Wednesday, May 13, 2026

"What makes a winning bet in agtech? PitchBook crunches the numbers"

A superb overview from/via AgFunderNews, April 30: 

Firms in animal health, crop inputs & enhancements, and precision ag software, are "generating the strongest risk-adjusted outcomes," says Pitchbook

As EcoTech Capital MD Adam Bergman recently noted, a lack of exits has created a “vicious cycle” in agtech: limited investable capital as existing funds hit the end of their life and struggle to raise new capital, and few new funds emerging as LPs shy away from a sector with weak returns.

Against this backdrop, Pitchbook’s latest report asks the question: What does a successful VC-backed agtech investment actually look like?

According to authors Alex Frederick and Caleb Wilkins, who analyzed 1,197 VC-backed agtech outcomes as of Dec 31, 2025, VC-backed exits remain “concentrated in specific sectors, with crop inputs & enhancements, precision ag software, and select animal ag health companies generating the strongest risk-adjusted outcomes.”

Notably, the biochem and inputs space is a sound bet, they claim: “Regulatory pressure on synthetic pesticides is accelerating the shift to biological crop inputs, with the market forecast to roughly double by 2030.

“Bayer, BASF, Syngenta, Novozymes, and Corteva are repeat acquirers who have publicly named biologicals as a strategic priority, giving investors in this segment a pool of well-capitalized, strategically motivated buyers that no other agtech segment can match.”

According to Pitchbook:

Capital is consolidating around the strongest players: “Median pre-money valuations are at record highs even as disclosed deal counts have dropped 70% from their 2021 peak, reflecting capital concentrating in the most credible teams and business models. Median valuations and deal sizes are rising not because the market is broadly improving, but because weaker companies are no longer being funded at all.”

Meanwhile, young startups, including AI-native agtech firms, “have received an influx of seed-stage capital from multistage funds, elevating deal sizes and valuations.” What we don’t know, says Pitchbook, “is whether investors can systematically identify” the best bets within this growing pool.

Where the smart money is: “Seed or Series A entry below $20 million pre-money, technology-supplier models rather than capital-intensive operators, total capital raised under $30 million, and exposure to segments with robust strategic and private equity acquirer pools.”

For LPs: Pitchbook recommends backing specialists with “concentrated portfolios, 10-plus-year or evergreen structures, biochem or precision ag expertise, and proven relationships” with strategic acquirers such as Bayer, Novozymes, John Deere, and Zoetis.

For GPs: With half of companies expected to fail (of 1,197 VC-backed agtech companies with known outcomes, 683 are confirmed failures and 372 exited without a disclosed valuation), “funds must secure enough ownership in the one to two outlier exits at $500m+ that will define performance and avoid late-stage entries at software-style multiples into businesses that are likely to exit at 6x revenue.”

Among the 2,533 VC-backed companies founded between 2015 and 2020, 152 have a confirmed exit and 345 are confirmed failures (as of year-end 2025). Of the 29 exits with disclosed values, nine exceeded $100 million, and one exceeded $1 billion.

$8.2 billion destroyed: VC-backed confirmed failures destroyed a known $8.2 billion in capital....

....MUCH MORE 

"I Have My Doubts about NATO's Survival" Former German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer

Fischer was an interesting guy. Kind of a wild child when he was younger, political street fighter, sort of a Sturmabteilung-type but gussied up in grün. In his day he was probably the most popular politician in Germany.

From Der Spiegel, April 28: 

Joschka Fischer, born in 1948, was a key figure in the rise and success of the Green Party from the 1980s onward. From 1998 to 2005, he served as vice chancellor and foreign minister in the SPD-Green coalition government under Chancellor Gerhard Schröder. He shaped German foreign policy during the Kosovo War in 1999, after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 and in the debate over the U.S.-led war against Iraq in 2003.

Joschka Fischer, a titan of Germany's post-reunification foreign policy, says he finds Trump "deeply distasteful," discusses the need for a European bomb and says he never trusted Putin.  

DER SPIEGEL: Mr. Fischer, if you were still Germany’s foreign minister, how would you be dealing with the current U.S. administration and President Donald Trump?
Fischer: I'm glad I don't have to, because I find this person deeply unpleasant. The German government has not done a bad job with him so far, and neither has NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte. They're often criticized for approaching Trump on a broad trail of slime. But in this situation, they don't have many other options. And (German Chancellor Friedrich) Merz has issued a clear refusal to participate in the Iran war – a wise decision.

DER SPIEGEL: Trump has obviously miscalculated with his war in Iran. How do you assess his actions?
Fischer: From my perspective, it was already a mistake in his first term to sweep the nuclear deal with Iran, negotiated by Barack Obama and the Europeans, off the table. With the current war, he has so far achieved nothing. The regime will most likely hold on to power, and the enriched uranium will remain under its control. The only regime change Trump has achieved in Iran: the mullahs have been replaced as the central power factor by the Revolutionary Guards. The regime has become even more radical.

DER SPIEGEL: Friedrich Merz currently seems to have little influence over Trump. Do you consider descriptions of him as a "foreign-policy chancellor" to be accurate?
Fischer: Every chancellor is a foreign-policy chancellor. I have never really been able to understand this distinction.

DER SPIEGEL: Does Germany need to involve itself even more strongly in global politics?
Fischer: Economically, Germany is a European middle power; in terms of power politics, it remains rather small. Now that the U.S. has fallen away as a protective power, Germany must first strengthen and improve its military position.

DER SPIEGEL: Could Germany’s Bundeswehr become part of a European army?
Fischer: That will be difficult to push through. We are under considerable time pressure. The simplest approach would be to assemble a coalition of those countries that feel threatened by Putin – which also means: making use of national strength. In Europe, Germany and France are vital in this regard. We simply cannot rely on the U.S. anymore in the future. I have my doubts about NATO’s survival.

DER SPIEGEL: You think the situation is so dire?
Fischer: At least as a trans-Atlantic alliance. I think it would be sensible for a European NATO to continue to exist.

DER SPIEGEL: In two years, the U.S. could have a new president who reverses Trump's course.
Fischer: Who can guarantee that another Trump won’t come along four or eight years after that? The trust is gone, and it cannot be restored through a different election outcome, as much as I hope for one. The stability of the trans-Atlantic alliance rested on this trust.

DER SPIEGEL: Does Germany also need to consider establishing its own nuclear deterrent?
Fischer: If Trump withdraws the nuclear umbrella – and that possibility exists – this debate will be unavoidable. There would have to be an attempt to create a European alternative, together with France and Britain. Those would, of course, be extremely challenging changes.

DER SPIEGEL: Is Europe ready for Germany to become a military power again, to build the strongest conventional army on the continent, as Chancellor Merz is demanding?
Fischer: Only if the Berlin conducts foreign policy with historical sensitivity. Twice in the 20th century, Germany was thwarted in its bid for world power. We don't seem to think about that as much anymore, but our neighbors have not forgotten this past, even if Chancellor Konrad Adenauer created a European postwar Germany through Western integration. That ultimately made unification possible and created a certain trust among former wartime adversaries.

DER SPIEGEL: What does that mean for today? What does that mean for a Germany in which the right-wing Alternative for Germany (AfD) party is gaining strength?
Fischer: If we have our country’s best interests at heart, we will remain committed to the principle of never again going it alone as a nation. That is also the great danger that the rise of the AfD brings with it: that we suppress our own history and once again develop fantasies of becoming a great power. The AfD wants to return to a pre-Adenauer Germany, a nationalist Germany. Doing so, in my view, would be quite simply insane. Europe is the only option remaining to us.

