Friday, March 6, 2026

"Gambling Man: The Wild Ride of Japan’s Masayoshi Son"

Some background for the earlier post "SoftBank Races to Borrow $40B to Fund Massive OpenAI Stake amid Mounting Debt Pressure".

"Gambling Man: The Wild Ride of Japan’s Masayoshi Son"

As we noted introducing March 26 2025's "OpenAI Close to Finalizing A $40 Billion SoftBank-Led Funding At A $300 Billion Valuation"

SoftBank's Mr. Son's entire history, going back to the dot.com bust is leveraged beta.

He was very fortunate that the British didn't allow Nvidia to buy ARM Holdings, thus clearing the way for his bid. Otherwise his claim to fame would  be being the largest investor in WeWork....

From the London Review of Books, March 20, 2025:

I am Genghis Khan 
By Laleh Khalili  

Gambling Man: The Wild Ride of Japan’s Masayoshi Son 
by Lionel Barber.
Allen Lane, 388 pp., £30, October 2024, 978 0 241 58272 5

When​ I started developing software for the management consulting firms I worked for in the mid-1990s, we still had to connect to the World Wide Web on slow and clunky lines to access our coding work. The laptops we carried weighed at least five kilogrammes and couldn’t be used for actual programming. One of our clients was a matchmaking company, which operated a number of neighbourhood storefronts where lonely hearts could flick through albums with the pictures and profiles of potential partners and leave messages in numbered pigeonholes. The firm had hired us to ‘automate’ both their core business and their back-of-house customer service functions. Our job was to set up electronic kiosks in the stores, so that punters could watch videos of and send electronic messages on the internal company network to people they fancied. We also designed a spartan database to keep track of customers, subscription payments and dating history. Our long-term plan was to move the business ‘online’ so that customers could dial up into the ‘business-to-consumer’ (B2C) interface and browse virtual ‘face books’ from the privacy of their own home.

This was the era of what came to be termed Web 1.0. In the aftermath of the Cold War, many of the tech stars who used to graduate from MIT and Carnegie Mellon and enter the US war machine were in California working in the private sector. Personal computers moved out of institutions and into homes and the software boom began. ‘Dot-coms’ began producing goods and services to sell to other businesses and to consumers. Business-to-business (B2B) products included everything from servers and routers to customer service, advertising and marketing databases.

To build the customer service software for our matchmaking clients, we needed a database program from Oracle and server management software from a company called Scopus Technology. We had to work in the Scopus building in the San Francisco Bay Area to adapt their software to the needs of our client. One day I was summoned to the offices of the two Iranian-American brothers who owned the company and offered a massive pay package and stock options if I joined Scopus. Technology companies were desperate for software developers. Since I was about to move to New York to go to graduate school, I turned them down. A couple of years later Scopus was acquired by Siebel, which was itself later acquired by Oracle. If I had stayed, I could have cashed out those stock options for a lot of money.

In the 1990s, huge amounts of money and debt were sloshing around in the software business. If a company ‘founder’ claimed to be doing something new (the homo economicus discourse of ‘disruption’ came later), investors were very likely to buy in. Venture capital firms hired cocaine-fuelled young MBAs to build up their operations. Many of the venture capital firms were leveraged up to their eyeballs because interest rates were at a historic low and because, in the US, the Taxpayer Relief Act (1997) had lowered the marginal rates on capital gains. Smaller companies were acquired at inflated prices by bigger companies. Many of the men (they were almost all men) perceived to be business and technology visionaries were lucky beneficiaries of the end of the Cold War and the public funding of technological innovation.

One of these men was Masayoshi Son, founder of SoftBank. Between 1945, when the US’s seven-year occupation of the country began, and 1973, when oil prices, until then controlled by US and British cartels, were suddenly opened to the market, Japan was the world’s fastest-growing economy. This growth depended on the Pax Americana’s guarantee of cheap oil, stable dollars and US military protection. Japan provided a base for the US in the Pacific, allowing it to fight its wars in Korea and Vietnam, and pacify insurgencies in the Philippines, Laos, Thailand and beyond. Some of the biggest US military bases are still in Okinawa, control of which didn’t revert to Japan until 1971. During the Korean War, spending by the US military doubled Japan’s industrial output. The Vietnam War opened up the US market to Japanese electronics and cars, transported on container ships which had delivered materiel to Vietnam and now needed a cargo to take back across the Pacific. By 1980, Japan was the biggest producer of cars in the world, and by 1991 of steel.

At around this time, Japan’s Ministry of International Trade and Industry began co-ordinating and rationalising industrial production, upgrading equipment and factories, and encouraging new products: transistors, computers, petrochemicals and synthetic fibres as well as cars. Plentiful cheap labour, corporatist employment laws and close relations between banks, suppliers and producers meant that economic policies had rapid effects. Centralised industrial planning encouraged the standardisation and automation of production as well as innovations in logistics. From the 1970s until the early 1990s, Japan’s share of the US trade deficit was a third. This was seen by chauvinists in the US as an attack on their God-fearing country by disciplined, inscrutable Asians.

As​ the first major wave of Japanese electronics and cars arrived in the US, so did 16-year-old Son, the precocious child of a Korean-Japanese pachinko parlour tycoon – pachinko is an arcade game. His six-year stay in California was funded by his father, who granted Son permission to make the journey on condition that he accepted financial support from home. Son spent his time coming up with ideas for businesses and making connections. According to Lionel Barber in Gambling Man, Son claims that one of his first inventions was a portable electronic translator intended to be used by international travellers, though a former business partner told Barber that Son didn’t have the technical knowledge to design such a device. ‘There were a lot of people talking about electronic translators at the time. The beauty of Son’s idea was to sell it in [airport] kiosks.’

Son returned to Japan in 1980, and a year later launched a software distribution company called SoftBank Japan to take advantage of the market for word processors, spreadsheets and other programs designed for personal computers. He set up a publishing company to bring out computer and technology magazines, and put on trade shows, in effect owning both the products and the vehicles for marketing them. But Son had larger ambitions, and in 1995 purchased Comdex, which operated the world’s biggest technology trade shows, for $842 million, leaving its previous owner, the Las Vegas godfather Sheldon Adelson, to expand his gambling empire. Adelson was so grateful for the above-market-price sale that decades later he introduced Son to Donald Trump, and lent him his yacht so that he could go snorkelling with Saudi royals.

