the European Union, while sunflower oil quotations continued to increase, underpinned by persistent supply tightness, particularly in Ukraine.

» The FAO Meat Price Index averaged 130.5 points in May, almost unchanged (up 0.1 percent) from its revised April value and 7.7 points (6.3 percent) above its level a year earlier. Higher quotations for bovine and ovine meat, alongside a modest increase in poultry meat prices, were almost entirely offset by a decline in pig meat prices. International bovine meat prices rose further in May, supported by robust import demand, particularly from China, where import quota allocations continued to be rapidly utilized, and from the United States of America amid persistently tight domestic supplies. At the same time, ongoing herd rebuilding in several major producing countries continued to constrain exportable availabilities. World ovine meat prices increased, as higher quotations in New Zealand, underpinned by limited supplies, were only partially offset by a temporary easing in Australian export prices, where dry weather forecasts prompted increased slaughtering, expanding exportable supplies. Poultry meat prices edged up, as higher prices in Brazil, supported by firm global import demand, were partly offset by slightly lower quotations in the United States of America, reflecting ample supplies. By contrast, pig meat prices declined, mainly due to lower prices in the European Union amid abundant supplies and subdued import demand.

» The FAO Dairy Price Index averaged 119.2 points in May, down 0.5 points (0.5 percent) from April and 34.5 points (22.4 percent) below its level a year earlier. International butter prices continued to decline in both Europe and Oceania, as improved milkfat availability and heightened competition among major exporters weighed on quotations. Cheese prices eased only marginally as ample export availability and intensified competition on international markets were partly offset by continued support from whey and dairy protein markets, which helped sustain values in major exporting regions. By contrast, skim milk powder prices increased further, particularly in Europe, supported by firm import demand from the Near East, North Africa, and parts of Asia. Whole milk powder prices showed mixed developments, with modest increases in Oceania, supported by seasonally tightening export availability following the production peak and continued demand from Southeast Asia and the Near East, largely offset by lower European quotations reflecting subdued demand from China and generally comfortable global supplies....

....MUCH MORE 

Thursday, June 4, 2026

"All poverty is energy poverty"

From Dunstan Ramsay's Omnibudsman substack, September 4, 2022:

The world needs to use a lot more energy 

A recent article in The New Yorker discusses the importance of refrigeration to the development of Rwanda, where cold storage is necessary to reduce rates of foodborne illness and secure more stable income for farmers. The piece demonstrates an inescapable fact about the future of the world: we need to use more energy — a lot more.

There's probably about 3 million households in Rwanda, and a vanishingly small number have a fridge. A refrigerator uses about 2 kilowatt-hours (kWh) of energy per day, so if we were able to get one into every household, that would add about 2 billion kWh (2 terawatt-hours, or tWh) to Rwanda's annual energy usage. That's about as much energy as there is contained in 1 million barrels of oil — and fully one-third of Rwanda's current primary energy consumption.

Primary energy describes the amount of energy not just in a barrel of oil but in a lump of coal, a gust of wind, a ray of sunshine, or a uranium fuel rod. Energy, in general, is a measurement that describes the capacity of any system—a cigar, a soccer player, a lightbulb—to perform work on its surroundings. A cigar converts chemical energy into heat via combustion; a soccer player transfers kinetic energy to a ball by kicking it; a lightbulb converts electricity into heat and light. The fundamental unit of energy is the joule: roughly, this is the amount of energy required to lift a pencil one foot into the air. Kilowatt-hours are just another measure of energy, in this case about the amount that a medium-sized person might use in running a 10k at an 8-minute pace.

Energy, put slightly more simply, is just a measure of how much stuff is done in the world. Access to more energy means the ability to do more stuff.

And the world needs to do a lot more stuff. Ten percent of people live in extreme poverty, and 85% live on less than $30 per day. In places like Somalia, Nigeria, and Chad, more than one in every ten children die before the age of five. In those countries, pneumonia, which is caused primarily by malnutrition, is among the top causes of death.

What does it take to end malnutrition? One thing that would help is, as the New Yorker notes, refrigeration: massive amounts of fresh food spoil in the developing world. Refrigerators are part of the solution: to fix malnutrition, you need to get food from where it's grown to where it's needed while it's still edible. And in order to get food between refrigerators, you also need refrigerated trucks, which are extremely energy intensive and of which Nigeria, a country of 200 million people, has fewer than 1000 (it needs 25 times as many).