DER SPIEGEL: You were once a militant opponent of the Bundeswehr, and you took part in demonstrations against rearmament and NATO. What was your path to the peace movement as a young man?
Fischer: My generation was raised by the surviving veterans of Adolf Hitler's Wehrmacht. In primary school back then, it was customary for teachers to tell stories of their war experiences before report cards were handed out. Our playgrounds were the remnants of bombed out buildings. Materiel left over from the war was also still lying around – steel helmets, ammunition and so on.

DER SPIEGEL: That made you a pacifist?
Fischer: It was also, to some extent, a stance against the older generation. But I wonder these days: Was I ever in the peace movement? After all, I was no pacifist. I never rejected violence per se. But I was firmly convinced that, against the backdrop of German history, a lasting peace was needed....

....MUCH MORE

As I said, interesting guy.

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

"Is your Porsche Taycan too slow at the Nürburgring? You need this Manthey Kit.

From Ars Technica, May 7:

Nordschleife-specialist Manthey has developed an upgrade package for the Porsche EV. 

Porsche is known for building cars that really are extremely good right out of the box. Yes, they tend to be more expensive than the other German luxury car brands, particularly once the option list comes out. But it doesn’t take very long behind the wheel before the driving experience reveals why they’re so good. And that’s just the regular models; the stuff that comes out of the motorsport department in Weissach—like the sublime 911 GT3—is even more focused.

But for some drivers, those who choose to spend their spare time enjoying track days at places like the legendary Nürburgring Nordschleife in Germany’s Eifel Mountains, even cars like the razor-sharp GT3 RS make too many compromises for the road. For those people, there is Manthey Racing.

Based at the industrial estate alongside the ’Ring, Manthey is a highly successful racing team—majority-owned by Porsche since 2013—that applies its years of experience making Porsches go even faster around the 12.9-mile (20.8 km) circuit known as the Green Hell to create upgrade kits that will turn the dials all the way up to 11.

Manthey’s newest upgrade kit is not for the 911 or 718, but the electric Taycan. Specifically, the Manthey Kit is an upgrade to the Taycan Turbo GT variant that Porsche introduced in 2024. More specifically, it requires the Taycan Turbo GT to also have the factory-installed Weissach package: this saves weight with carbon-fiber trim, thinner glass, a lighter sound system, and even loses the second charge port and the rear speakers to cut kilos. So equipped, the 0–60 mph (0–97 km/h) time falls from 2.2 seconds to 2.1 seconds.

But a more impressive statistic is how little time it took Porsche factory driver Lars Kern to lap the Nordschleife—in 2024, he completed a lap in 7 minutes, 7.5 seconds.

 So the 12 seconds he shaved off with the Manthey Kit, setting a time of 6:55.553, should underscore just how much faster the car can now go. There’s more aerodynamic downforce courtesy of wild new body extensions, with louvers on the front wheel arches (presumably to let air escape the wheel well), a larger rear wing, new underbody diffusers, and aerodisc rear wheels. And the car’s downforce levels are tunable, so you can optimize it for whichever track you happen to be blistering this week....

....MUCH MORE 

"China-US trade talks kick off in Seoul ahead of high-profile leaders’ summit"

From the South China Morning Post, May 13: 

Trade deals, export controls on critical minerals and the Iran war likely to be talking points as senior officials sit down for negotiations 

Senior officials from China and the United States have started a new round of trade talks in Seoul, South Korea, hours ahead of US President Donald Trump’s scheduled arrival in Beijing.

The delegations – led by Chinese Vice-Premier He Lifeng and US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent – arrived at Terminal 1 of Incheon Airport around noon on Wednesday Seoul time.

The two officials had both paid courtesy calls to South Korean President Lee Jae Myung in the morning.

This is the seventh round of negotiations between He and Bessent since Trump returned to office and launched a global tariff war last year, with the talks setting the stage for the meeting between Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping.

Unlike previous meetings that have usually lasted around two days, this round of talks is expected to only run for a few hours. Bessent will head to China in the afternoon to join Trump.

Trump is set to visit Beijing from Wednesday to Friday, China’s foreign ministry confirmed on Monday. This will mark the first trip by a US president to China in over eight years, after a state visit during Trump’s first non-consecutive term in 2017.

Bessent and He are expected to discuss a number of issues, including Chinese purchases of American soybeans, beef and aircraft, as well as China’s export controls on critical minerals, for which a key suspension is set to expire in November....

....MUCH MORE 

Also at the SCMP: 

Xi-Trump meeting could lift Chinese stocks 12%: Morgan Stanley 

Nvidia’s Jensen Huang joins Trump’s trip to China at last minute 

"AI Is Starting to Build Better AI"

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

From IEEE Spectrum, May 7: 

Recursive self-improvement is emerging, but humans are still in the loop

The field of artificial intelligence was built on the premise that machines might someday improve themselves. In 1966, the English mathematician I. J. Good wrote that “an ultraintelligent machine could design even better machines; there would then unquestionably be an ‘intelligence explosion,’ and the intelligence of man would be left far behind.” AI researchers have long seen recursive self-improvement, or RSI, as something to both desire and fear. Today, advances in AI are raising the question of whether parts of that process are already underway.

RSI means many things to many people. Some use the idea as a bogeyman to scare up regulation, while others brandish it in marketing. For some, it means a fully autonomous loop, while for others it’s nearly any use of tech to build tech.

Safest to say it’s a spectrum. At its strictest, researchers use the term to describe systems that can improve not just their outputs but the process by which they improve—generating ideas, evaluating results, and modifying their own methods with zero human direction. By that standard, many of today’s systems fall short. They can help build better AI, but they still rely on humans to set goals, define success, and decide which changes to keep. The question is not whether self-improvement exists in some form today, but how much of the loop has actually been closed.

Stepping-Stones to Self-Improvement
Researchers have spent decades putting in place the elements of RSI. Machine learning (ML) algorithms automatically tune the parameters of programs that can play games or even create new programs. ML methods called evolutionary algorithms diversify and iterate on design solutions, including other algorithms. Over the last decade, “AutoML” has automated aspects of the pipeline in which ML models such as neural networks are structured, trained, and evaluated.

Today, large language models (LLMs) such as GPT, Gemini, Claude, and Grok extend this trend. One of their biggest use cases is to write code, including the code to produce future versions of themselves. In February, OpenAI reported that GPT‑5.3‑Codex was instrumental in creating itself, helping to debug training, manage deployment, and analyze evaluation results. Anthropic claims that the majority of its code is now written by Claude Code. These systems still rely on humans to direct and verify the work.

Last year, Google DeepMind announced a system called AlphaEvolve, “a coding agent for scientific and algorithmic discovery.” It uses LLMs to guide the evolution of solutions, such as optimizing neural-network architectures, data-center scheduling, and chip design. It’s not a fully recursive loop, as people still need to decide what problems AlphaEvolve should solve and how to evaluate its performance. But each breakthrough enhances scientists’ ability to make further AI breakthroughs.

“It’s also a very collaborative process” between humans and machines, says Matej Balog, a computer scientist at Google DeepMind who worked on AlphaEvolve. “Often you look at what the system discovers, and you actually learn from that discovery.” The system has already surprised the team. “Our mission is to use AI to discover new algorithms that have evaded human intuition,” Balog says. “I think we have the first demonstrations that this is not a wild dream.”

Meanwhile, the co-leads of Google DeepMind’s earlier chip-design system, AlphaChip, have launched a startup called Ricursive Intelligence to use AI to design AI chips. “We expect that we can dramatically reduce the design cycle from one or two years to days,” says cofounder Azalia Mirhoseini. Phase 1 is to help human designers. Phase 2 is to automate the process for companies without in-house designers. In Phase 3, the company will recursively use AI to design better chips to train better AI—though still under human supervision, says cofounder Anna Goldie....