The same year, Son added the computer publishing house Ziff to his portfolio, at a cost of $2.1 billion. Barber – unimpressed – points out that this was ‘not as much as Sony paid for Columbia Pictures ($3.4 billion)’. With Ziff, Son had bought a stake in Yahoo! and in 1996 he launched Yahoo! Japan. He bought Vodafone Japan for $17 billion, $12 billion of it in cash, in what was then Asia’s largest leveraged buy-out ever. To secure the debt, his finance people arm-twisted ratings agencies to improve SoftBank’s rating from BB to BBB and secured a loan on very favourable terms: any future cash flow would pay off the interest rate on the debt before dividend payouts had to be made. SoftBank then boosted the number of Vodafone customers by offering subscribers to Son’s Yahoo! Broadband and SoftBank Telecom businesses flashy mobile handsets and undercutting competitors with pricing plans so outrageous that the company was censured by the Japanese Fair Trade Commission. The debt was made good in 2008, when Son won the Japanese distribution rights for the first iPhone from Steve Jobs himself.

Son benefited from the Reagan-era financial engineering that was meant to slow the flood of Japanese exports which had brought US manufacturing, especially the automobile sector, to its knees. In 1985, Reagan’s Treasury secretary, James Baker, negotiated the Plaza Accord, which depreciated the US dollar in relation to the mark, the franc, sterling and the yen. Although Japan acquiesced to the agreement, its government brought in a stimulus to counteract the effect of the accord; the injection of cash, in turn, led to an asset price bubble in the late 1980s. When, in 1989, property prices inevitably crashed, the Nikkei price index followed. The policies that resulted from this, especially the liberalisation of banking, and low or negative interest rates made it easier for new players such as Son to enter the big business leagues and put together enormous syndicated loan packages. Helpfully, the appreciation of the yen against the dollar also meant that Son could buy US technology companies more cheaply.

SoftBank’s most successful investment was not in Silicon Valley, however, but in China. The Chinese e-commerce platform Alibaba was set up by Jack Ma in 1999, and quickly became an online space for B2B, B2C and consumer-to-consumer (C2C) marketing and sales. SoftBank spent just $20 million to acquire 30 per cent of Alibaba’s ownership. When the company was listed on the New York Stock Exchange in 2014, the flotation was the biggest ever in the world: Alibaba’s market capitalisation was valued at $230 billion, or as the Financial Times reported, ‘larger than fellow tech giants Facebook and Amazon, and big US companies such as J.P. Morgan and Procter & Gamble’. SoftBank’s $20 million investment was now worth $70 billion – a 350,000 per cent gain. Because Alibaba was so valuable, Son could sell its shares as needed to shore up SoftBank’s finances.

Son had ‘smelled the money’ in China because Japan had been investing at a vast scale in enterprises there ever since Deng Xiaoping’s ‘opening’ of the Chinese economy in 1978: it was the place to look to for opportunities. The timing of Alibaba’s founding had also been propitious. China had liberalised private ownership and foreign direct investment in the early 1990s and, as poverty rates fell, markets for consumer products expanded. With China’s accession to the World Trade Organisation in 2001, Alibaba was in a position to export Chinese products, taking advantage of extensive state investment in both domestic and transnational logistical infrastructure.

Not everything went Son’s way. The bursting of the dotcom bubble in 2000 and the global financial crash of 2008 posed existential crises for SoftBank. In the mid-1990s, the firm had invested nearly $5 billion in more than fifty technology companies in Silicon Valley, many of them loss-making and soon to be forgotten. In 2000, SoftBank’s value fell to one twentieth of its value the previous year, and Son himself lost 96 per cent of his paper wealth. To raise money, he sold shares in his successful ventures, especially Alibaba. After the 2008 crash, SoftBank was exposed to $750 million of Goldman Sachs’s collateralised debt obligations; more significantly, its acquisition of Vodafone Japan two years earlier had meant taking on $23.8 billion of debt. The company’s subsequent recovery was aided at least in part by the flow of cheap money unleashed by stimulus packages in both the US and China. The people who had lost their homes or savings were not so lucky.

From the start, SoftBank had employed financial wizards, many of them former bankers, most of them US-educated, who put together increasingly complex and opaque loan packages that blurred the line between Son’s personal assets and debts and SoftBank’s corporate holdings and leverage. The company became a conglomerate with evolving functions, from publishing to telecommunications infrastructure to technology distribution, and eventually to venture capital. Son packed the board with loyal friends and decided the direction of acquisitions and investments almost single-handedly, often inspired only by intuition.....

....MUCH MORE 

SoftBank’s Masayoshi Son Sees AI Evolving To A Point Where Your Happiness Will Be its Greatest Reward

Having observed Mr. Son and his position in the parade—from Drum Majorette leading the way, to being the guy cleaning up after the elephants, and then back to the front— we had this introduction in February 2024:

Since the time he almost went broke after the dot.bomb bubble burst (he had briefly been the richest person in the world) I've come to realize this guy isn't some great visionary/grand strategist; he's just leveraged beta. Making big bets, all geared up, on whatever is at the head of the passing parade.

That said, he owns 90% of ARM Holdings and I don't.

Bastard.

Rabobank: "Who Exactly Is Going To Be Earning More With AI?"

Rabobank's Michael Every via ZeroHedge,  Feb 18, 2026:

By Michael Every of Rabobank

May The Warsh Be With You

After having written about AI for two days in a row, it wasn’t the intention to do so again today. However, developments on the ground are accelerating while those responsible for dealing with the fallout are failing to understand what the immediate implications are.

Two short movies were just made with AI for pennies, in hours, both more entertaining than anything Hollywood has splurged onto our screens in some time. (The latest trailer for ‘The Mandalorian and Grogu’ underlines Hollywood no longer understands movie- and myth-making, or even The Force behind fonts.) Indeed, Warner Brothers, Paramount, and Netflix are standing in a circle like the gunfighters at the end of The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly (which IS a great movie),… as a giant T-Rex in sunglasses parachutes in to a heavy metal soundtrack to eat them.

