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    1. EIA Announces Strategic Petroleum Release,

      in Europe, a record 400 million barrels. The move pushed down oil for about 15 minutes, which then rallied $7. The decision was unanimous, with several nations outlining their contribution, including Japan, the UK, Germany, France, and South Korea. That’s enough for only 20 days of global supply. IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol said the most important thing for the stability of energy markets remains the resumption of transit via the Strait of Hormuz, through which about 20% of the world’s seaborne oil normally flows.

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    2. Underlying US inflation slowed in February

      from a month earlier, with the consumer price index, excluding food and energy, rising 0.2% from January. Lower prices for used cars and motor vehicle insurance helped keep inflation in check last month, despite higher costs for gasoline and groceries, including fresh vegetables and coffee. The report showed tamer housing costs, with a key metric known as rent of primary residence rising 0.1%, the least in five years, and goods prices, excluding food and energy, barely increasing.

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    3. Airlines are Getting Slammed by Spiking Fuel Prices,

      and record long TSA lines. Expect fuel surcharges soon. Jet fuel, the second-largest expense for airlines behind labor, already jumped to as much as $4.11 a gallon in New York on March 5 from a low of $1.92 last May. Avoid all airlines for now.

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    4. Iran War is Threatening AI Build-Out.

      Iran's wave of retaliatory attacks hit AWS facilities in the UAE and Bahrain, causing banking, payments, enterprise, and consumer services to experience outages. While the Iran war will likely not see hyperscalers walking away from existing AI infrastructure builds in the region, it could impact future investment in the case of drawn-out hostilities. Data centers were being built in the Middle East because energy was cheap and there were no local NIMBY protests.

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    5. Bonds Collapse,

      under the weight of $2 trillion in extra borrowing demanded by the Iran War. Ten-year US Treasury bond yields have jumped 25 basis points in ten days to 4.51% since the war started. Every other class of fixed income is also selling off thanks to the private credit crisis brought to us by the likes of Blackstone (BLK) and Apollo (APO).

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    1. Oil Dives $35,

      as markets came back into balance. The Sunday spike to $119 was caused by massive short covering in the oil market by those who were long puts/short calls. There was no one to take the other side of the market during thin trading on Sunday. Oil prices will rise again as long as shipments from the Persian Gulf are closed. Iran gets to decide when that happens.

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    2. Existing Home Sales Rise 1.7%,

      in February, to a seasonally adjusted 4.09 million units. There were 1.29 million units for sale in January, up 4.9% YOY. Mortgage rates at 6.0% back then were a big help. Inventories are at 3.8 months. The median sale price was $398,000, up 0.3% YOY.

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    3. Exxon Pulls out Middle East Employees.

      Some operations have been ​scaled back to manage inventory levels as ⁠traffic through the Strait of Hormuz ​has been challenged, he said. Exxon is a ​minority partner in oil projects in the UAE, Qatar, and Saudi Arabia. Exxon wouldn’t be doing this if it believed the war would be over in three weeks. Another vote for a long war.

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    4. Bitcoin Recovers $70,000,

      on a flight to safety bid. Crypto-related stocks also got a lift. Robinhood (HOOD), a digital asset brokerage, rose 2.4% in premarket trading, while Strategy (MSTR)—the largest corporate holder of Bitcoin—rose 3.1%. Crypto has been trying to put in a bottom for months.

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    5. Get Ready to Buy American Airlines,

      the most exposed airline to rising fuel prices. American Airlines is attractively priced at 0.2 times price to sales, with analysts projecting over 60% upside. Robust premium and corporate travel demand, coupled with debt reduction below $35 billion in 2026, supports American Airlines. American Airlines projects 2026 earnings between $1.70 and $2.70 per share, with 2027 EPS growth of nearly 30%.

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    1. Oil Hits $119 Overnight,

      driven by panic buying by Asian customers who have no alternative. This is the sharpest rise in oil prices in history, and the US oil industry loves it. It’s an all oil stock market all the time now. Everything else is irrelevant. The Dow Average plunged 1,200 points in overnight trading.

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    2. JP Morgan Sees 10% Stock Market Correction,

      as the Iran War broadens out. I see at least 20% once we pass the promised five-week deadline. We did go into this war with stock valuations near record highs. A correction would mark a 10% drop in the US benchmark from its peak, implying the S&P 500 would drop to roughly 6,270 points — or roughly 7% lower than where the index closed on Friday.

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    3. TSA Waiting Lines Extend Past Hours,

      as many agents miss their first paycheck as a result of the Homeland Security Budget Shutdown. It’s all happening during the peak spring travel season. Expect airlines' profits to crater. Avoid (DAL), (UAL), and (AA). Close call. I just got home from Mexico yesterday.