....MUCH MORE 

Recently:

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

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

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"

"Mystery of sunken Russian ‘ghost ship’ grows after explosions reported while carrying alleged nuclear reactors to North Korea"

From the New York Post, May 12:

The mystery of how a Russian cargo ship sank deepened after it was revealed that the vessel suffered multiple explosions while allegedly carrying two nuclear reactors believed to be bound for North Korea, according to a new report.

The prevailing theory suggests that the West might have been involved in the incident that saw the Ursa Major sink 60 miles off the coast of Spain on Dec. 23, 2024, CNN reported.

The ship, also known as the Sparta 3, appeared to have been hit by a rare type of torpedo that breached the ship’s hull and forced it to sink to the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea, according to Spanish investigators.

The investigation suggested that the only thing that could have breached the ship was the Barracuda supercavitating torpedo, a powerful weapon of which only the US, a few NATO countries, Russia and Iran are believed to be in possession....

....MUCH MORE 

note to self: if the pescado is glowing probably best to switch back to the tapas. 

"US Power Prices Climb 61% Faster Than Inflation as Demand Surges"

Lifted in toto from Bloomberg, May 12:

Consumer prices climbed last month by the most in three years, but prices for electricity surged even more, highlighting an intensifying battle between utilities, consumers and power grids.

Electricity prices jumped 6.1% last month compared to a year earlier, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data published on Tuesday. That’s well above the overall consumer price index, which rose 3.8%, the most since May 2023. 

https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/i0HtHS6AMlX4/v3/pidjEfPlU1QWZop3vfGKsrX.ke8XuWirGYh1PKgEw44kE/-1x-1.png 

Mounting electricity demand from data centers has strained US energy grids, and customers are feeling the impact from soaring wholesale power costs. Lawmakers have attacked utilities and grid operators over higher electricity bills, while utilities and regulators are calling into question the design of the US grid. Concerns over energy affordability are emerging as a critical issue in this year’s midterm elections.

Read more: Soaring Electric Bills Unleash Voter Fury Before US Midterms

To answer voters’ complaints, politicians are working to reform the utility model and tamp down rates. The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities, for example, announced last week New Jersey to Complete Utility Revenue Reform Study by July 19 different ways to reward utilities based on performance, including affordability and reliability, instead of the current model that ties their profit to investments in infrastructure.

Also at Bloomberg May 12:

Here Are the Key Takeaways for the US CPI Report for April

Earlier:

Inflation: "CPI for all items rises 0.6% in April; shelter and gasoline up "

Inflation: "CPI for all items rises 0.6% in April; shelter and gasoline up "

From the Bureau of Labor Statistics, May 12:

CONSUMER PRICE INDEX - APRIL 2026

The Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U) increased 0.6 percent on a seasonally adjusted basis in April, after rising 0.9 percent in March, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Over the last 12 months, the all items index increased 3.8 percent before seasonal adjustment.

The index for energy rose 3.8 percent in April, accounting for over forty percent of the monthly all items increase. The shelter index also increased in April, rising 0.6 percent. The index for food increased 0.5 percent over the month as the index for food at home rose 0.7 percent and the index for food away from home increased 0.2 percent. 

The index for all items less food and energy rose 0.4 percent in April. Indexes that increased over the month include household furnishings and operations, airline fares, personal care, apparel, and education. Conversely, the indexes for new vehicles, communication, and medical care were among the major indexes that decreased in April.

The all items index rose 3.8 percent for the 12 months ending April, after rising 3.3 percent for the 12 months ending March. The all items less food and energy index rose 2.8 percent over the year, following a 2.6 percent increase over the 12 months ending March. The energy index increased 17.9 percent for the 12 months ending April. The food index increased 3.2 percent over the last year....

....MUCH MORE, tables, narrative. 

And more to come. 

Earlier this morning Bloomberg Economics expected: 

Headline CPI to increase 0.58% and core CPI rise 0.36%. On a year-over-year basis, headline probably climbed to 3.7% and core to 2.7%.

Energy should add 24 bps to the headline, driven by a 7% increase in gasoline prices. Electricity likely rose 0.9%, and natural gas 0.7%.

Core services likely reaccelerated to 0.4%, with rents the biggest contributor to the firm reading. We expect primary rents to increase 0.45% and owners’ equivalent rent (OER) to advance 0.57%. Unlike most CPI categories, shelter inflation was not fully “caught up” after the October shutdown because rent and OER are measured on a six-month property rotation. That left index levels artificially depressed until the affected units were resurveyed in April.

So A Sea Captain And A Cambridge Don Came To The Same Realization: "The Hormuz Hypothesis"

This is old news but I thought I should mention some of what's been guiding our thinking on events over the last  2 1/2 months.

First up, Cambridge Uni. Professor of Political Economy Helen Thompson at MarketWatch, April 11:

What if Trump actually wanted this Hormuz outcome all along?
Cambridge professor Helen Thompson says the consistent ‘thread’ through the second Trump administration has been resetting the energy part of the world geopolitically

Since the start of the Iran war, the conventional wisdom has been that the whole thing is a hot mess. The argument is that President Donald Trump either blundered into a strategic situation he didn’t understand or was suckered into it by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, with disastrous consequences.

These range from the humanitarian — starting with the killing of around 165 Iranian schoolgirls, apparently by a U.S. missile — to the economic and even geopolitical. Oil is up to $100 a barrel, gasoline is nearly $4.20 a gallon nationally, and — irony of ironies — the enemy regime in Tehran has been left with control of the Strait of Hormuz and about 20% of the world’s oil supply.

The Iranians are now reportedly charging a toll of $1 a barrel — payable apparently through nontraceable cryptocurrency or in Chinese yuan Trump, who has repeatedly called the regime evil and worse, was left surprised that it acted in such a “dishonorable” manner with regard to the cease-fire.

But what if the conventional wisdom is wrong?

That’s the hypothesis of one of the world’s shrewdest and most respected analysts of geopolitics and energy, Cambridge University political-economy professor Helen Thompson. In a couple of recent broadcasts, she has argued that this entire outcome — including the apparent closure of the Strait of Hormuz — may not be a bug of the war at all but a deliberate feature.

Thompson argues that driving up the worldwide price of oil and keeping it there may be a core war goal of the Trump administration. That hurts China, which depends on imported energy, and helps America, which is a net energy producer. And if that’s the case, then Iranian control over the strait would, ironically, be a desirable outcome.

“The Trump administration thinks through the lens of resource competition,” Thompson explained.

“You have to consider the possibility … that actually part of what’s going on isn’t just about Iran, it’s about the Trump administration trying to hurt China,” she told the conservative-leaning website UnHerd.

The Iran war may be “part of an attempt by the Trump administration to reset the energy part of the world geopolitically,” she told Bloomberg Podcasts.

That, according to Thompson, is the consistent “thread” running through the second Trump administration’s foreign policy — including the intervention in oil-rich Venezuela and the attempt to destabilize resource-rich Greenland. It is also, she said, part of a geopolitical blueprint that the administration laid out last fall.

America, Thompson pointed out, may be a “beneficiary” of the war economically because it will be able to sell more liquefied natural gas at elevated prices, especially to the Europeans.

She added that, right now, competitive thinking between the U.S. and China focuses on artificial intelligence, which uses a staggering amount of energy. Driving up China’s energy costs hurts its AI ambitions.

Thompson also pointed out that it wasn’t just the Iranians who “closed” the Strait of Hormuz. Western shipping insurers became worried about the risks, especially after the Iranians attacked some ships. And after initially floating the notion of stepping in and providing insurance to ships through the U.S. government, the Trump administration soon walked away from the idea. That would be consistent with the theory that the administration does not want fuel to flow freely through the strait, because it wants oil and gas to remain expensive....