Another video showed Chinese robots doing acrobatic kung fu, when their Russian equivalent fell off the stage at its launch as if after too much vodka. Robots like that can do almost any job, 24/7, faster and better than humans. That includes soldiery. With AI, they can learn from us then teach themselves. That’s as serious as a giant T-Rex in sunglasses is trivial.

The Fed’s Barr and Daley addressed AI yesterday. The headline, written by Bloomberg AI, is that neither think this potential revolution makes the case for lower rates. That places them in stark opposition to Fed Chair nominee Warsh even before he gets appointed, and even before other areas of controversy arise within the FOMC, which they will.

Barr’s main argument is that AI means the demand for capital would rise because of strong business investment, while “household savings could fall due to expectations of stronger real wage growth and thus higher lifetime earnings.” Daley noted higher growth would dictate a higher neutral rate in “the standard model” because “the demand for investment would rise relative to the supply of savings.” Yet that analysis --which may well be copied and pasted around other institutions as if by AI agents-- lacks sufficient human, let alone artificial intelligence.

Obviously, AI is going to be inflationary in some areas - it already is. However, it’s got nothing to do with constraints on CAPITAL in a fiat credit based system with an equity market where ludicrous P/E ratios are normal – indeed, US 10-year yields have been trending down even as AI action has heated up. The real world AI constraints are PHYSICAL: electricity, copper, memory chips, rare earths, etc.

Equally obviously, AI is going to be deflationary for many other areas. Barr echoes the gibberish early AIs spat out in predicting “expectations of strong wage growth and higher lifetime earnings.” Who is going to be earning more with AI? Hollywood types about to be replaced? The swathe of white collar workers going the same way? The blue collar workers who face competition from robots who can do back flips to the building site they labour away at 24/7?

Setting rates high vs AI would mean deeper disaster for those hit by it. Setting rates too low to help those hit by AI would inflame inflation in the areas boosted by it. In short, how the Fed works logically needs to change. However, at least two of the current members of the FOMC are instead producing the monetary policy equivalent of ‘The Mandalorian and Grogu’ – reheated nonsense that undermines its own mythic power and collapses its fanbase. Or, maybe, they just don’t want to say ‘May The Warsh Be With You’(?) That could also be the way.

The RBNZ left rates on hold today and said it expects them to stay there – but said nothing about AI.

Meanwhile, the second round of US-Iran talks ended with the Iranians smiling and talking about deals within reach, and a third round pencilled in for two weeks from now to close gaps. Markets liked that. However, the US is still surging military equipment to the region; Iran also insulted and threatened the US yesterday, partially closing the Strait of Hormuz for the first time since the 1980s; and both regional reports and Vice President Vance underlined that Tehran is playing for time while it tries to regain control of its restless population, and is ignoring core US demands. Recall in 2025, Iran offered the US the same deal it’s offering now – and got bombed.

On which note, India and France just upgraded their ties to a strategic partnership – which is a win for France but complicates the EU moving as one on foreign policy as we move towards a possible multi-tier Europe. It also has interesting implications given India’s closeness to Russia, and steely relations with Pakistan, which is in turn close to Saudi and Turkey. That’s as the UK PM, who gave a pugnacious speech in Munich and returned to push for 3% of GDP defense spending by 2029, suffered his latest of blow as Chancellor Reeves blocked that move....

....MORE

And Here I Thought Jerusalem Was The Prohibitive-Favorite Bet For A Resurrection

Note date.

"Banks, Asset Manager Stocks Tumble as Credit Concerns Persist" (BKX; XLF)

From Bloomberg, March 6:

Shares of financial firms are once again sliding, as fresh worries over private credit combine with a broad market selloff to hit the weakened sector.

With the S&P 500 Index plumbing its lowest levels since late last year, investors showed little patience for bad news. Among the biggest losers was Western Alliance Bancorp, whose shares tumbled as much as 14% after the bank said it will take a roughly $126 million charge because of a loan tied to bankrupt auto-parts company First Brands Group. The bank also filed a lawsuit against Jefferies Financial Group Inc.

“Western Alliance’s charge-off places renewed scrutiny on banks’ credit quality, particularly lending to non-bank financial institutions,” said Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Herman Chan.

Meanwhile, Blackrock Inc. shares were down around 5%, after the asset manager curbed withdrawals from one of its biggest private credit funds. Blue Owl Capital Inc. fell as much as 7% before trimming losses: The company has a $48 million exposure to a London-based property lender that filed for administration last month. The KBW Bank Index recently stood at the lowest intraday level since Nov. 25.

The selloff in financial stocks came as investors digested everything from an unexpectedly soft US employment report to another spike in oil prices resulting from the war with Iran. The S&P 500 was headed for its worst week since November, while Brent crude topped $90 per barrel.

Credit Worries

Worries over disruptions from artificial intelligence and angst over exposure to the troubled private credit industry have weighed on the shares of lenders, payments providers and asset managers this year.

For Jefferies, the Western Alliance suit comes on the heels of mounting credit concerns in the wake of its exposure to failed UK lender MFS. The bank’s shares are down over 35% year-to-date and on Friday touched their lowest intraday level since early April.

“Investors should be asking Jefferies a lot more questions about their exposure,” said Matt Maley, chief market strategist at Miller Tabak + Co LLC. The credit concerns are “a problem for all financial stocks.”...

....MORE, charts, graphs

Earlier today: "BlackRock limits withdrawals as redemptions rattle private credit fund" (BLK)

As noted introducing March 1's "Beware of banks breaking bad, warns top B. of A. strategist. He casts a wary eye on bank-loan ETFs.":

Banks can be a tell on everything from the overall economy to credit markets to equities. 

Also June 2011:
"Financials Fully Confirm the Downturn" (BAC; C; GS; JPM; USB; WFC: XLF)
Keeping track of what the financials are doing can pay dividends, so to speak.*

Here's the ETF for the financial stocks in the S&P 500:

XLF  The Financial Select Sector SPDR Fund daily Stock Chart
 

And February 26:

"UBS now sees private credit defaults reaching 15% in worst case"  

"BlackRock limits withdrawals as redemptions rattle private credit fund" (BLK)

From Reuters, March 6:

BlackRock said on Friday it has put limits on withdrawals from a flagship private credit fund after a surge in ​redemption requests, amid rising investor worries over the once red-hot asset ‌class.