Those trucks will be more useful (and longer-lived) with better roads to drive them on: only about 16% of Nigerian roads are paved. You need energy equivalent to 240 tons of coal to pave 1 kilometer of asphalt, and with the need to do so for 135,000 km of roadway, you're looking at an energy cost of roughly 2GwH — about as much as a full square kilometer of solar panels produces each day.

Suppose now that the world has done what it takes to address pneumonia as a cause of infant mortality. What next?

Well, then there's everything else. Just for starters, we need to set up and run the systems that distribute clean water in order to prevent diarrhea, the next-most-common cause of infant mortality across much of the world. This takes energy. It also takes energy to run dialysis machines, school buses, and incubators for preterm babies. It takes energy to boil a pot of water on the stove, to pasteurize milk, and to manufacture antibiotics. It takes energy to build universities, preschools, old folks' homes, affordable housing, bookstores and art museums, and yet more energy to provide the air conditioning that allows students to focus and the elderly to survive on hot days in a warming world. It takes energy just to grow food: most of the billions of people alive today — and, with any luck, the billions to come — owe their lives to the Haber-Bosch process, which quite literally turns energy into artificial fertilizer for the purposes of growing more food. That process is responsible for about 1% of global energy consumption.

It takes energy to do all this — and we haven't even gotten to Netflix.

Energy and poverty in a nutshell....

....MUCH MORE 

"China's solar majors charge into batteries as panel sales falter"

This reminded me that I should note First Solar surpassed its $317.00 May 2008 all-time-high* yesterday, June 3, by trading up to $320.95 and closing at $318.25. The stock also had a $320 handle this morning ($320.64) before reversing to close down $3.30 at $314.95. Fingers, toes and other body parts crossed that we didn't just see a double top.

From Reuters, June 4/5:

  • Storage gets bigger display at world's largest solar exhibition
  • Solar majors make battery foray, lean on supply chain networks
  • Jinko to nearly triple battery-making capacity this year
China's major solar panel manufacturers are ramping up higher-margin battery exports to boost revenue ​as growth in photovoltaic (PV) sales slows, betting on rising global demand for renewable energy storage to cut reliance on fossil ‌fuels.
 
The sector has been hit by weaker domestic installations, slowing exports and record-low prices, with executives expecting global demand to decline in 2026.
 
That has pushed players including JinkoSolar (688223.SS), JA Solar (002459.SZ), LONGi Green Energy (601012.SS), and Trina Solar (688599.SS), to accelerate expansion into battery storage, company executives told Reuters. 
 
JinkoSolar plans to nearly triple its battery manufacturing capacity from ​5 gigawatt-hours (GWh) to 13-14 GWh by the end of this year, as developers seek to address the intermittency of renewables, a ​company official said at SNEC - a solar industry gathering attended by over half a million people.
 
"We are seeing ⁠some goodwill from our company's directors' point of view, in that we are having massive investments," Titus Koech, a regional technical head for ​energy storage systems, told Reuters.
Countries with high renewable penetration - including Japan, Vietnam and India, as well as Germany, the Netherlands, the U.S. and Australia - ​were among the largest importers of batteries from China in 2025, according to energy think tank Ember.
 
At JA Solar's booth, energy storage products took centre stage, marking a shift from PV-focused displays in previous conferences, said Gloria Gao, marketing director of its storage unit. 
"If you only own a solar business, it's not helping your ​business grow because the margins are really small. That's why we started our energy storage business, because we foresee the future," Gao told Reuters.
 
Solar ​panels exports, which typically carry better margins than domestic sales, grew 4.7% in 2025 - the slowest pace since 2018, Ember data showed. Growth from May to ‌December is ⁠expected to lag that seen in the first four months of the year, Rystad Energy analyst Fei Chen said. 
By contrast, battery exports for energy storage are forecast to jump 30% to 150 GWh in 2026, Rystad said.

ONE-STOP-SHOP VERSUS BATTERY MANUFACTURING GIANTS

China's solar manufacturers are entering a market dominated by battery giants such as CATL and BYD, but are betting on their supply-chain expertise and ability to offer integrated solar-plus-storage solutions....

....MUCH MORE 
*That 2008 ATH was more dramatic, coming eighteen months after the $20 IPO.

If interested we have maybe 500 posts on FSLR, either: https://climateerinvest.blogspot.com/search?q=FSLR or the 'search blog' box upper left for more specific queries

"Looking for a new chief executive? Why not hire an equity analyst?"

