Sunday, May 31, 2026

"The last day of Constantinople" (May 29, 1453)

From the British Library, May 29, 2023:

Discover how the fall of Constantinople in 1453 ended the Byzantine Empire and transformed the great city into Ottoman Istanbul.

Blog series Medieval Manuscripts

Author Peter Toth

This year marks the 570th anniversary of the fall of Constantinople to the Ottoman Empire, on 29 May 1453. The city at the Bosporus, on the border between the Mediterranean and the Black Sea, bridging Europe, Asia Minor and the Balkans, was originally called Byzantium. The exact date of its foundation is unknown, but according to legend it was founded in 667 BC.

https://www.bl.uk/images/v5dwkion/production/8f39b10b003e5eb5431c5e5eb100549068a790b4-676x1090.jpg/constantine-the-great.jpg?w=1440&auto=format 

Constantine the Great from the Synopsis of Histories (Eastern Mediterranean, 1574):
Harley MS 5632, f. 2v.

The city was already an important trading and military centre, but its significance rose when, on 11 May, AD 324, Emperor Constantine the Great selected it to be the new capital of the reunited Roman Empire, and called it the New Rome. Six years later, to honour the emperor, it was renamed Constantinople after him. From the 5th century onwards, Constantinople was enriched with enormous fortifications, churches and monasteries, and the world-renowned imperial library.... 

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"AI And The End Of Recessions As We Know Them"

From Forbes, May 28:

Stagflation sounded impossible until it happened. AI could create another economic contradiction economists don’t yet have a name for 

Artificial intelligence can propel the economy forward even if unemployment soars. If that happens, economists will need to rethink the idea that a growing economy is a healthy one. 

Ken Griffin wasn’t buying the AI panic. At Davos in January, the billionaire founder of Citadel, the Miami hedge fund giant with $68 billion in investment capital, dismissed artificial intelligence’s output as “garbage.”

Then this month, Griffin did a 180. He watched AI agents do complex work in hours that once took Citadel employees weeks or even months. Citadel’s entire business is built around hiring brainiacs. More than 40% of its employees hold advanced degrees, including about 270 Ph.D.s across 40 fields. These are some of the highest-paid workers in America –the median annual compensation for software engineers at Citadel is more than $500,000– and software that can replace even part of that labor could save firms like Citadel enormous amounts of money. Griffin still said he went home depressed because machines were starting to do work that once only those people could do.

Economists may soon face a strange problem. Businesses grow. GDP rises. Profits stay strong. But the jobs don’t come along for the ride. If AI allows companies to produce more with fewer workers, America could end up looking richer on paper while millions of households feel poorer in real life. An economy with rising GDP and 8% unemployment would have sounded implausible a few years ago. With each passing day, it sounds a little less so. If that’s where the economy is heading, economists may have to rethink whether growth alone still tells us the economy is healthy.

Since the Great Depression, GDP has been the main measure of economic health. Economist Simon Kuznets, who would receive a Nobel Prize for his work in 1971, developed the metric in the 1930s while working with the U.S. government to track the collapse. When GDP rises, the economy is considered to be growing. When it shrinks for long enough, the thinking goes, the economy is probably in a recession or close to one. It’s not quite that black and white because the official call is made by the National Bureau of Economic Research and includes other factors, but the basic framework has remained intact for decades. Growth and recession aren’t supposed to happen at the same time.

Throughout modern American history, recessions have arrived with brutal regularity. From 1950 through 2010, the U.S. endured 10 recessions, or roughly one every six years. The economy contracted in 1953, 1958, 1960, 1969, twice during the inflation and oil shock of the 1970s, again in the early 1980s when the Paul Volcker Federal Reserve crushed inflation with punishing interest rates, then during the savings-and-loan crisis, the dot-com bust and finally the housing collapse in 2008. The details changed, but the broad pattern stayed the same. Corporate profits fell and with them so did GDP. Americans lost jobs and businesses failed. The economy looked sick because the economy was sick.

Then something changed. Outside of the brief Covid collapse, the United States hasn’t experienced a traditional recession since 2008. The longest expansion in modern U.S. history stretched from June 2009 until the pandemic shutdowns 11 years later. Since then, the economy has repeatedly bucked recession models. Massive government stimulus, years of near-zero interest rates, globalization and the growing dominance of technology firms helped keep growth alive. But even as GDP and stock prices climbed, wealth inequality widened as housing, healthcare and education costs rose faster than most paychecks. The old signals stopped lining up the way they once did. AI could widen that disconnect even further by allowing companies to grow without needing nearly as many workers.

Technology has always destroyed some jobs. Farm equipment reduced the need for manual labor. ATMs reduced the number of bank tellers. Telephone operators disappeared. But there was usually somewhere else for workers to go. New industries appeared. New jobs came with them.

AI could be different because it is moving into so many kinds of work at once. It’s already writing code, reviewing contracts, handling customer service and analyzing spreadsheets. Many of those jobs were long considered difficult to automate.

Companies are already starting to test what an AI-heavy workplace might look like. Meta is cutting 8,000 positions while Mark Zuckerberg pours billions into AI. Block, the parent company of Square and Cash App, eliminated more than 4,000 jobs after Jack Dorsey said the technology had changed what the company needed from humans. Standard Chartered, the British bank, expects AI and automation to help cut more than 7,000 “lower-value human capital” roles by 2030.

Not every “AI layoff” is really about AI. Companies overhired, investors want lower expenses, and executives now have a convenient scapegoat for job cuts. Still, more companies are starting to realize they may need fewer workers than they once thought.

Michael Madowitz, principal economist at the Roosevelt Institute, a Washington think tank focused on economic policy, says economists don’t have enough catchphrases for every strange state the economy can reach. The term “stagflation” only became common after the 1970s proved inflation and unemployment could rise together. AI could create its own mismatch of strong growth and high unemployment at the same time.

Madowitz isn’t predicting a jobless future. He’s saying its time to throw out your Econ 101 textbooks because the old way of judging the economy may stop making sense. Roughly two-thirds of national income has historically gone to workers through paychecks, with owners taking much of the rest through profits. Many economic models simply assume that split because it has stayed fairly stable for so long. But that balance comes from history, not a law of nature. If AI allows companies to produce more with fewer workers, a larger share of the gains could flow to owners and a smaller share to employees.