Shares of the world's largest asset manager fell 4.6% in early trading.
 
Sentiment over private credit continues to worsen after Blue Owl replaced client redemptions with promised payouts, and the ​exposure of some players last year to the bankruptcies of a U.S. ​auto parts supplier and a subprime auto lender.
 
Sentiment over private credit continues to worsen after Blue Owl replaced client redemptions with promised payouts, and the ​exposure of some players last year to the bankruptcies of a U.S. ​auto parts supplier and a subprime auto lender.
 
Earlier this week, mounting ⁠requests prompted rival Blackstone to lift its usual 5% redemption limit to 7%, ​while the company and its employees invested $400 million to allow all requests to ​be met.
 
BlackRock's $26 billion HPS Corporate Lending Fund received withdrawal requests worth $1.2 billion in the first quarter, or roughly 9.3% of its net asset value....
....HPS said in a statement that the uncertainty ​presents an opportunity. 
"In our judgment, preserving the fund's available capital ​to ⁠lean into this perceived opportunity set, while providing liquidity to shareholders consistently with the fund's designed parameters, is in the best interest of the fund as a ⁠whole," it ​said in a statement....
....MORE 

Capital Markets: "War Continues to Roil the Markets"

From Marc to Market:

The war continues to disrupt the global capital markets. The US dollar remains firm though mostly within the ranges seen in recent days. It is threatening to break higher against the Japanese yen, where the JPY158 level is coming under pressure. Still, the yen, despite Japan’s reliance on imported oil and refined products is the second-best performing currency in the G10 this week, off around 0.15%, second only to the Canadian dollar, which continues to shadow the greenback. The Australian dollar is the worst performer, down 1.2%, followed the by oil exporter, Norwegian krone, which has fallen by about 0.9%.

The bond market sell-off continues. Among the G10, the 10-year JGB has risen the least (~nine basis points) while the UK Gilts and Italian BTPs have risen the most (almost 25 bp). Despite the mixed performance in the Asia Pacific region today, equities also have sold off this week. The Nikkei is off 6.6% and Europe’s Stoxx 600 is off nearly 5%. The S&P 500 comes into today with a little less than a 1% decline this week and the Nasdaq composite is up about 0.3%....

....MUCH MORE 

Coming into the February jobs report the three major U.S. indices [futures] are down .55% to .78% and I am reminded of the ancient aphorism:

There are old traders

And there are bold traders

But there are no old, bold traders.

"SoftBank Races to Borrow $40B to Fund Massive OpenAI Stake amid Mounting Debt Pressure"

Mr. Son is the King of leveraged beta (he was briefly the richest person in the world in 1999) and thus far has managed to bounce back from monster-sized drawdowns but the current situation is wild even for him.

First up, Softbank's last earnings report, February 12:

Where Will SoftBank Get The Money To Fund Their Commitment To OpenAI?

By writing-up their stake in OpenAI, naturellement.

From Nikkei Asia, February 12:

SoftBank profit quintuples as OpenAI bet lifts Vision Funds
IPOs set to to deliver 'significant value' to Japanese tech investor, says CFO 

SoftBank Group on Thursday reported a net profit of 3.17 trillion yen ($20.7 billion) for the nine months through December, five times that of a year earlier, boosted by a rise in the value of its stake in ChatGPT maker OpenAI....

 And the headline story from TipRanks, March 5:

SoftBank SFTBY -4.02% ▼ is looking to borrow up to $40 billion to keep pouring money into OpenAI. This would be the biggest dollar-based loan in the company’s history, showing just how far founder Masayoshi Son is going to keep his firm at the center of the AI boom.

The loan is expected to last for one year. SoftBank is currently talking to banks like JPMorgan Chase JPM -1.95% ▼ to get the deal done. This cash is meant to act as a bridge, giving the company the immediate funds it needs to meet its huge investment pledges while it manages its other assets.

Son Makes OpenAI the Main Focus of SoftBank

Masayoshi Son has made his bet on OpenAI the main focus of SoftBank. With this new $30 billion pledge, SoftBank’s total investment in the AI maker is set to hit roughly $64.6 billion, giving it a 13% ownership stake. This means the Japanese firm’s stock price is now tied directly to how well ChatGPT performs against rivals like Gemini and Anthropic.

To find the money for these massive payments, SoftBank has sold off its stake in Nvidia NVDA +0.16% ▲ , used its shares in Arm Holdings ARM -2.81% ▼ and SoftBank Corp (JP:9434) to get loans, and spent billions on data centers and robotics to build out the physical tools needed for AI. 

Analysts Express Growing Credit Concerns...

....MORE 

TipRanks trending news 

If interested see also:

June 2019's - "Something is not quite right with SoftBank"

Additionally, SoftBank investee WeWork was out looking for  a few billion dollar line of credit.
Shades of another disruptor, Sam Insull, leverage at the holding company level, leverage at the operating company level, leverage all the way down...


The leverage in all this, with Softbank lending money to Son and other Softbank employees to invest in Vision Fund 2 and the margining of assets is eerily familiar to folks who know the Insull story.  

November 2025's - "SoftBank shares slide as Nvidia stake sale highlights AI funding needs"

That was a rookie fund manager's move, using your most liquid asset to fund your least liquid.

In the olden days proprietary traders/stock jobbers/proto-market makers would keep their share and bond certificates in a box—hence short against the box etc. And in that box the most speculative, least-liquid-in-a-crash certificates were on top ready to be tossed into the maw of a descending market, with the highest quality, most liquid shares at the bottom of the box.

It was a tell as to either the individual trader's finances or to the depth of a downturn to see certs from the bottom of the box coming onto the market.

As a side note, you can still get your stock in certificate form but it will cost you at least $500 per cert. The powers that be, Depository Trust, the brokers et al. really prefer you don't ask for the paper.