I'm not sure that's a good idea but I haven't had much luck with companies run by attorneys either. With the lawyers they either remain in the "Thou shalt not" groove of the wise counselor or they go a bit nuts because they think they're no longer an officer of the court.

With the analysts you, somewhat surprisingly, run into the same problems you do with economists: "Sure, it works in practice but will it work in theory." And the "On the other hand..." stuff. Don't even get me started on Elliot Wave practitioners with their alternative wave counts introducing a third and a a fourth hand.

Anyhoo, the equity analysts are going to need to do something after AI takes their jobs so maybe give them a shot at the C-suite. But watch those hands.

From Financial News London, May 25:

It might seem an unlikely move, but capital markets experience is increasingly valuable in the C-suite 

Standard Chartered had some compelling reasons to promote Manus Costello -

It is easy to see why Standard Chartered has appointed Manus Costello as its new chief financial officer.

As a former equity analyst who covered the bank for many years, Costello is very familiar with the bank’s strengths and weaknesses, and those of its rivals. He knows its investors well, understands what they are looking for and speaks their language.

Since joining Standard Chartered as head of investor relations two years ago, Costello has built a good rapport with chief executive Bill Winters, who says he has made a “significant contribution to the group’s strategic positioning and engagement of stakeholders”.

While very familiar with the business he also brings an outsider perspective that many management experts would say is an ideal combination.

Yet this raises a question: if it is such an obvious move why don’t more analysts become senior executives in the sectors they have covered?

In financial services, the numbers are strikingly small. One of the few prominent examples is Sallie Krawcheck, who made her name as an independent-minded analyst of Wall Street banks at Sanford Bernstein. In 2002, she was hired by Citigroup to rebuild trust in its research and wealth management business after accusations of conflicts of interest. Two years later she was appointed Citi’s chief financial officer.

In the UK, Luke Ellis, former chief executive of hedge fund manager Man Group, previously worked for JPMorgan, though in equity derivatives rather than research.

Another former analyst who is now a chief executive is Anthony Noto. A one-time Goldman Sachs internet analyst, Noto was appointed head of financial technology firm SoFi in 2018. But Noto shifted into banking at Goldman before going into the industry, which makes him a slightly different case.

There are plenty of bankers who move into the industry they covered. Current examples include Jonathan Sorrell, the former Goldman banker who now heads wealth management group Rathbones....

....MUCH MORE 

U.S. Drought Monitor, June 4, 2026

It looks like the drought intensities decreased a bit while the areas affected remained about the same.* 

From the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, June 4:

https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/data/png/20260602/20260602_usdm.png 

This Week's Drought Summary 
The mid-level height anomaly pattern during the week exhibited an omega-block type pattern, with mean troughing over Alaska and both the West and East, with the western trough cutting off over California, and strong ridging between the troughs across the central contiguous US. This pattern promoted below-normal temperatures across the Southwest for much of the period, with colder air pushing eastward towards the end of the week followed by warming temperatures. Across the East, cooler air overspread New England and the mid-Atlantic, keeping evapotranspiration rates a bit lower than normal. In contrast, much above-normal temperatures were observed throughout the week across the northern Plains and upper-Midwest, though colder weather and storminess overspread the northern Rockies and adjacent High Plains at the end of the week.

An active pattern was noted across the Plains, South, and Southeast as a mean frontal boundary provided a focus for stormy weather. These rains, in conjunction with a wetter pattern overall during May, prompted widespread additional drought relief for the South and Southeast regions, as well as portions of the High Plains. In contrast, hot, dry weather across the northern Plains and upper-Midwest caused expansion of drought and abnormal dryness, with widespread degradation occurring in western portions of the Midwest region. Towards the end of the week, a storm system brought heavy precipitation to western and central Montana, bringing some drought relief following a period of hot, windy weather. Across the Northeast, additional rainfall benefitted portions of New England, while drier weather overspread the mid-Atlantic and southern New England following a wet week previously.....

***** 

....Looking Ahead

At the start of the next 7 days, drier conditions are favored across much of the East, with daily temperatures quickly warming to above-normal. A storm system now over the Plains will progress slowly eastward, bringing a potential for much needed rainfall across the upper Midwest and Great Lakes region. Current QPF forecasts from the Weather Prediction Center show amounts potentially exceeding 1.5 inches across much of Iowa and far southwestern Wisconsin, but lighter amounts elsewhere will likely be insufficient to overcome the high demands coming from much above-normal temperatures and summer agriculture, especially across Illinois, Indiana, and northern Minnesota. A gradual return to a summer convective regime is favored across the Southeast during the week, but accumulations are forecast to be less than what fell over the past few weeks, especially across northern Florida and east of the Appalachians. Seabreeze-driven convection is favored to remain active across South Florida. Mostly dry conditions are favored across the West, with a storm system bringing some precipitation to the Pacific Northwest. Meager precipitation is forecast for the Northeast region, raising concerns for a return of short term drought impacts....