A strong economy with a weak labor market would be hard to ignore. Unemployment above roughly 5% already makes economists queasy. Add strong GDP growth driven mostly by profits and rising inequality, and the picture changes. That’s not to mention the greater societal implications. “You could be looking at healthy GDP growth here,” Madowitz says, “but this is not a healthy economy.”....

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As noted a year ago:

"Can the Developed World Grow Its Way Out of Stagnation?"

I sure hope so because that appears to be the only option left.

And it also appears that debt-fueled growth is the path that both the U.S. and Germany have chosen.

Past is not prologue but it is the only guide we have. And unfortunately we only have one time and price series. Someday it will all end, it may be tomorrow, it may be in a couple hundred years as stasis and/or entropy and/or civilizational catastrophe makes its mark.

Here's our boilerplate intro to extrapolating the past into the future:
"Industrial Revolution Comparisons Aren't Comforting"
Partly because of Eddington's Arrow of Time, at least in the mundane everyday experience, we only have one economic history dataset to work with. Because of this I used to argue with people who said this time will be like the last time but found that approach neither satisfying nor enlightening. I don't argue anymore, I just observe, like a kid watching a bug and wonder where the almost metaphysical certitude would be coming from, because, truth be told, nobody knows how this all works out....

....Again, we only have one dataset. We can say that U.S. stocks have returned 'X' over 'Y' time period, and for long periods we've been able to extrapolate those variables, but no one knows what tomorrow brings.  

Don't let your kids grow up to be risk managers.....

And a month ago:

"If AI Makes Every Moat Temporary, What Will Happen To The Value Of Everything" ("The Collapse of Terminal Value")

Entropy. Stasis. Death.

But tonight, we dance!

SoftBank Says It Will Invest Up To €75 Billion To Build Data Centers In France

From Fortune, May 30:

SoftBank plans up to €75 billion investment in French AI centers

SoftBank Group Corp. plans to invest as much as €75 billion ($87 billion) to build 5 gigawatts of artificial intelligence data center capacity in France, saying the country is poised to become a top European hub for AI infrastructure.   

The first phase comprises an initial €45 billion investment to deliver 3.1 gigawatts of AI data center capacity in the Hauts-de-France region by 2031, SoftBank said Saturday in a statement. 

The commitment, which SoftBank called its biggest AI infrastructure investments in Europe, reflect personal diplomacy between Emmanuel Macron and SoftBank founder Masayoshi Son, who met during the French president’s visit to Japan this year.

Bloomberg has reported that Son floated the idea of SoftBank investing as much as $100 billion in France. The Japanese investor, who was used to fielding similar inquiries from company leaders, was intrigued by an approach made directly by a head of state and started reviewing the matter in earnest.

Read More: SoftBank in Talks for Major Data Center Project in France

“I was very impressed by the fact that Emmanuel Macron is so personally committed to ensuring France’s economic success, even though our investments have so far been concentrated mainly in the US, as well as in Japan and Asia,” French outlet La Tribune cited Son as saying in an interview.

SoftBank’s initial investment plans to deliver data centers in Dunkirk, Bosquel and Bouchain. SoftBank also plans to develop additional sites across France, “reinforcing the country’s role as a leading European hub for next-generation digital infrastructure,” according to the company statement....

....MUCH MORE 

Saturday, May 30, 2026

"Hush Money: The Asset Class: How Private Equity Turned Capitalism Against Itself"

From Literary Review, May 27, reviewed by Simon Nixon:

Some of the most disagreeable people I have encountered in three decades of financial journalism work in private equity. A university acquaintance I had not seen for years once invited me for drinks on the terrace of his vast Thames-side apartment, only to demand that I lean on a colleague to kill an inconvenient story. The husband of another acquaintance, who also worked in private equity, once tried to pull the same stunt. That time I didn’t even get a beer.

This is an industry that takes the private part of its name with deadly seriousness. It usually exercises total control over its operations, deploying financial muscle rather than charm to enforce submission and cloaking almost every aspect of its business – the provenance of its money, the performance of its companies – in secrecy. Yet over recent decades, private equity has quietly captured vast swathes of the economy and accumulated political power for which it is rarely held publicly accountable.

In The Asset Class, Hettie O’Brien, a Guardian journalist, goes some way towards redressing the balance. She traces the industry’s origins to the 1970s, when William E Simon, President Nixon’s former Treasury secretary, became convinced after a visit to the Soviet Union that a bureaucratic corporate managerial class was leading the United States towards communism. His solution – to reinvigorate capitalism by buying underperforming companies and breaking them up or exposing managers to the incentivising effects of high debt – was enthusiastically adopted by a generation of asset strippers, men such as Sir James Goldsmith and Jim Slater, who styled themselves as buccaneering apex predators, culling the corporate lame to strengthen the herd.

By the 1990s, however, the industry was awash with more money than could sensibly be deployed, channelled through the secretive family offices of the burgeoning global super-rich. Since fund managers earned 2 per cent of every dollar invested and 20 per cent of profits above a certain threshold, the incentive to put capital to work at almost any cost was irresistible. The solution was to acquire public companies and load them with debt levels that would never be permitted in public markets – in effect, compelling the target to finance its own takeover. If the business subsequently buckled under the weight, the private equity house had already got its money back. The model worked best, as O’Brien observes, where customers had no alternative but to keep paying: essential services, which were conveniently reframed as a public benefit, bringing much-needed capital to a cash-strapped state....

....MUCH MORE 

Although it is difficult to top that declarative first sentence: "Some of the most disagreeable people I have encountered in three decades of financial journalism work in private equity" Literary Review has on offer:

Read more by
Simon Nixon
  

"How Will Data Centers Pay for Power?"

From American Affairs Journal, Summer 2026 / Volume X, Number 2:

The American electric power sector has not grown appreciably for twenty years. To be sure, consumers pay plenty to replace infrastructure, to “transition” the sector away from the most carbon-intensive sources of energy, and to find ways to allow utilities to cram a wide variety of underutilized capital spending (think “smart meters”) into their regulated “rate base.” But demand has been stable or declining.