November 2025's - "SoftBank stock broke before the market during the dot-com bust, and Citi warns that might be the case this time as well"

December 2025's - SoftBank races to fulfill $22.5 billion funding pledge to OpenAI by year-end (may sell Didi; margin ARM Holdings)

October 2024's - SoftBank’s Masayoshi Son Sees AI Evolving To A Point Where Your Happiness Will Be its Greatest Reward

And possibly related:

Previously on Baby need a new pair of shoes:

Dreamtime Finance (and the Kelly Criterion) 

I've been meaning to write about Kelly for a couple years and keep forgetting. Today I forget no more.
In probability theory the Kelly Criterion is a bet sizing technique used when the player has a quantifiable edge.
(When there is no edge the optimal bet size is $0.00)

The criterion will deliver the fastest growth rate balanced by reduced risk of ruin.
You can grow your pile faster but you increase the risk of ending up broke should you, for example bet 100% of your net worth in a situation where you have anything less than a 100% chance of winning.

The criterion says bet roughly your advantage as a percentage of your current bankroll divided by the variance of the game/market/sports book etc..
Variance is the standard deviation of the game squared. In blackjack the s.d. is 1.15 so the square is 1.3225.

As blackjack is played in the U.S. the most a card counter can hope for is a 1/2% to 1% average advantage with much of that average accruing from the fact that you can get up from a negative table.
Divide by 1.3225 and you've got your bet size.

It's a tough way to grind out a living but hopefully this exercise will stop you from pulling a Leeson, betting all of Barings money and destroying the 233 year old bank.

I'll be back with more later this week.In the meantime here's a UWash paper with the formulas for equities investment....MORE 
What Proportion of Your Bankroll Should You Bet? "A New Interpretation of Information Rate"
How did Ed Thorp Win in Blackjack and the Stock Market?
Journal of Investment Consulting: Interview With Edward O. Thorp
Markets, Risk and Gambler's Ruin
"Not in my house: how Vegas casinos wage a war on cheating"

Finally, another rule of life:

Cassandra's (Not so) Golden Rules About Investing (And Not Investing)
#21. NEVER double-down (except when you have material non-public information and deep pockets) or if you're Ed Thorp, or if you're playing at The Martingale Room. 

Don't double down, double up.

 

B-2 Bombers Entombing Iranian 'Missile Cities' Launchers

From the Times of Israel, March 6: 

US, Israel say Iran missile fire down, most launchers taken out as offensive ramps up
Hegseth says US firepower to surge as B-2s start dropping heavy bombs on missile sites deep underground; Zamir says new phase will target regime’s foundations; cluster warhead fired at central Israel in late night attack  

Military chiefs in Israel and the US said Thursday that the countries’ airstrikes had notched major successes in taking out Iran’s missile threat and warned that the offensive was set to intensify in the coming days, even as ballistic missile and drone attacks continued to harass Israel and Gulf states.

IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir said waves of strikes had destroyed 80 percent of Iran’s air defenses and 60% of its missile launchers, though he cautioned that “the threat has not yet been removed.”

Hours after he spoke, a fresh ballistic missile attack on central Israel, including a cluster warhead, sparked a fire and caused damage but no injuries, authorities said.

Central Command head Admiral Brad Cooper, who leads US forces in the Middle East, said Iran’s ballistic missile attacks had decreased by 90% since the first day of the war, while drone attacks had decreased by 83% in that time frame.

Cooper said that B-2 bombers had dropped dozens of 2000-pound penetrator bombs late Thursday, targeting deeply buried ballistic missile launchers, and that bombings were also targeting Iran’s missile production facilities.

Israel’s military said earlier it had hit hundreds of Iranian missile launchers above ground that could target Israeli cities, and two sources told Reuters that an upcoming second phase of the air campaign would target bunkers storing ballistic missiles and equipment, buried deep underground. 

The US’s B-2 bombers are considered key to delivering the heavy bunker-buster bombs needed to penetrate Iran’s heavily fortified underground ballistic missile sites....

....MUCH MORE 

Times of Israel liveblog home - https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog-march-06-2026/

Recently:

Inside Iran's Underground 'Missile Cities'   

Followup: Iran's Underground 'Missile Cities' May Have Been A Big Mistake

U.N. "FAO Food Price Index posts first rise in five months, driven by higher cereal, meat and vegetable oil prices"

From the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, March 6:

»The FAO Food Price Index* (FFPI) averaged 125.3 points in February 2026, up 1.1 points (0.9 percent) from its revised January level. Increases in the price indices for cereals, meats and vegetable oils more than offset declines in dairy and sugar, resulting in the first rise of the index after five consecutive monthly decreases. Compared to historical levels, the FFPI stood 1.3 points (1.0 percent) below its value a year ago and as much as 34.9 points (21.8 percent) down from the peak reached in March 2022. 

» The FAO Cereal Price Index averaged 108.6 points in February, up 1.1 points (1.1 percent) from January but still 4.0 points (3.5 percent) below its level a year earlier. World wheat prices rose by 1.8 percent in February, underpinned by reports of frosts and heightened winterkill risks in parts of Europe and the United States of America. Logistical disruptions in the Russian Federation and continuing tensions in the Black Sea region also contributed to the increase. International coarse grain prices also rose, albeit more moderately. World maize prices remained broadly steady, while barley quotations continued to firm on sustained demand from China for Australian supplies and purchases by North African buyers sourcing from Europe. Prices of sorghum also increased on strong international demand. The FAO All Rice Price Index edged up by 0.4 percent in February, supported by sustained demand for basmati and Japonica varieties.

» The FAO Vegetable Oil Price Index averaged 174.2 points in February, up 5.6 points (3.3 percent) month-on-month, reaching the highest level since June 2022. The increase was driven by higher prices of palm, soy and rapeseed oils, more than offsetting lower sunflower oil quotations. International palm oil prices rose for the third consecutive month, underpinned by firm global import demand and seasonally lower outputs in Southeast Asia. World soyoil prices increased on expectations of supportive biofuel policy measures in the United States of America, while rapeseed oil prices rebounded amid prospects for stronger import demand for Canadian supplies. By contrast, sunflower oil prices eased moderately, reflecting subdued import demand due to elevated prices and rising export supplies from Argentina, but they remained well above their year-earlier levels.