....MUCH MORE  
*So we don't have to rely on just eye-balling the current map here's the animation of the drought development over the last four weeks:

https://droughtmonitor.unl.edu/Maps/Animations.aspx 

Additionally here is the "Compare Two Weeks" feature. (map plus statistical comparison)

"end the deficit in five minutes"

Via MoneyWise, June 2

 “I could end the deficit in five minutes,” he said. “You just pass a law that says that any time there’s a deficit of more than three percent of GDP, all sitting members of Congress are ineligible for re-election. Yeah, yeah, now you’ve got the incentives in the right place, right?”

—Warren E. Buffett, retired insurance salesman, Omaha Nebraska 

 

Data Centers In Space? Not Until They're Mandated

From SemiAnalysis, June 3:

To Boldly Go: The Case for Space Datacenters
Space DC Total Cost of Ownership Explained. Unpacking constraints from Terrestrial DCs and Chip Production. Space-Earth Parity in the late 2030s, Space DCs could start to be viable even sooner. 

Everyone has been talking about datacenters in space. Interviews given by Elon Musk in the past few months have spent lots of time on orbital compute:

“Five years from now, my prediction is we will launch and be operating every year more AI in space than the cumulative total on Earth... I would expect to be at least, sort of five years from now, a few hundred gigawatts per year of AI in space and rising.”
- Elon Musk on Dwarkesh Podcast, February 2026

Furthering space-based compute was also one of the stated motivations behind the merger of xAI into SpaceX (as a ‘reorganization of entities under common control’), and is a key part of SpaceX’s plans to go public, as stated in their S-1 filing on 20 May 2026.

“Our goal over time is to launch 100 gigawatts of compute to space each year. If operated continuously, the generation resources used to support 100 gigawatts of compute could generate approximately one-fifth of the annual power production in the United States, which was 4.4 thousand terawatt hours in 2025… We expect space‑based compute to massively increase AI compute scale, while also improving token economics.”
- SpaceX, S-1 Filing, May 2026

As expected, many part-time prognosticators in the Substack-verse have emerged from the woodwork to weigh in on the concept. Some articles bring up insightful points, but there are more than a few that are built upon ideas that fly in the face of science.

A few casual arguments made in favor of space datacenters include the following:

  1. Space can provide free solar energy 24 hours a day

  2. Cooling is “free”. Some erroneously point to space being cold as a key positive

  3. Communications latency in space is low as you’re just sending light through a vacuum

  4. There is no need for permitting in space… so far…

Many of these points sound like they hold merit on the surface, but a deeper analysis of each apparent advantage reveals a far more complex story.

While we think that it is possible that space datacenters could scale one day, deploying orbital compute using today’s technology currently costs several times more than deploying terrestrial compute. Achieving Space-Earth cost parity will require significant engineering work, material science breakthroughs and cost scaling progresses and will still take years to achieve. There are also important reliability and servicing obstacles to overcome - for instance - how GPU servers will recover from faults that require human intervention, effectively shielding accelerators from radiation, among many others.

When we deploy compute in space, it won’t be because of the four superficial reasons we have cherry-picked above. Rather, Space-based datacenters make sense in the world where AI demand well exceeds all of the four layers of terrestrial datacenter supply that we will introduce below. For Space datacenters to step up to this call - it is a necessary condition that major space datacenter cost items like radiators, solar arrays and launch costs decline considerably, and that a number of key operational obstacles are overcome.

Users of our AI Space Datacenter TCO Model can see a first-principles, system-level framework for evaluating orbital compute economics, engineering constraints, and supply-demand dynamics across both terrestrial and space-based infrastructure.

The four layers of incremental power supply for terrestrial datacenters include:

  1. Grid-connected supply,

  2. Converted bitcoin miners and powered land,

  3. Behind the meter generation, and finally,

  4. Industrial capacity and manpower to build further power infrastructure.

A necessary condition for AI related IT equipment demand to reach levels exceeding terrestrial datacenter supply is for there to be enough chip fabrication capacity to fulfill this demand in the first place, before we even discuss datacenters! We wrote about this in great detail in our recent article on the Great AI Silicon Shortage, where we concluded that the industry has moved from a power-constrained to an accelerator-constrained regime. Available datacenter capacity and power now exceed AI compute demand, but TSMC’s N3 wafer capacity and HBM supply cannot keep pace with the pace of accelerator deployments. This means that today, and for the next few years, chip manufacturing will be the global constraint before we even worry about supply for these four layers.

