| SATURDAY RECAP | Two extensions. No deal. Iran used the pauses to build a toll booth, not negotiate. The bond market failed three auctions. The physical oil market bet on months of disruption. And a legal verdict in Los Angeles quietly changed the rules for every platform on the internet. | | | | | | The S&P lost ground for the fifth straight week. The Nasdaq closed in correction territory on Thursday. Oil whipsawed from $93 to above $108 and back. Gold fell hard for the second straight week. Treasury yields hit multi-month highs. | The week had a pattern underneath the noise. | Every time a diplomatic signal arrived, markets rallied. Every time Iran spoke, the rally died. That loop ran four times this week. By Friday, the second extension barely moved futures. The market had learned to wait for confirmation that never came. | Here are the six developments that actually mattered. |
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| | | | | | Iran Isn't Negotiating. It's Building. | Trump issued two extensions this week. Iran denied talks existed for both of them. | That is not a negotiating posture. It is a construction schedule. | The first extension gave Iran five days. Iran used them to stand up an IRGC clearance system in the strait. Ships now submit documents, receive authorization codes, and pay fees to transit. The second extension gave ten more days. Iran's parliament began drafting legislation to make the toll permanent. | Each pause is a window. Not for diplomacy. For institutionalization. | Iran also submitted five ceasefire conditions this week. One requires US recognition of Iranian sovereignty over the strait. That is not a position that closes in ten days. | Investor Signal | The market is pricing extensions as progress. They are not. Each extension is a deadline reset that gives Iran more time to formalize the new regime. |
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| | | | The Toll Booth Is Denominated in Yuan | This is the story most readers missed this week. It is the one with the longest tail. | Iran's IRGC clearance system does not settle in dollars. Fees are paid in yuan, brokered by Chinese intermediaries. Ships that want to transit submit documents and receive authorization from Iranian authorities. | Iran's parliament is now moving to legislate this. If it passes, Iran holds legal toll authority over one-fifth of the world's traded oil. In yuan. With Chinese firms in the middle of every cargo approval. | When the shooting stops, the strait does not go back to what it was. The physical infrastructure for a yuan-denominated toll regime is already running. | The consequences stretch well beyond oil prices. They run through LNG pricing, energy routing, and the dollar's role in commodity trade. | Investor Signal | A ceasefire ends the war. It does not end the toll booth. The market has not priced that distinction. |
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| | | | | | The Physical Market Made Its Bet | TotalEnergies purchased 69 Dubai benchmark oil cargoes in March. All of 2025 saw 347. | Those cargoes ship in May. That is not a hedge against a bad week. That is a bet on disruption lasting months. Real money. In a physical market where you cannot simply hit sell. | When Total briefly stopped buying on Wednesday, Oman futures fell $48. Murban dropped nearly $20. One company had become the only thing holding the benchmark together. | The bond market made the same bet three times. The 2-year, 5-year, and 7-year Treasury auctions all failed this week. Primary dealers absorbed the excess each time. After the 7-year sale on Thursday, yields across the curve spiked more than 10 basis points in minutes. | Real buyers step back from auctions when they expect yields to go higher. They expect yields to go higher because they do not trust the inflation path. The OECD raised its US inflation forecast to 4.2% this week. That is up from its prior estimate of 2.8%. The revision happened before the March energy data has even been counted. | Investor Signal | Paper markets are priced for a short war. The physical oil market and the bond market placed real capital on a longer one. |
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| | | | The AI Trade Split Into Two Halves | The AI infrastructure trade survived the war. It did not survive intact. | Hardware is still working. Arm launched its first in-house chip with Meta as the debut customer. The CEO said it would generate $15 billion in revenue by 2031. SK Hynix filed for a US listing targeting up to $14 billion. Capital goods prices posted their largest monthly gain since the government started tracking the data in 1988. The buildout is big enough now to move official macro statistics. | Memory got hit. Google published a compression algorithm called TurboQuant that cuts AI memory use per model run by six times. Memory stocks fell hard. SK Hynix dropped 6% in Asia. Micron fell 22% in six sessions from its all-time high. | The selloff is pricing the wrong story. When you make AI cheaper to run, more AI gets deployed. More workloads. More models running. Total memory demand goes up, not down. Every major efficiency breakthrough in computing has worked this way. Sandisk's own CFO made this point directly to analysts this week. | The tell is hyperscaler capex guidance. If Amazon, Microsoft, and Google confirm memory orders are unchanged, the selloff looks like a mispricing. | Investor Signal | The AI hardware thesis held. The memory selloff is a sentiment event, not a structural one. The Jevons argument wins when the data confirms it. |
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| | | | The LNG Problem Is Worse Than the Oil Problem | Oil has strategic reserves. It has pipeline bypasses. It has futures markets pricing recovery. | LNG has none of those things. | QatarEnergy declared force majeure on supply contracts this week. Customers in China, South Korea, Italy, and Belgium all affected. Qatar's Ras Laffan facility produces 20% of global LNG. Repairs will take up to five years. When Russia cut Europe's pipeline gas in 2022, LNG tankers were the safety valve. That safety valve is now the damaged asset. | The helium angle connects directly to chips. Qatar produces a third of global helium. Helium cools the machines that print semiconductors. One supplier warned this week that availability could be halved this year. This is not just an energy story. It is a supply chain story moving through multiple industries at once. | Slovenia rationed fuel. Spain approved a 5 billion euro aid package. The Shell CEO said the crunch reaches Europe in April. | Investor Signal | The oil disruption is priced. The LNG disruption is not finished pricing. The two have different timelines and different repair paths. |
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| | | | A Courtroom Changed the Rules for Every Platform | Meta lost two child safety trials in two days this week. New Mexico on Tuesday. California on Wednesday. | The fines were small. The legal theory was not. | Both cases won by targeting platform design rather than content. That sidesteps Section 230, the law that has shielded tech platforms from content liability since 1996. No appeals court has ruled on this design-liability theory yet. When one does, the ruling covers every platform that hosts content used by children. Gaming. Video. Social. All of it. | Snap fell sharply just from being in the same category. More than 3,000 similar cases are waiting in California courts. | Meta lost $119 billion in market cap on Thursday. On the same day it boosted its Texas data center commitment from $1.5 billion to $10 billion and confirmed $135 billion in total capital spending for the year. The existing business is facing a litigation pipeline that could require fundamental redesigns. The AI buildout is a bet that the next business justifies the cost. | The market is not yet pricing what happens if those redesigns are ordered. | Investor Signal | Design liability went 2-for-2 in jury trials this week. The financial penalties are manageable. The cost of rebuilding revenue-generating products is not. |
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| | | | Central Banks Are Lying About Gold | Jerome Powell says gold isn't money. The Fed says inflation is under control. | But look at what central banks are doing. | Last year, they bought more gold than at any time since 1967. China dumped $100B in U.S. debt, then bought gold. Poland, Hungary, Singapore, Turkey… all loading up. | This isn't a trend. It's a panic. | After the U.S. froze Russia's assets, the world learned a hard lesson: there's only one asset no one can freeze. | Gold. | I've just released an urgent report on one stock positioned to benefit as this rush accelerates. | Get the name and ticker here >>> |
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| | | | This week had one underlying question. Is the market priced for the war that is happening, or the war it hopes is almost over? | Two extensions produced no deal. Iran used the time to build a toll regime. The physical oil market bet on disruption through May. The bond market failed three straight auctions. LNG force majeure landed. A legal verdict began rewriting the rules for the internet's largest platforms. | The paper market is still priced for a short war. The real-money signals moved on. | The gap between those two things is still open. |
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