....MUCH MORE 

And at gCaptain, March 18:

The Hormuz Hypothesis – What If the U.S. Navy Isn’t in a Hurry to Reopen the Strait? 

By Captain John Konrad (Opinion) – The Strait of Hormuz is twenty-one miles wide. Two shipping channels, each two miles across, separated by a two-mile buffer. There is no alternative. Saudi Arabia’s East-West Pipeline to Yanbu and the UAE’s pipeline to Fujairah can handle maybe five million barrels combined. The math doesn’t work. The bottleneck is not political. It is geological and hydrographic.

Every TV analyst in America is talking about minesweepers and carrier strike groups. They are asking the wrong questions. The binding constraint on Hormuz was never a minefield or insurance. It is the US Navy’s willingness and ability to reopen it.

Every talking point suggests the White House and Navy are working hard to reopen the strait but progress is slow. A new posts on Truth Social suggests we may have to considet a new hypothesis.

“I wonder what would happen if we “finished off” what’s left of the Iranian Terror State, and let the Countries that use it, we don’t, be responsible for the so called Strait?” wrote President Trump in a psot this morning. “That would get some of our non-responsive “Allies” in gear, and fast!!!”

Which leads to a question, White House may have no intention of reopening the Strait of Hormuz?

The Insurance Kill Switch 
When the seven P&I clubs belonging to the International Group issued 72-hour cancellation notices for war risk coverage in the Persian Gulf on March 5, they did not just raise costs. They made transit impossible.

P&I clubs insure roughly 90 percent of the world’s ocean-going tonnage. Without their coverage, ships cannot sail. Port authorities will not let them dock. Banks will not finance the cargo. Charterers will not book the vessel. The entire system, from loading berth to discharge terminal, is underwritten by a chain of contracts that begins with a club in London, Oslo, or Tokyo. When the clubs pulled war risk extensions, that chain broke. Not for a few ships. For the global fleet.

War risk premiums jumped from 0.25 percent to 1 percent of hull value, renewable every seven days. VLCC charter rates quadrupled to nearly $800,000 per day. Over 1,000 vessels are now trapped in the Persian Gulf, burning charter costs with nowhere to go. By March 3, only four ships crossed the Strait, down from a seven-day average of seventy-seven.

Then Trump did something that almost nobody in the press understood.

He ordered the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation to create a $20 billion maritime reinsurance facility, with Chubb as lead underwriter, making the United States government the insurer of last resort for Gulf shipping. A sovereign nation positioned itself as the backstop for war risk insurance on the world’s most critical maritime chokepoint. The DFC facility, coordinated with US Central Command and Treasury, offers hull, machinery, and cargo coverage on a rolling basis to eligible vessels.

The United States now controls the on/off switch for the Strait of Hormuz. Not through naval firepower. Through insurance.

Read the latest MARAD advisory carefully: U.S.-flagged, owned, or crewed commercial vessels operating in these areas should maintain a minimum standoff of 30 nautical miles from U.S. military vessels.

And read this part of the DFC announcement again… “coordinated with US Central Command.”

They cannot pass without the Navy permission.

The green light has not appeared.

The Maritime Dream Team That Was 
To understand why this matters, you need to understand what Trump built and what was destroyed.

Trump came into his second term determined to restore American maritime power. He assembled the greatest collection of maritime minds in key government positions since Nixon. He put Mike Waltz, creator of the SHIPS for America Act, as head of the National Security Council. He created a Maritime Office in the White House. He appointed maritime advocates to key positions throughout the administration. He signed a sweeping Maritime Executive Order in April 2025 directing a Maritime Action Plan across Defense, State, Transportation, and Homeland Security.

He started targeting chokepoints: Panama, the Red Sea, Suez, the Greenland-UK Gap. He launched investigations into Gibraltar and Spain. He created USTR actions to tariff Chinese-built and operated ships. He called CMA CGM’s CEO Rodolphe Saadé to the Oval Office and secured a $20 billion commitment to American maritime investment.

The ambition was real.

So was the pushback.

Shipowners lined up outside USTR to protest the China shipping tariffs. Nearly every economist on the planet lined up against the maritime tariff proposals. The entire U.S. tech sector asked for China concessions, and what did China want in return? A pause to USTR.

Then Signalgate. The media leaked a private conversation about attacking the Houthis and reopening the Red Sea. The operation was stunned. Signalgate forced a reorganization. Waltz was moved to the UN. The Maritime Office was downsized. The NSC was gutted.

That was the moment every maritime initiative began to stall.

What collapsed: Panama did not follow through on free transits for U.S. ships. CMA CGM’s $20 billion commitment evaporated as the company ordered vessels from China and India instead. Congress stalled on the SHIPS Act. The UK traded the Chagos Islands, including Diego Garcia, to Mauritius for a sweetheart deal, putting a critical naval base at risk. Key Navy appointees were slow-rolled or blocked in the Senate.

Then it came to a head at the International Maritime Organization in London. In April 2025, sixty-three countries voted to approve the Net-Zero Framework, a global carbon pricing mechanism on every ship over 5,000 tons. What did Trump’s negotiators ask for? That America’s tiny fleet of merchant ships be exempt. Europe refused, claiming American maritime interests are “irrelevant” and that we lack the leverage or votes.

The U.S. walked out. In October, at the adoption vote, Trump called it a “Global Green New Scam Tax on Shipping.” Trump played hardball. The State Department threatened sanctions against any country that voted yes. Fifty-seven countries voted to delay.

A pyrrhic victory. The carbon tax was dead in the water, but we did not get exemptions for U.S. ships, and the White House began losing the wider war for chokepoints and maritime trade with the City of London, Europe and China.

Then two body blows in quick succession.

On February 20, the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 that IEEPA does not authorize the President to impose tariffs, invalidating the “Liberation Day” reciprocal tariffs and the China, Canada, and Mexico trafficking tariffs. An estimated $160 billion in tariff revenue, gone. Trump imposed 15 percent global tariffs under Section 122, but those are capped at 150 days and require Congressional extension.

His most powerful tariff tool was taken away by the courts. If you cannot tariff your way to compliance, you need another form of leverage.

And then the Golden Fleet.

In December, Trump announced a new class of Trump-class battleships at Mar-a-Lago: 30,000 to 40,000 tons, armed with hypersonic missiles, railguns, lasers, and nuclear cruise missiles. Twenty to twenty-five hulls. The most ambitious surface combatant program since World War II.

Within 72 hours, every national security think tank and academia – which all have close ties and funding with NATO nations – lined up to kill it. With no time for due dillegence CSIS published the hit piece “The Golden Fleet’s Battleship Will Never Sail” and estimated $9 billion per hull and predicted cancellation before the first ship hits water. The Foundation for Defense of Democracies called it a waste. Retired admirals on defense baords lined up to say the Navy should buy small distributed platforms instead. Every defense analyst competed to be quoted saying it was impossible.

The same establishment that produced three Zumwalts instead of thirty, and thirty almost useless Littorial Combat Ships instead of none, the same think tanks that has presided over the smallest Navy since World War I, lined up overnight to explain why America cannot build big ships anymore.

The same people who have no plan to close the destroyer gap that is right now undermining convoy escort operations in the Gulf.

The think tanks did not offer an alternative. They offered learned helplessness. And that helplessness is the context in which Hormuz is now playing out.

The Leverage Hypothesis 
Now connect the dots.

Strike Iran, and Europe either bends or goes dark in an energy crisis.

The European shipping community and political establishment spent the past year dismissing, undermining, and mocking every Trump maritime initiative. They scoffed at the USTR tariffs. They laughed at the SHIPS Act. They blocked the IMO exemptions. They refused to take American maritime policy seriously.

Now their energy supply runs through an insurance facility controlled by Washington.