To the degree that profits in the sector have grown, it is because the economic regulation of the utility industry provides for a “spend more, make more” ecosystem whose profits are a function of its capital investment. The sector is still one of the few that is actively regulated through government price-setting, even in places sometimes mistakenly termed “deregulated.” So, even when demand is not rising, the business must find ways to grow earnings by spending more to serve the same level of demand. This has meant that rates, which otherwise might be declining, have been at best steady, even without increasing grid capacity, and in fact, much utility spending has been undertaken to retire reliable capacity.

This was the uninspiring landscape of American electric utilities on the eve of the boom in data centers needed to fuel the technological revolution in AI. Electricity demand forecasts are now sharply up for the balance of this decade, and a majority of this growth is concentrated in data center power needs, with growth in manufacturing a distant runner-up.1 For a power system that serves as a basis for Americans’ everyday lives and the economy writ large, it is unusual to see such a concentration amid one particular sector for its growth.

The rising power demand of the data center industry almost appears like an industry running within the integrated grid but outside the usual paradigm of the traditional electric utility sector. Indeed, it should be treated as such. Doing so calls for a variety of policy solutions that accurately price grid capacity in order to facilitate efficient usage of that scarce asset, impose regulatory requirements to furnish power generation to the system, and in the alternative, allow power demand that is more flexible to better use residual capacity. Such reforms can accomplish two important policy aims simultaneously. First, they would insulate legacy customers who have already paid their fair share and then some for the grid. Second, they would allow power industry growth in support of data centers to be unchained from traditional utility practices, which often do not reward speed or innovation.

Both of these aims, customer protection and growth, are embodied in the Ratepayer Protection Pledge, a March 2026 declaration at the White House undertaken jointly by the Trump administration and seven major hyperscaler AI companies. The 485-word document begins with an endorsement of data center infrastructure as “the foundation of the internet, cloud computing, and artificial intelligence (AI),” noting the national security implications of this. But it qualifies that “the American people should not be footing the bill for the benefit of private companies.”2

The central proposals of the Pledge are that AI companies “will pay for all new power delivery infrastructure upgrades required to service their data centers” and “will bring, build, or buy the new power generation resources and electricity needed to satisfy their new energy demands.” By directly incurring these costs, the “companies agree to protect American consumers from price hikes due to data center energy and infrastructure requirements, and lower electricity costs for consumers in the long term.” These ambitions are easier to proclaim than accomplish.

Power grids are characterized by joint costs: poles and wires, transformers, and substations that together form a network. Both the typical practice and the financial incentives of most local utility monopolies militate toward a broad socialization of costs to consumers. They do this by having rates set by utility commissions on the utility’s average, embedded costs, rather than pricing based on marginal costs or on a new customer’s willingness to pay. The Pledge wisely points the way toward value-based pricing for grid access that recovers at least the incremental cost of serving customers. This seemingly mundane change, if well implemented in an open season where data centers vie for grid access, is capable of not just protecting legacy ratepayers, but producing massive investment in the American power grid.

Meanwhile, for the power plants that generate electricity for data center consumption, the proposition that the AI industry furnish its own supply is both straightforward and, sadly, unlawful in a majority of states, which maintain local monopolies that prevent this. In these places, many proposals purporting to fulfill the Pledge fall well short of the mark. But this is not to say it is an easy story of letting the market go to work. Even in those regions where competition has been introduced to the sector, investment has been slow to materialize. The Pledge suggests clearing away barriers to new power generation, but with a corresponding regulatory mandate to match the Pledge’s ambition that AI companies bring their own generation to the grid.

The purpose of this essay is threefold: to examine the broader economic and institutional context that the Pledge must address; to put some meat on the bones of its spare but purposeful declarations; and also to take aim at some bad ideas masquerading as fulfillments of the Pledge’s ambitions. Since the two sides of the industry—price-regulated grid costs and more commoditized power generation—operate on so different a basis today, it is best to consider them in turn, but with reforms that ultimately come together, like the grid itself, in sound operation.

The Economics of Regulation

Amid a framework of economic regulation that exists for the electric power industry and very few others, utility commissioners at the state and federal levels fix prices based on a utility’s “cost of service.” This form of price regulation allows the utility to recover both its invested capital and a regulated return on that capital, while generally passing operating expenses through to customers without any markup.

The math that results from cost-of-service regulation is, at its core, one big division problem. The numerator is a sum of the utility’s costs; the denominator, the volume of services the utility sells; the quotient is the rate you pay. Pricing in competitive markets settles around the cost to serve marginal demand, at least according to the basic principles of microeconomic theory. Utility pricing, however, is principally concerned with recovering the sunk costs of infrastructure, which usually serve to flatten and socialize the volatile tendencies that would be expressed in a competitive, commoditized market. “Notice how, at once, the traditional practices of public utility price regulation diverge from economic principles,” the economist and utility regulator Alfred Kahn once dryly observed of the difference between marginal-cost and average-embedded-cost pricing.3

Kahn’s ironic observation has great import today. This divergence between competitive and utility pricing has substantial implications. Consider what happens when incremental demand manifests in price-regulated utility service. In the division problem, if the numerator (costs) rises more slowly than the denominator (demand), then all other customers’ rates would decline as a result of adding a new customer to the grid when utility commissioners next reset utility rates.

There are many examples of this happy phenomenon in the utility sector, beginning in its 1920s heyday, where investment and sales volumes soared, even while rates fell.4 More recently, unassuming North Dakota emerges as the winner of the demand growth Olympics in a magisterial study conducted by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and Brattle Group that evaluated retail electricity rates from 2019 to 2024; the state simultaneously notched the highest percentage demand growth and the steepest percentage reduction in retail electricity prices.5 New Mexico and Nebraska are in much the same situation.

Some have taken these historical occurrences to stand for a general principle that a rising tide of demand lifts all boats. Would that were so. The early industry’s victories on economies of scale have long been priced in. Indeed, for decades now, the sector’s new classes of capital assets have been trending smaller, predicated on diversifying risk and modular, nimble deployment. When studied closely, these recent successes are idiosyncratic demonstrations of the ingredients one would need to make a return to those halcyon days a reality. North Dakota, for example, had residual grid capacity remaindered from previous oil booms, and on the commodity side, cheap fuels and a surplus of power generation stimulated by federal tax incentives pointed at renewables. In both situations, the marginal cost to serve was lower than the average, embedded cost rate, and this supported what was, in effect, a subsidy from newcomers to legacy customers: the type of subsidy everyone cheers.