The chip constraint forms a separate fifth layer of supply - Semiconductor Production, and it is a “universal” constraint on all chip deployment, whether deployed on Earth or in Space. Users of our AI Space Datacenter TCO Model can see how this constraint applies well into the future, and under what scenarios regarding chip manufacturing capacity addition that Semiconductor Production may not be the constraint.

Elon Musk is clearly well aware of this constraint, and it is the impetus behind his Terafab Initiative. The AI Space Datacenter TCO Model also includes knobs and sliders for users to tune to test out various Terafab scenarios.

Framing the Space Datacenter Debate 
Our various industry models such as the Accelerator Model, the Foundry Industry Model and WFE Models illustrate the aforementioned chip tightness. Meanwhile our AI Datacenter Model forecasts accelerating incremental datacenter additions in 2027 and 2028. Thus, datacenter capacity addition will run ahead of chip constraints in the next few years until fab capacity additions accelerate to catch up. Our suite of industry models will only forecast such wafer fab and datacenter capacity additions once such plans are confirmed.

However, the world in which AI demand is so overwhelming as to exceed the already formidable datacenter capacity additions is a world with no time for half measures. As such, our AI Space Datacenter TCO Model base case departs from our industry models to reflect this world, assuming accelerating incremental datacenter capacity additions and a meaningful step up in the pace of chip fab capacity addition. It is a world where all the stops are pulled out and many obstacles from gas turbine availability to EUV tool production constraints are overcome because clear long-term AI end use ROI justifies enough capital investment to overcome them.

The below chart illustrates what this world could look like - with incremental datacenter capacity additions eventually in the hundreds of GW annually, though adding chip capacity will still be more difficult than adding datacenter capacity....

....MUCH MORE 

Most recently from SemiAnalysis:

May 28 -  Powering Data Centers: "Inside the 800VDC Revolution"

March 18 - Memory: Shortage Could Last Five Years, It's The Wafers

February 21 - "CPUs are Back: The Datacenter CPU Landscape in 2026"

February 10 - "Memory Mania: How a Once-in-Four-Decades Shortage Is Fueling a Memory Boom "

And many more

Capital Markets: "Softer Oil, Softer Greenback"

From Marc to Market:

Israel and Lebanon raises hopes of a breakthrough in US-Iran talks where a low intensity conflict has been waged under the flag of a ceasefire. The Israel-Lebanon deal reportedly does not include Hezbollah, underscoring the fragility and limits of the ceasefire claims. July WTI is near the middle of the $94-$96 range. The market seems cautious. 

The US dollar is mostly softer, with the Canadian dollar the weakest among the G10 currencies. The swaps market has a BOJ hike nearly fully discounted for later this month and the greenback continues to hover near but below JPY160. Japan’s finance minister continued to press with recent rhetoric that it stands ready to act. Poor earnings from Broadcom late yesterday weighed on the chip sector in Asia and has dragged the Nasdaq futures down over 1%. The market-sensitive US May jobs data are due tomorrow but the bar to a change in Fed policy this month, as Warsh chairs his first meeting is very high....

....MUCH MORE 

"2026 Smartphone Shipments to Post Worst Annual Decline on Record as Memory Crisis and Geopolitical Shocks Converge"

These folks were among those who flagged how serious the memory chip shortage actually was and would be. See after the jump. 

From Counterpoint Research May 31: 

  • Global smartphone shipments are now forecast to fall 13.9% YoY in 2026, dropping to 1.08 billion units, the lowest annual volume since 2013, and a steeper contraction than our February forecast of 12.4%.
  • A memory supply crisis, driven by capacity reallocation toward AI-focused HBM and server DRAM, is the primary driver of the downturn, with LPDDR4/5 prices expected to treble in Q2 2026 relative to Q4 2025, per Counterpoint’s Memory Service.
  • Lower-end OEMs and Emerging Markets face the sharpest pressure, with LPDDR4 memory supply tracking to a decline of over 40% in 2026; the sub-$150 segment faces an effective permanent removal in some markets.
  • Apple and Samsung are the most insulated OEMs, while Huawei is the only Chinese brand expected to grow shipments in 2026.
  • The Iran conflict and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz add a geopolitical dimension to the downturn, though macroeconomic headwinds are expected to be materially less severe than the post-Ukraine inflationary shock. 
Seoul, Beijing, Berlin, Buenos Aires, Fort Collins, Hong Kong, London, New Delhi, Taipei, Tokyo – June 1, 2026