“Let their navies figure it out.” Except everyone knows they cannot. European naval forces are too small, too slow, and too poorly equipped for sustained convoy escort operations through a contested strait. All the European navies combined could not send more than three ships at a time to defend the Red Sea. An entire German task force sailed around Africa to avoid it....

....MUCH MORE 

So we don't have a lot of Taco Tuesday posts. One

 On May 6 because in was in Marc Chandler's headline. 

But speaking of Mexican food we have on offer, from a couple years ago:

"The first Mexican taco stand to get a Michelin star is a tiny business where the heat makes the meat"

Capital Markets: "Ceasefire is on "Life Support": Saps Risk Appetites, Buoys the Greenback"

From Marc to Market:

The uncertainty about the US-Iran fragile ceasefire, which President Trump has said is on “life support” is weighing on risk-taking appetites today. Brent and WTI are up over $3 and bonds and stocks have been sold. The US dollar is firmer against the G10 currencies but the Norwegian krone. Most emerging market currencies are lower. Ahead of the Xi-Trump meeting later this week, the PBOC continued to gradually lower the dollar’s reference rate. Treasury Secretary Bessent is in Tokyo, and the media reports he ‘understands” Japanese exchange rate policy. This is a far cry from having the Treasury Department use the Federal Reserve to check prices as it did in January. The dollar reached a new five-session high against the yen. 

The US reports April CPI today. The headline rate is seen rising to around 3.7% from 3.3%. And as Warsh’s confirmation process continued to make progress, the swaps market has boosted the chances of a rate hike this year to around 31%, the highest since last March. Still, the other major central banks are expected to raise rates sooner and by more....

....MUCH MORE 

Monday, May 11, 2026

News You Can Use: "Want to track the apocalypse? One theory: Follow the billionaires’ jets"

From the Washington Post, May 9:

An artist made a warning system to notify you if the ultra-rich flee city centers en masse. 

They have endless amounts of money. Sophisticated bunkers. Private jets. Might the oligarchs of the world know — or be warned — in advance of a nuclear apocalypse?

So goes the theory underpinning the newest project from Los Angeles artist and coder Kyle McDonald, who has created what he calls an Apocalypse Early Warning System by tracking private jets around the world. If a large number of jets suddenly flee city centers, transporting their likely affluent passengers to bunkers and isolated resorts, he figures it might be a warning sign for the rest of us.

“I want people to laugh. I hope they see it and they feel the sort of humor of our situation — that we’re locked in a battle between the ultra-wealthy and the working class,” McDonald said. “And remember, there’s still things we can do. We’re not completely downtrodden and lost of all hope.”....

....MUCH MORE 

For a graphic the paper uses a picture of private jets at Le Bourget but I was thinking of the overflow parking at the Swiss Air Force base down the road from Davos:

https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/9772274127cc75fed9c823d5dd55c84001daa3a9/977_0_2379_1428/master/2379.jpg?width=1300&dpr=2&s=none&crop=none 

That was at the Guardian in 2019, the year that David Attenbourough came to talk about Global Warming.

New York's Mayor Mamdani And The Curley Effect

Following on the post immediately below, "Fun Fact: "New York City spends more per homeless person than the median NYC household earns. $81,705 per person in FY2025" a bit of scholarship from the National Bureau of Economic Research:

James Michael Curley, a four-time mayor of Boston, used wasteful redistribution to his poor Irish constituents and incendiary rhetoric to encourage richer citizens to emigrate from Boston, thereby shaping the electorate in his favor. Boston as a consequence stagnated, but Curley kept winning elections. We present a model of the Curley effect, in which inefficient redistributive policies are sought not by interest groups protecting their rents, but by incumbent politicians trying to shape the electorate through emigration of their opponents or reinforcement of class identities. The model sheds light on ethnic politics in the United States and abroad, as well as on class politics in many countries including Britain. 

NBER download page.

Both the authors have those "@harvard.edu" email addresses.

Enough appeal to authority? I've got more if it is desired. Here's Mom:

A Mother's Love, Letter To Arthur Schopenhauer

‘All your good qualities,’ she wrote on 6 November, ‘become obscured by your super-cleverness and are made useless to the world merely because of your rage at wanting to know everything better than others … If you were less like you, you would only be ridiculous, but thus as you are, you are highly annoying.’
....MUCH MORE 

Now THAT'S authority. But in Arthur's defense our post goes on to look at his "Die Kunst, Recht zu behalten" with its thirty-eight stratagems for making an argument including:

#30 - Appeal to Authority Rather Than Reason and: 

#38 - Become Personal, Insulting, Rude (the Ultimate Stratagem)

And that, children, is why we study philosophy.

Fun Fact: "New York City spends more per homeless person than the median NYC household earns. $81,705 per person in FY2025"

From Newsweek March 16:

NYC Spends as Much Per Homeless Person as Median Income

A new report from the New York State Comptroller Office reveals New York City spent roughly as much per homeless person as the city’s median household income last fiscal year.

Newsweek reached out to comptroller's office and New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani's office for comment on Monday afternoon via email.

Why It Matters

The data reflects a central tension in New York City’s homelessness debate: record‑high spending alongside persistent, visible homelessness. If the city is effectively spending the equivalent of a median income per homeless individual each year, critics say it raises serious questions about efficiency and accountability....

....MUCH MORE 

As noted in March 2020's "Where Are The Bodies Of The Homeless Coronavirus Victims?":

Over the years I've taken a special interest in the plight of the homeless, both as an outlet for charitable impulses and as a socio-political phenomena/area of study. Some of that has ended up on the blog where posts, usually focused on money, have also looked at the lack of it....

****

https://media4.s-nbcnews.com/j/newscms/2018_05/2316496/180204-homeless-shelter-san-diego-se-555p_565a90ebd8cdf824a9cca0f97a439605.nbcnews-ux-1024-900.jpg
Here's a shelter in, I thinks it's San Diego, which is typical of newer designs: bunk beds, the mattress mats are washable but I don't know how often that is done, close quarters, colds and flu spread very quickly but apparently not Covid-19 deaths.

A shelter like that, capable of holding 80 to 100 souls should not cost $6.5 to $8 million per year to run. The Newsweek article states:

“Per‑person” homelessness spending typically reflects system‑wide costs, including shelters, medical care, mental health services, security, administration, and emergency services, rather than direct cash or housing support provided to individuals. 

One of the commentariat is quoted as saying:

X user @charliesmirkley, who has over 10,000 followers, wrote on Sunday: “NYC spends more per homeless person than the median NYC household earns. $81,705 per person in FY2025. And $81,705 is a floor. It excludes supportive housing (~$500M/yr), mental health response teams, and NYPD encampment costs. The city projects ~$97K per person in FY2026." 

We lifted the first part of his comment for our headline. 

Chips: MORE Cerebras IPO Stuff

Following on May 9's "AI Chipmaker Cerebras Is Said to Plan Raising IPO Price Range".

From Techi:

Cerebras is no longer a vague "maybe IPO" story. As of May 6, 2026, the AI-chip company has a live roadshow, a fresh SEC filing, a proposed Nasdaq ticker and a real price range for public investors to evaluate.

The clean headline is this: Cerebras filed an amended S-1 on May 4, 2026 to sell 28 million Class A shares at an expected range of $115 to $125 per share, and the company says it has applied to list on the Nasdaq Global Select Market under the ticker CBRS. At the top of the range, the deal would raise about $3.5 billion before expenses and put Cerebras near a $26.6 billion market value, according to Reuters' May 4 report and TechCrunch's read of the same filing.

That makes Cerebras one of the most important AI infrastructure listings of 2026, but it also makes the due diligence harder. The company has real technology, real customers and real revenue growth. It also has customer concentration, unusual financing tied to OpenAI, export-control exposure and a profit line that looks better on the surface than the operating business underneath.