These happy conditions no longer obtain. In the circumstances that have coalesced lately, a grid with little residual capacity during peak demand conditions means that a lot of new, uninterruptible demand for power placed upon it necessitates capital spending to expand the grid. The materials on which such an expansion is predicated have inflated in price rapidly. Wires and cables, transformers, switchgear, and wood poles have inflated 152 percent, 89 percent, 77 percent, and 50 percent, respectively, since the beginning of 2019, while the overall consumer price index recorded only 29 percent cumulative inflation in the same period.6

The cost of financing these capital assets has also become more expensive. Although utilities have earned generous returns on their equity investment, their debt costs have only captured a modest premium over Treasuries, with many utility customers paying rates that reflect historical debt costs in the 3–4 percent range. With Treasuries well above that today, electric utility issuances of ten- and thirty-year debt so far in 2026 have approached 5 percent and 6 percent, respectively. This double whammy of materials’ price inflation and higher capital costs means that nearly every megawatt of demand added to an American utility will incur costs that exceed the embedded, average cost to serve the same unit. Under such circumstances, if new customers are brought online paying the same rates as legacy customers pay, it will axiomatically result in a cost shift from legacy customers to new customers: the type of subsidy no one can stomach.

In the normal operations of utility regulation, that is usually what would happen. Utilities typically have a legal obligation, in exchange for their monopoly, to serve new customers under their prevailing rates. New data center customers would be classified into existing “rate classes” and begin paying the same rates as, say, a paper mill or chemicals refiner.7

For much of the past several years, the data center industry’s hill to die on at public utility commissions was an insistence that they should not be treated in fundamentally different ways than other customers. It is hard to think of a more arcane subject for outsiders to the craft of utility regulation than the procedures by which customers are separated into rate classes. But to long-time practitioners, this debate raised the question of whether regulators were going to labor under the premise that data centers were just another category of customer that fit within the extant practices of utility ratemaking.....

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FrenchTech: "Mistral launches Industrial Engineering AI with Airbus, BMW and EDF as headline customers" (plus rebutting the Pope)

From The Next Web, May 28:

At its first annual conference in Paris, Mistral formally rolled out the physics-aware AI stack it built around the Emmi acquisition, with Airbus, BMW and EDF as launch customers.


Mistral AI used its first annual conference in Paris on Thursday to formally launch “Mistral for Industrial Engineering,” a physics-aware AI stack pitched directly at heavy-industry customers, with Airbus, BMW, EDF and the shipping group CMA CGM named as launch deployments.

The product is the commercial layer Mistral has been visibly building toward since its acquisition of Vienna’s Emmi AI earlier this month, and represents the French firm’s clearest articulated alternative to the consumer-and-enterprise-software focus that has defined the largest US foundation-model labs.

The technical core of the offering is what the industry calls simulation surrogate modelling, neural networks trained on the outputs of expensive physics simulators that can subsequently produce comparable answers in seconds rather than hours.

Emmi’s models, originally spun out of Johannes Kepler University Linz and the Austrian AI company NXAI in December 2024, simulate airflow, thermodynamics, fluid dynamics and material deformation in real time.

The category sits cleanly inside what European industrial firms actually need from AI: engineering tools tied to production data, robotics workflows, defect detection and factory operations, rather than another chatbot or code-assistant product.

The customer roster is the most concrete part of the launch. Airbus, the European aerospace heavyweight, joins as a launch customer for the engineering-simulation tier.

BMW, which separately announced earlier this year that it is running humanoid-robot pilots in its Leipzig plant, is using the Mistral stack as part of its industrial-AI competence centre.

EDF, the French state-owned electricity utility, is the third anchor customer named publicly. CMA CGM, the Marseille-based container-shipping group, has been a Mistral customer for over a year and is being positioned inside the new industrial offering.

The named customers reflect the segments Mistral is targeting: aerospace, automotive, energy and logistics.

The strategic positioning is worth pausing on. OpenAI, Anthropic and Google’s frontier labs have spent the past two years competing on consumer-facing chatbots and enterprise-software automation.

The industrial-engineering market has been left visibly under-served. Google’s Fanuc partnership for industrial-robot AI, announced earlier this year, is the closest US analogue....

....MUCH MORE 

For some reason my keyboard is starting to smoke so I'll quick paste this next bit and hit publish:

Mistral’s Arthur Mensch directly rebuts Pope Leo on AI in warfare

"The Experienced Investors Who Think They Can Beat the Scam"

Not only beat the scam but also beat the scammers.

Crush them, without their realizing what happened.

Everybody needs a hobby.

From Harvard Business School's Working Knowledge, May 28: 

Pump-and-dump schemes hurt people who buy into them and can rattle markets. And yet, some speculative investors purposely seek out them out, says research by Eugene Soltes. What can regulators do? 

Many investors think they can outsmart the wolves of Wall Street, betting they can outmaneuver “pump-and-dump” schemes and bring home a windfall.

Rather than being lured into fraudulent trades, some investors seek out such schemes, according to research by Harvard Business School Professor Eugene Soltes and his coauthors. Their analysis of 470 pump-and-dump schemes finds that participants lose one-third of their investment, on average.

There’s a subset of people who are actually looking for pump-and-dumps.

“There’s a subset of people who are actually looking for pump-and-dumps,” says Soltes, the McLean Family Professor of Business Administration. “That was fairly provocative and surprising.”

Pump-and-dumps conjure images of inexperienced investors duped out of their life savings. On the contrary, Soltes’ research shows that many speculative traders seek out shady penny stocks—with some viewing warnings as buy signals—in search of a quick buck in a hot market.

“These investors appear to be quite similar to the risk-seeking traders that were fueling the recent surge in trading in speculative meme stocks,” write the authors of “Who Falls Prey to the Wolf of Wall Street Investor Participation in Market Manipulation,” published in the journal Management Science in November.

Soltes cowrote the paper with Christian Leuz and Maximilian Muhn of the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business, Steffen Meyer of Denmark’s Aarhus University, and Andreas Hackethal of Goethe University in Frankfurt.

A tale as old as the Great Depression
Pump-and-dump promoters buy large amounts of inexpensive and often illiquid shares, and then distribute false information about the company unrelated to their fundamentals. The “tout”—often through email, newsletters, and online forums—sparks a buying spree.