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    4. There is No Safe Haven in Bonds,

      with yields climbing worldwide on oil-driven inflation fears. Global government bond markets were headed for one of their worst weekly losses in months, on concerns ​that war in the Middle East will renew upward pressure on inflation and force more hawkish pivots from central banks. Crude oil was ‌set on Friday for its strongest weekly gain since the extreme volatility of the COVID-19 pandemic in spring 2020, as conflict halted shipping and energy exports through the vital Strait of Hormuz. Ten-year US Treasury yields have backed up 17 basis points since the war started.

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    5. The Mag 7 has become the Lag 7,

      as investors dump big tech stocks with both hands. The group may still do OK, and some of the individual stocks may even kill it, but the slam-dunk, set-it-and-forget-it, run-circles-around-the-market era of the Mag Seven is gone with the wind. If and when the Iran War ends, you want to pile back into cheap domestic industrial stocks and financials.

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    1. Nonfarm Payroll Shows a Loss of 92,000 Jobs,

      in February, the worst since the Pandemic. The Headline Unemployment Rate rose to 4.4%. The recession is here. Imagine what the March numbers will look like with the war and a stock market crash. The report calls into question whether the labor market is actually steadying. While job growth jumped in January and unemployment insurance claims have settled at a low level, companies may be starting to follow through on a series of previously announced layoffs.

       

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    2. Oil Soars 8% to Over $91 a barrel,

      up 50% so far this year. Some 90 tankers a day are prevented from passing through the Straits of Hormuz, and 8 have been hit by missiles so far. The Wall Street Journal reported that Kuwait has begun cutting production at some oil fields after running out of places to store bottled-up crude, the latest sign of a hit to supply in the region. Citigroup Inc estimates that the crude oil market is losing 7 million to 11 million barrels a day of supply due to the disruption through Hormuz.

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    3. Business Inventories Rose in December,

      another recessionary indicator. Inventories ​advanced 1.6% on a year-over-year basis in December. ​The report was delayed by last year's shutdown of the federal government.

       

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    4. America’s Gasoline Bill Rose by $1 Billion This Week,

      portending a move in inflation to mid-single digits. If the conflict prolongs, the airline could see an impact in the second quarter as well. Fuel ​prices have jumped by 15% in the past week, adding to the pressure ​on an airline industry already hit hard by the conflict, ⁠which has led to more than 20,000 flight cancellations and left thousands ​of passengers stranded.

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    5. Money is Pouring Out of US Equity Funds.

      Investors divested a net $21.92 billion of ​U.S. equity funds during the week in their largest ​weekly net sales since January 7. Money market funds spar. As the conflict in the Middle East entered ​its seventh day on Friday, oil prices were on track ​for the biggest weekly gains since early 2022, fanning worries of inflation, potentially delaying rate cuts by the U.S. Federal Reserve. U.S. growth funds ​suffered $11.15 billion worth of outflows, the biggest for a ​week since December 17, 2025. Investors still bought $146 million worth of ‌value ⁠funds, logging a fourth weekly net purchase.

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    1. Oil Takes Off Again,

      rising by $2.50 a barrel to $84 and trashing stocks and bonds. The slide in bonds put two-year yields on pace for their biggest four-day surge since May as higher energy costs fuel inflation worries. Brent hovered near $84 as the war in the Middle East disrupted flows to key buyers. The S&P 500 lost traction after a rally in the previous session. The recession is coming.

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    2. Morgan Stanley Lays off 2,500,

      or 3% of their global staff. They are tied to shifting business and location priorities—as well as individual job performance—and are occurring both in the U.S. and abroad.  The moves come after the bank reported a banner year in 2025. Morgan Stanley, which has around 83,000 employees, posted record annual revenue in its investment banking and trading division as well as in its wealth-management unit last year. AI is coming for your job!

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    3. BYD Sales Plunge,

      as the world flees EVs. The world's largest electric vehicle manufacturer's combined January and February sales volume in 2026 dipped by roughly 36% compared to the year before. This figure was adjusted to account for the seasonal sales slowdown during the two-week Chinese New Year holiday, which took place in mid-February. They may flee back as the price of gasoline skyrockets.

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    4. Berkshire Hathaway is Buying Back Own Shares.

      The Omaha, Nebraska-based conglomerate disclosed in a regulatory filing that it began buying back its Class A and Class B shares on Wednesday because the price is trading at a discount to Berkshire’s intrinsic value. The new CEO, Greg Abel, bought $15 million worth for his personal account. Abel, 62, took over for Buffett, 95, at the start of January. Shares of Berkshire have fallen 3% this year and 10% from their record high last May. 

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    5. Weekly Jobless Claims Come in Flat.

      The number of Americans filing new applications for unemployment benefits was unchanged last week, while layoffs dropped sharply in February, consistent with stable labor market conditions.

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