For TECHi readers already tracking the AI silicon race through AMD vs. Nvidia and the new AMD data-center earnings cycle, Cerebras is the public-market test of a different question: can a wafer-scale AI system become a serious investable platform, or is this IPO being priced like a perfect outcome before the proof is fully in?

The May 2026 IPO terms

Cerebras' May 4 preliminary prospectus says the company is offering 28 million Class A shares and expects the IPO price to land between $115 and $125 per share. The company also plans to grant underwriters a 30-day option to buy up to 4.2 million additional shares, a standard over-allotment structure that could increase the total number of shares sold if demand is strong.

The midpoint matters because it gives investors a cleaner way to size the deal. Cerebras estimates net proceeds of about $3.24 billion at a $120 midpoint after underwriting discounts, commissions and offering expenses, or about $3.73 billion if the underwriters exercise the option in full. The company says it plans to use the proceeds for general corporate purposes, including working capital, operating expenses and capital expenditures, with about $230 million earmarked for tax withholding and remittance obligations tied to RSU settlement.

The banking group is large enough to signal a serious institutional book. Cerebras named Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, Barclays and UBS Investment Bank as lead book-running managers, with Mizuho and TD Cowen as bookrunners and a longer list of co-managers. That does not make the deal low risk, but it does mean this is not a quiet niche listing.

The registration statement is still preliminary. Cerebras' own IPO release says the registration statement has been filed but is not yet effective, and the SEC's investor bulletin on IPOs reminds investors that SEC effectiveness is not an endorsement of the company or the investment merits. Until the offering is declared effective and priced, CBRS is not a normal public stock that retail investors can buy on the open market.

Why this is Cerebras' second attempt

Cerebras first filed to go public in 2024, but the IPO became tied up in national-security scrutiny around Abu Dhabi-based G42. In the original 2024 S-1, Cerebras disclosed that G42 represented $119.1 million of revenue in the first half of 2024, or 87% of total revenue for that period. That concentration made the IPO story about more than chips; it made it about customer dependency, export controls and geopolitical risk.

TechCrunch reported in April 2026 that Cerebras' earlier IPO plan was delayed by a federal review of the Abu Dhabi-based G42 investment and was ultimately withdrawn. The new May 2026 filing does not erase that history, but it changes the center of gravity by putting OpenAI and AWS at the front of the growth story.

The updated prospectus still shows that concentration risk is not gone. Cerebras says G42 accounted for 24% of 2025 revenue and 85% of 2024 revenue, while Mohamed bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence accounted for 62% of 2025 revenue. It also says OpenAI, G42, MBZUAI and AWS are significant customers or expected future customers whose negative demand changes could harm the business.

That is the first key point for investors: Cerebras has improved the story, but it has not turned into a diversified chip company overnight.

What Cerebras actually sells

Cerebras is not trying to build a slightly cheaper GPU. Its pitch is architectural. The company builds wafer-scale AI systems around the Wafer Scale Engine, a processor that keeps far more compute, memory and bandwidth on one very large piece of silicon instead of distributing work across many smaller chips.

The current flagship is WSE-3. Cerebras says WSE-3 has 4 trillion transistors, 900,000 AI-optimized cores, 44GB of on-chip SRAM and 125 petaflops of peak AI performance, and that the 5nm chip powers the CS-3 AI supercomputer. The same company release says CS-3 systems can be clustered up to 2,048 nodes and train models up to 24 trillion parameters.

That technical pitch matters because the AI market is splitting into workloads. Training frontier models is one market. Low-latency inference is another. Agentic coding, long reasoning, search and enterprise assistants often depend less on one benchmark score and more on how quickly a system can produce useful tokens back to the user. OpenAI makes that point directly in its Cerebras partnership announcement, saying low-latency compute can make AI responses faster and more natural across code, agents and other workloads.

Cerebras is therefore not just selling "anti-Nvidia" sentiment. It is selling a specialized system for customers that need speed, latency and token throughput. That is why the stock, if the IPO prices, should be analyzed beside Nvidia's broader AI platform rather than as a simple one-for-one replacement.

OpenAI is the center of the story

The biggest reason the 2026 IPO looks different from the 2024 attempt is OpenAI. In January, OpenAI said it was partnering with Cerebras to add 750MW of ultra-low-latency AI compute to its platform, with capacity coming online in multiple tranches through 2028. Cerebras' prospectus goes further, describing a multi-year OpenAI deal valued at more than $20 billion and saying the companies agreed to co-design future models for future Cerebras hardware.

That is powerful validation, but it also creates real dependency. The May S-1 says the Master Relationship Agreement with OpenAI represents a substantial portion of projected revenue over the next several years. It also says Cerebras must deliver capacity tranches across specified numbers of data centers and minimum capacity thresholds, and that OpenAI can terminate part or all of the agreement if Cerebras misses certain delivery or service obligations.

The financing around OpenAI is just as important. Cerebras disclosed a $1.0 billion working-capital loan from OpenAI that is tied to accelerating services, technology, manufacturing and buildout under the MRA. The filing also describes an OpenAI warrant covering 33,445,026 shares of Class N common stock at a $0.00001 exercise price, subject to vesting conditions.

That setup gives public investors both upside and risk. If Cerebras delivers, OpenAI could be the anchor customer that turns wafer-scale inference into a large cloud business. If Cerebras misses delivery milestones, the same agreement can become a pressure point.

AWS gives Cerebras a second hyperscaler channel....

....MUCH MORE 

As always our interest is in the disclosures found in the filings rather than in the share flotation. 

As the old-timers used to say: The banks give you too much of the cold ones and not enough of the hot ones to make it pay to play the game.

Speaking of disclosures, there a new amendment to the S1 this morning: 

S-1/A1cerebras-sx1a2.htmS-1/A  

Capital Markets: "Monday Blues: US Negotiating Tactic or Ceasefire may End "

From Marc Chandler at Bannockburn Global Forex:

News that the US rejected Iran’s counter-proposal is set the tone for today’s session. The dollar is mostly firmer, though the Canadian dollar and Norwegian krone are slightly firmer. Equities are mostly lower, yields, higher, alongside oil. Appreciating the seeming reluctance of the US to renew “kinetic” operations, the North American market may view the US position as predictable negotiation tactics.

This week, US Treasury Secretary Bessent is in Tokyo. He has indicated that the weak yen is on the agenda. President Trump will be in Beijing later this week. The Trump-Xi meeting is highlight, and we have argued to keep expectations modest. Meanwhile, UK Prime Minister continues to fight for high political future after Labour’s drubbing in last week’s local elections. His speech earlier today does not appear to have done the trick. Sterling and Gilts are lower than before the speech....

....MUCH MORE 

United Arab Emirates Joins Svalbard Treaty

That's quite a ways away:

 https://maps.googleapis.com/maps/api/staticmap?language=en&size=1280x768&key=AIzaSyCLpFDcBkls7g0EHifLgkerYNApq1S9544&markers=color%3A0xDE007BFF%7C24.45118%2C54.39696&markers=color%3A0xDE007BFF%7C78.15706%2C15.86426&style=feature%3Alandscape%7Clightness%3A30%7Csaturation%3A-50&path=weight%3A8%7Ccolor%3A0x04C9A6FF%7Cfillcolor%3A%2304c9a6%7Cenc%3Ac%7EatCu_plIanngI%7CkcnF&signature=goQaXtqOfqEV_Qbbbp5noi0h-SY%3D

But I suppose that if China can call itself a "near-Arctic nation"* the UAE should be able to head for Svalbard (and the rumored undersea riches the Norwegians have been looking for). 