However, because these stocks often have a limited number of shares to trade, prices spike. At some point, the promoters sell, reaping big profits, and other investors are left with losses.

The strategy, immortalized in films such as “The Wolf of Wall Street,” has been around since 1929, when such a scam helped set off the market crash that would spark the Great Depression.

Who are ‘tout’ investors?
Soltes and fellow researchers examined 470 allegedly illegal “tout” campaigns in Germany from 2002 to 2015, including those identified by the German Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (Bafin). They also analyzed 178 billion euros ($208 billion) of stock trades by 113,000 retail investors during that time as well as their demographics, data provided by a major German bank...

....MUCH MORE 

Also at HBS Working Knowledge

May 20 - If AI Knows Your Next Trade, What Happens to Money Managers?

To get a feel for the way it was done in one of the preeminent hives of scum and villainy (credit Obi-Wan Kenobi) we join our guide David Baines at The Vancouver Sun:

June 7, 2012 
Why We Love the Vancouver Business Scene (Frauds, Scams and Flim-flams)

February 4, 2013

Checking In On the Vancouver Business Scene
...That's it Dec. 5 to Feb. 4.
But, if one were to look at the November 2012 stories, you have the head of criminal investigations for the British Columbia Securities Commission getting fired, the former mutual fund salesman now selling bongs, the defrocked fund manager who, when ask about a Baines story on him responded...
June 21, 2014 
The Vancouver Sun's David Baines' Farewell to Readers

Leaving the life of frauds scams and flim-flams.
We missed it last year so I thought a one year anniversary adios to one of the best business journalists I've ever come across would be in order. He wrote about some of the scummiest denizens of one of the most wide-open markets in the world and despite the death threats and the lawyers and the diabolically ingenious corporate structures he got the story and as long-time readers of this blog know I have a weakness for tales of the knaves, varlets charlatans and outright frauds that populate the underbelly of the markets.
I think Baines does too.... 

"Ozempic may be reshaping the brain, scientists say"

From the Washington Post, May 28:

GLP-1 drugs may be rewiring circuits involved not only in appetite but in emotion, desire and beyond. 

Ozempic was supposed to be a gut story. Then Allison Shapiro looked at the brain scans.

An assistant professor at the University of Colorado Anschutz, she was part of a team studying 13 teens and young women with a hormonal disorder affecting the ovaries who were put on GLP-1 drugs. As part of testing to catalogue the effect of the medication on their bodies, Shapiro took snapshots of their brains before and after.

She was astonished to find extensive changes.

Within only a few months, the brain connections in the salience network, which helps target attention, had multiplied.

“We didn’t expect to see this effect, and we really don’t know what it means,” Shapiro said.

Ozempic and other GLP-1 drugs were initially understood as a metabolism breakthrough: medicines that act like hormones to control hunger, blood sugar and weight. But as researchers probe deeper into how the drugs work, early evidence suggests that GLP-1s may also be reshaping parts of the brain.

Tens of millions of people are now taking the medications worldwide, turning what began as an obesity and diabetes treatment into what could be modern medicine’s largest unplanned neuroscience experiments.

Scientists are studying GLP-1 drugs — medications that mimic the hormones involved in appetite, blood sugar and digestion — for how they affect not only eating behavior, but also addiction, cognition, neurodegeneration and even motivation and pleasure. The category includes older diabetes drugs that researchers have studied for decades; newer medications such as Ozempic and Wegovy, which contain semaglutide; and Mounjaro and Zepbound, which contain tirzepatide — a newer compound that targets both GLP-1 and a second metabolic hormone known as GIP, a distinction some scientists believe may matter neurologically.

The emerging research on GLP-1s is part of a larger scientific shift away from treating brain and physical health as separate domains. Increasingly, researchers see them as tightly intertwined.

Exercise is associated with sharper cognition, stronger memory and better executive function across a person’s lifespan, probably because it enhances neural activation and plasticity — the brain’s capacity to adapt and reorganize itself. Diet exerts its own influence; eating balanced, nutrient-dense foods has been linked to greater gray matter volume and improved mental well-being.

But not all of the reported mental effects of GLP-1 drugs have been positive. On social media and at doctor’s offices, some users have reported a type of brain fog and others something broader and harder to define: a strange emotional flattening. People describe less pleasure, less motivation, diminished interest in hobbies and even reduced sexual desire.

Those accounts are beginning to raise deeper questions about what, exactly, these drugs are changing. If GLP-1s alter the brain systems involved in reward, craving and motivation, researchers wonder, where is the line between quieting a person’s destructive impulses and reshaping personality itself?

The mystery of the mechanism
The hormones and receptors targeted by GLP-1 drugs form a vast communication network that stretches far beyond the stomach. Naturally activated after eating, the system helps regulate hunger, blood sugar and digestion — but its receptors are also scattered throughout the body, including in the heart and deep within the brain.

Scientists are still in the early stages of investigating how GLP-1 drugs affect neural networks. Because the medications are relatively large molecules, researchers remain uncertain how much of them can cross the blood-brain barrier, a protective membrane that shields the brain from the bloodstream.

That uncertainty has raised a larger question: Are the drugs acting directly on the brain, or are they reshaping the nervous system more indirectly by reducing inflammation, improving metabolism and easing stress on the body?

Researchers suspect that both may be true. Some studies suggest the drugs help reduce inflammation that can damage neurons over time, while other research indicates the medications may help brain cells survive and function more effectively.

More on GLP-1s

One leading theory is that GLP-1 drugs may reduce inflammation in the brain. Researchers think the medications could quiet overactive immune cells that, when repeatedly triggered, may contribute to damage and cognitive degeneration over time. Other scientists suspect the drugs may act more directly on brain cells themselves, helping them function more efficiently and resist stress. These two effects may be happening simultaneously.

Researchers are also investigating whether this process originates in the gut rather than the brain. Naturally occurring GLP-1 hormones communicate with the brain through the vagus nerve, the long signaling pathway connecting the digestive system and brain stem that guides sensations of hunger and fullness. Scientists suspect those same gut-brain circuits may also influence mood, craving and cognition.

Rewiring addiction and desire
Long before Oprah Winfrey and social media influencers helped popularize GLP-1 drugs, physician-scientist Lorenzo Leggio was studying them as a possible addiction treatment.