The global smartphone market has entered its deepest period of contraction on record, according to Counterpoint Research's latest Smartphone Market Outlook Tracker, with full-year 2026 shipments now forecast to decline 13.9% YoY to 1.08 billion units, a downward revision from the 12.4% decline projected in February. The trigger is a worsening memory supply crisis that has accelerated sharply in recent weeks, compounded by the outbreak of the Iran conflict.

Global Smartphone Forecast, May 2026 Edition
Global Smartphone Forecast, May 2026 Edition
Source: Counterpoint Research Smartphone Market Monitor and Market Outlook, May 2026 Update 
Memory crisis deepens the 2026–2027 downturn

The Q1 2026 smartphone market retreated 3.1% YoY, marking the first decline after nine consecutive quarters of growth. The performance was nonetheless better than expected, as OEMs moved to front-load shipments and clear pre-shock inventory ahead of expected price increases. However, the deterioration since has been sharp. Counterpoint Research's Memory Service indicates that mobile LPDDR4/5 prices in Q2 2026 are on track to treble relative to Q4 2025 levels, with the squeeze expected to persist through H2 2027 given the capital intensity and lead times inherent to semiconductor manufacturing.

The damage is falling disproportionately on lower-end devices. LPDDR4 supply is expected to decline more than 40% in 2026 as fabs reallocate capacity toward AI-driven HBM and server DRAM, making it increasingly uneconomical to supply entry-level products. Globally, smartphone wholesale prices rose 14% in Q1, and the pace will sustain as pre-shock inventory is exhausted. Certain sub-$150 price tiers face effective permanent ejection from the market.

Principal Analyst Yang Wang commented, “The memory crisis is the most disruptive supply-side event the smartphone industry has ever faced. Unlike demand-driven slowdowns, such as seen during COVID and 2022-23, the current contraction will not respond to pricing, channel and product planning adjustments. OEMs in the low- and mid-tier are caught between unabsorbable cost increases and consumers with hard affordability ceilings. The narrative around the smartphone market is no longer how to grow shipments or market share, but whether to remain in the market at all.”

Premium resilience, OEM divergence, and the road to recovery

....MUCH MORE 

So the question becomes: Will the increase in average selling price brought about by the shift to more expensive phones be large enough to offset the decline in unit volume?

Previously from Counterpoint:

January 2026 - Chips: "2026 Smartphone Shipment Forecasts Revised Down as Memory Shortage Drives BoM Costs Up"

February 2026 - Electric Vehicles: "Ford Looks for Model-T Redux with UEV Plan" (F)

May 2026 -  Computex 2026: Agentic AI & Physical AI Reshaping the Computing Landscape

Researchers May Put A Big Dent In China's Need To Import Plant Proteins

Dent is a type of field corn. A long way for a not-very-good play on words 

First up, from Xinhua via People's Daily, June 4:

Chinese scientists develop high protein maize in animal feed quest 

Chinese scientists have identified two key genes for high protein content in maize and have managed to develop high protein varieties, offering a promising solution to China's animal feed protein shortage.

Maize is China's largest grain in terms of production volume, however, its protein content is generally low, only about 8 percent, leading to a heavy dependence on imported soybean meal as a protein source for livestock, according to Wu Yongrui, deputy director of the Center for Excellence in Molecular Plant Sciences (CEMPS) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS).

In 2025, China's soybean imports exceeded 100 million tonnes. Raising maize protein content by just one percentage point would be equivalent to the protein contained in approximately 8 million tonnes of imported soybeans, Wu said.

Therefore, developing high protein maize to replace imported soybean meal in feed is a promising tactic in seeking to address the country's feed protein shortfall. Yet, for a long time, breeding efforts had lacked access to superior high protein genes, Wu noted.

Research has found that wild maize contains protein levels as high as 30 percent, but after over 9,000 years of domestication and modern breeding, most of these genes have been "lost" in contemporary varieties due to the absence of targeted selection for protein content, Wu explained.

In 2022, a research team led by Wu identified the first high protein gene, THP9-T, from wild maize, achieving a preliminary boost in protein content for major domestic maize cultivars. However, further breakthroughs in maize protein content remained a significant challenge.