» The FAO Meat Price Index averaged 126.2 points in February, up 1.0 points (0.8 percent) from its revised January value and 9.4 points (8.0 percent) above its level a year earlier. The increase was largely driven by higher world bovine and ovine meat prices, while poultry and pig meat quotations registered only marginal upticks. Ovine meat prices climbed to a new record high, underpinned by limited exportable supplies from Oceania – the main source of global exports – amid steady global demand. Bovine meat quotations also increased, supported by robust buying interest from China and the United States of America, which sustained export prices in leading suppliers, notably Australia and Brazil. Pig meat prices edged up slightly in the month. Higher quotations in the United States of America, reflecting firm international demand, were partially offset by lower export prices in Brazil due to ample supplies. In the European Union, prices stabilized as earlier holiday-related slaughter backlogs that contributed to a sharp decline in the previous month were largely cleared. Poultry meat prices rose marginally, with firm import demand in several markets partly counterbalanced by ample supplies in key producing countries, limiting upward price pressure.

» The FAO Dairy Price Index averaged 119.3 points in February, down 1.4 points (1.2 percent) from January and 28.4 points (19.2 percent) below its level a year earlier. The February decline extends the downward trend that began in July 2025. The easing was mainly driven by a continued decline in cheese prices, particularly in the European Union, driven by improved milk availability, softer demand from key export markets, and intensified international competition.  By contrast, international quotations for both skim milk and whole milk powders increased notably, supported by a pick-up in import demand, particularly from North Africa, the Near East and Southeast Asia, alongside a seasonal slowdown in milk supply growth in New Zealand. World butter prices registered their first monthly rise since reaching an all-time high in June 2025, underpinned by firmer international demand and tightening supply growth prospects in Oceania, although the increases were capped by softer quotations in the European Union amid ample cream availability....

....MUCH MORE 

 https://www.fao.org/images/worldfoodsituationlibraries/default-album/home_graph_2_en_mar26.jpg?sfvrsn=d0e1a022_475

Thursday, March 5, 2026

"Iran Conflict Sends Farmers Rushing to Secure Critical Fertilizers"

The markets moved very fast and made this a textbook "If you snooze, you lose" situation. 

From Bloomberg, March 5:

A third of global fertilizer supply passes through the Strait of Hormuz, while gas from the region is crucial to production of nutrients for global agriculture. 

Chet Edinger had already bought most of the fertilizer for his corn and soybean farm last year, but on Monday morning, with war breaking out in the Middle East, he rushed to secure a last few truckloads of urea for the tens of thousands of acres he cultivates near Mitchell, South Dakota.

“We grabbed what we needed,” he said by phone. It cost 22% more than late last year — “the highest price I ever had to pay.”

The US and Israel’s attacks on Iran, and Tehran’s retaliation across the Middle East, have disrupted supplies of fertilizer, and farmers worldwide are rushing to secure critical nutrients. Around a third of global fertilizer supply passes through the Strait of Hormuz, a nautical passage between the Persian Gulf and the Arabian Sea, which Iran has promised to shut to shipping. Prices of natural gas — a crucial element in fertilizer production — are soaring globally.

Visually searched image

The conflict has come at a sensitive moment for global agriculture. The cost of fertilizers is already high. Farmers in the northern hemisphere are about to begin fertilizing their fields, while winter-crop planting is approaching in the southern hemisphere.

The disruption is particularly frustrating for farmers in the US, who have been suffering for years from low crop prices and high input costs, as well as trade volatility since President Donald Trump took office.

“I don’t want to say it’s catastrophic, but it could not come at a worse time,” said Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Alexis Maxwell. “Escalating attacks in the Middle East are creating a global chokepoint for farmers.”

If the disruption continues, it could add to inflationary pressures, just as the world is slowly recovering from a period of prolonged rising food prices caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine and extreme weather shocks.

“Without fertilizer your yields go down. If your yields go down, then there’s less grain or rice or any food on the market,” said Philip Sunderland, a fertilizer trader at Aquifert. “There might be a lag of between six to nine months between getting the greens out of the ground and putting the food on your table. But you can expect inflation going through the roof around Christmas time.”

The market reaction to the war has been quick and dramatic. US prices for urea, which is widely used on corn crops, rose $70 from the prior week’s high to $550 a short ton, with some American suppliers pulling offers, Bloomberg Green Markets reported Tuesday. Egyptian granular urea prices jumped nearly 27% to $620 per metric ton. Price estimates also increased sharply in Russia, one of the world's top fertilizer producers.

In many cases, offers of products have been pulled and buyers are similarly waiting before committing, said Peter Harrisson, an analyst with researcher CRU Group. “Much of the fertilizer market is waiting to assess the impact of the conflict on availability,” he said.

Indian manufacturers of urea have started to curb output after Qatar suspended supplies of liquefied natural gas due to an attack, according to people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified. In Pakistan, fertilizer company Agritech said on Wednesday that its supplies of gas were being suspended.

In Europe, which is dependent on gas for much of its energy, the fertilizer industry has been suffering in recent years from rising costs, production cutbacks and cheap imports from Russia. Soaring gas prices due to the new conflict in the Middle East are likely to add to the pressure. Poland’s state-run fertilizer producer, Grupa Azoty SA — one of the largest in the European Union — temporarily stopped taking orders for its fertilizers, citing higher gas prices that inflated their production costs.

The threat of shortages has put farmers worldwide in a state of anxiety.

Rafal Derlukiewicz, who owns an organic farm in eastern Poland, told Bloomberg he got a phone call from his neighbor about any excess horse and sheep manure, which he typically applies instead of synthetic products. “There is some panic here in Lubenka,” he said. “People cannot buy fertilizers.”

In Queensland, northeastern Australia, wheat and barley farmer Richard Golden got a call from his supplier earlier this week, urging him to pick up previously-booked supplies of imported nitrogen fertilizer — or risk it being snapped up by other increasingly nervous farmers. Some two-thirds of the country’s urea imports come from the Middle East...

....MUCH MORE 

March 4 - Inflation: "How disruption in the Strait of Hormuz threatens fertilizer supply and global food prices"

JPMorgan On Oil Volumes Removed From The Market Due To Strait Of Hormuz Closure

From Reuters via AOL, March 3/4: 

Hormuz shutdown could force Iraq, Kuwait to curb oil output within days, JP Morgan says

Crude oil supplies from Iraq and Kuwait could start shutting in within days if the ‌Strait of Hormuz remains closed, potentially cutting 3.3 ‌million barrels per day (bpd) by day eight of the Middle East conflict, J.P. ​Morgan analysts said in a note.