After seeing a 2013 study in Sweden showing that rodents given a GLP-1-like medication consumed less alcohol, Leggio — the clinical director and deputy scientific director at the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute on Drug Abuse — replicated the findings and has been investigating ever since.

Leggio and his team have built a mock bar where participants are exposed to alcohol-related cues — smells, sights and other triggers associated with craving — while their physiological and behavioral responses are measured in real time. Participants also move through virtual-reality environments, including a cafeteria simulation in which they are asked to choose foods, allowing scientists to study how desire and decision-making may shift under the drugs’ influence.

Researchers have long known that addiction is associated with hyperactivity in brain circuits connected to reward, craving and reinforcement. Scientists suspect GLP-1 drugs may dampen the brain’s dopamine-driven reward systems that determine what feels pleasurable and worth repeating — which could lessen these urges. They are also investigating whether the drugs affect the amygdala, which helps regulate fear, stress and emotional processing.

Eli Lilly, which manufactures tirzepatide under the brand names Mounjaro and Zepbound, has launched a large clinical trial expected to conclude by the end of this year or early next year examining whether the drug could help treat alcohol-use disorder.

Several major studies examining GLP-1 drugs on nicotine dependence, opioid- and cocaine-use disorders, gambling addiction and binge eating are also underway.

“It’s very exciting times, but we don’t fully understand how it works,” Leggio said.

Many patients have described a quieting of “food noise” — the constant mental pull toward eating that many had lived with for years. But the same mechanisms that curb destructive cravings could also suppress healthy desires, a shift some on the medication have reported.

“If you think about it from a survival standpoint, some of the foundational behavior such as eating and sex could be impacted,” Leggio said. Still, he noted, the Food and Drug Administration has repeatedly reviewed available safety data and has not concluded that this is a widespread problem....

....MUCH MORE 

 So we're running a giant, unplanned, neuroscience project.

Let's hope it all works out. 

Friday, May 29, 2026

"Russia to task bankers with shooting down Ukrainian drones"

From Al Jazeera, May 27:

New legislation aims to integrate banks into Russia’s air defences using jamming systems and trained employees. 

Russian lawmakers have passed a bill to allow trained bank employees to shoot down Ukrainian drones amid an increase in the number of attacks.

The draft legislation, which would see banks across Russia install electronic jamming systems while selected employees would shoot down incoming unmanned aircraft, passed in its third and final reading in the lower house Duma on Tuesday, according to the state-run TASS news agency....

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https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSk76y1R7uhiTwMhSsHacLgIzmVM9tT1HyJZGrk8J-zqjHIOY5m0a7ZZLn8vqLAbB3lrniym2p5_m_MiapCrdRC2T8WQsxWGRm2YkLMF1gX&s=10 

Top Gun, Madame Nabiullina

"A Luxury Survivalist Community Is Tearing Itself Apart"

The headline is deceptive, this is far from luxury. 

There are a couple developments that are but they, or ultra-luxe cruise ship timeshares, never made any sense. Why would the very wealthy want to do something like this? It is applying mass-affluent marketing to the actually affluent. Wut?

From the Wall Street Journal, May 26:

They went to South Dakota to ride out the apocalypse at a ‘5-star’ bunker compound. They’re already at each other’s throats with HOA-style grievances. 

IGLOO, S.D.—Row upon row of concrete bunkers with steel blast doors peek up from the rolling grasslands—like hobbit holes for the apocalypse.

There are 575 of them, clustered on a former munitions depot near South Dakota’s Black Hills and billed as “The Largest Survival Community on Earth.” The pitch: Ride out nuclear war, the next pandemic or societal collapse in relative comfort.

Yet for many residents, the dream has soured. The threat hasn’t come from Armageddon, but from friction that resembles a suburban homeowners’ association battle. 

Lawsuits, countersuits and disputes are piling up over septic systems, property taxes, off-leash dogs and a growing list of community rules. The legal skirmishing has reached the state supreme court—twice. Promised amenities, including a restaurant bunker, a pool bunker and a horse-stable bunker, have yet to materialize. Guns have been drawn, and there have been offers to settle things with fists. The developer denies wrongdoing and says complaints come from a few malcontents.

“You get that many people with the same mentality in a small place like that, eventually they’re going to cross over each others’ lines and you’re going to have a conflict,” said Larry Harter, a retired locomotive engineer in nearby Edgemont, population 725. He was nursing a beer recently at the Victory Steakhouse & Lounge, where preppers from the compound sometimes turn up for dinner or a drink. 

Edgemont Mayor Rheta Reagan said she was unsure whether being on the road to the complex was a boon for her city. “There’s a few that come into town, but for the most part they don’t,” she said. “They’re just doing their own thing, whatever their own thing is. Like I said, I would want no part of it.”

‘5-star survival luxury’
The doomsday enclave, known as Vivos xPoint, is the brainchild of Robert Vicino, a Los Angeles-based entrepreneur who had a vision in 1980: He needed to build a large underground structure to protect 1,000 people from a coming “life-extinction event,” according to the company’s website. He since has developed a global network of such communities

In 2016, Vicino began working with local ranchers to convert the long-abandoned South Dakota property—far from “known nuclear targets” and “high-crime anarchy zones” (read: cities)—into a compound for “like-minded survivalists to ride out ‘the event,’” as Vivos puts it. Vicino later bought the property outright, according to his son, Dante, Vivos xPoint’s director of operations. 

Vivos offers 99-year leases on the shelters, roomy at nearly 2,200 square feet. Occupants pay up to $55,000 upfront, plus annual ground rent and service fees. They can build out the raw space themselves or hire Vivos’s contractors. The company touts “5-Star Survival Luxury and Comfort” and residents live on roads with names like Bunker Way.

“My vision is to see xPoint become a thriving community of people who want safety in this increasingly crazy world we live in,” Dante Vicino said. He noted that about a third of the units were leased and a few dozen occupied full-time. “The lawsuits have been a real pain, but we’re not set back at all,” he said. 

Philippe Briggs, a recently retired Los Angeles police detective and former Army reservist, said he paid $25,000 for the 99-year lease on his windowless bunker six or seven years ago. He lives in Las Vegas now and uses it as a vacation spot and potential emergency shelter. “You can do fishing over there, you can do hunting, you can do hiking,” he said. “And if I need to, yeah, I could use it as a bug out—if I can get there.”