From The Barents Observer, April 7:

The Emirates joins Svalbard Treaty
The United Arab Emirates (UAE) has officially joined the Svalbard Treaty, in a move said to strengthen the country’s role in Arctic science.

The Emirates News Agency (WAM) quoted Assistant Minister of Foreign Affairs Abdulla Balalaa as saying that the UAE’s accession to the treaty opens new avenues for scientific and environmental cooperation.

It is “enabling our scientists to contribute directly to global research initiatives at stations such as Ny-Ålesund — one of the northernmost permanent civilian research stations in the world,” Balalaa said.

“We will continue to expand our polar programmes and strengthen international partnerships that enhance climate resilience and serve future generations,” he added.

The Emirates is the 49th signatory to the 1920 Svalbard Treaty. The most recent countries to join prior to the UAE were Turkey in 2024, Serbia in 2022 (Yugoslavia acceded to the treaty in 1925), and North Korea in 2016.

The joining of the Svalbard Treaty comes after UAE's accession to the Antarctic Treaty in December 2024. The country's Foreign Ministry then said: "the UAE’s participation reflects its growing role in global environmental diplomacy and its commitment to multilateral processes that safeguard fragile ecosystems."...

....MUCH MORE
*
If interested see:

September 2024 -Meanwhile, In The Arctic: "Svalbard-research becomes more important for China, professor says"

Regarding China in the Great White North:
"China’s Emerging Strategies in the Arctic"
"China’s Polar Strategy: An Emerging Gray Zone?"
"Pentagon warns of risk of Chinese submarines in the Arctic"
"Don't Fear China's Arctic Takeover"
"How To Avoid A Naval Cold War In The High North"
Natural Gas: "Chinese oilmen make big discovery in Russian Arctic waters"
"China opens bids for first nuclear-powered icebreaker"
China seeks a more active role in the Arctic

China defines itself as a near-Arctic state and says it will actively participate with wisdom and strength to future protection and development. Roger that, wisdom and strength, over.
Flashback, June 2018:
...On the other hand, if you read Xinhua's translation of January's "Full text: China's Arctic Policy" you'll note they call themselves a ‘Near-Arctic state’.
This is to counter people like me using the 'non-polar' or 'non-Arctic' phrasing.
Additionally China is couching their interest in terms of research:
States from outside the Arctic region do not have territorial sovereignty in the Arctic, but they do have rights in respect of scientific research, navigation, overflight, fishing, laying of submarine cables and pipelines in the high seas and other relevant sea areas in the Arctic Ocean, and rights to resource exploration and exploitation in the Area, pursuant to treaties such as UNCLOS and general international law. In addition, Contracting Parties to the Spitsbergen Treaty enjoy the liberty of access and entry to certain areas of the Arctic, the right under conditions of equality and, in accordance with law, to the exercise and practice of scientific research, production and commercial activities such as hunting, fishing, and mining in these areas....

Russia also has serious interest in the archipelago including the old coal mine, the undersea cables and access and egress into the Atlantic:

https://web.archive.org/web/20230629044229im_/https://thebarentsobserver.com/sites/default/files/resize/skjermbilde_2020-12-01_kl._11.05.38-1000x602.png 

Russian Bastion Defence in relation to Norway and the Bear and GIUK Gaps. 
Source: Mikkola / RAND Europe report 

The Bear Gap is Svalbard - Bear Island - Norway while the GIUK Gap is Greenland - Iceland - Britain.

"Shipping giant MSC opens new trade route to bypass Hormuz disruption"

The first lesson of commodity trading (second lesson of ecology*): Humans are quite adaptable.

From EuroNews, May 11:

As tensions choke the Strait of Hormuz, Mediterranean Shipping Company races to keep global trade moving with new route.

Global container shipping giant, Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC), has announced a new Europe-Red Sea-Middle East express service, linking key European ports with Saudi Arabia and other regional hubs.

The announcement comes as companies across global supply chains respond to surging demand and mounting disruption across Middle Eastern trade routes as a result of the US-Iran conflict.

MSC said its new service will offer faster, more efficient, multimodal alternatives in an increasingly volatile maritime landscape.

Ships sailing from the Baltic sea and across Europe will be directly connected to Jordan’s Aqaba, Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah Port and Jeddah via the Suez Canal....

....MUCH MORE 
*The first lesson of ecology is: Everything is connected. 

As we saw in 2022 when MSC surpassed Maersk as the largest container shipping line, different business models require different assets. French standard bearer CNA CGN rounds out the top three. 

Chips: "AI’s Next Phase Plays Into TSMC’s Hands"

From the Wall Street Journal via MSN, May 11: 

Big tech companies are tripping over themselves to get as many chips as possible to secure AI supremacy. So much so that the world’s ability to make what they want is coming under growing strain.

Microsoft, Meta Platforms, Alphabet and Amazon.com collectively plan capital spending of $725 billion this year, much of it on artificial-intelligence chips. That bodes well for the makers of those chips, particularly the largest contract manufacturer, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.

The spotlight for chip investors has largely been elsewhere lately. Markets have recently blessed memory-chip manufacturers whose sales and prices have skyrocketed. Intel and Advanced Micro Devices are also celebrating a shift within AI toward using autonomous agents where their central processors are increasingly important.

There is an argument, though, that nobody in the chip world is better positioned to reap the rewards of this new phase than TSMC. And despite all that, its stock doesn’t look expensive.

While the company doesn’t make memory chips, it is the go-to manufacturer for just about everything else—including Nvidia’s market-leading AI chips and Apple’s smartphone chips. It has already seen sales and profits soar over the past few years.

The strength of TSMC’s position is evident in the recent expansion of its gross margins. Those margins get fatter when sales grow faster than expenses, something that happens for TSMC when its factories are running closer to full blast.

High capacity utilization offsets the large fixed costs of maintaining chip factories. With demand soaring, the company’s gross margins climbed to around 66% in the first quarter, from roughly 59% a year before.

TSMC Chief Financial Officer Wendell Huang told analysts last month that those margins will actually compress in the latter part of the year—but for good reason. The company is moving to high-volume production of its newest generation of cutting-edge chips, which it calls N2. Costs naturally go up during such ramp-up phases, then come down when production stabilizes....

....MUCH MORE 

Sunday, May 10, 2026

"Shall We Play a Game?" (from India with love)

Our second visit to Asterisk this weekend.

 From Asterisk Magazine, April 2026:

Historian Jon Peterson traces the route from Prussian military headquarters to Gary Gygax’s basement.

Jon Peterson is an expert on the history of wargames, and the tabletop role-playing games that they spawned. His books include Playing at the World, on simulated combat from chess to Dungeons & Dragons, The Elusive Shift, on the evolution of role-playing, and Game Wizards, on the legal feuds that shaped the early history of D&D.

One of us (Clara) has spent more time than she’d like to admit at the gaming table. The other (Angela) has never filled out a character sheet in her life. But both of us are fascinated by what happens when we try to reduce the most violent and unpredictable of human actions down to a set of rules. In this interview, the three of us discuss how advances in statistics and cartography made wargaming possible, the journey from 18th century Prussian military officers to Midwestern hobbyists, how RAND played an instrumental role in the birth of D&D, and how little the core debates on game design have changed in the past 200 years. Have fun. 

This interview has been edited for clarity.

Umpires, topography, and dice

Angela Chen: I wanted to start by talking about the very early history of wargames. In your book Playing at the World, you write that an Indian game called chaturanga was the precursor to and inspiration for chess, which then developed into the first modern wargame. 

Jon Peterson: Right, and through India, chaturanga made it to the Arabic world. And when chess was introduced to Europe through the Iberian Peninsula and the Caliphate, it had a huge impact, first in Spain and then spreading to the remainder of Europe. People viewed the game as a means of studying statecraft, and so they saw it differently from other kinds of parlor games that were circulating at the time. 