Iraq and Kuwait have roughly three and 14 days, respectively, before they would be forced to halt crude exports that pass through the strait, the bank ‌said on Tuesday.

The ⁠Strait of Hormuz, a narrow, strategically vital waterway between the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of ⁠Oman, is one of the world's key oil transit chokepoints, carrying roughly a fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas ​flows.

In a ​prolonged closure, losses could escalate ​to 3.8 million bpd ‌around day 15 and 4.7 million bpd by day 18, according to J.P. Morgan.

Iraq will be forced to cut its oil production by more than 3 million bpd in a few days if oil tankers cannot move freely through the ‌Strait of Hormuz and reach its ​loading ports, two Iraqi oil officials ​told Reuters on Tuesday....

....MUCH MORE 

Diesel Prices Are Rising Fast

Unfortunately the world runs on diesel.

From Yahoo Finance, March 5: 

It's not just gasoline. Diesel reacting 'more aggressively' to oil price jump amid Iran war. 

It's not just gasoline prices spiking at the pump. Diesel has jumped even more since the outbreak of the Middle East war as oil prices have surged.

The national average for gas touched the highest level this year at $3.25 per gallon on Thursday, up $0.27 from a week ago, according to AAA data.

Diesel jumped by $0.41 over the same period to $4.16 per gallon, its highest level since 2023. 

Analysts say diesel markets are highly global and especially sensitive to shipping risks and maritime disruptions. The war has brought traffic to a standstill at the Strait of Hormuz, a critical Middle East shipping corridor through which roughly a fifth of the world's oil flows.

"With elevated tension in a key global shipping corridor, diesel is reacting more aggressively than gasoline," GasBuddy head of petroleum analysis Patrick De Haan said.

That could be passed through to prices on other goods as companies face higher transportation costs.

"Higher diesel prices absolutely tend to filter into consumer prices, though usually with a lag," De Haan said.

Diesel is the primary fuel used for moving goods across the economy, especially long-haul trucking. Roughly 70% of US freight moves by truck, carrying everything from groceries to construction materials.

Typically, the pass-through isn't immediate because most trucking companies build fuel surcharges into existing contracts. The impact tends to show up when those contracts renew.

"When diesel rises as quickly as it has recently ... it can begin putting noticeable upward pressure on freight costs, shipping rates, and ultimately consumer prices if it persists," De Haan said....

....MORE 

Following Russia's invasion of Ukraine we saw similar price action in diesel. Some of our posts from 2022 - 2023:

Followup: Iran's Underground 'Missile Cities' May Have Been A Big Mistake

From the Wall Street Journal via MSN, March 5:

Iran’s underground ‘missile cities’ have become one of its biggest vulnerabilities 

Iran spent decades constructing underground bunkers to shield its vast missile arsenal from destruction. Less than a week into the war with its two most powerful adversaries, the strategy is beginning to look like a blunder.

U.S. and Israeli war planes and armed drones are circling over the dozens of cavernous bases, striking missile-carrying launchers when they emerge to fire. Meanwhile, waves of heavy bombers have dropped munitions on the sites, apparently entombing the Iranian weapons below ground in some locations.

Satellite imagery taken in recent days shows the smoldering remains of several Iranian missiles and launchers destroyed in U.S. and Israeli airstrikes near entrances to the “missile cities,” as Iranian officials call the subterranean sites.

Tehran managed to shoot more than 500 missiles at Israel, at U.S. bases and at other targets in the Persian Gulf region since the conflict began this past Saturday, although many have been intercepted, according to governments in the region. There have been fewer large salvos since the first days of the conflict, a sign that the U.S.-Israeli attacks are degrading Tehran’s ability to strike back.

“We’re hunting Iran’s last remaining ballistic missile launchers to eliminate what I would characterize as their lingering ballistic missile capability,” Adm. Brad Cooper, the top U.S. commander in the Middle East, said in a video briefing Tuesday. “We’re seeing Iran’s ability to hit us and our partners is declining.”

Tehran appears to have moved some of its missiles and truck launchers out of the bunkers before the war began, hoping to protect them from attack by dispersing them. Cooper said the U.S. and Israel have destroyed hundreds of missiles, launchers and drones.

U.S. Central Command, which is conducting the air campaign, said Wednesday that Iran’s missile launches have dropped 86% in four days.

Analysts said it is likely that much of Tehran’s remaining stockpile of thousands of medium- and short-range missiles remains in underground bases whose locations are mostly known to the U.S. and Israeli militaries.

That underscores a fundamental flaw in the missile-city concept: “What was once mobile and difficult to find is no longer mobile, and easier to hit,” said Sam Lair, a research associate at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, a research organization in Monterey, Calif....

....MUCH MORE 

Earlier:

Inside Iran's Underground 'Missile Cities'  

Insurance: "India seeks US marine cover for Middle East energy cargoes, source says"

From Reuters, March 5: 

India is in talks with the United States to secure marine cover for vessels shipping oil from the Middle East, as New Delhi seeks ​to shield buyers from potential supply disruptions caused by the crisis in the Gulf, a ‌government official said on Thursday. 
"So far we are comfortable," the official, who did not wish to be identified, said, adding that the oil ministry is in discussions with major producers and traders to secure oil, liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), and liquefied natural gas (LNG).
U.S. ​President Donald Trump has ordered the U.S. International Development Finance Corporation to provide political risk insurance and ​financial guarantees for maritime trade in the Gulf. 
He also said the U.S. Navy could ⁠begin escorting vessels through the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow shipping lane between Iran and Oman through which ​around a fifth of global oil and gas supplies normally pass. 
India, the world's third biggest oil importer, relies ​on the Middle East for about 40% of its oil imports and about 85-90% of LPG imports.
The official said India is looking at buying oil from all sources, including Russia, to replenish crude stocks. Indian refiners had reduced Russian oil intake to ​help New Delhi clinch a trade deal with Washington. 
India has already increased imports of oil and cooking fuel LPG ​from the United States....
....MUCH MORE 

"Wall Street Sees AI’s ‘Creative Destruction’ Coming For Entire Companies"

From Bloomberg, March 5: 

A new worry is rippling across the stock market lately: entire businesses, not just their employees, may be thrown out of work. While most economists say fears of an AI job apocalypse are overblown, seismic shifts have happened in the past after big tech breakthroughs.