He keeps a year’s supply of provisions inside. “Just like rice—basic foodstuff that you would fix at the end of the world,” he said, adding that he hasn’t had issues with management. “If I had an issue, I would just sell my place and be gone.”

Not everyone shares Briggs’s experience.

‘You ain’t never killed nobody, have you?’
David Streeter paid $55,000 for his unit in July 2023 and moved to the windswept prairie. His wife, daughter and her four children eventually all joined him.

He soon discovered his septic system didn’t work. When he inquired about filing a complaint, a Vivos employee warned him off, Streeter testified in court. The company would likely try to evict him—as it had done to others, he said the employee told him. Upon eviction, he would lose his lease payment and potentially the value of any improvements he had made, according to the terms of the lease. 

Vivos has said that no such tactic exists.  

Then came roughly five months of what Streeter described in court as harassment by Vivos contractors. It ended when one of them drove a front-end loader up to Streeter’s bunker and challenged him to a fistfight. Streeter drew his gun and told the man to leave. 

“You ain’t never killed nobody, have you?” the man said, according to a video shot by Streeter’s daughter and entered into the court record. 

“Oh, yeah,” replied Streeter, a former prison guard, EMT and Army veteran who served in Bosnia.

“I have, with these hands,” the man responded. 

A few moments later, the camera goes out of frame. A shot can be heard. 

Streeter testified that the man charged him and he fired once, striking him. Streeter rendered aid afterward and, with a friend, drove the man to meet an ambulance. The man survived. A grand jury declined to indict Streeter, and a judge later granted him immunity under South Dakota’s stand-your-ground law. The state supreme court later affirmed the decision.

Vivos moved to evict Streeter for the shooting and for an incident earlier in the day in which he shoved another contractor. Streeter is fighting the proceeding in court.

Bunker mentality
Residents who move in find that preparing for the end times is just one challenge. They receive a long list of rules—including a ban on talking about the compound or its owner to the media, with penalties that can include eviction—and Vivos can change the rules mid-lease. “Vivos has prided itself on the ability of members to coexist with each other and within the confines of the Rules and Regulations,” it said in an email to lessees.

It isn’t quite a zombie apocalypse, but life in litigation is its own kind of dystopia....
....MUCH MORE 
*Here are a couple of the boats: 
 
At the New York Post, Ulyssia:
 
At The Australian Financial Review, The World:

AI: "The $2B Mira Murati Mystery"

From Puck, May 21, 2026:

With stratospheric funding and a slew of founding talent from OpenAI, Mira Murati’s Thinking Machines Lab seemingly had everything an A.I. startup needed for escape velocity. But as it approaches its 15-month mark, the company has little to show for all that promise and capital. 

When former OpenAI C.T.O. Mira Murati launched Thinking Machines Lab, in February 2025, she made a helluva splash in Silicon Valley. Not only had Murati left OpenAI to set up the foundations of a seemingly legit competitor, but she’d become a talent magnet in the midst of a highly competitive battle for engineers. More importantly, she quickly raised $2 billion in a funding round led by Andreessen Horowitz, with participation from Jane Street, Google Ventures, and Nvidia, that valued the company at $12 billion.
At launch, Thinking Machines Lab had no product in sight—just a dream of a slightly more focused and quixotic version of OpenAI that would advance “human-A.I. collaboration.” It wasn’t all that dissimilar to what, say, the Amodeis had set out to do when they bailed on Sam Altman’s hyperscale-at-all-costs vision to create a truly viable competitor in Anthropic. Or even what Ilya Sutskever, another former OpenAI co-founder and executive, had less successfully attempted when he launched Safe Superintelligence—a startup that has secured billions in funding, also without any real product to show for it. Anyway, some 15 months later, and during a moment of head-spinning acceleration in the space, OpenAI is about to go public, Anthropic is raising another privately financed round at about a $1 trillion valuation, and Thinking Machines has been eerily quiet.
Last October, Thinking Machines launched Tinker, an A.P.I. designed to help researchers fine-tune open L.L.M.s. Cool, sure—but this “me too” product, as one source close to the company suggested, was hardly what the industry had expected from the lab. Instead, it seemed designed merely to “remind people,” as this person put it, that the company still existed. Afterward, Thinking Machines fully dropped off the radar. (The company declined an interview request for this article.)
Thinking Machines now employs around 150 people, but 13 of its 42 founding team members have already left the building, including three of its six original co-founders, according to Business Insider. Several returned to OpenAI; others jumped at those ludicrous offers coming from Meta. Not surprisingly, the industry chatter has been pretty brutal. Yet last week, at the tail end of this mini-exodus, Thinking Machines unveiled a new product, one slightly more in line with what you might expect from a frontier A.I. lab: an A.I. system that Murati is calling Interaction Models.
The general idea is to make conversations with models feel more… human. As Murati explained on X, the “current ‘A.I. experience’ often feels like a conversation that only begins after we stop talking. We have to batch our thoughts. We can’t point at things. We phrase questions like emails. The interface doesn’t leave room for us so we adapt to the models.” Essentially, Thinking Machines wrote in a blog post, they’ve been trying to build more natural interactivity directly into the model, rather than in the form of scaffolding that goes on top. In practice, this would enable users to interrupt the model, point things out, and adjust their queries in real time. Thinking Machines also announced that it would award multiple $100,000 grants for related social research.
Oumi founder Manos Koukoumidis, who formerly led engineering teams at Microsoft, Meta, and Google, told me the research direction is certainly “worth exploring”—he just wasn’t sure why Thinking Machines decided to be the company to explore it. “This makes one wonder, is there a specific strategic direction they have in mind that is not clear to the rest of us?” he said. “Are they struggling to figure out what is the right direction for them? Or is it just full of researchers and different voices that they’re just, as a company, a little bit scattered?”
Investors are presumably asking the same questions. Several sources I spoke to found Thinking Machines’ research preview underwhelming—useful, but incongruous with the hype that the company has generated or the capital it has raised. Others were simply puzzled by what it has been trying to accomplish. Said one person familiar with the company, “A lot of people are confused on if they have a plan. They seem to have started with a massive inventory of brilliant people, and they haven’t been very disclosing.”