Through persistent efforts, the team successfully identified a second high protein gene, THP3-T. Multi-year, multi-location field trials demonstrated that this gene can increase kernel protein content from 10 percent to over 13 percent in inbred lines without compromising yield, while also enhancing whole-plant protein content and enabling the maize to grow well and remain protein-rich with less fertilizer, Wu said.

Further research revealed that combining THP3-T and THP9-T produces an unprecedented synergistic effect, raising kernel protein content in inbred lines from 10 percent to 15 percent -- far exceeding the impact of either gene alone.

"The research not only discovered the 'key puzzle piece' for high protein maize breeding but also offers new possibilities for quality improvement and precise genetic enhancement of modern maize," Wu said.

The team has employed marker-assisted breeding technology to precisely improve over 80 parental lines of major maize cultivars in China, raising their protein content to more than 14 percent.

The team also successfully increased the kernel protein content of Zhengdan958, China's most widely cultivated maize hybrid, from 8.5 percent to over 12 percent.

Wu said that China produces approximately 300 million tonnes of maize annually. If the protein content of maize used for feed nationwide were raised by four percentage points to more than 12 percent, the total added protein would be equivalent to over 30 million tonnes of imported soybeans, which is roughly 30 percent of current soybean imports....

....MUCH MORE 

From the Chinese Academy of Sciences, June 4:

CAS in Media
Chinese Scientists Develop High Protein Maize in Animal Feed Quest 

And at the journal Nature:

June 3 -  A discarded allele boosts protein

And -  Teosinte alleles enhance nitrogen assimilation and seed protein in maize

We Missed An Anniversary: The First Oil Well In Iran

From EBSCO Information Services

Oil Is Discovered in Persia

The discovery of oil in Persia (modern-day Iran) in 1908 marked a significant turning point in the region's economic and political landscape. The process began when Moẓaffar od-Dīn Shāh, the Qājār Dynasty's ruler, sold exploration rights to William Knox D'Arcy, a wealthy Englishman. Despite initial challenges, including harsh weather and a lack of skilled labor, D'Arcy's venture bore fruit when oil was struck at Masjed Soleymān, leading to the establishment of the Anglo-Persian Oil Company in 1909. This discovery attracted British government interest, especially as the internal combustion engine gained importance, further integrating Persian oil into global markets.

The geopolitical implications of this find were profound, as both Russia and Britain sought to protect their interests in Persia during World War I. Subsequent developments included efforts by local leaders, such as Reza Khan, to negotiate better terms for oil profits, reflecting a growing nationalistic sentiment. This historical moment laid the foundation for Iran’s complex relationship with foreign powers, particularly regarding oil control, which continued to evolve through the 20th century, culminating in significant political upheaval, including the 1979 revolution. The discovery of oil thus not only transformed Persia's economy but also its political dynamics and international relations.

Full Article

DATE May 26, 1908

The discovery of oil in Persia by an Englishman who had purchased oil concession rights gave Great Britain control of Persian oil, making Persia of tremendous strategic importance during two world wars. The discovery also initiated the opening of the Middle East to oil exploration and development, making the region of vital importance to the world economy. Initial Western control of oil production produced an anti-imperialist reaction that remained for many decades.

LOCALE Masjed Soleymān, Persia (now Iran)

Key Figures

  • William Knox D’Arcy (1849-1917), British entrepreneur
  • Moẓaffar od-Dīn Shāh (1853-1907), Qājār shah, r. 1896-1907
  • Reza Khan (1878-1944), nationalist and secular reformist shah of Iran, 1925-1941
  • Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi (1919-1980), shah of Iran, 1941-1979
  • Mohammad Mosaddeq (1880-1967), nationalistic prime minister of Iran, 1951-1953
  • Sir Percy Sykes (1867-1945), British general in charge of protecting Persian oil fields during World War I
  • George B. Reynolds (fl. early twentieth century), leader of D’Arcy’s oil drilling team

Summary of Event

During the last half of the nineteenth century, Persia (modern-day Iran) was of interest to Europeans mainly for its fine carpets and for whatever monopolies could be gained from monetary gifts to the corrupt shahs (emperors) of the Qājār Dynasty. By 1900, Russian interests controlled the five northern Persian provinces, while the British sphere was in the south and controlled monopolies for commodities such as tobacco. It was business as usual when Moẓaffar od-Dīn Shāh sold a concession to a wealthy Englishman, William Knox D’Arcy, who had made his fortune mining gold in Queensland, Australia. For ten thousand pounds, D’Arcy purchased the rights to explore, develop, and sell natural gas, petroleum, and asphalt in all of Persia, except for the five northern provinces controlled by Russia, for the next sixty years. After two years, D’Arcy was required to form a company and give the shah twenty thousand additional pounds and twenty thousand pounds in shares of the company’s stock. The shah was also to receive 16 percent of any profits from annual oil revenues.