Christoph Weickhmann writes about this in his 1664 book The Newly Invented Great Kings’ Game. He believed that games that were based on a board — based on being able to deploy units and manage them, and to engage in a competition that required you to understand different lines of attack— could help you become a better leader. 

But in these early games, you had very prescribed movements, so people questioned how useful it really was as an understanding of military tactics or grand strategy. And so a lot of people started proposing ways that you could improve the game of chess. People said, “let's get rid of all these confusing units and break this down to what the battlefields of Europe look like today. There's infantry, there's cavalry, there's artillery. Let's focus on trying to figure out ways to represent them, still using the basic concepts of chess, where there’s a board, there’s a grid.” 

So Johann Hellwig, who was educated in Brunswick in the late 18th century, was the one who first recommended a game like this for the instruction of the young who needed to learn how to be officers. He recommended playing a game that would be entertaining, but at the same time didactic.

Angela: At this point it’s still on a board. How did it develop from there?

Jon: Well, let’s talk about Georg Venturini first. Venturini really applied a scale to the map, which was not something you would find in Hellwig’s game. His map was still treated like a chessboard, but he was concerned about questions like: What distance is this square supposed to represent? How far does the soldier march in a day? And based on that, how many squares will a soldier march in the day in a realistic game? 

Clara Collier: The wargame variants that exist before Venturini sound a lot like combat in tactical turn-based video games that have squares on a grid. The squares can have different terrain — this one can be swampy, and it makes your unit slower, for example. But there's no sense of how that corresponds to real distances in space. 

Jon:  Quite accurate, yes. Venturini really wanted to create a scale as a tool that bound the setting of the game to its system.

Then the same principles determine how far artillery can fire. It becomes a question of, “based on how far we think the distance to the square is, how far can our guns fire?” And they calculated this before people actually had rifled barrels, so guns couldn't actually fire very far at all. Throughout the 19th century, as time went on, technological innovation required designers to revisit the principles of wargames and adjust for that. 

Angela: After Venturini, we get the elder Georg von Reisswitz and his son, who together  invented the first modern wargame, the Kriegsspiel. It sounds like there were a few key conceptual leaps between Hellwig’s and Venturini’s games and what the Reisswitzes developed....

....MUCH MORE 

May 8 at Asterisk - "Are Prediction Markets Good for Anything?"

Understanding Chicago

From the Daily Kos, August 26, 2012:

WARD HEELERS

I think the curtain came down on Chicago's innocence just after five on Monday afternoon, November 27, 1905. That was when 38 year old Marshall Field Jr, the eldest son of Marshal Field and heir to $150 millions (about $10 billion today), died at Chicago’s Mercy hospital. He had been admitted five days earlier with a gunshot wound to the abdomen, and now he was dead. And there has never been a good explanation as to just how he had been shot.

The official story was that while in his bedroom that morning Marshall (above) had been cleaning his gun, dropped it and the gun had gone off. The butler and a nurse said they had immediately rushed to his aide. But a reporter for the Daily News tried to replicate the accident with an identical weapon, but it refused to discharge. The papers were afraid of losing advertising from the Marshall Field Department stores, the largest retail chain in America, so the public questions stopped there - for the time being.
*
The Field’s mansions, father’s and son’s, stood next to each other on “Millionaires Row” - Prairie Avenue on Chicago’s south side. The row was home to Pullman, Armour, Sears, and the Fields. In fact 70 of the most powerful families in America lived within a square mile of each other on Chicago's south side, and this was not a place usually visited by public scandal. After the funeral, Marshall’s widow and three children moved in with his father. But it stood no chance of being a happy home. The very next year the elder Field died of pneumonia, and the widow returned to her native England, leaving behind an open wound - caused, many believed, by a section of Chicago called the Levee
*
Less than a half mile from the Field mansions, the Levee District was home to sin and vice of unsurpassed depravity and popularity. It was bordered by 18th street on the north, 23rd street on the south, South Clark on the west and South Wabash Avenue on the east. And at its immoral center was the Everleigh Club.
*
For eight years Ada and Minna Everleigh were “Queens of the Levee”, running one of the most popular brothels in the Chicago. Minna (right) famously greeted each customer with a delightfully wicked, “How’s my boy?”
*
Their thirty girls catered to an upscale clientele, charging $50 just to get in the front door of 2131-2133 South Dearborn. Once inside the plush parlor, extras were extra. It was common knowledge that for years Marshall Field Jr. had been a regular at the Everleigh Club, and the rumor was that Marshall had been shot at the club by one of the girls, or had shot himself because he was being blackmailed by one of the "ladies". Those kinds of things were not unheard of in The Levee.
*
To the south of the Club was Ed Weiss’s bawdy house, "The Capital", and to the north was "The Sapphro", run by his brother Lou Weiss. In fact, jammed into the Levee were dozens of such houses of prostitution; Dago Franks, French Em’s, Old 92, and in direct cutthroat competition with the Everleigh sisters was Madam Vic Shaw’s house at Dearborn and Cullerton. In between the whore houses were opium dens, cocaine factories, gambling joints, peep shows and bars - lots and lots of bars.
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Ringmasters of this sin circus, the Princes of the Levee, were two men; the big, blustery city alderman, John J. Coughlin, and his diminutive doppelganger, Michael "Hinky Dink" Kenna.
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The gimlet eyed “Hinky Dink” (above) received his nickname because he stood just 5 feet tall. He was normally “…glum and quietly dressed”, and usually chewing on a cigar. He was a teetotaler, and his wife was a temperance worker. He also was an Alderman, as well as owning and operating several bars and gambling houses in the Levee, the most famous of which was The Workingman’s Exchange on Clark Street.
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Here barflies, bums, tramps and the homeless could find beer for a nickel, a free lunch and, come election day, a job as a “repeater”, for this was where politics and vice crossed paths. Given pre-marked ballots by “Ward Heelers” who walked the district, these "repeaters" spread out to various polling places, where they would trade their pre-marked ballots for blanks. They then returned to "The Exchange" and handed in their blanks for a payment of fifty cents each. While they drank a free beer, their new ballots would be marked and the game would go another round. In twenty years neither "Hinky Dink" nor "Bathhouse" John Coughlin ever lost an election.
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“Bathhouse” earned his nickname because he worked as an attendant at a bath house, a Levee euphemism for a gambling joint. Coughlin was over sized and overdressed and prone to outbursts of poetry, such as his infamous “She sleeps by the Drainage Canal” and “Why did they build the lovely lake so close to the horrible shore?” His typical “Signs of Spring “concluded, “There are many other signs of spring which come by wireless wire; One of which is Yours Sincerely, who is tuning up his lyre. Just to twang a song to nature 'bout the brooks and fields of green; O, I wonder if I'm understood; I wonder, yes, I ween.”
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One of Chicago’s mayors asked Hinky Dink if Bathhouse was just crazy or a drug addict. Hinky Dink replied, “To tell you the god’s truth, Mayor, they ain’t found a name for it yet.” These two men had a genius for skimming protection money from the Levee. Their enforcement arm was the Chicago Police, and in addition to their weekly take of up to a thousand dollars per establishment, they sold tickets to the annual First Ward Ball. In the words of one web site, “Every employee of a house of ill-repute or gambling den, every robber, pickpocket, safe-cracker, and streetwalker, and every bartender, bawdy house entertainer, and low groggery proprietor, all were required to buy tickets…”
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The Ball was held each December, and Ike Bloom, owner of “Freiberg’s Dance Hall”, was responsible for selling the tickets. Ike was half clown and half cold blooded killer, whose club was “the most notorious place in Chicago”, which was quite a charge, considering Chicago....

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