The IT revolution of the 1990s led to a surge in productivity that sped up the US economy for several years. It also rendered companies or even industries largely redundant — from travel agents and stockbrokers to classified advertising and newspapers, or video rental stores.

Economists expect artificial intelligence will deliver higher productivity, which is key to raising growth rates in the long run. But investors are growing nervous about what damage might be done on the way, in capital markets as well as labor markets – especially because AI threatens disruptions on a broader scale than the internet boom.

“Is this time bigger? Yes,” says Anton Korinek, an AI expert at the University of Virginia – perhaps by a factor of 10. “The key difference from the 1990s is that the internet only disrupted information distribution,” says Korinek. “AI disrupts cognitive production at large. That’s a much bigger economic surface area.”

Ultimate Promise
To be sure, all of this is early-days speculation over a fast-changing and largely untested technology, whose ultimate promise is to make workers more productive.

Productivity is essentially a measure of how much output workers can deliver with the available tools, so it tends to surge upward when someone invents important new ones like the internet or AI.

Data for the last three months of 2025 is due out later Thursday. Economists typically don’t read too much into one quarter, since the numbers tend to jump around. Still, the trend has been ticking up. After big swings in the pandemic period, productivity has grown at an average pace of 2.6% since the start of 2023. That’s more than double the average for the decade through 2019.

There’s intense debate over how much of this acceleration is due to AI. But even analysts who reckon the new technology isn’t yet making a big contribution mostly expect it will do so before long.

A more productive workforce drives the kind of efficiency gains that can allow both corporations and their employees to boost earnings, without triggering inflation. Historically, economies adapt to big tech breakthroughs – creating new industries and professions that nobody could’ve envisioned before – and living standards rise.

‘How It Has to Be’

That’s the long-run view – which smooths out lots of bumps on the road.

”Having some boom-bust in a sector is normal,” says Simon Johnson, the Nobel prizewinning economist at MIT. “Maybe even how it has to be.” But as companies go under, he says, it can create wider risks – especially if the failed businesses borrowed lots of money. “What you don’t want is to infect the credit, and you definitely don’t want to get inside the banking system.”

As of now, on US capital markets, what’s become known as the “AI scare trade” is barely a blip.

The S&P 500 is up by about two-thirds since the release of ChatGPT in November 2022. A big chunk of those gains has been driven by the surging value of AI companies themselves and their suppliers – giants like Meta Platforms Inc. and Nvidia Corp. – which creates one set of risks if their technology disappoints....

....MUCH MORE 

Capital Markets: "War-Driven Markets"

From Marc Chandler at Bannockburn Global Forex:

The Gulf War continues rage. China has reportedly told top oil refiners to suspend exports of diesel and gasoline. The disruption is beginning to impact shipments of fertilizer, chemicals, aluminum, as well as natural gas and oil fuels. In the next few days, several countries will reportedly run out of storage capacity and will have to cut output. Other secondary impacts include worker remittances from the region, which are important for several Asian countries, including India and the Philippines. 

The US dollar is mostly firmer but largely within the recent ranges. The inflationary implications are higher energy prices continue to press bond yields higher. With April WTI still well below levels many thought likely if the Strait of Hormuz was effectively shut, there seems to still be a sense that the war can end shortly, though hope may be getting ahead of reality....

....MUCH MORE    

Inside Iran's Underground 'Missile Cities'

From the Daily Mail, March 4:

Iran shows off sprawling underground missile city with row after row of drones and rockets - amid growing fears US and its allies are burning through multi-million-pound weaponry

https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2026/03/04/09/106855849-15612811-image-a-49_1772614999035.jpg 

Iran has showed off a sprawling underground network of tunnels filled with row after row of drones and rockets, amid fears the US and its allies are burning through expensive weaponry in their war against the regime.  

Footage released by the Fars News Agency, which is closely linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, shows long lines of missiles and Shahed drones. 

With a ticking clock playing in the background, the video used dramatic drone footage to show off the extent of their cheap arsenal. 

One shot appeared to show a wall-to-wall hanging depicting the now-dead Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei looking out over the massive arsenal of drones.  

A series of Iranian flags were seen hanging down from the roof of the tunnels. 

Another showed a pair of lorries carrying Shahed drone launchers, each one holding four of the cheap drones. 

Shahed drones cost just tens of thousands of dollars to produce, and take little time to manufacture....

....MUCH MORE 

"China's parliament rolls out economic, political blue-print..."

From Reuters, March 4:

China's political elite gathered in Beijing on Thursday as President Xi Jinping unveiled a sweeping roadmap for the country’s economic and political future, delivered against a backdrop ​of sharpening tech competition with Washington and mounting geopolitical friction. 
The National People’s Congress, ‌China’s rubber-stamp legislature, rolled out its Five-Year Plan outlining goals for growth, budgets, industrial policy and defence - signalling Xi’s determination to propel the world’s second-biggest economy toward technological dominance.
 
Here are the main highlights from the NPC:

GDP, ​BUDGET PRIORITIES
China is looking to grow its economy at a 4.5%-5% pace, a touch below ​the 5% rate achieved last year, opening the door to greater efforts to ⁠rebalance the growth drivers.
Beijing's stimulus will also remain steady to rev up an economy stuck ​in a lower post-pandemic gear, setting a budget deficit of 4.0% of GDP, similar to last ​year.

HIGH-TECH DRIVE AS US RIVALRY SHARPENS
Aiming for tech supremacy in key fields such as AI and quantum computing amid a fierce rivalry with the U.S., Beijing is accelerating efforts to "seize the commanding heights of science and technological development." As ​the world's largest producer of rare earths, China is also moving to secure an edge in ​these critical minerals used in everything from electric vehicles to aircraft engines and defence technologies.

DEFENCE CAPACITY
China will improve combat ‌readiness ⁠and accelerate the development of "advanced combat capabilities", Premier Li Qiang said, boosting defence spending by 7% in 2026.
Military observers are watching closely as Beijing pushes to modernise its forces by 2035 and project military power amid the backdrop of rising regional tensions, including over Taiwan, and global ​geopolitical strains.

FINANCIAL SYSTEM
China will inject ​around $44 billion into state-owned ⁠banks this year to guard against systemic risks, and boost financing for technology companies....
....MUCH MORE