The natural seepage of oil from the ground in Persia, which had been used for centuries to caulk boats and bind bricks, attracted European interest in the 1870’s as technology for oil drilling developed. Baron Julius de Reuter (founder of Reuters News Agency) made two unsuccessful efforts to locate oil, and in the early 1890’s a French geologist surveyed western Persia and published a scientific paper on the region’s oil-producing potential. These efforts sparked D’Arcy’s interests and resulted in his 1901 purchase of the shah’s concession. That year, D’Arcy hired George B. Reynolds, one of the few Englishmen with experience in oil exploration, and sent him to find oil fields in western Persia.

From 1901 to 1905, Reynolds drilled for oil without success. Harsh weather conditions, difficult terrain, and the shortage of skilled labor slowed progress. Running low on capital, D’Arcy signed an agreement with the Burmah Oil Company, a British corporation, to gain the funding necessary to continue exploration. Reynolds began drilling in southern Iraq, but through 1906 and 1907 he continued to lose money. The venture was close to collapse when, at 4:00 P.M. on May 26, 1908, oil began to gush over the top of oil rig number one at Masjed Soleymān, rising to a height of fifty feet above the rig. Two more wells were sunk, with equally productive results. The first major oil strike in the Middle East had been made. Today, a small outdoor museum preserves what is known as Well Number One, which still retains its original rig, boiler, and pump.

In 1909, the Anglo-Persian Oil Company was founded. D’Arcy led the company, and by the time of his death in 1917 he had made a massive fortune, despite the fact that he never set foot in Persia and operated only through his agents. The company began construction in October, 1909, and by 1911 the number of employees had risen to twenty-five hundred. The export of oil began in 1912, and by 1914, thirty oil wells had been drilled at Masjed Soleymān....

....MUCH MORE 

Here's BP's version of their origin story.

And at Encyclopedia Iranica

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

"Russia Finance Officials Tell Putin War Spending Is Unaffordable"

From Bloomberg, June 1:

Senior government officials have warned Russian President Vladimir Putin that spending on the war in Ukraine is on an unaffordable path, the most serious sign of internal division in Moscow since the full-scale invasion began.

Officials in Russia’s Finance Ministry and central bank have advised the Kremlin that the current level of projected defense expenditure risks the government’s budget deficit widening dangerously, according to people familiar with the matter and documents reviewed by Bloomberg News.

The officials, who have grown increasingly concerned about the state of Russia’s economy and state budget in recent months, have proposed new cuts to defense spending, the people said. It will be difficult to mend the country’s stretched public finances without finding further efficiencies, they have advised.

However, a divide among policymakers has seen senior officials in the Defense Ministry and some in the Kremlin, who are determined to pursue Putin’s war aims, insist on protecting military expenditure. Reducing it would badly damage the economy because so many businesses are reliant on military-related contracts, they have argued.

Putin has asked Finance Ministry officials to find spending reductions in other budget areas before targeting defense, some of the people said. They were all granted anonymity discussing the concerns, the extent of which has not been made public.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Defense Ministry is not only resisting cuts but is demanding additional funding, according to two people close to the Russian government. Military expenditure will have to increase to address a shortfall as high as three trillion rubles ($36 billion) this year, they said.

The president has been aware of the budgetary pressures both last year and this year, so the challenges aren’t a surprise, the people said. The scale of any spending cuts will depend solely on Putin, as no major budget decisions are made without his approval and he acts as the ultimate arbiter, they said, describing that as an iron rule.

When the 2026 budget was drafted, officials understood that a funding gap of roughly 1.2 trillion to 1.5 trillion rubles could emerge in the second half of the year, money that might be needed for the defense sector.

At the time, there were hopes the war in Ukraine would end following the summit in Alaska last August between Putin and US President Donald Trump, which would have made a reduction in defense spending in the second half of 2026 a logical assumption, according to the people close to the Russian government....

....MUCH MORE 

Russia's budget deficit is less than half that of the U.S, 2.5% vs. 5.9%