Perhaps, this person posited, Thinking Machines might just be one of those labs, like Yann LeCun’s Advanced Machine Intelligence, or Sutskever’s SSI, where there’s simply no product story… ever. But it’s hard to imagine that mere research is what Andreessen Horowitz had in mind when the firm led the company’s 10-figure seed round. “If this is anything more than 25 percent of their research portfolio, they’re going to be falling way below people’s expectations of this organization,” this person added. “People expected quite a lot more innovation from that, and in this field, you just don’t get to do three years of secret shit without getting out in the world.”....

....MUCH MORE 

If interested see also:

November 2023 - More On Q* and Q-Learning 

October 2024 - "OpenAI Executives Say AI Will Be Able to Do Any Job Within 10 Years" 

July 2025 -  Former OpenAI Chief Technology Officer Mira Murati Raises $2 Billion At $12 Billion Valuation From Jane Street, A16Z, Nvidia 

August 2025 - "Thanks for Your $1 Billion Job Offer, Mark Zuckerberg. I’m Gonna Pass." (META)

"Canada Dips Into Technical Recession for First Time Since 2020"

Just as the United States-Mexico-Canada trade Agreement (USMCA) enters joint review (and probable limbo).

From Bloomberg, May 29: 

Canada edged into a technical recession as weak business and government spending drove a slight contraction in the first quarter, pointing to persistent slack in the economy amid US trade tensions.

Real gross domestic product fell by 0.1% on an annualized basis during the first three months of the year, Statistics Canada reported on Friday. That follows a 1% contraction in the fourth quarter, a downward revision from a 0.6% decrease previously reported by the federal agency.

The surprise decline in the first quarter stands in contrast with forecasters’ expectations. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg were anticipating a 1.5% annualized increase in the first quarter, aligning with the Bank of Canada’s projection.

The last time Canada recorded two consecutive quarters of negative growth was in 2020 during the Covid-19 pandemic. Before that, it was in 2015 amid low oil prices.

The loonie fell to a session low after the report and was trading at C$1.3809 per US dollar as of 10:16 a.m. in Ottawa. Canadian government bond yields dipped to lows of the day, extending outperformance versus Treasuries, with the two-year benchmark down four basis points to 2.803%.

“There’s no sense sugar-coating this sour result, as the economy has clearly been struggling to grow since the start of the trade war, with headline growth also blunted by the rapid slowdown in population,” Doug Porter, chief economist at Bank of Montreal, said in a report to investors.

The weaker-than-expected GDP data coincides with a looser job market as well, painting a softer picture of the Canadian economy as US tariffs continue to squeeze some businesses.

“Overall, this should really throw a wet blanket on rate-hike talk, as the economy is in no condition to deal with higher rates,” Porter added.

The central bank has held its policy rate at 2.25% for four straight meetings, choosing to look through the short-term impact of higher oil prices on inflation while keeping an eye on softer economic conditions.

Economists in a Bloomberg survey had RATE SURVEY: BOC, Treasuries Forecasts in May 2026 (Table) the central bank to remain on hold for the rest of this year. Many said Friday’s data further reduces the likelihood of a hike, but traders in overnight interest rate swaps maintained bets on a 25 basis-point increase by December.

Read More: Bank of Canada Says Markets More Vulnerable to Sharp Correction

The “surprising” first quarter data means Canada has only seen growth in one of the last four quarters, pointed out Charles St-Arnaud, chief economist at Servus Credit Union....

....MUCH MORE 

 As Canada's Financial Post pointed out in February:

Posthaste: One sector of Canada's economy is in deep recession — and we can't even blame Trump
Manufacturing output has been declining for two decades. Here's wh

https://smartcdn.gprod.postmedia.digital/financialpost/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/gdpchart-0205.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=944&type=webp&sig=SMlxLWSbHbqWM1GqbN2bAw 

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"AMD Stock Drops After Lisa Su’s AI Speech to MIT Grads Sparks Boos" (AMD)

AMD's  CEO has three degrees from MIT (or as Harvard Man Russell Seitz put it: The trade school on the Charles)

From TIPRanks, May 29:

  • AMD stock was down after Lisa Su spoke at an MIT graduation ceremony.
  • Her mention of AI sparked boos from the graduates.
  • Advanced Micro Devices stock was down on Friday after CEO Lisa Su spoke to MIT graduates about AI. The semiconductor company’s CEO joined a growing list of tech sector heavyweights that chose to tackle AI in their speeches to college graduates. Just like with other tech CEOs, Su was booed by students who were unhappy about AI being brought up during graduation....

    ....MUCH MORE 

    From MIT News, May 28:

    Commencement address by Lisa Su ’90, SM ’91, PhD ’94
    “Technology itself does not decide what the future looks like,” the chair and CEO of Advanced Micro Devices told the Class of 2026.

    "Soros-Funded Indivisible Targets Texas Data Centers In Temple, Texas" (plus Form 990 updates)

    I wonder why Mr. Soros would allow one of the OSF grantees to do that? 

    From The Dallas Express via Yahoo News, May 18:

    A national progressive organization partially funded by George Soros’ Open Society Foundations appears to have been actively opposing the development of data centers in Temple, Texas.

    Indivisible Centex, the Bell County chapter of the national Indivisible group, held a week of action in late April against data center projects in Temple.

    The campaign included a “Protest & Petition” event at Temple City Hall on April 24, efforts to recall city council members who supported the projects, and a virtual Zoom event on April 27 titled “Thirsty for Power: When Data Centers Drain Our Water.”

    Screenshots of the events from social media were provided to The Dallas Express.


    Funding and Connections

    Indivisible has received more than $7.6 million from George Soros’ Open Society Foundations since 2017, including a two-year $3 million grant in 2023, according to OSF’s public grant database.

    The financial ties appear to be matched by direct personnel connections.

    Tom Perriello led OSF’s U.S. operations from 2018 to 2023 while serving on Indivisible’s national board. Indivisible co-founder Leah Greenberg previously served as Perriello’s policy director. Heather McGhee currently serves on the boards for both organizations....

    ....MUCH MORE 

    Though not directly related, there's battle lines being drawn. From the U.S. Department of the Treasury, April 23:

    Treasury Announces Form 990 Transparency Initiative to Expose Hidden Funding and Strengthen Oversight